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authorGlauber de Oliveira Costa <gcosta@redhat.com>2008-01-07 11:05:33 -0200
committerRusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>2008-01-30 22:50:11 +1100
commitfc708b3e407dfd2e12ba9a6cf35bd0bffad1796d (patch)
treee9a6df9c9b8cf4077c98198c3f5d3bc6dc991c0f /drivers/lguest/segments.c
parenta53a35a8b485b9c16b73e5177bddaa4321971199 (diff)
lguest: replace lguest_arch with lg_cpu_arch.
The fields found in lguest_arch are not really per-guest, but per-cpu (gdt, idt, etc). So this patch turns lguest_arch into lg_cpu_arch. It makes sense to have a per-guest per-arch struct, but this can be addressed later, when the need arrives. Signed-off-by: Glauber de Oliveira Costa <gcosta@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Diffstat (limited to 'drivers/lguest/segments.c')
-rw-r--r--drivers/lguest/segments.c42
1 files changed, 22 insertions, 20 deletions
diff --git a/drivers/lguest/segments.c b/drivers/lguest/segments.c
index 9e189cbec7dd..02138450ecf5 100644
--- a/drivers/lguest/segments.c
+++ b/drivers/lguest/segments.c
@@ -58,7 +58,7 @@ static int ignored_gdt(unsigned int num)
* Protection Fault in the Switcher when it restores a Guest segment register
* which tries to use that entry. Then we kill the Guest for causing such a
* mess: the message will be "unhandled trap 256". */
-static void fixup_gdt_table(struct lguest *lg, unsigned start, unsigned end)
+static void fixup_gdt_table(struct lg_cpu *cpu, unsigned start, unsigned end)
{
unsigned int i;
@@ -71,14 +71,14 @@ static void fixup_gdt_table(struct lguest *lg, unsigned start, unsigned end)
/* Segment descriptors contain a privilege level: the Guest is
* sometimes careless and leaves this as 0, even though it's
* running at privilege level 1. If so, we fix it here. */
- if ((lg->arch.gdt[i].b & 0x00006000) == 0)
- lg->arch.gdt[i].b |= (GUEST_PL << 13);
+ if ((cpu->arch.gdt[i].b & 0x00006000) == 0)
+ cpu->arch.gdt[i].b |= (GUEST_PL << 13);
/* Each descriptor has an "accessed" bit. If we don't set it
* now, the CPU will try to set it when the Guest first loads
* that entry into a segment register. But the GDT isn't
* writable by the Guest, so bad things can happen. */
- lg->arch.gdt[i].b |= 0x00000100;
+ cpu->arch.gdt[i].b |= 0x00000100;
}
}
@@ -109,31 +109,31 @@ void setup_default_gdt_entries(struct lguest_ro_state *state)
/* This routine sets up the initial Guest GDT for booting. All entries start
* as 0 (unusable). */
-void setup_guest_gdt(struct lguest *lg)
+void setup_guest_gdt(struct lg_cpu *cpu)
{
/* Start with full 0-4G segments... */
- lg->arch.gdt[GDT_ENTRY_KERNEL_CS] = FULL_EXEC_SEGMENT;
- lg->arch.gdt[GDT_ENTRY_KERNEL_DS] = FULL_SEGMENT;
+ cpu->arch.gdt[GDT_ENTRY_KERNEL_CS] = FULL_EXEC_SEGMENT;
+ cpu->arch.gdt[GDT_ENTRY_KERNEL_DS] = FULL_SEGMENT;
/* ...except the Guest is allowed to use them, so set the privilege
* level appropriately in the flags. */
