Attaching physical PCI devices to guests¶
The PCI passthrough feature in OpenStack allows full access and direct control of a physical PCI device in guests. This mechanism is generic for any kind of PCI device, and runs with a Network Interface Card (NIC), Graphics Processing Unit (GPU), or any other devices that can be attached to a PCI bus. Correct driver installation is the only requirement for the guest to properly use the devices.
Some PCI devices provide Single Root I/O Virtualization and Sharing (SR-IOV) capabilities. When SR-IOV is used, a physical device is virtualized and appears as multiple PCI devices. Virtual PCI devices are assigned to the same or different guests. In the case of PCI passthrough, the full physical device is assigned to only one guest and cannot be shared.
PCI devices are requested through flavor extra specs, specifically via the
pci_passthrough:alias
flavor extra spec.
This guide demonstrates how to enable PCI passthrough for a type of PCI device
with a vendor ID of 8086
and a product ID of 154d
- an Intel X520
Network Adapter - by mapping them to the alias a1
.
You should adjust the instructions for other devices with potentially different
capabilities.
Note
For information on creating servers with SR-IOV network interfaces, refer to the Networking Guide.
Limitations
Attaching SR-IOV ports to existing servers was not supported until the 22.0.0 Victoria release. Due to various bugs in libvirt and qemu we recommend to use at least libvirt version 6.0.0 and at least qemu version 4.2.
Cold migration (resize) of servers with SR-IOV devices attached was not supported until the 14.0.0 Newton release, see bug 1512800 for details.
Note
Nova only supports PCI addresses where the fields are restricted to the following maximum value:
domain - 0xFFFF
bus - 0xFF
slot - 0x1F
function - 0x7
Nova will ignore PCI devices reported by the hypervisor if the address is outside of these ranges.
Enabling PCI passthrough¶
Configure compute host¶
To enable PCI passthrough on an x86, Linux-based compute node, the following are required:
VT-d enabled in the BIOS
IOMMU enabled on the host OS, e.g. by adding the
intel_iommu=on
oramd_iommu=on
parameter to the kernel parametersAssignable PCIe devices
To enable PCI passthrough on a Hyper-V compute node, the following are required:
Windows 10 or Windows / Hyper-V Server 2016 or newer
VT-d enabled on the host
Assignable PCI devices
In order to check the requirements above and if there are any assignable PCI devices, run the following Powershell commands:
Start-BitsTransfer https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Microsoft/Virtualization-Documentation/master/hyperv-samples/benarm-powershell/DDA/survey-dda.ps1
.\survey-dda.ps1
If the compute node passes all the requirements, the desired assignable PCI devices to be disabled and unmounted from the host, in order to be assignable by Hyper-V. The following can be read for more details: Hyper-V PCI passthrough.
Configure nova-compute
¶
Once PCI passthrough has been configured for the host, nova-compute
must be configured to allow the PCI device to pass through to VMs. This is done
using the pci.passthrough_whitelist
option. For example,
assuming our sample PCI device has a PCI address of 41:00.0
on each host:
[pci]
passthrough_whitelist = { "address": "0000:41:00.0" }
Refer to pci.passthrough_whitelist
for syntax information.
Alternatively, to enable passthrough of all devices with the same product and vendor ID:
[pci]
passthrough_whitelist = { "vendor_id": "8086", "product_id": "154d" }
If using vendor and product IDs, all PCI devices matching the vendor_id
and
product_id
are added to the pool of PCI devices available for passthrough
to VMs.
In addition, it is necessary to configure the pci.alias
option, which is a JSON-style configuration option that allows you to map a
given device type, identified by the standard PCI vendor_id
and (optional)
product_id
fields, to an arbitrary name or alias. This alias can then be
used to request a PCI device using the pci_passthrough:alias
flavor extra spec, as discussed previously.
For our sample device with a vendor ID of 0x8086
and a product ID of
0x154d
, this would be:
[pci]
alias = { "vendor_id":"8086", "product_id":"154d", "device_type":"type-PF", "name":"a1" }
It’s important to note the addition of the device_type
field. This is
necessary because this PCI device supports SR-IOV. The nova-compute
service
categorizes devices into one of three types, depending on the capabilities the
devices report:
type-PF
The device supports SR-IOV and is the parent or root device.
type-VF
The device is a child device of a device that supports SR-IOV.
type-PCI
The device does not support SR-IOV.
