diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation/virt')
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/virt/kvm/api.txt | 55 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/virt/kvm/arm/pvtime.rst | 80 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/virt/kvm/devices/vcpu.txt | 14 |
3 files changed, 148 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/virt/kvm/api.txt b/Documentation/virt/kvm/api.txt index f94d06a12d20..49183add44e7 100644 --- a/Documentation/virt/kvm/api.txt +++ b/Documentation/virt/kvm/api.txt @@ -1002,12 +1002,18 @@ Specifying exception.has_esr on a system that does not support it will return -EINVAL. Setting anything other than the lower 24bits of exception.serror_esr will return -EINVAL. +It is not possible to read back a pending external abort (injected via +KVM_SET_VCPU_EVENTS or otherwise) because such an exception is always delivered +directly to the virtual CPU). + + struct kvm_vcpu_events { struct { __u8 serror_pending; __u8 serror_has_esr; + __u8 ext_dabt_pending; /* Align it to 8 bytes */ - __u8 pad[6]; + __u8 pad[5]; __u64 serror_esr; } exception; __u32 reserved[12]; @@ -1051,9 +1057,23 @@ contain a valid state and shall be written into the VCPU. ARM/ARM64: +User space may need to inject several types of events to the guest. + Set the pending SError exception state for this VCPU. It is not possible to 'cancel' an Serror that has been made pending. +If the guest performed an access to I/O memory which could not be handled by +userspace, for example because of missing instruction syndrome decode +information or because there is no device mapped at the accessed IPA, then +userspace can ask the kernel to inject an external abort using the address +from the exiting fault on the VCPU. It is a programming error to set +ext_dabt_pending after an exit which was not either KVM_EXIT_MMIO or +KVM_EXIT_ARM_NISV. This feature is only available if the system supports +KVM_CAP_ARM_INJECT_EXT_DABT. This is a helper which provides commonality in +how userspace reports accesses for the above cases to guests, across different +userspace implementations. Nevertheless, userspace can still emulate all Arm +exceptions by manipulating individual registers using the KVM_SET_ONE_REG API. + See KVM_GET_VCPU_EVENTS for the data structure. @@ -4471,6 +4491,39 @@ Hyper-V SynIC state change. Notification is used to remap SynIC event/message pages and to enable/disable SynIC messages/events processing in userspace. + /* KVM_EXIT_ARM_NISV */ + struct { + __u64 esr_iss; + __u64 fault_ipa; + } arm_nisv; + +Used on arm and arm64 systems. If a guest accesses memory not in a memslot, +KVM will typically return to userspace and ask it to do MMIO emulation on its +behalf. However, for certain classes of instructions, no instruction decode +(direction, length of memory access) is provided, and fetching and decoding +the instruction from the VM is overly complicated to live in the kernel. + +Historically, when this situation occurred, KVM would print a warning and kill +the VM. KVM assumed that if the guest accessed non-memslot memory, it was +trying to do I/O, which just couldn't be emulated, and the warning message was +phrased accordingly. However, what happened more often was that a guest bug +caused access outside the guest memory areas which should lead to a more +meaningful warning message and an external abort in the guest, if the access +did not fall within an I/O window. + +Userspace implementations can query for KVM_CAP_ARM_NISV_TO_USER, and enable +this capability at VM creation. Once this is done, these types of errors will +instead return to userspace with KVM_EXIT_ARM_NISV, with the valid bits from +the HSR (arm) and ESR_EL2 (arm64) in the esr_iss field, and the faulting IPA +in the fault_ipa field. Userspace can either fix up the access if it's +actually an I/O access by decoding the instruction from guest memory (if it's +very brave) and continue executing the guest, or it can decide to suspend, +dump, or restart the guest. + +Note that KVM does not skip the faulting instruction as it does for +KVM_EXIT_MMIO, but userspace has to emulate any change to the processing state +if it decides to decode and emulate the instruction. + /* Fix the size of the union. */ char padding[256]; }; diff --git a/Documentation/virt/kvm/arm/pvtime.rst b/Documentation/virt/kvm/arm/pvtime.