- lg->arch.gdt[GDT_ENTRY_KERNEL_CS].b |= (GUEST_PL << 13);
- lg->arch.gdt[GDT_ENTRY_KERNEL_DS].b |= (GUEST_PL << 13);
+ cpu->arch.gdt[GDT_ENTRY_KERNEL_CS].b |= (GUEST_PL << 13);
+ cpu->arch.gdt[GDT_ENTRY_KERNEL_DS].b |= (GUEST_PL << 13);
}
/*H:650 An optimization of copy_gdt(), for just the three "thead-local storage"
* entries. */
-void copy_gdt_tls(const struct lguest *lg, struct desc_struct *gdt)
+void copy_gdt_tls(const struct lg_cpu *cpu, struct desc_struct *gdt)
{
unsigned int i;
for (i = GDT_ENTRY_TLS_MIN; i <= GDT_ENTRY_TLS_MAX; i++)
- gdt[i] = lg->arch.gdt[i];
+ gdt[i] = cpu->arch.gdt[i];
}
/*H:640 When the Guest is run on a different CPU, or the GDT entries have
* changed, copy_gdt() is called to copy the Guest's GDT entries across to this
* CPU's GDT. */
-void copy_gdt(const struct lguest *lg, struct desc_struct *gdt)
+void copy_gdt(const struct lg_cpu *cpu, struct desc_struct *gdt)
{
unsigned int i;
@@ -141,21 +141,22 @@ void copy_gdt(const struct lguest *lg, struct desc_struct *gdt)
* replaced. See ignored_gdt() above. */
for (i = 0; i < GDT_ENTRIES; i++)
if (!ignored_gdt(i))
- gdt[i] = lg->arch.gdt[i];
+ gdt[i] = cpu->arch.gdt[i];
}
/*H:620 This is where the Guest asks us to load a new GDT (LHCALL_LOAD_GDT).
* We copy it from the Guest and tweak the entries. */
-void load_guest_gdt(struct lguest *lg, unsigned long table, u32 num)
+void load_guest_gdt(struct lg_cpu *cpu, unsigned long table, u32 num)
{
+ struct lguest *lg = cpu->lg;
/* We assume the Guest has the same number of GDT entries as the
* Host, otherwise we'd have to dynamically allocate the Guest GDT. */
- if (num > ARRAY_SIZE(lg->arch.gdt))
+ if (num > ARRAY_SIZE(cpu->arch.gdt))
kill_guest(lg, "too many gdt entries %i", num);
/* We read the whole thing in, then fix it up. */
- __lgread(lg, lg->arch.gdt, table, num * sizeof(lg->arch.gdt[0]));
- fixup_gdt_table(lg, 0, ARRAY_SIZE(lg->arch.gdt));
+ __lgread(lg, cpu->arch.gdt, table, num * sizeof(cpu->arch.gdt[0]));
+ fixup_gdt_table(cpu, 0, ARRAY_SIZE(cpu->arch.gdt));
/* Mark that the GDT changed so the core knows it has to copy it again,
* even if the Guest is run on the same CPU. */
lg->changed |= CHANGED_GDT;
@@ -165,12 +166,13 @@ void load_guest_gdt(struct lguest *lg, unsigned long table, u32 num)
* Remember that this happens on every context switch, so it's worth
* optimizing. But wouldn't it be neater to have a single hypercall to cover
* both cases? */
-void guest_load_tls(struct lguest *lg, unsigned long gtls)
+void guest_load_tls(struct lg_cpu *cpu, unsigned long gtls)
{
- struct desc_struct *tls = &lg->arch.gdt[GDT_ENTRY_TLS_MIN];
+ struct desc_struct *tls = &cpu->arch.gdt[GDT_ENTRY_TLS_MIN];
+ struct lguest *lg = cpu->lg;
__lgread(lg, tls, gtls, sizeof(*tls)*GDT_ENTRY_TLS_ENTRIES);
- fixup_gdt_table(lg, GDT_ENTRY_TLS_MIN, GDT_ENTRY_TLS_MAX+1);
+ fixup_gdt_table(cpu, GDT_ENTRY_TLS_MIN, GDT_ENTRY_TLS_MAX+1);
/* Note that just the TLS entries have changed. */
lg->changed |= CHANGED_GDT_TLS;
}