From: Tim Sell <Timothy.Sell@xxxxxxxxxx> Update documentation (including TODO) to reflect the current state of the drivers. Signed-off-by: Tim Sell <Timothy.Sell@xxxxxxxxxx> Signed-off-by: Benjamin Romer <benjamin.romer@xxxxxxxxxx> --- .../Documentation/ABI/sysfs-platform-visorchipset | 2 + drivers/staging/unisys/Documentation/overview.txt | 458 ++++++++++++++------- drivers/staging/unisys/TODO | 25 +- 3 files changed, 332 insertions(+), 153 deletions(-) diff --git a/drivers/staging/unisys/Documentation/ABI/sysfs-platform-visorchipset b/drivers/staging/unisys/Documentation/ABI/sysfs-platform-visorchipset index 28f8f12..b0498ff 100644 --- a/drivers/staging/unisys/Documentation/ABI/sysfs-platform-visorchipset +++ b/drivers/staging/unisys/Documentation/ABI/sysfs-platform-visorchipset @@ -1,3 +1,5 @@ +This file describes sysfs entries beneath /devices/platform/visorchipset. + What: install/error Date: 7/18/2014 KernelVersion: TBD diff --git a/drivers/staging/unisys/Documentation/overview.txt b/drivers/staging/unisys/Documentation/overview.txt index 8d078e4..25f93f2 100644 --- a/drivers/staging/unisys/Documentation/overview.txt +++ b/drivers/staging/unisys/Documentation/overview.txt @@ -1,76 +1,282 @@ +1. Overview +----------- -Overview - -This document describes the driver set for Unisys Secure Partitioning (s-ParĀ®). +This document describes the driver set for Unisys Secure Partitioning +(s-Par(R)). s-Par is firmware that provides hardware partitioning capabilities for splitting large-scale Intel x86 servers into multiple isolated partitions. s-Par provides a set of para-virtualized device drivers to allow guest partitions on the same server to share devices that would -normally be unsharable; specifically, PCI network interfaces and host -bus adapters that do not support shared access via SR-IOV. The shared -device is owned and managed by a small, single-purpose service -partition, which communicates with each guest partition sharing that -device through an area of shared memory called a channel. Additional -drivers provide support interfaces for communicating with s-Par -services, logging and diagnostics, and accessing the Linux console -from the s-Par user interface. - -The driver stack consists of a set of support modules, a set of bus -modules, and a set of device driver modules. The support modules -handle a number of common functions across each of the other -drivers. The bus modules provide organization for the device driver -modules, which provide the shared device functionality. - -These drivers are for the Unisys virtual PCI hardware model where the -hypervisor need not intervene (other than normal interrupt handling) -in the interactions between the client drivers and the virtual adapter -firmware in the adapter service partition. - -Driver Descriptions - -Device Modules - -The modules in this section handle shared devices and the virtual -buses required to support them. These modules use functions in and -depend on the modules described in the support modules section. - -visorchipset - -The visorchipset module receives device creation and destruction -events from the Command service partition of s-Par, as well as -controlling registration of shared device drivers with the s-Par -driver core. The events received are used to populate other s-Par -modules with their assigned shared devices. Visorchipset is required -for shared device drivers to function properly. Visorchipset also -stores information for handling dump disk device creation during -kdump. - -In operation, the visorchipset module processes device creation and -destruction messages sent by s-Par's Command service partition through -a channel. These messages result in creation (or destruction) of each -virtual bus and virtual device. Each bus and device is also associated -with a communication channel, which is used to communicate with one or -more IO service partitions to perform device IO on behalf of the -guest. - -virthba - -The virthba module provides access to a shared SCSI host bus adapter -and one or more disk devices, by proxying SCSI commands between the -guest and the service partition that owns the shared SCSI adapter, -using a channel between the guest and the service partition. The disks -that appear on the shared bus are defined by the s-Par configuration -and enforced by the service partition, while the guest driver handles -sending commands and handling responses. Each disk is shared as a -whole to a guest. Sharing the bus adapter in this way provides -resiliency; should the device encounter an error, only the service +normally be unsharable, specifically: + +* visornic - network interface +* visorhba - scsi disk adapter +* visorhid - keyboard and mouse + +These drivers conform to the standard Linux bus/device model described +within