kernel-ark/include/linux/kvm_para.h
Ingo Molnar c21415e843 KVM: Add host hypercall support for vmx
Signed-off-by: Avi Kivity <avi@qumranet.com>
2007-03-04 11:12:40 +02:00

74 lines
2.1 KiB
C

#ifndef __LINUX_KVM_PARA_H
#define __LINUX_KVM_PARA_H
/*
* Guest OS interface for KVM paravirtualization
*
* Note: this interface is totally experimental, and is certain to change
* as we make progress.
*/
/*
* Per-VCPU descriptor area shared between guest and host. Writable to
* both guest and host. Registered with the host by the guest when
* a guest acknowledges paravirtual mode.
*
* NOTE: all addresses are guest-physical addresses (gpa), to make it
* easier for the hypervisor to map between the various addresses.
*/
struct kvm_vcpu_para_state {
/*
* API version information for compatibility. If there's any support
* mismatch (too old host trying to execute too new guest) then
* the host will deny entry into paravirtual mode. Any other
* combination (new host + old guest and new host + new guest)
* is supposed to work - new host versions will support all old
* guest API versions.
*/
u32 guest_version;
u32 host_version;
u32 size;
u32 ret;
/*
* The address of the vm exit instruction (VMCALL or VMMCALL),
* which the host will patch according to the CPU model the
* VM runs on:
*/
u64 hypercall_gpa;
} __attribute__ ((aligned(PAGE_SIZE)));
#define KVM_PARA_API_VERSION 1
/*
* This is used for an RDMSR's ECX parameter to probe for a KVM host.
* Hopefully no CPU vendor will use up this number. This is placed well
* out of way of the typical space occupied by CPU vendors' MSR indices,
* and we think (or at least hope) it wont be occupied in the future
* either.
*/
#define MSR_KVM_API_MAGIC 0x87655678
#define KVM_EINVAL 1
/*
* Hypercall calling convention:
*
* Each hypercall may have 0-6 parameters.
*
* 64-bit hypercall index is in RAX, goes from 0 to __NR_hypercalls-1
*
* 64-bit parameters 1-6 are in the standard gcc x86_64 calling convention
* order: RDI, RSI, RDX, RCX, R8, R9.
*
* 32-bit index is EBX, parameters are: EAX, ECX, EDX, ESI, EDI, EBP.
* (the first 3 are according to the gcc regparm calling convention)
*
* No registers are clobbered by the hypercall, except that the
* return value is in RAX.
*/
#define __NR_hypercalls 0
#endif