qemu-e2k/hw/display/xenfb.c

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/*
* xen paravirt framebuffer backend
*
* Copyright IBM, Corp. 2005-2006
* Copyright Red Hat, Inc. 2006-2008
*
* Authors:
* Anthony Liguori <aliguori@us.ibm.com>,
* Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com>,
* Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>,
* Pat Campbell <plc@novell.com>,
* Gerd Hoffmann <kraxel@redhat.com>
*
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
* it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
* the Free Software Foundation; under version 2 of the License.
*
* This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
* GNU General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along
* with this program; if not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
*/
#include "qemu/osdep.h"
#include "qemu/units.h"
#include "ui/input.h"
#include "ui/console.h"
#include "hw/xen/xen-legacy-backend.h"
#include "hw/xen/interface/io/fbif.h"
#include "hw/xen/interface/io/kbdif.h"
#include "hw/xen/interface/io/protocols.h"
#include "trace.h"
#ifndef BTN_LEFT
#define BTN_LEFT 0x110 /* from <linux/input.h> */
#endif
/* -------------------------------------------------------------------- */
struct common {
struct XenLegacyDevice xendev; /* must be first */
void *page;
};
struct XenInput {
struct common c;
int abs_pointer_wanted; /* Whether guest supports absolute pointer */
int raw_pointer_wanted; /* Whether guest supports raw (unscaled) pointer */
QemuInputHandlerState *qkbd;
QemuInputHandlerState *qmou;
int axis[INPUT_AXIS__MAX];
int wheel;
};
#define UP_QUEUE 8
struct XenFB {
struct common c;
QemuConsole *con;
size_t fb_len;
int row_stride;
int depth;
int width;
int height;
int offset;
void *pixels;
int fbpages;
int feature_update;
int bug_trigger;
int do_resize;
struct {
int x,y,w,h;
} up_rects[UP_QUEUE];
int up_count;
int up_fullscreen;
};
static const GraphicHwOps xenfb_ops;
/* -------------------------------------------------------------------- */
static int common_bind(struct common *c)
{
xen: Switch uses of xc_map_foreign_range into xc_map_foreign_pages In Xen 4.7 we are refactoring parts libxenctrl into a number of separate libraries which will provide backward and forward API and ABI compatiblity. One such library will be libxenforeignmemory which provides access to privileged foreign mappings and which will provide an interface equivalent to xc_map_foreign_{pages,bulk}. In preparation for this switch all uses of xc_map_foreign_range to xc_map_foreign_pages. This is trivial because size was always XC_PAGE_SIZE so the necessary adjustments are trivial: * Pass &mfn (an array of length 1) instead of mfn. The function takes a pointer to const, so there is no possibily of mfn changing due to this change. * Pass nr_pages=1 instead of size=XC_PAGE_SIZE There is one wrinkle in xen_console.c:con_initialise() where con->ring_ref is an int but can in some code paths (when !xendev->dev) be treated as an mfn. I think this is an existing latent truncation hazard on platforms where xen_pfn_t is 64-bit and int is 32-bit (e.g. amd64, both arm* variants). I'm unsure under what circumstances xendev->dev can be NULL or if anything elsewhere ensures the value fits into an int. For now I just use a temporary xen_pfn_t to in effect upcast the pointer from int* to xen_pfn_t*. In xenfb.c:common_bind we now explicitly launder the mfn into a xen_pfn_t, so it has the correct type to be passed to xc_map_foreign_pages and doesn't provoke warnings on 32-bit x86. Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ian.campbell@citrix.com> Reviewed-by: Stefano Stabellini <stefano.stabellini@eu.citrix.com> Signed-off-by: Stefano Stabellini <stefano.stabellini@eu.citrix.com>
2016-01-15 14:23:40 +01:00
uint64_t val;
xen_pfn_t mfn;
xen: Switch uses of xc_map_foreign_range into xc_map_foreign_pages In Xen 4.7 we are refactoring parts libxenctrl into a number of separate libraries which will provide backward and forward API and ABI compatiblity. One such library will be libxenforeignmemory which provides access to privileged foreign mappings and which will provide an interface equivalent to xc_map_foreign_{pages,bulk}. In preparation for this switch all uses of xc_map_foreign_range to xc_map_foreign_pages. This is trivial because size was always XC_PAGE_SIZE so the necessary adjustments are trivial: * Pass &mfn (an array of length 1) instead of mfn. The function takes a pointer to const, so there is no possibily of mfn changing due to this change. * Pass nr_pages=1 instead of size=XC_PAGE_SIZE There is one wrinkle in xen_console.c:con_initialise() where con->ring_ref is an int but can in some code paths (when !xendev->dev) be treated as an mfn. I think this is an existing latent truncation hazard on platforms where xen_pfn_t is 64-bit and int is 32-bit (e.g. amd64, both arm* variants). I'm unsure under what circumstances xendev->dev can be NULL or if anything elsewhere ensures the value fits into an int. For now I just use a temporary xen_pfn_t to in effect upcast the pointer from int* to xen_pfn_t*. In xenfb.c:common_bind we now explicitly launder the mfn into a xen_pfn_t, so it has the correct type to be passed to xc_map_foreign_pages and doesn't provoke warnings on 32-bit x86. Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ian.campbell@citrix.com> Reviewed-by: Stefano Stabellini <stefano.stabellini@eu.citrix.com> Signed-off-by: Stefano Stabellini <stefano.stabellini@eu.citrix.com>
