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Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation/virtual/kvm/devices/xive.txt')
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diff --git a/Documentation/virtual/kvm/devices/xive.txt b/Documentation/virtual/kvm/devices/xive.txt deleted file mode 100644 index 9a24a4525253..000000000000 --- a/Documentation/virtual/kvm/devices/xive.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,197 +0,0 @@ -POWER9 eXternal Interrupt Virtualization Engine (XIVE Gen1) -========================================================== - -Device types supported: - KVM_DEV_TYPE_XIVE POWER9 XIVE Interrupt Controller generation 1 - -This device acts as a VM interrupt controller. It provides the KVM -interface to configure the interrupt sources of a VM in the underlying -POWER9 XIVE interrupt controller. - -Only one XIVE instance may be instantiated. A guest XIVE device -requires a POWER9 host and the guest OS should have support for the -XIVE native exploitation interrupt mode. If not, it should run using -the legacy interrupt mode, referred as XICS (POWER7/8). - -* Device Mappings - - The KVM device exposes different MMIO ranges of the XIVE HW which - are required for interrupt management. These are exposed to the - guest in VMAs populated with a custom VM fault handler. - - 1. Thread Interrupt Management Area (TIMA) - - Each thread has an associated Thread Interrupt Management context - composed of a set of registers. These registers let the thread - handle priority management and interrupt acknowledgment. The most - important are : - - - Interrupt Pending Buffer (IPB) - - Current Processor Priority (CPPR) - - Notification Source Register (NSR) - - They are exposed to software in four different pages each proposing - a view with a different privilege. The first page is for the - physical thread context and the second for the hypervisor. Only the - third (operating system) and the fourth (user level) are exposed the - guest. - - 2. Event State Buffer (ESB) - - Each source is associated with an Event State Buffer (ESB) with - either a pair of even/odd pair of pages which provides commands to - manage the source: to trigger, to EOI, to turn off the source for - instance. - - 3. Device pass-through - - When a device is passed-through into the guest, the source - interrupts are from a different HW controller (PHB4) and the ESB - pages exposed to the guest should accommadate this change. - - The passthru_irq helpers, kvmppc_xive_set_mapped() and - kvmppc_xive_clr_mapped() are called when the device HW irqs are - mapped into or unmapped from the guest IRQ number space. The KVM - device extends these helpers to clear the ESB pages of the guest IRQ - number being mapped and then lets the VM fault handler repopulate. - The handler will insert the ESB page corresponding to the HW - interrupt of the device being passed-through or the initial IPI ESB - page if the device has being removed. - - The ESB remapping is fully transparent to the guest and the OS - device driver. All handling is done within VFIO and the above - helpers in KVM-PPC. - -* Groups: - - 1. KVM_DEV_XIVE_GRP_CTRL - Provides global controls on the device - Attributes: - 1.1 KVM_DEV_XIVE_RESET (write only) - Resets the interrupt controller configuration for sources and event - queues. To be used by kexec and kdump. - Errors: none - - 1.2 KVM_DEV_XIVE_EQ_SYNC (write only) - Sync all the sources and queues and mark the EQ pages dirty. This - to make sure that a consistent memory state is captured when - migrating the VM. - Errors: none - - 2. KVM_DEV_XIVE_GRP_SOURCE (write only) - Initializes a new source in the XIVE device and mask it. - Attributes: - Interrupt source number (64-bit) - The kvm_device_attr.addr points to a __u64 value: - bits: | 63 .... 2 | 1 | 0 - values: | unused | level | type - - type: 0:MSI 1:LSI - - level: assertion level in case of an LSI. - Errors: - -E2BIG: Interrupt source number is out of range - -ENOMEM: Could not create a new source block - -EFAULT: Invalid user pointer for attr->addr. - -ENXIO: Could not allocate underlying HW interrupt - - 3. KVM_DEV_XIVE_GRP_SOURCE_CONFIG (write only) - Configures source targeting - Attributes: - Interrupt source number (64-bit) - The kvm_device_attr.addr points to a __u64 value: - bits: | 63 .... 33 | 32 | 31 .. 3 | 2 .. 0 - values: | eisn | mask | server | priority - - priority: 0-7 interrupt priority level - - server: CPU number chosen to handle the interrupt - - mask: mask flag (unused) - - eisn: Effective Interrupt Source Number - Errors: - -ENOENT: Unknown source number - -EINVAL: Not initialized source number - -EINVAL: Invalid priority - -EINVAL: Invalid CPU number. - -EFAULT: Invalid user pointer for attr->addr. - -ENXIO: CPU event queues not configured or configuration of the - underlying HW interrupt failed - -EBUSY: No CPU available to serve interrupt - - 4. KVM_DEV_XIVE_GRP_EQ_CONFIG (read-write) - Configures an event queue of a CPU - Attributes: - EQ descriptor identifier (64-bit) - The EQ descriptor identifier is a tuple (server, priority) : - bits: | 63 .... 32 | 31 .. 3 | 2 .. 0 - values: | unused | server | priority - The kvm_device_attr.addr points to : - struct kvm_ppc_xive_eq { - __u32 flags; - __u32 qshift; - __u64 qaddr; - __u32 qtoggle; - __u32 qindex; - __u8 pad[40]; - }; - - flags: queue flags - KVM_XIVE_EQ_ALWAYS_NOTIFY (required) - forces notification without using the coalescing mechanism - provided by the XIVE END ESBs. - - qshift: queue size (power of 2) - - qaddr: real address of queue - - qtoggle: current queue toggle bit - - qindex: current queue index - - pad: reserved for future use - Errors: - -ENOENT: Invalid CPU number - -EINVAL: Invalid priority - -EINVAL: Invalid flags - -EINVAL: Invalid queue size - -EINVAL: Invalid queue address - -EFAULT: Invalid user pointer for attr->addr. - -EIO: Configuration of the underlying HW failed - - 5. KVM_DEV_XIVE_GRP_SOURCE_SYNC (write only) - Synchronize the source to flush event notifications - Attributes: - Interrupt source number (64-bit) - Errors: - -ENOENT: Unknown source number - -EINVAL: Not initialized source number - -* VCPU state - - The XIVE IC maintains VP interrupt state in an internal structure - called the NVT. When a VP is not dispatched on a HW processor - thread, this structure can be updated by HW if the VP is the target - of an event notification. - - It is important for migration to capture the cached IPB from the NVT - as it synthesizes the priorities of the pending interrupts. We - capture a bit more to report debug information. - - KVM_REG_PPC_VP_STATE (2 * 64bits) - bits: | 63 .... 32 | 31 .... 0 | - values: | TIMA word0 | TIMA word1 | - bits: | 127 .......... 64 | - values: | unused | - -* Migration: - - Saving the state of a VM using the XIVE native exploitation mode - should follow a specific sequence. When the VM is stopped : - - 1. Mask all sources (PQ=01) to stop the flow of events. - - 2. Sync the XIVE device with the KVM control KVM_DEV_XIVE_EQ_SYNC to - flush any in-flight event notification and to stabilize the EQs. At - this stage, the EQ pages are marked dirty to make sure they are - transferred in the migration sequence. - - 3. Capture the state of the source targeting, the EQs configuration - and the state of thread interrupt context registers. - - Restore is similar : - - 1. Restore the EQ configuration. As targeting depends on it. - 2. Restore targeting - 3. Restore the thread interrupt contexts - 4. Restore the source states - 5. Let the vCPU run |