Documentation/driver-model/, and utilize a driver named visorbus to +present the virtual busses involved. Drivers in the 'visor*' driver set are +commonly referred to as "guest drivers" or "client drivers". All drivers +except visorbus expose a device of a specific usable class to the Linux guest +environment (e.g., block, network, or input), and are collectively referred +to as "function drivers". + +The back-end for each device is owned and managed by a small, +single-purpose service partition in the s-Par firmware, which communicates +with each guest partition sharing that device through an area of shared memory +called a "channel". In s-Par nomenclature, the back-end is often referred to +as the "service partition", "IO partition" (for virtual network and scsi disk +devices), or "console partition" (for virtual keyboard and mouse devices). + +Each virtual device requires exactly 1 dedicated channel, which the guest +driver and back-end use to communicate. The hypervisor need not intervene +(other than normal interrupt handling) in the interactions that occur across +this channel. + +NOT covered in this document: + +* s-Par also supports sharing physical PCI adapters via SR-IOV, but + because this requires no specific support in the guest partitions, it will + not be discussed in this document. Shared SR-IOV devices should be used + wherever possible for highest performance. + +* Because the s-Par back-end provides a standard EFI framebuffer to each + guest, the already-existing efifb Linux driver is used to provide guest + video access. Thus, the only s-Par-unique support that is necessary to + provide a guest graphics console are for keyboard and mouse (via visorhid). + + +2. Driver Descriptions +---------------------- + +2.1. visorbus +------------- + +2.1.1. Overview +--------------- + +The visorbus driver handles the virtual busses on which all of the virtual +devices reside. It provides a registration function named +visorbus_register_visor_driver() that is called by each of the function +drivers at initialization time, which the function driver uses to tell +visorbus about the device classes (via specifying a list of device type +GUIDs) it wants to handle. For use by function drivers, visorbus provides +implementation for struct visor_driver and struct visor_device, as well +as utility functions for communicating with the back-end. + +visorbus is associated with ACPI id "PNP0A07" in modules.alias, so if built +as a module it will typically be loaded automatically via standard udev or +systemd (God help us) configurations. + +visorbus can similarly force auto-loading of function drivers for virtual +devices it discovers, as it includes a MODALIAS environment variable of this +form in the hotplug uevent environment when each virtual device is +discovered: + + visorbus:<device type GUID> + +visorbus notifies each function driver when a device of its registered class +arrives and departs, by calling the function driver's probe() and remove() +methods. + +The actual struct device objects that correspond to each virtual bus and +each virtual device are created and owned by visorbus. These device objects +are created in response to messages from the s-Par back-end received on a +special control channel called the "controlvm channel" (each guest partition +has access to exactly 1 controlvm channel), and have a lifetime that is +independent of the function drivers that control them. + +2.1.2. "struct visor device" Function Driver Interfaces +------------------------------------------------------- + +The interface between visorbus and its function drivers is defined in +visorbus.h, and described below. + +When a visor function driver loads, it calls visorbus_register_visor_driver() +to register itself with visorbus. The significant information passed in this +exchange is as follows: + +* the GUID(s) of the channel type(s) that are handled by this driver, as + well as a "friendly name" identifying each (this will be published under + /sys/devices/visorbus<x>/dev<y>) + +* the addresses of callback functions to be called whenever a virtual + device/channel with the appropriate channel-type GUID(s) appears or + disappears + +* the address of a "channel_interrupt" function, which will be automatically + called at specific intervals to enable the driver to poll the device + channel for activity + +The following functions implemented within each function driver will be +called automatically by the visorbus driver at appropriate times: + +* The probe() function notifies about the creation of each new virtual + device/channel instance. + +* The remove() function notifies about the destruction of a virtual + device/channel instance. + +* The channel_interrupt() function is called at frequent intervals to + give the function