2016-01-15 14:23:40 +01:00
if (xenstore_read_fe_uint64(&c->xendev, "page-ref", &val) == -1)
return -1;
xen: Switch uses of xc_map_foreign_range into xc_map_foreign_pages In Xen 4.7 we are refactoring parts libxenctrl into a number of separate libraries which will provide backward and forward API and ABI compatiblity. One such library will be libxenforeignmemory which provides access to privileged foreign mappings and which will provide an interface equivalent to xc_map_foreign_{pages,bulk}. In preparation for this switch all uses of xc_map_foreign_range to xc_map_foreign_pages. This is trivial because size was always XC_PAGE_SIZE so the necessary adjustments are trivial: * Pass &mfn (an array of length 1) instead of mfn. The function takes a pointer to const, so there is no possibily of mfn changing due to this change. * Pass nr_pages=1 instead of size=XC_PAGE_SIZE There is one wrinkle in xen_console.c:con_initialise() where con->ring_ref is an int but can in some code paths (when !xendev->dev) be treated as an mfn. I think this is an existing latent truncation hazard on platforms where xen_pfn_t is 64-bit and int is 32-bit (e.g. amd64, both arm* variants). I'm unsure under what circumstances xendev->dev can be NULL or if anything elsewhere ensures the value fits into an int. For now I just use a temporary xen_pfn_t to in effect upcast the pointer from int* to xen_pfn_t*. In xenfb.c:common_bind we now explicitly launder the mfn into a xen_pfn_t, so it has the correct type to be passed to xc_map_foreign_pages and doesn't provoke warnings on 32-bit x86. Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ian.campbell@citrix.com> Reviewed-by: Stefano Stabellini <stefano.stabellini@eu.citrix.com> Signed-off-by: Stefano Stabellini <stefano.stabellini@eu.citrix.com>
2016-01-15 14:23:40 +01:00
mfn = (xen_pfn_t)val;
assert(val == mfn);
if (xenstore_read_fe_int(&c->xendev, "event-channel", &c->xendev.remote_port) == -1)
return -1;
xen: Switch uses of xc_map_foreign_{pages,bulk} to use libxenforeignmemory API. In Xen 4.7 we are refactoring parts libxenctrl into a number of separate libraries which will provide backward and forward API and ABI compatiblity. One such library will be libxenforeignmemory which provides access to privileged foreign mappings and which will provide an interface equivalent to xc_map_foreign_{pages,bulk}. The new xenforeignmemory_map() function behaves like xc_map_foreign_pages() when the err argument is NULL and like xc_map_foreign_bulk() when err is non-NULL, which maps into the shim here onto checking err == NULL and calling the appropriate old function. Note that xenforeignmemory_map() takes the number of pages before the arrays themselves, in order to support potentially future use of variable-length-arrays in the prototype (in the future, when Xen's baseline toolchain requirements are new enough to ensure VLAs are supported). In preparation for adding support for libxenforeignmemory add support to the <=4.0 and <=4.6 compat code in xen_common.h to allow us to switch to using the new API. These shims will disappear for versions of Xen which include libxenforeignmemory. Since libxenforeignmemory will have its own handle type but for <= 4.6 the functionality is provided by using a libxenctrl handle we introduce a new global xen_fmem alongside the existing xen_xc. In fact we make xen_fmem a pointer to the existing xen_xc, which then works correctly with both <=4.0 (xc handle is an int) and <=4.6 (xc handle is a pointer). In the latter case xen_fmem is actually a double indirect pointer, but it all falls out in the wash. Unlike libxenctrl libxenforeignmemory has an explicit unmap function, rather than just specifying that munmap should be used, so the unmap paths are updated to use xenforeignmemory_unmap, which is a shim for munmap on these versions of xen. The mappings in xen-hvm.c do not appear to be unmapped (which makes sense for a qemu-dm process) In fb_disconnect this results in a change from simply mmap over the existing mapping (with an implicit munmap) to expliclty unmapping with xenforeignmemory_unmap and then mapping the required anonymous memory in the same hole. I don't think this is a problem since any other thread which was racily touching this region would already be running the risk of hitting the mapping halfway through the call. If this is thought to be a problem then we could consider adding an extra API to the libxenforeignmemory interface to replace a foreign mapping with anonymous shared memory, but I'd prefer not to. Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ian.campbell@citrix.com> Reviewed-by: Stefano Stabellini <stefano.stabellini@eu.citrix.com> Signed-off-by: Stefano Stabellini <stefano.stabellini@eu.citrix.com>
2016-01-15 14:23:41 +01:00
c->page = xenforeignmemory_map(xen_fmem, c->xendev.dom,
PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE, 1, &mfn, NULL);
if (c->page == NULL)
return -1;
xen_be_bind_evtchn(&c->xendev);
xen_pv_printf(&c->xendev, 1,
"ring mfn %"PRI_xen_pfn", remote-port %d, local-port %d\n",
mfn, c->xendev.remote_port, c->xendev.local_port);
return 0;
}
static void common_unbind(struct common *c)
{
xen_pv_unbind_evtchn(&c->xendev);
if (c->page) {
xen: Switch uses of xc_map_foreign_{pages,bulk} to use libxenforeignmemory API. In Xen 4.7 we are refactoring parts libxenctrl into a number of separate libraries which will provide backward and forward API and ABI compatiblity. One such library will be libxenforeignmemory which provides access to privileged foreign mappings and which will provide an interface equivalent to xc_map_foreign_{pages,bulk}. The new xenforeignmemory_map() function behaves like xc_map_foreign_pages() when the err argument is NULL and like xc_map_foreign_bulk() when err is non-NULL, which maps into the shim here onto checking err == NULL and calling the appropriate old function. Note that xenforeignmemory_map() takes the number of pages before the arrays themselves, in order to support potentially future use of variable-length-arrays in the prototype (in the future, when Xen's baseline toolchain requirements are new enough to ensure VLAs are supported). In preparation for adding support for libxenforeignmemory add support to the <=4.0 and <=4.6 compat code in xen_common.h to allow us to switch to using the new API. These shims will disappear for versions of Xen which include libxenforeignmemory. Since libxenforeignmemory will have its own handle type but for <= 4.6 the functionality is provided by using a libxenctrl handle we introduce a new global xen_fmem alongside the existing xen_xc. In fact we make xen_fmem a pointer to the existing xen_xc, which then works correctly with both <=4.0 (xc handle is an int) and <=4.6 (xc handle is a pointer). In the latter case xen_fmem is actually a double indirect pointer, but it all falls out in the wash. Unlike libxenctrl libxenforeignmemory has an explicit unmap function, rather than just specifying that munmap should be used, so the unmap paths are updated to use xenforeignmemory_unmap, which is a shim for munmap on these versions of xen. The mappings in xen-hvm.c do not appear to be unmapped (which makes sense for a qemu-dm process) In fb_disconnect this results in a change from simply mmap over the existing mapping (with an implicit munmap) to expliclty unmapping with xenforeignmemory_unmap and then mapping the required anonymous memory in the same hole. I don't think this is a problem since any other thread which was racily touching this region would already be running the risk of hitting the mapping halfway through the call. If this is thought to be a problem then we could consider adding an extra API to the libxenforeignmemory interface to replace a foreign mapping with anonymous shared memory, but I'd prefer not to. Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ian.campbell@citrix.com> Reviewed-by: Stefano Stabellini <stefano.stabellini@eu.citrix.com> Signed-off-by: Stefano Stabellini <stefano.stabellini@eu.citrix.com>
2016-01-15 14:23:41 +01:00
xenforeignmemory_unmap(xen_fmem, c->page, 1);
c->page = NULL;
}
}
/* -------------------------------------------------------------------- */
/* Send an event to the keyboard frontend driver */
static int xenfb_kbd_event(struct XenInput *xenfb,
union xenkbd_in_event *event)
{
struct xenkbd_page *page = xenfb->c.page;
uint32_t prod;
if (xenfb->c.xendev.be_state != XenbusStateConnected)
return 0;
if (!page)
return 0;
prod = page->in_prod;
if (prod - page->in_cons == XENKBD_IN_RING_LEN) {
errno = EAGAIN;
return -1;
}
xen_mb(); /* ensure ring space available */
XENKBD_IN_RING_REF(page, prod) = *event;
xen_wmb(); /* ensure ring contents visible */
page->in_prod = prod + 1;
return xen_pv_send_notify(&xenfb->c.xendev);
}
/* Send a keyboard (or mouse button) event */
static int xenfb_send_key(struct XenInput *xenfb, bool down, int keycode)
{
union xenkbd_in_event event;
memset(&event, 0, XENKBD_IN_EVENT_SIZE);
event.type = XENKBD_TYPE_KEY;
event.key.pressed = down ? 1 : 0;
event.key.keycode = keycode;
return xenfb_kbd_event(xenfb, &event);
}
/* Send a relative mouse movement event */
static int xenfb_send_motion(struct XenInput *xenfb,
int rel_x, int rel_y, int rel_z)
{
union xenkbd_in_event event;
memset(&event, 0, XENKBD_IN_EVENT_SIZE);
event.type = XENKBD_TYPE_MOTION;
event.motion.rel_x = rel_x;
event.motion.rel_y = rel_y;
event.motion.rel_z = rel_z;
return xenfb_kbd_event(xenfb, &event);
}
/* Send an absolute mouse movement event */
static int xenfb_send_position(struct XenInput *xenfb,
int abs_x, int abs_y, int z)
{
union xenkbd_in_event event;
memset(&event, 0, XENKBD_IN_EVENT_SIZE);
event.type = XENKBD_TYPE_POS;
event.pos.abs_x = abs_x;
event.pos.abs_y = abs_y;
event.pos.rel_z = z;
return xenfb_kbd_event(xenfb, &event);
}
/*
* Send a key event from the client to the guest OS
* QEMU gives us a QCode.
* We have to turn this into a Linux Input layer keycode.
*
* Wish we could just send scancodes straight to the guest which
* already has code for dealing with this...
