Il 30/09/2013 22:11, Chris Metcalf ha scritto: > As I said to Gleb in the previous email - sorry for the delay in > replying to your thoughtful comments! > > > On 9/10/2013 8:47 AM, Paolo Bonzini wrote: >> Il 28/08/2013 22:58, Chris Metcalf ha scritto: >>> This change enables support for a virtio-based console, >>> network support, and block driver support. >>> >>> We remove some debug code in relocate_kernel_64.S that made raw >>> calls to the hv_console_putc Tilera hypervisor API, since everything >>> now should funnel through the early_hv_write() API. >>> >>> Signed-off-by: Chris Metcalf <cmetcalf@xxxxxxxxxx> >> Why couldn't this use the "regular" virtio-mmio interface? > > We probably should! We were working with a CentOS 6 style distribution, > which has an older version of qemu; we upgraded slightly to 0.13 in > the thought that minimizing version skew would help distribution compatibility. > That version doesn't have the virtio-mmio stuff. But you're right, we probably > should return the virtio-mmio stuff to the community instead, even if we're > going to keep something like this patch in our local copy of KVM. Thanks, that looks like the right thing to do. The difference between s390-virtio and virtio-mmio is that s390 has a single device that supports multiple "back-ends", with hotplug and hot-unplug support. virtio-mmio supports a fixed number of devices, defined in the board by creating a number of instances of the "naked" virtio-mmio front-ends. On the other hand, s390-virtio was never fully specified and is not part of the virtio standardization effort (because s390 has now switched to a different mechanism). >>> static void early_hv_write(struct console *con, const char *s, unsigned n) >>> { >>> +#ifdef CONFIG_KVM_GUEST >>> + char buf[512]; >>> + >>> + if (n > sizeof(buf) - 1) >>> + n = sizeof(buf) - 1; >>> + memcpy(buf, s, n); >>> + buf[n] = '\0'; >>> + >>> + hcall_virtio(KVM_VIRTIO_NOTIFY, __pa(buf)); >> How can userspace know the difference between KVM_VIRTIO_NOTIFY with a >> string buffer, and KVM_VIRTIO_NOTIFY with a config space pointer? >> >> In fact, this looks like a completely separate hypercall, why not keep >> hv_console_putc? > > Good point. Right now in qemu the virtio hypercall with a KVM_VIRTIO_NOTIFY > reason either does a virtio_queue_notify(), if the address is not in RAM, > or a print, if it is. It does seem we could just have separate calls; > the reason we grouped it in with the KVM_VIRTIO stuff instead of implementing > it with the hv_console_write() API is just that it uses the virtio_console > API to do the work. But we probably could do it the other way too, and > that might arguably make more sense. We'll think about it. Yeah, using virtio-console is just an implementation-dependent issue. I think it's better to keep the previous guest code for early printk. Paolo -- 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