driver an opportunity to poll the virtual device channel + for requests. Information is passed to this function to enable the + function driver to use the visorchannel_signalinsert() and + visorchannel_signalremove() functions to respond to and initiate activity + over the channel. (Note that since it is the visorbus driver that + determines when this is called, it is very easy to switch to + interrupt-driven mechanisms when available for particular virtual device + types.) + +* The pause() function is called should it ever be necessary to direct the + function driver to temporarily stop accessing the device channel. An + example of when this is needed is when the service partition implementing + the back-end of the virtual device needs to be recovered. After a + successful return of pause(), the function driver must not access the + device channel until a subsequent resume() occurs. + +* The resume() function is the "book-end" to pause(), and is described above. + +If/when a function driver creates a Linux device (that needs to be accessed +from usermode), it calls visorbus_registerdevnode(), passing the major and +minor number of the device. (Of course not all function drivers will need +to do this.) This simply creates the appropriate "devmajorminor" sysfs entry +described below, so that a hotplug script can use it to create a device node. + +2.1.3. sysfs Advertised Information +----------------------------------- + +Because visorbus is a standard Linux bus driver in the model described in +Documentation/driver-model/, the hierarchy of s-Par virtual devices is +published in the sysfs tree beneath /bus/visorbus/, e.g., +/sys/bus/visorbus/devices/ might look like: + + vbus1:dev1 -> ../../../devices/visorbus1/vbus1:dev1 + vbus1:dev2 -> ../../../devices/visorbus1/vbus1:dev2 + vbus1:dev3 -> ../../../devices/visorbus1/vbus1:dev3 + vbus2:dev0 -> ../../../devices/visorbus2/vbus2:dev0 + vbus2:dev1 -> ../../../devices/visorbus2/vbus2:dev1 + vbus2:dev2 -> ../../../devices/visorbus2/vbus2:dev2 + visorbus1 -> ../../../devices/visorbus1 + visorbus2 -> ../../../devices/visorbus2 + +visor_device notes: + +* Each visorbus<n> entry denotes the existence of a struct visor_device + denoting virtual bus #<n>. A unique s-Par channel exists for each such + virtual bus. + +* Virtual bus numbers uniquely identify s-Par back-end service partitions. + In this example, bus 1 corresponds to the s-Par console partition + (controls keyboard, video, and mouse), whereas bus 2 corresponds to the + s-Par IO partition (controls network and disk). + +* Each vbus<x>:dev<y> entry denotes the existence of a struct visor_device + denoting virtual device #<y> outboard of virtual bus #<x>. A unique s-Par + channel exists for each such virtual device. + +* If a function driver has loaded and claimed a particular device, the + bus/visorbus/devices/vbus<x>:dev<y>/driver symlink will indicate that + function driver. + +Every active visorbus device will have a sysfs subtree under: + + /sys/devices/visorbus<x>/vbus<x>:dev<y>/ + +The following files exist under /sys/devices/visorbus<x>/vbus<x>:dev<y>: + + subsystem link to sysfs tree that describes the + visorbus bus type; e.g.: + ../../../bus/visorbus + + driver link to sysfs tree that describes the + function driver controlling this device; + e.g.: + ../../../bus/visorbus/drivers/visorhba + Note that this "driver" link will not exist + if the appropriate function driver has not + been loaded yet. + + devmajorminor + + <devname> if applicable, each file here identifies (via + ... its file contents) the + "<major>:<minor>" needed for a device node to + enable access from usermode. There is exactly + one file here for each different device node + that can be accessed (from usermode). Note + that this info is provided by a particular + function driver, so these will not exist + until AFTER the appropriate function driver + controlling this device class is loaded. + + channel properties of the device channel (all in + ascii text format) + + clientpartition handle identifying the guest (client) side + of this channel, e.g. 0x10000000. + + nbytes total size of this channel in bytes + + physaddr the guest physical address for the base of + the channel + + typeguid a GUID identifying the channel type, in + xxxxxxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxx notation + + typename a "friendly name" for this channel type, e.g., + "keyboard". Note that this name is provided by + a particular function driver, so "typename" + will return an empty string until AFTER the + appropriate function driver controlling this + channel type is loaded + + zoneguid a GUID identifying the channel zone, in + xxxxxxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxx notation + + +2.2. visorhba +------------- + +The visorhba driver