*/
static void xenfb_key_event(DeviceState *dev, QemuConsole *src,
InputEvent *evt)
{
struct XenInput *xenfb = (struct XenInput *)dev;
InputKeyEvent *key = evt->u.key.data;
int qcode = qemu_input_key_value_to_qcode(key->key);
int lnx;
if (qcode < qemu_input_map_qcode_to_linux_len) {
lnx = qemu_input_map_qcode_to_linux[qcode];
if (lnx) {
trace_xenfb_key_event(xenfb, lnx, key->down);
xenfb_send_key(xenfb, key->down, lnx);
}
}
}
/*
* Send a mouse event from the client to the guest OS
*
* The QEMU mouse can be in either relative, or absolute mode.
* Movement is sent separately from button state, which has to
* be encoded as virtual key events. We also don't actually get
* given any button up/down events, so have to track changes in
* the button state.
*/
static void xenfb_mouse_event(DeviceState *dev, QemuConsole *src,
InputEvent *evt)
{
struct XenInput *xenfb = (struct XenInput *)dev;
InputBtnEvent *btn;
InputMoveEvent *move;
QemuConsole *con;
DisplaySurface *surface;
int scale;
switch (evt->type) {
case INPUT_EVENT_KIND_BTN:
btn = evt->u.btn.data;
switch (btn->button) {
case INPUT_BUTTON_LEFT:
xenfb_send_key(xenfb, btn->down, BTN_LEFT);
break;
case INPUT_BUTTON_RIGHT:
xenfb_send_key(xenfb, btn->down, BTN_LEFT + 1);
break;
case INPUT_BUTTON_MIDDLE:
xenfb_send_key(xenfb, btn->down, BTN_LEFT + 2);
break;
case INPUT_BUTTON_WHEEL_UP:
if (btn->down) {
xenfb->wheel--;
}
break;
case INPUT_BUTTON_WHEEL_DOWN:
if (btn->down) {
xenfb->wheel++;
}
break;
default:
break;
}
break;
case INPUT_EVENT_KIND_ABS:
move = evt->u.abs.data;
if (xenfb->raw_pointer_wanted) {
xenfb->axis[move->axis] = move->value;
} else {
con = qemu_console_lookup_by_index(0);
if (!con) {
xen_pv_printf(&xenfb->c.xendev, 0, "No QEMU console available");
return;
}
surface = qemu_console_surface(con);
switch (move->axis) {
case INPUT_AXIS_X:
scale = surface_width(surface) - 1;
break;
case INPUT_AXIS_Y:
scale = surface_height(surface) - 1;
break;
default:
scale = 0x8000;
break;
}
xenfb->axis[move->axis] = move->value * scale / 0x7fff;
}
break;
case INPUT_EVENT_KIND_REL:
move = evt->u.rel.data;
xenfb->axis[move->axis] += move->value;
break;
default:
break;
}
}
static void xenfb_mouse_sync(DeviceState *dev)
{
struct XenInput *xenfb = (struct XenInput *)dev;
trace_xenfb_mouse_event(xenfb, xenfb->axis[INPUT_AXIS_X],
xenfb->axis[INPUT_AXIS_Y],
xenfb->wheel, 0,
xenfb->abs_pointer_wanted);
if (xenfb->abs_pointer_wanted) {
xenfb_send_position(xenfb, xenfb->axis[INPUT_AXIS_X],
xenfb->axis[INPUT_AXIS_Y],
xenfb->wheel);
} else {
xenfb_send_motion(xenfb, xenfb->axis[INPUT_AXIS_X],
xenfb->axis[INPUT_AXIS_Y],
xenfb->wheel);
xenfb->axis[INPUT_AXIS_X] = 0;
xenfb->axis[INPUT_AXIS_Y] = 0;
}
xenfb->wheel = 0;
}
static QemuInputHandler xenfb_keyboard = {
.name = "Xen PV Keyboard",
.mask = INPUT_EVENT_MASK_KEY,
.event = xenfb_key_event,
};
static QemuInputHandler xenfb_abs_mouse = {
.name = "Xen PV Mouse",
.mask = INPUT_EVENT_MASK_BTN | INPUT_EVENT_MASK_ABS,
.event = xenfb_mouse_event,
.sync = xenfb_mouse_sync,
};
static QemuInputHandler xenfb_rel_mouse = {
.name = "Xen PV Mouse",
.mask = INPUT_EVENT_MASK_BTN | INPUT_EVENT_MASK_REL,
.event = xenfb_mouse_event,
.sync = xenfb_mouse_sync,
};
static int input_init(struct XenLegacyDevice *xendev)
{
xenstore_write_be_int(xendev, "feature-abs-pointer", 1);
xenstore_write_be_int(xendev, "feature-raw-pointer", 1);
return 0;
}
static int input_initialise(struct XenLegacyDevice *xendev)
{
struct XenInput *in = container_of(xendev, struct XenInput, c.xendev);
int rc;
rc = common_bind(&in->c);
if (rc != 0)
return rc;
return 0;
}
static void input_connected(struct XenLegacyDevice *xendev)
{
struct XenInput *in = container_of(xendev, struct XenInput, c.xendev);
if (xenstore_read_fe_int(xendev, "request-abs-pointer",
&in->abs_pointer_wanted) == -1) {
in->abs_pointer_wanted = 0;
}
if (xenstore_read_fe_int(xendev, "request-raw-pointer",
&in->raw_pointer_wanted) == -1) {
in->raw_pointer_wanted = 0;
}
if (in->raw_pointer_wanted && in->abs_pointer_wanted == 0) {
xen_pv_printf(xendev, 0, "raw pointer set without abs pointer");
}
if (in->qkbd) {
qemu_input_handler_unregister(in->qkbd);
}
if (in->qmou) {
qemu_input_handler_unregister(in->qmou);
}
trace_xenfb_input_connected(xendev, in->abs_pointer_wanted);
in->qkbd = qemu_input_handler_register((DeviceState *)in, &xenfb_keyboard);
in->qmou = qemu_input_handler_register((DeviceState *)in,
in->abs_pointer_wanted ? &xenfb_abs_mouse : &xenfb_rel_mouse);
