History log of /freebsd/usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_emul.c (Results 126 – 150 of 176)
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# 654957c2 19-Nov-2013 Gleb Smirnoff <glebius@FreeBSD.org>

Merge head up to r258343.


# 565bbb86 12-Nov-2013 Neel Natu <neel@FreeBSD.org>

Move the ioapic device model from userspace into vmm.ko. This is needed for
upcoming in-kernel device emulations like the HPET.

The ioctls VM_IOAPIC_ASSERT_IRQ and VM_IOAPIC_DEASSERT_IRQ are used to

Move the ioapic device model from userspace into vmm.ko. This is needed for
upcoming in-kernel device emulations like the HPET.

The ioctls VM_IOAPIC_ASSERT_IRQ and VM_IOAPIC_DEASSERT_IRQ are used to
manipulate the ioapic pin state.

Discussed with: grehan@
Submitted by: Tycho Nightingale (tycho.nightingale@pluribusnetworks.com)

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# 50d3286d 11-Nov-2013 Gleb Smirnoff <glebius@FreeBSD.org>

Merge head r232040 through r258006.


# c8afb9bc 06-Nov-2013 Neel Natu <neel@FreeBSD.org>

Fix an off-by-one error when iterating over the emulated PCI BARs.

Submitted by: Tycho Nightingale (tycho.nightingale@pluribusnetworks.com)


# f9b2a21c 31-Oct-2013 Gleb Smirnoff <glebius@FreeBSD.org>

Merge head r232040 through r257457.
M usr.sbin/portsnap/portsnap/portsnap.8
M usr.sbin/portsnap/portsnap/portsnap.sh
M usr.sbin/tcpdump/tcpdump/Makefile


# ea7f1c8c 29-Oct-2013 Neel Natu <neel@FreeBSD.org>

Add support for PCI-to-ISA LPC bridge emulation. If the LPC bus is attached
to a virtual machine then we implicitly create COM1 and COM2 ISA devices.

Prior to this change the only way of attaching a

Add support for PCI-to-ISA LPC bridge emulation. If the LPC bus is attached
to a virtual machine then we implicitly create COM1 and COM2 ISA devices.

Prior to this change the only way of attaching a COM port to the virtual
machine was by presenting it as a PCI device that is mapped at the legacy
I/O address 0x3F8 or 0x2F8.

There were some issues with the original approach:
- It did not work at all with UEFI because UEFI will reprogram the PCI device
BARs and remap the COM1/COM2 ports at non-legacy addresses.
- OpenBSD GENERIC kernel does not create a /dev/console because it expects
the uart device at the legacy 0x3F8/0x2F8 address to be an ISA device.
- It was functional with a FreeBSD guest but caused the console to appear
on /dev/ttyu2 which was not intuitive.

The uart emulation is now independent of the bus on which it resides. Thus it
is possible to have uart devices on the PCI bus in addition to the legacy
COM1/COM2 devices behind the LPC bus.

The command line option to attach ISA COM1/COM2 ports to a virtual machine is
"-s <bus>,lpc -l com1,stdio".

The command line option to create a PCI-attached uart device is:
"-s <bus>,uart[,stdio]"

The command line option to create PCI-attached COM1/COM2 device is:
"-S <bus>,uart[,stdio]". This style of creating COM ports is deprecated.

Discussed with: grehan
Reviewed by: grehan
Submitted by: Tycho Nightingale (tycho.nightingale@pluribusnetworks.com)

M share/examples/bhyve/vmrun.sh
AM usr.sbin/bhyve/legacy_irq.c
AM usr.sbin/bhyve/legacy_irq.h
M usr.sbin/bhyve/Makefile
AM usr.sbin/bhyve/uart_emul.c
M usr.sbin/bhyve/bhyverun.c
AM usr.sbin/bhyve/uart_emul.h
M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_uart.c
M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_emul.c
M usr.sbin/bhyve/inout.c
M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_emul.h
M usr.sbin/bhyve/inout.h
AM usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_lpc.c
AM usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_lpc.h

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# 0bfd163f 18-Oct-2013 Gleb Smirnoff <glebius@FreeBSD.org>

Merge head r233826 through r256722.


