Avi Kivity wrote: > On 07/02/2010 11:00 AM, Xiao Guangrong wrote: >> The IOAPIC spec says: >> >> When accessing these registers, accesses must be done one dword at a >> time. >> For example, software should never access byte 2 from the Data >> register before >> accessing bytes 0 and 1. The hardware will not attempt to recover from >> a bad >> programming model in this case. >> >> So, this patch removes other width access >> >> > > The ioapic code also implements the ia64 iosapic. I'm guessing that > does support 64-bit accesses. Please check the iosapic documentation. > The iosapic also using 32-bit to access registers: All registers are accessed using 32-bit uncacheable loads and stores to a reserved memory location in system memory. This implies that to modify a field (e.g., a bit or a byte) in any register, the whole 32-bit register must be read, the field modified, and the 32 bits written back. Partial register access, or non-aligned register access, are implementation-defined by the I/O xAPIC and will not be compatible across different implementations. Also, registers that are described as 64 bits wide are accessed as multiple independent 32-bit registers. [ From << Intel® Itanium® Processor Family Interrupt Architecture Guide >>, P2-6 ] > There might be guests that use incorrect access despite the > documentation; if real hardware supports it, it should work. So we need > to start with just a warning, and allow the access. Later we can drop > the invalid access. If the OS contravene the spec, i thinks it's the OS's bug, also, i have tested some versions windows/linux guests, it's no broken, can we directly drop the other wide access? > >> @@ -288,6 +288,11 @@ static int ioapic_mmio_read(struct kvm_io_device >> *this, gpa_t addr, int len, >> ioapic_debug("addr %lx\n", (unsigned long)addr); >> ASSERT(!(addr& 0xf)); /* check alignment */ >> >> + if (len != 4) { >> + printk(KERN_WARNING "ioapic: wrong length %d\n", len); >> + return 0; >> + } >> + >> > > Guest triggered, so needs to be rate limited. Yeah, will using printk_ratelimit cooperate with it. -- 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