if (in->raw_pointer_wanted) {
qemu_input_handler_activate(in->qkbd);
qemu_input_handler_activate(in->qmou);
}
}
static void input_disconnect(struct XenLegacyDevice *xendev)
{
struct XenInput *in = container_of(xendev, struct XenInput, c.xendev);
if (in->qkbd) {
qemu_input_handler_unregister(in->qkbd);
in->qkbd = NULL;
}
if (in->qmou) {
qemu_input_handler_unregister(in->qmou);
in->qmou = NULL;
}
common_unbind(&in->c);
}
static void input_event(struct XenLegacyDevice *xendev)
{
struct XenInput *xenfb = container_of(xendev, struct XenInput, c.xendev);
struct xenkbd_page *page = xenfb->c.page;
/* We don't understand any keyboard events, so just ignore them. */
if (page->out_prod == page->out_cons)
return;
page->out_cons = page->out_prod;
xen_pv_send_notify(&xenfb->c.xendev);
}
/* -------------------------------------------------------------------- */
static void xenfb_copy_mfns(int mode, int count, xen_pfn_t *dst, void *src)
{
uint32_t *src32 = src;
uint64_t *src64 = src;
int i;
for (i = 0; i < count; i++)
dst[i] = (mode == 32) ? src32[i] : src64[i];
}
static int xenfb_map_fb(struct XenFB *xenfb)
{
struct xenfb_page *page = xenfb->c.page;
char *protocol = xenfb->c.xendev.protocol;
int n_fbdirs;
xen_pfn_t *pgmfns = NULL;
xen_pfn_t *fbmfns = NULL;
void *map, *pd;
int mode, ret = -1;
/* default to native */
pd = page->pd;
mode = sizeof(unsigned long) * 8;
if (!protocol) {
/*
* Undefined protocol, some guesswork needed.
*
* Old frontends which don't set the protocol use
* one page directory only, thus pd[1] must be zero.
* pd[1] of the 32bit struct layout and the lower
* 32 bits of pd[0] of the 64bit struct layout have
* the same location, so we can check that ...
*/
uint32_t *ptr32 = NULL;
uint32_t *ptr64 = NULL;
#if defined(__i386__)
ptr32 = (void*)page->pd;
ptr64 = ((void*)page->pd) + 4;
#elif defined(__x86_64__)
ptr32 = ((void*)page->pd) - 4;
ptr64 = (void*)page->pd;
#endif
if (ptr32) {
if (ptr32[1] == 0) {
mode = 32;
pd = ptr32;
} else {
mode = 64;
pd = ptr64;
}
}
#if defined(__x86_64__)
} else if (strcmp(protocol, XEN_IO_PROTO_ABI_X86_32) == 0) {
/* 64bit dom0, 32bit domU */
mode = 32;
pd = ((void*)page->pd) - 4;
#elif defined(__i386__)
} else if (strcmp(protocol, XEN_IO_PROTO_ABI_X86_64) == 0) {
/* 32bit dom0, 64bit domU */
mode = 64;
pd = ((void*)page->pd) + 4;
#endif
}
if (xenfb->pixels) {
munmap(xenfb->pixels, xenfb->fbpages * XC_PAGE_SIZE);
xenfb->pixels = NULL;
}
xenfb->fbpages = DIV_ROUND_UP(xenfb->fb_len, XC_PAGE_SIZE);
n_fbdirs = xenfb->fbpages * mode / 8;
n_fbdirs = DIV_ROUND_UP(n_fbdirs, XC_PAGE_SIZE);
pgmfns = g_new0(xen_pfn_t, n_fbdirs);
fbmfns = g_new0(xen_pfn_t, xenfb->fbpages);
xenfb_copy_mfns(mode, n_fbdirs, pgmfns, pd);
xen: Switch uses of xc_map_foreign_{pages,bulk} to use libxenforeignmemory API. In Xen 4.7 we are refactoring parts libxenctrl into a number of separate libraries which will provide backward and forward API and ABI compatiblity. One such library will be libxenforeignmemory which provides access to privileged foreign mappings and which will provide an interface equivalent to xc_map_foreign_{pages,bulk}. The new xenforeignmemory_map() function behaves like xc_map_foreign_pages() when the err argument is NULL and like xc_map_foreign_bulk() when err is non-NULL, which maps into the shim here onto checking err == NULL and calling the appropriate old function. Note that xenforeignmemory_map() takes the number of pages before the arrays themselves, in order to support potentially future use of variable-length-arrays in the prototype (in the future, when Xen's baseline toolchain requirements are new enough to ensure VLAs are supported). In preparation for adding support for libxenforeignmemory add support to the <=4.0 and <=4.6 compat code in xen_common.h to allow us to switch to using the new API. These shims will disappear for versions of Xen which include libxenforeignmemory. Since libxenforeignmemory will have its own handle type but for <= 4.6 the functionality is provided by using a libxenctrl handle we introduce a new global xen_fmem alongside the existing xen_xc. In fact we make xen_fmem a pointer to the existing xen_xc, which then works correctly with both <=4.0 (xc handle is an int) and <=4.6 (xc handle is a pointer). In the latter case xen_fmem is actually a double indirect pointer, but it all falls out in the wash. Unlike libxenctrl libxenforeignmemory has an explicit unmap function, rather