# 3caf0790 13-Oct-2013 Simon J. Gerraty <sjg@FreeBSD.org>

Merge head@256284


# 0e325afd 12-Oct-2013 Mark Murray <markm@FreeBSD.org>

MFC - tracking commit


# 1ccca3b5 10-Oct-2013 Alan Somers <asomers@FreeBSD.org>

IFC @256277

Approved by: ken (mentor)


# 2a8d400a 10-Oct-2013 Peter Grehan <grehan@FreeBSD.org>

Allow a 4-byte write to PCI config space to overlap
the 2 read-only bytes at the start of a PCI capability.
This is the sequence that OpenBSD uses when enabling
MSI interrupts, and works fine on real

Allow a 4-byte write to PCI config space to overlap
the 2 read-only bytes at the start of a PCI capability.
This is the sequence that OpenBSD uses when enabling
MSI interrupts, and works fine on real h/w.

In bhyve, convert the 4 byte write to a 2-byte write to
the r/w area past the first 2 r/o bytes of a capability.

Reviewed by: neel
Approved by: re@ (blanket)

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# 12babbf2 06-Oct-2013 Mark Murray <markm@FreeBSD.org>

MFC - tracking commit


# 318224bb 05-Oct-2013 Neel Natu <neel@FreeBSD.org>

Merge projects/bhyve_npt_pmap into head.

Make the amd64/pmap code aware of nested page table mappings used by bhyve
guests. This allows bhyve to associate each guest with its own vmspace and
deal wi

Merge projects/bhyve_npt_pmap into head.

Make the amd64/pmap code aware of nested page table mappings used by bhyve
guests. This allows bhyve to associate each guest with its own vmspace and
deal with nested page faults in the context of that vmspace. This also
enables features like accessed/dirty bit tracking, swapping to disk and
transparent superpage promotions of guest memory.

Guest vmspace:
Each bhyve guest has a unique vmspace to represent the physical memory
allocated to the guest. Each memory segment allocated by the guest is
mapped into the guest's address space via the 'vmspace->vm_map' and is
backed by an object of type OBJT_DEFAULT.

pmap types:
The amd64/pmap now understands two types of pmaps: PT_X86 and PT_EPT.

The PT_X86 pmap type is used by the vmspace associated with the host kernel
as well as user processes executing on the host. The PT_EPT pmap is used by
the vmspace associated with a bhyve guest.

Page Table Entries:
The EPT page table entries as mostly similar in functionality to regular
page table entries although there are some differences in terms of what
bits are used to express that functionality. For e.g. the dirty bit is
represented by bit 9 in the nested PTE as opposed to bit 6 in the regular
x86 PTE. Therefore the bitmask representing the dirty bit is now computed
at runtime based on the type of the pmap. Thus PG_M that was previously a
macro now becomes a local variable that is initialized at runtime using
'pmap_modified_bit(pmap)'.

An additional wrinkle associated with EPT mappings is that older Intel
processors don't have hardware support for tracking accessed/dirty bits in
the PTE. This means that the amd64/pmap code needs to emulate these bits to
provide proper accounting to the VM subsystem. This is achieved by using
the following mapping for EPT entries that need emulation of A/D bits:
Bit Position Interpreted By
PG_V 52 software (accessed bit emulation handler)
PG_RW 53 software (dirty bit emulation handler)
PG_A 0 hardware (aka EPT_PG_RD)
PG_M 1 hardware (aka EPT_PG_WR)

The idea to use the mapping listed above for A/D bit emulation came from
Alan Cox (alc@).

The final difference with respect to x86 PTEs is that some EPT implementations
do not support superpage mappings. This is recorded in the 'pm_flags' field
of the pmap.