By default, it is only possible to attach type-PCI
devices using PCI
passthrough. If you wish to attach type-PF
or type-VF
devices, you must
specify the device_type
field in the config option. If the device was a
device that did not support SR-IOV, the device_type
field could be omitted.
Refer to pci.alias
for syntax information.
Important
This option must also be configured on controller nodes. This is discussed later in this document.
Once configured, restart the nova-compute service.
Configure nova-scheduler
¶
The nova-scheduler service must be configured to enable the
PciPassthroughFilter
. To do this, add this filter to the list of filters
specified in filter_scheduler.enabled_filters
and set
filter_scheduler.available_filters
to the default of
nova.scheduler.filters.all_filters
. For example:
[filter_scheduler]
enabled_filters = ...,PciPassthroughFilter
available_filters = nova.scheduler.filters.all_filters
Once done, restart the nova-scheduler service.
Configure nova-api
¶
It is necessary to also configure the pci.alias
config
option on the controller. This configuration should match the configuration
found on the compute nodes. For example:
[pci]
alias = { "vendor_id":"8086", "product_id":"154d", "device_type":"type-PF", "name":"a1", "numa_policy":"preferred" }
Refer to pci.alias
for syntax information.
Refer to Affinity for numa_policy
information.
Once configured, restart the nova-api service.
Configuring a flavor or image¶
Once the alias has been configured, it can be used for an flavor extra spec.
For example, to request two of the PCI devices referenced by alias a1
, run:
$ openstack flavor set m1.large --property "pci_passthrough:alias"="a1:2"
For more information about the syntax for pci_passthrough:alias
, refer to
the documentation.
PCI-NUMA affinity policies¶
By default, the libvirt driver enforces strict NUMA affinity for PCI devices,
be they PCI passthrough devices or neutron SR-IOV interfaces. This means that
by default a PCI device must be allocated from the same host NUMA node as at
least one of the instance’s CPUs. This isn’t always necessary, however, and you
can configure this policy using the
hw:pci_numa_affinity_policy
flavor extra spec or equivalent
image metadata property. There are three possible values allowed:
- required
This policy means that nova will boot instances with PCI devices only if at least one of the NUMA nodes of the instance is associated with these PCI devices. It means that if NUMA node info for some PCI devices could not be determined, those PCI devices wouldn’t be consumable by the instance. This provides maximum performance.
- socket
This policy means that the PCI device must be affined to the same host socket as at least one of the guest NUMA nodes. For example, consider a system with two sockets, each with two NUMA nodes, numbered node 0 and node 1 on socket 0, and node 2 and node 3 on socket 1. There is a PCI device affined to node 0. An PCI instance with two guest NUMA nodes and the
socket
policy can be affined to either:node 0 and node 1
node 0 and node 2
node 0 and node 3
node 1 and node 2
node 1 and node 3
The instance cannot be affined to node 2 and node 3, as neither of those are on the same socket as the PCI device. If the other nodes are consumed by other instances and only nodes 2 and 3 are available, the instance will not boot.
- preferred
This policy means that
nova-scheduler
will choose a compute host with minimal consideration for the NUMA affinity of PCI devices.nova-compute
will attempt a best effort selection of PCI devices based on NUMA affinity, however, if this is not possible thennova-compute
will fall back to scheduling on a NUMA node that is not associated with the PCI device.- legacy
This is the default policy and it describes the current nova behavior. Usually we have information about association of PCI devices with NUMA nodes. However, some PCI devices do not provide such information. The
legacy
value will mean that nova will boot instances with PCI device if either:The PCI device is associated with at least one NUMA nodes on which the instance will be booted
There is no information about PCI-NUMA affinity available
For example, to configure a flavor to use the preferred
PCI NUMA affinity
policy for any neutron SR-IOV interfaces attached by the user:
$ openstack flavor set $FLAVOR \
--property hw:pci_numa_affinity_policy=preferred
You can also configure this for PCI passthrough devices by specifying the
policy in the alias configuration via pci.alias
. For more
information, refer to the documentation
.