than just specifying that munmap should be used, so the unmap paths are updated to use xenforeignmemory_unmap, which is a shim for munmap on these versions of xen. The mappings in xen-hvm.c do not appear to be unmapped (which makes sense for a qemu-dm process) In fb_disconnect this results in a change from simply mmap over the existing mapping (with an implicit munmap) to expliclty unmapping with xenforeignmemory_unmap and then mapping the required anonymous memory in the same hole. I don't think this is a problem since any other thread which was racily touching this region would already be running the risk of hitting the mapping halfway through the call. If this is thought to be a problem then we could consider adding an extra API to the libxenforeignmemory interface to replace a foreign mapping with anonymous shared memory, but I'd prefer not to. Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ian.campbell@citrix.com> Reviewed-by: Stefano Stabellini <stefano.stabellini@eu.citrix.com> Signed-off-by: Stefano Stabellini <stefano.stabellini@eu.citrix.com>
2016-01-15 14:23:41 +01:00
map = xenforeignmemory_map(xen_fmem, xenfb->c.xendev.dom,
PROT_READ, n_fbdirs, pgmfns, NULL);
if (map == NULL)
goto out;
xenfb_copy_mfns(mode, xenfb->fbpages, fbmfns, map);
xen: Switch uses of xc_map_foreign_{pages,bulk} to use libxenforeignmemory API. In Xen 4.7 we are refactoring parts libxenctrl into a number of separate libraries which will provide backward and forward API and ABI compatiblity. One such library will be libxenforeignmemory which provides access to privileged foreign mappings and which will provide an interface equivalent to xc_map_foreign_{pages,bulk}. The new xenforeignmemory_map() function behaves like xc_map_foreign_pages() when the err argument is NULL and like xc_map_foreign_bulk() when err is non-NULL, which maps into the shim here onto checking err == NULL and calling the appropriate old function. Note that xenforeignmemory_map() takes the number of pages before the arrays themselves, in order to support potentially future use of variable-length-arrays in the prototype (in the future, when Xen's baseline toolchain requirements are new enough to ensure VLAs are supported). In preparation for adding support for libxenforeignmemory add support to the <=4.0 and <=4.6 compat code in xen_common.h to allow us to switch to using the new API. These shims will disappear for versions of Xen which include libxenforeignmemory. Since libxenforeignmemory will have its own handle type but for <= 4.6 the functionality is provided by using a libxenctrl handle we introduce a new global xen_fmem alongside the existing xen_xc. In fact we make xen_fmem a pointer to the existing xen_xc, which then works correctly with both <=4.0 (xc handle is an int) and <=4.6 (xc handle is a pointer). In the latter case xen_fmem is actually a double indirect pointer, but it all falls out in the wash. Unlike libxenctrl libxenforeignmemory has an explicit unmap function, rather than just specifying that munmap should be used, so the unmap paths are updated to use xenforeignmemory_unmap, which is a shim for munmap on these versions of xen. The mappings in xen-hvm.c do not appear to be unmapped (which makes sense for a qemu-dm process) In fb_disconnect this results in a change from simply mmap over the existing mapping (with an implicit munmap) to expliclty unmapping with xenforeignmemory_unmap and then mapping the required anonymous memory in the same hole. I don't think this is a problem since any other thread which was racily touching this region would already be running the risk of hitting the mapping halfway through the call. If this is thought to be a problem then we could consider adding an extra API to the libxenforeignmemory interface to replace a foreign mapping with anonymous shared memory, but I'd prefer not to. Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ian.campbell@citrix.com> Reviewed-by: Stefano Stabellini <stefano.stabellini@eu.citrix.com> Signed-off-by: Stefano Stabellini <stefano.stabellini@eu.citrix.com>
2016-01-15 14:23:41 +01:00
xenforeignmemory_unmap(xen_fmem, map, n_fbdirs);