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..2357dd2d8655 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/virt/kvm/arm/pvtime.rst @@ -0,0 +1,80 @@ +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 + +Paravirtualized time support for arm64 +====================================== + +Arm specification DEN0057/A defines a standard for paravirtualised time +support for AArch64 guests: + +https://developer.arm.com/docs/den0057/a + +KVM/arm64 implements the stolen time part of this specification by providing +some hypervisor service calls to support a paravirtualized guest obtaining a +view of the amount of time stolen from its execution. + +Two new SMCCC compatible hypercalls are defined: + +* PV_TIME_FEATURES: 0xC5000020 +* PV_TIME_ST: 0xC5000021 + +These are only available in the SMC64/HVC64 calling convention as +paravirtualized time is not available to 32 bit Arm guests. The existence of +the PV_FEATURES hypercall should be probed using the SMCCC 1.1 ARCH_FEATURES +mechanism before calling it. + +PV_TIME_FEATURES + ============= ======== ========== + Function ID: (uint32) 0xC5000020 + PV_call_id: (uint32) The function to query for support. + Currently only PV_TIME_ST is supported. + Return value: (int64) NOT_SUPPORTED (-1) or SUCCESS (0) if the relevant + PV-time feature is supported by the hypervisor. + ============= ======== ========== + +PV_TIME_ST + ============= ======== ========== + Function ID: (uint32) 0xC5000021 + Return value: (int64) IPA of the stolen time data structure for this + VCPU. On failure: + NOT_SUPPORTED (-1) + ============= ======== ========== + +The IPA returned by PV_TIME_ST should be mapped by the guest as normal memory +with inner and outer write back caching attributes, in the inner shareable +domain. A total of 16 bytes from the IPA returned are guaranteed to be +meaningfully filled by the hypervisor (see structure below). + +PV_TIME_ST returns the structure for the calling VCPU. + +Stolen Time +----------- + +The structure pointed to by the PV_TIME_ST hypercall is as follows: + ++-------------+-------------+-------------+----------------------------+ +| Field | Byte Length | Byte Offset | Description | ++=============+=============+=============+============================+ +| Revision | 4 | 0 | Must be 0 for version 1.0 | ++-------------+-------------+-------------+----------------------------+ +| Attributes | 4 | 4 | Must be 0 | ++-------------+-------------+-------------+----------------------------+ +| Stolen time | 8 | 8 | Stolen time in unsigned | +| | | | nanoseconds indicating how | +| | | | much time this VCPU thread | +| | | | was involuntarily not | +| | | | running on a physical CPU. | ++-------------+-------------+-------------+----------------------------+ + +All values in the structure are stored little-endian. + +The structure will be updated by the hypervisor prior to scheduling a VCPU. It +will be present within a reserved region of the normal memory given to the +guest. The guest should not attempt to write into this memory. There is a +structure per VCPU of the guest. + +It is advisable that one or more 64k pages are set aside for the purpose of +these structures and not used for other purposes, this enables the guest to map +the region using 64k pages and avoids conflicting attributes with other memory. + +For the user space interface see Documentation/virt/kvm/devices/vcpu.txt +section "3. GROUP: KVM_ARM_VCPU_PVTIME_CTRL". diff --git a/Documentation/virt/kvm/devices/vcpu.txt b/Documentation/virt/kvm/devices/vcpu.txt index 2b5dab16c4f2..6f3bd64a05b0 100644 --- a/Documentation/virt/kvm/devices/vcpu.txt +++ b/Documentation/virt/kvm/devices/vcpu.txt @@ -60,3 +60,17 @@ time to use the number provided for a given timer, overwriting any previously configured values on other VCPUs. Userspace should configure the interrupt numbers on at least one VCPU after creating all VCPUs and before running any VCPUs. + +3. GROUP: KVM_ARM_VCPU_PVTIME_CTRL +Architectures: ARM64 + +3.1 ATTRIBUTE: KVM_ARM_VCPU_PVTIME_IPA +Parameters: 64-bit base address +Returns: -ENXIO: Stolen time not implemented + -EEXIST: Base address already set for this VCPU + -EINVAL: Base address not 64 byte aligned + +Specifies the base address of the stolen time structure for this VCPU. The +base address must be 64 byte aligned and exist within a valid guest memory +region. See Documentation/virt/kvm/arm/pvtime.txt for more information +including the layout of the stolen time structure. |