On Thu, 2014-06-05 at 17:25 +1000, Alexey Kardashevskiy wrote: > +This creates a virtual TCE (translation control entry) table, which > +is an IOMMU for PAPR-style virtual I/O. It is used to translate > +logical addresses used in virtual I/O into guest physical addresses, > +and provides a scatter/gather capability for PAPR virtual I/O. > + > +/* for KVM_CAP_SPAPR_TCE_64 */ > +struct kvm_create_spapr_tce_64 { > + __u64 liobn; > + __u64 window_size; > + __u64 bus_offset; > + __u32 page_shift; > + __u32 flags; > +}; > + > +The liobn field gives the logical IO bus number for which to create a > +TCE table. The window_size field specifies the size of the DMA window > +which this TCE table will translate - the table will contain one 64 > +bit TCE entry for every IOMMU page. The bus_offset field tells where > +this window is mapped on the IO bus. Hrm, the bus_offset cannot be set arbitrarily, it has some pretty strong HW limits depending on the type of bridge & architecture version... Do you plan to have that knowledge in qemu ? Or do you have some other mechanism to query it ? (I might be missing a piece of the puzzle here). Also one thing I've been pondering ... We'll end up wasting a ton of memory with those TCE tables. If you have 3 PEs mapped into a guest, it will try to create 3 DDW's mapping the entire guest memory and so 3 TCE tables large enough for that ... and which will contain exactly the same entries ! We really want to look into extending PAPR to allow the creation of table "aliases" so that the guest can essentially create one table and associate it with multiple PEs. We might still decide to do multiple copies for NUMA reasons but no more than one per node for example... at least we can have the policy in qemu/kvm. Also, do you currently require allocating a single physically contiguous table or do you support TCE trees in your implementation ? Cheers, Ben. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe kvm" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html