xen: Switch uses of xc_map_foreign_{pages,bulk} to use libxenforeignmemory API. In Xen 4.7 we are refactoring parts libxenctrl into a number of separate libraries which will provide backward and forward API and ABI compatiblity. One such library will be libxenforeignmemory which provides access to privileged foreign mappings and which will provide an interface equivalent to xc_map_foreign_{pages,bulk}. The new xenforeignmemory_map() function behaves like xc_map_foreign_pages() when the err argument is NULL and like xc_map_foreign_bulk() when err is non-NULL, which maps into the shim here onto checking err == NULL and calling the appropriate old function. Note that xenforeignmemory_map() takes the number of pages before the arrays themselves, in order to support potentially future use of variable-length-arrays in the prototype (in the future, when Xen's baseline toolchain requirements are new enough to ensure VLAs are supported). In preparation for adding support for libxenforeignmemory add support to the <=4.0 and <=4.6 compat code in xen_common.h to allow us to switch to using the new API. These shims will disappear for versions of Xen which include libxenforeignmemory. Since libxenforeignmemory will have its own handle type but for <= 4.6 the functionality is provided by using a libxenctrl handle we introduce a new global xen_fmem alongside the existing xen_xc. In fact we make xen_fmem a pointer to the existing xen_xc, which then works correctly with both <=4.0 (xc handle is an int) and <=4.6 (xc handle is a pointer). In the latter case xen_fmem is actually a double indirect pointer, but it all falls out in the wash. Unlike libxenctrl libxenforeignmemory has an explicit unmap function, rather than just specifying that munmap should be used, so the unmap paths are updated to use xenforeignmemory_unmap, which is a shim for munmap on these versions of xen. The mappings in xen-hvm.c do not appear to be unmapped (which makes sense for a qemu-dm process) In fb_disconnect this results in a change from simply mmap over the existing mapping (with an implicit munmap) to expliclty unmapping with xenforeignmemory_unmap and then mapping the required anonymous memory in the same hole. I don't think this is a problem since any other thread which was racily touching this region would already be running the risk of hitting the mapping halfway through the call. If this is thought to be a problem then we could consider adding an extra API to the libxenforeignmemory interface to replace a foreign mapping with anonymous shared memory, but I'd prefer not to. Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ian.campbell@citrix.com> Reviewed-by: Stefano Stabellini <stefano.stabellini@eu.citrix.com> Signed-off-by: Stefano Stabellini <stefano.stabellini@eu.citrix.com>
2016-01-15 14:23:41 +01:00
xenfb->pixels = xenforeignmemory_map(xen_fmem, xenfb->c.xendev.dom,
PROT_READ, xenfb->fbpages, fbmfns, NULL);
if (xenfb->pixels == NULL)
goto out;
ret = 0; /* all is fine */
out:
g_free(pgmfns);
g_free(fbmfns);
return ret;
}
static int xenfb_configure_fb(struct XenFB *xenfb, size_t fb_len_lim,
int width, int height, int depth,
size_t fb_len, int offset, int row_stride)
{
size_t mfn_sz = sizeof_field(struct xenfb_page, pd[0]);
size_t pd_len = sizeof_field(struct xenfb_page, pd) / mfn_sz;
size_t fb_pages = pd_len * XC_PAGE_SIZE / mfn_sz;
size_t fb_len_max = fb_pages * XC_PAGE_SIZE;
int max_width, max_height;
if (fb_len_lim > fb_len_max) {
xen_pv_printf(&xenfb->c.xendev, 0,
"fb size limit %zu exceeds %zu, corrected\n",
fb_len_lim, fb_len_max);
fb_len_lim = fb_len_max;
}
if (fb_len_lim && fb_len > fb_len_lim) {
xen_pv_printf(&xenfb->c.xendev, 0,
"frontend fb size %zu limited to %zu\n",
fb_len, fb_len_lim);
fb_len = fb_len_lim;
}
if (depth != 8 && depth != 16 && depth != 24 && depth != 32) {
xen_pv_printf(&xenfb->c.xendev, 0,
"can't handle frontend fb depth %d\n",
depth);
return -1;
}
if (row_stride <= 0 || row_stride > fb_len) {
xen_pv_printf(&xenfb->c.xendev, 0, "invalid frontend stride %d\n",
row_stride);
return -1;
}
max_width = row_stride / (depth / 8);
if (width < 0 || width > max_width) {
xen_pv_printf(&xenfb->c.xendev, 0,
"invalid frontend width %d limited to %d\n",
width, max_width);
width = max_width;
}
if (offset < 0 || offset >= fb_len) {
xen_pv_printf(&xenfb->c.xendev, 0,
"invalid frontend offset %d (max %zu)\n",
offset, fb_len - 1);
return -1;
}
max_height = (fb_len - offset) / row_stride;
if (height < 0 || height > max_height) {
xen_pv_printf(&xenfb->c.xendev, 0,
"invalid frontend height %d limited to %d\n",
height, max_height);
height = max_height;
}
xenfb->fb_len = fb_len;
xenfb->row_stride = row_stride;
xenfb->depth = depth;
