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migration/doc: How to migrate when hosts have different features
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Sometimes devices have different features depending of things outside
of qemu.  For instance the kernel.  Document how to handle that cases.

Acked-by: Peter Xu <peterx@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Fabiano Rosas <farosas@suse.de>
Signed-off-by: Juan Quintela <quintela@redhat.com>
Message-ID: <20231018112827.1325-4-quintela@redhat.com>
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Juan Quintela committed Oct 30, 2023
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Expand Up @@ -1138,3 +1138,100 @@ machine types to have the right value::
+ { "virtio-blk-device", "num-queues", "1"},
...
};
A device with diferent features on both sides
---------------------------------------------
Let's assume that we are using the same QEMU binary on both sides,
just to make the things easier. But we have a device that has
different features on both sides of the migration. That can be
because the devices are different, because the kernel driver of both
devices have different features, whatever.
How can we get this to work with migration. The way to do that is
"theoretically" easy. You have to get the features that the device
has in the source of the migration. The features that the device has
on the target of the migration, you get the intersection of the
features of both sides, and that is the way that you should launch
QEMU.
Notice that this is not completely related to QEMU. The most
important thing here is that this should be handled by the managing
application that launches QEMU. If QEMU is configured correctly, the
migration will succeed.
That said, actually doing it is complicated. Almost all devices are
bad at being able to be launched with only some features enabled.
With one big exception: cpus.
You can read the documentation for QEMU x86 cpu models here:
https://qemu-project.gitlab.io/qemu/system/qemu-cpu-models.html
See when they talk about migration they recommend that one chooses the
newest cpu model that is supported for all cpus.
Let's say that we have:
Host A:
Device X has the feature Y
Host B:
Device X has not the feature Y
If we try to migrate without any care from host A to host B, it will
fail because when migration tries to load the feature Y on
destination, it will find that the hardware is not there.
Doing this would be the equivalent of doing with cpus:
Host A:
$ qemu-system-x86_64 -cpu host
Host B:
$ qemu-system-x86_64 -cpu host
When both hosts have different cpu features this is guaranteed to
fail. Especially if Host B has less features than host A. If host A
has less features than host B, sometimes it works. Important word of
last sentence is "sometimes".
So, forgetting about cpu models and continuing with the -cpu host
example, let's see that the differences of the cpus is that Host A and
B have the following features:
Features: 'pcid' 'stibp' 'taa-no'
Host A: X X
Host B: X
And we want to migrate between them, the way configure both QEMU cpu
will be:
Host A:
$ qemu-system-x86_64 -cpu host,pcid=off,stibp=off
Host B:
$ qemu-system-x86_64 -cpu host,taa-no=off
And you would be able to migrate between them. It is responsability
of the management application or of the user to make sure that the
configuration is correct. QEMU doesn't know how to look at this kind
of features in general.
Notice that we don't recomend to use -cpu host for migration. It is
used in this example because it makes the example simpler.
Other devices have worse control about individual features. If they
want to be able to migrate between hosts that show different features,
the device needs a way to configure which ones it is going to use.
In this section we have considered that we are using the same QEMU
binary in both sides of the migration. If we use different QEMU
versions process, then we need to have into account all other
differences and the examples become even more complicated.

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