registers with visorbus as the function driver to +handle virtual scsi disk devices, specified using the +SPAR_VHBA_CHANNEL_PROTOCOL_UUID type in the visorbus_register_visor_driver() +call. visorhba uses scsi_add_host() to expose a Linux block device +(e.g., /sys/block/) in the guest environment for each s-Par virtual device. + +visorhba provides access to a shared SCSI host bus adapter and one or more +disk devices, by proxying SCSI commands between the guest and the service +partition that owns the shared SCSI adapter, using a channel between the +guest and the service partition. The disks that appear on the shared bus +are defined by the s-Par configuration and enforced by the service partition, +while the guest driver handles sending commands and handling responses. Each +disk is shared as a whole to a guest. Sharing the bus adapter in this way +provides resiliency; should the device encounter an error, only the service partition is rebooted, and the device is reinitialized. This allows guests to continue running and to recover from the error. -virtnic +When compiled as a module, visorhba can be autoloaded by visorbus in +standard udev/systemd environments, as it includes the modules.alias +definition: + + "visorbus:"+SPAR_VHBA_CHANNEL_PROTOCOL_UUID_STR + +i.e.: + + alias visorbus:414815ed-c58c-11da-95a9-00e08161165f visorhba + -The virtnic module provides a paravirtualized network interface to a +2.3. visornic +------------- + +The visornic driver registers with visorbus as the function driver to +handle virtual network devices, specified using the +SPAR_VNIC_CHANNEL_PROTOCOL_UUID type in the visorbus_register_visor_driver() +call. visornic uses register_netdev() to expose a Linux device of class net +(e.g., /sys/class/net/) in the guest environment for each s-Par virtual +device. + +visornic provides a paravirtualized network interface to a guest by proxying buffer information between the guest and the service partition that owns the shared network interface, using a channel between the guest and the service partition. The connectivity of this @@ -79,96 +285,72 @@ partitions is defined by the s-Par configuration and enforced by the service partition; the guest driver handles communication and link status. -visorserial - -The visorserial module allows the console of the linux guest to be -accessed via the s-Par console serial channel. It creates devices in -/dev/visorserialclientX which behave like a serial terminal and are -connected to the diagnostics system in s-Par. By assigning a getty to -the terminal in the guest, a user could log into and access the guest -from the s-Par diagnostics SWITCH RUN terminal. - -visorbus - -The visorbus module handles the bus functions for most functional -drivers except visorserial, visordiag, virthba, and virtnic. It -maintains the sysfs subtree /sys/devices/visorbus*/. It is responsible -for device creation and destruction of the devices on its bus. - -visorclientbus - -The visorclientbus module forwards the bus functions for virthba, and -virtnic to the virtpci driver. - -virtpci - -The virtpci module handles the bus functions for virthba, and virtnic. - -s-Par Integration Modules - -The modules in this section provide integration with s-Par guest -partition services like diagnostics and remote desktop. These modules -depend on functions in the modules described in the support modules -section. - -visorvideoclient - -The visorvideoclient module provides functionality for video support -for the Unisys s-Par Partition Desktop application. The guest OS must -also have the UEFI GOP protocol enabled for the partition desktop to -function. visorconinclient The visorconinclient module provides -keyboard and mouse support for the Unisys s-Par Partition Desktop -application. +When compiled as a module, visornic can be autoloaded by visorbus in +standard udev/systemd environments, as it includes the modules.alias +definition: -sparstop + "visorbus:"+SPAR_VNIC_CHANNEL_PROTOCOL_UUID_STR -The sparstop module handles requests from the Unisys s-Par platform to -shutdown the linux guest. It allows a program on the guest to perform -clean-up functions on the guest before the guest is shut down or -rebooted using ACPI. +i.e.: -visordiag + alias visorbus:8cd5994d-c58e-11da-95a9-00e08161165f visornic -This driver provides the ability for the guest to write information -into the s-Par diagnostics subsystem. It creates a set of devices -named /dev/visordiag.X which can be written to by the guest to add -text to the s-Par system log. -Support Modules +2.4. visorhid +------------- -The modules described in this section provide functions and -abstractions to support the modules described in the previous -sections, to avoid having duplicated functionality. +The visorhid driver registers with visorbus