TLB invalidation:
The amd64/pmap code has a number of ways to do invalidation of mappings
that may be cached in the TLB: single page, multiple pages in a range or the
entire TLB. All of these funnel into a single EPT invalidation routine called
'pmap_invalidate_ept()'. This routine bumps up the EPT generation number and
sends an IPI to the host cpus that are executing the guest's vcpus. On a
subsequent entry into the guest it will detect that the EPT has changed and
invalidate the mappings from the TLB.

Guest memory access:
Since the guest memory is no longer wired we need to hold the host physical
page that backs the guest physical page before we can access it. The helper
functions 'vm_gpa_hold()/vm_gpa_release()' are available for this purpose.

PCI passthru:
Guest's with PCI passthru devices will wire the entire guest physical address
space. The MMIO BAR associated with the passthru device is backed by a
vm_object of type OBJT_SG. An IOMMU domain is created only for guest's that
have one or more PCI passthru devices attached to them.

Limitations:
There isn't a way to map a guest physical page without execute permissions.
This is because the amd64/pmap code interprets the guest physical mappings as
user mappings since they are numerically below VM_MAXUSER_ADDRESS. Since PG_U
shares the same bit position as EPT_PG_EXECUTE all guest mappings become
automatically executable.

Thanks to Alan Cox and Konstantin Belousov for their rigorous code reviews
as well as their support and encouragement.

Thanks for John Baldwin for reviewing the use of OBJT_SG as the backing
object for pci passthru mmio regions.

Special thanks to Peter Holm for testing the patch on short notice.

Approved by: re
Discussed with: grehan
Reviewed by: alc, kib
Tested by: pho

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Revision tags: release/9.2.0
# ef90af83 20-Sep-2013 Peter Grehan <grehan@FreeBSD.org>

IFC @ r255692

Comment out IA32_MISC_ENABLE MSR access - this doesn't exist on AMD.
Need to sort out how arch-specific MSRs will be handled.


# d1d01586 05-Sep-2013 Simon J. Gerraty <sjg@FreeBSD.org>

Merge from head


# 46ed9e49 04-Sep-2013 Peter Grehan <grehan@FreeBSD.org>

IFC @ r255209


# f27c28dc 30-Aug-2013 Mark Murray <markm@FreeBSD.org>

MFC


# 6a52209f 27-Aug-2013 Neel Natu <neel@FreeBSD.org>

Allow single byte reads of the emulated MSI-X tables. This is not required
by the PCI specification but needed to dump MMIO space from "ddb" in the
guest.


# 50dc0db3 16-Aug-2013 Peter Grehan <grehan@FreeBSD.org>

Fix ordering of legacy IRQ reservations.

Submitted by: Jeremiah Lott jlott at averesystems dot com


# 40f65a4d 07-Aug-2013 Peter Grehan <grehan@FreeBSD.org>

IFC @ r254014


# 552311f4 17-Jul-2013 Xin LI <delphij@FreeBSD.org>

IFC @253398


# ceae90c2 05-Jul-2013 Peter Grehan <grehan@FreeBSD.org>

IFC @ r252763


# a38e2a64 04-Jul-2013 Peter Grehan <grehan@FreeBSD.org>

Support an optional "mac=" parameter to virtio-net config, to allow
users to set the MAC address for a device.

Clean up some obsolete code in pci_virtio_net.c

Allow an error return from a PCI devic

Support an optional "mac=" parameter to virtio-net config, to allow
users to set the MAC address for a device.

Clean up some obsolete code in pci_virtio_net.c

Allow an error return from a PCI device emulation's init routine
to be propagated all the way back to the top-level and result in
the process exiting.

Submitted by: Dinakar Medavaram dinnu sun at gmail (original version)

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# 34d244ed 02-Jul-2013 Peter Grehan <grehan@FreeBSD.org>

Fix up option parsing to allow a colon in the config section.
Clean up some other unnecessary code.

Submitted by: Dinakar Medavaram dinnu sun at gmail
Reviewed by: neel


# 75543036 28-Jun-2013 Peter Grehan <grehan@FreeBSD.org>

Allow the PCI config address register to be read. The Linux
kernel does this. Also remove an unused header file.

Submitted by: tycho nightingale at pluribusnetworks com
Reviewed by: neel


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