Wei Liu <wei.liu@xxxxxxxxxx> writes: > On Mon, Jul 11, 2022 at 10:48:21AM -0700, Michael Kelley wrote: >> This documentation is a high level overview to explain the basics >> of Linux running as a guest on Hyper-V. The intent is to document >> the forest, not the trees. The Hyper-V Top Level Functional Spec >> provides conceptual material and API details for the core Hyper-V >> hypervisor, and this documentation provides additional info on >> how that functionality is applied to Linux. Also, there's no >> public documentation on VMbus or the VMbus synthetic devices, so >> this documentation helps fill that gap at a conceptual level. This >> documentation is not API-level documentation, which can be seen >> in the code and associated comments. >> >> More topics will be added in future patches, including: >> >> * Miscellaneous synthetic devices like KVP, timesync, VSS, etc. >> * Virtual PCI support >> * Isolated/Confidential VMs >> * UIO driver >> >> If you think I'm missing a topic that fits into the overall >> approach as described, feel free to suggest text, or let me >> know and I can add it to my list. >> >> Changes in v2: >> * Updated clocks.rst to use section hierarchy that matches >> overview.rst and vmbus.rst [Wei Liu] >> >> Michael Kelley (3): >> Documentation: hyperv: Add overview of Hyper-V enlightenments >> Documentation: hyperv: Add overview of VMbus >> Documentation: hyperv: Add overview of clocks and timers > > Content-wise all patches look good to me. > > Jonathan, let me know how you would like to handle this series. I'm > happy to carry them in hyperv-next. I went ahead and applied them while I was in the neighborhood. Thanks, jon