On Friday 10 October 2008 06:26:25 Anthony Liguori wrote: > Mark McLoughlin wrote: > > Also, including virtio_net_hdr in the data buffer would need another > > feature flag. Rightly or wrongly, KVM's implementation requires > > virtio_net_hdr to be the first buffer: > > > > if (elem.in_num < 1 || elem.in_sg[0].iov_len != sizeof(*hdr)) { > > fprintf(stderr, "virtio-net header not in first element\n"); > > exit(1); > > } > > > > i.e. it's part of the ABI ... at least as KVM sees it :-) > > This is actually something that's broken in a nasty way. Having the > header in the first element is not supposed to be part of the ABI but it > sort of has to be ATM. > > If an older version of QEMU were to use a newer kernel, and the newer > kernel had a larger header size, then if we just made the header be the > first X bytes, QEMU has no way of knowing how many bytes that should be. > Instead, the guest actually has to allocate the virtio-net header in > such a way that it only presents the size depending on the features that > the host supports. We don't use a simple versioning scheme, so you'd > have to check for a combination of features advertised by the host but > that's not good enough because the host may disable certain features. > > Perhaps the header size is whatever the longest element that has been > commonly negotiated? Yes. The feature implies the header extension. Not knowing implies no extension is possible. Rusty. _______________________________________________ Virtualization mailing list Virtualization@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.linux-foundation.org/mailman/listinfo/virtualization