as the function driver to +handle human input devices, specified using the +SPAR_KEYBOARD_CHANNEL_PROTOCOL_UUID and SPAR_MOUSE_CHANNEL_PROTOCOL_UUID +types in the visorbus_register_visor_driver() call. visorhid uses +input_register_device() to expose devices of class input +(e.g., /sys/class/input/) for virtual keyboard and virtual mouse devices. +A s-Par virtual keyboard device maps 1-to-1 with a Linux input device +named "visor Keyboard", while a s-Par virtual mouse device has 2 Linux input +devices created for it: 1 named "visor Wheel", and 1 named "visor Mouse". -visornoop +By registering as input class devices, modern versions of X will +automatically find and properly use s-Par virtual keyboard and mouse devices. +As the s-Par back-end reports keyboard and mouse activity via events on the +virtual device channel, the visorhid driver delivers the activity to the +Linux environment by calling input_report_key() and input_report_abs(). -The visornoop module is a placeholder that responds to device -create/destroy messages that are currently not in use by linux guests. +You can interact with the guest console using the usyscon Partition Desktop +(a.k.a., "pd") application, provided as part of s-Par. After installing the +usyscon Partition Desktop into a Linux environment via the +usyscon_partitiondesktop-*.rpm, or into a Windows environment via +PartitionDesktop.msi, you will be able to launch a console for your guest +Linux environment by clicking the console icon in the s-Par web UI. -visoruislib +When compiled as a module, visorhid can be autoloaded by visorbus in +standard udev/systemd environments, as it includes the modules.alias +definition: -The visoruislib module is a support library, used to handle requests -from virtpci. + "visorbus:"+SPAR_MOUSE_CHANNEL_PROTOCOL_UUID_STR + "visorbus:"+SPAR_KEYBOARD_CHANNEL_PROTOCOL_UUID_STR -visorchannelstub +i.e.: -The visorchannelstub module provides support routines for storing and -retrieving data from a channel. + alias visorbus:c73416d0-b0b8-44af-b304-9d2ae99f1b3d visorhid + alias visorbus:addf07d4-94a9-46e2-81c3-61abcdbdbd87 visorhid -visorchannel -The visorchannel module is a support library that abstracts reading -and writing a channel in memory. +3. Minimum Required Driver Set +------------------------------ -visorutil +visorbus is required for every Linux guest running under s-Par. -The visorutil module is a support library required by all other s-Par -driver modules. Among its features it abstracts reading, writing, and -manipulating a block of memory. +visorhba is typically required for a Linux guest running under s-Par, as it +is required if your guest boot disk is a virtual device provided by the s-Par +back-end, which is the default configuration. However, for advanced +configurations where the Linux guest boots via an SR-IOV-provided HBA or +SAN disk for example, visorhba is not technically required. -Minimum Required Driver Set +visornic is typically required for a Linux guest running under s-Par, as it +is required if your guest network interface is a virtual device provided by +the s-Par back-end, which is the default configuration. However, for +configurations where the Linux guest is provided with an SR-IOV NIC +for example, visornic is not technically required. -The drivers required to boot a Linux guest are visorchipset, visorbus, -visorvideoclient, visorconinclient, visoruislib, visorchannelstub, -visorchannel, and visorutil. The other drivers are required by the -product configurations that are currently being marketed. +visorhid is only required for a Linux guest running under s-Par if you +require graphics-mode access to your guest console. diff --git a/drivers/staging/unisys/TODO b/drivers/staging/unisys/TODO index 034ac61..d863f26 100644 --- a/drivers/staging/unisys/TODO +++ b/drivers/staging/unisys/TODO @@ -1,19 +1,14 @@ TODO: - -checkpatch warnings - -move /proc entries to /sys - -proper major number(s) - -add other drivers needed for full functionality: - -visorclientbus - -visorbus - -visordiag - -virtnic - -visornoop - -visorserial - -visorvideoclient - -visorconinclient - -sparstop - -move individual drivers into proper driver subsystems - + - enhance visornic to use channel_interrupt() hook instead of a + kernel thread + - enhance visorhba to use channel_interrupt() hook instead of a + kernel thread + - teach visorbus to handle virtual interrupts triggered by s-Par + back-end, and call function driver's channel_interrupt() function + when they occur + - enhance debugfs interfaces (e.g., per device, etc.) + - upgrade/remove deprecated workqueue operations + - move individual drivers into proper driver subsystems Patches to: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> -- 2.1.4
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