kernel-ark/Documentation/virt/kvm/devices/xive.rst
Juergen Gross a1c42ddedf kvm: rename KVM_MAX_VCPU_ID to KVM_MAX_VCPU_IDS
KVM_MAX_VCPU_ID is not specifying the highest allowed vcpu-id, but the
number of allowed vcpu-ids. This has already led to confusion, so
rename KVM_MAX_VCPU_ID to KVM_MAX_VCPU_IDS to make its semantics more
clear

Suggested-by: Eduardo Habkost <ehabkost@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Juergen Gross <jgross@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
Message-Id: <20210913135745.13944-3-jgross@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
2021-09-30 04:27:05 -04:00

248 lines
8.2 KiB
ReStructuredText

.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
===========================================================
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
1.3 KVM_DEV_XIVE_NR_SERVERS (write only)
The kvm_device_attr.addr points to a __u32 value which is the number of
interrupt server numbers (ie, highest possible vcpu id plus one).
Errors:
======= ==========================================
-EINVAL Value greater than KVM_MAX_VCPU_IDS.
-EFAULT Invalid user pointer for attr->addr.
-EBUSY A vCPU is already connected to the device.
======= ==========================================
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