xenfb->width = width;
xenfb->height = height;
xenfb->offset = offset;
xenfb->up_fullscreen = 1;
xenfb->do_resize = 1;
xen_pv_printf(&xenfb->c.xendev, 1,
"framebuffer %dx%dx%d offset %d stride %d\n",
width, height, depth, offset, row_stride);
return 0;
}
/* A convenient function for munging pixels between different depths */
#define BLT(SRC_T,DST_T,RSB,GSB,BSB,RDB,GDB,BDB) \
for (line = y ; line < (y+h) ; line++) { \
SRC_T *src = (SRC_T *)(xenfb->pixels \
+ xenfb->offset \
+ (line * xenfb->row_stride) \
+ (x * xenfb->depth / 8)); \
DST_T *dst = (DST_T *)(data \
+ (line * linesize) \
+ (x * bpp / 8)); \
int col; \
const int RSS = 32 - (RSB + GSB + BSB); \
const int GSS = 32 - (GSB + BSB); \
const int BSS = 32 - (BSB); \
const uint32_t RSM = (~0U) << (32 - RSB); \
const uint32_t GSM = (~0U) << (32 - GSB); \
const uint32_t BSM = (~0U) << (32 - BSB); \
const int RDS = 32 - (RDB + GDB + BDB); \
const int GDS = 32 - (GDB + BDB); \
const int BDS = 32 - (BDB); \
const uint32_t RDM = (~0U) << (32 - RDB); \
const uint32_t GDM = (~0U) << (32 - GDB); \
const uint32_t BDM = (~0U) << (32 - BDB); \
for (col = x ; col < (x+w) ; col++) { \
uint32_t spix = *src; \
*dst = (((spix << RSS) & RSM & RDM) >> RDS) | \
(((spix << GSS) & GSM & GDM) >> GDS) | \
(((spix << BSS) & BSM & BDM) >> BDS); \
src = (SRC_T *) ((unsigned long) src + xenfb->depth / 8); \
dst = (DST_T *) ((unsigned long) dst + bpp / 8); \
} \
}
/*
* This copies data from the guest framebuffer region, into QEMU's
* displaysurface. qemu uses 16 or 32 bpp. In case the pv framebuffer
* uses something else we must convert and copy, otherwise we can
* supply the buffer directly and no thing here.
*/
static void xenfb_guest_copy(struct XenFB *xenfb, int x, int y, int w, int h)
{
DisplaySurface *surface = qemu_console_surface(xenfb->con);
int line, oops = 0;
int bpp = surface_bits_per_pixel(surface);
int linesize = surface_stride(surface);
uint8_t *data = surface_data(surface);
if (!is_buffer_shared(surface)) {
switch (xenfb->depth) {
case 8:
if (bpp == 16) {
BLT(uint8_t, uint16_t, 3, 3, 2, 5, 6, 5);
} else if (bpp == 32) {
BLT(uint8_t, uint32_t, 3, 3, 2, 8, 8, 8);
} else {
oops = 1;
}
break;
case 24:
if (bpp == 16) {
BLT(uint32_t, uint16_t, 8, 8, 8, 5, 6, 5);
} else if (bpp == 32) {
BLT(uint32_t, uint32_t, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8);
} else {
oops = 1;
}
break;
default:
oops = 1;
}
}
if (oops) /* should not happen */
xen_pv_printf(&xenfb->c.xendev, 0, "%s: oops: convert %d -> %d bpp?\n",
__func__, xenfb->depth, bpp);
dpy_gfx_update(xenfb->con, x, y, w, h);
}
#ifdef XENFB_TYPE_REFRESH_PERIOD
static int xenfb_queue_full(struct XenFB *xenfb)
{
struct xenfb_page *page = xenfb->c.page;
uint32_t cons, prod;
if (!page)
return 1;
prod = page->in_prod;
cons = page->in_cons;
return prod - cons == XENFB_IN_RING_LEN;
}
static void xenfb_send_event(struct XenFB *xenfb, union xenfb_in_event *event)
{
uint32_t prod;
struct xenfb_page *page = xenfb->c.page;
prod = page->in_prod;
/* caller ensures !xenfb_queue_full() */
xen_mb(); /* ensure ring space available */
XENFB_IN_RING_REF(page, prod) = *event;
xen_wmb(); /* ensure ring contents visible */
page->in_prod = prod + 1;
xen_pv_send_notify(&xenfb->c.xendev);
}
static void xenfb_send_refresh_period(struct XenFB *xenfb, int period)
{
union xenfb_in_event event;
memset(&event, 0, sizeof(event));
event.type = XENFB_TYPE_REFRESH_PERIOD;
event.refresh_period.period = period;
xenfb_send_event(xenfb, &event);
}
#endif
/*
* Periodic update of display.
* Also transmit the refresh interval to the frontend.
*
* Never ever do any qemu display operations
* (resize, screen update) outside this function.
* Our screen might be inactive. When asked for
* an update we know it is active.
*/
static void xenfb_update(void *opaque)
{
struct XenFB *xenfb = opaque;
DisplaySurface *surface;
int i;
if (xenfb->c.xendev.be_state != XenbusStateConnected)
return;
if (!xenfb->feature_update) {
/* we don't get update notifications, thus use the
* sledge hammer approach ... */
xenfb->up_fullscreen = 1;
}
/* resize if needed */
if (xenfb->do_resize) {
pixman_format_code_t format;
xenfb->do_resize = 0;
switch (xenfb->depth) {
case 16:
case 32:
/* console.c supported depth -> buffer can be used directly */
format = qemu_default_pixman_format(xenfb->depth, true);
surface = qemu_create_displaysurface_from
(xenfb->width, xenfb->height, format,
xenfb->row_stride, xenfb->pixels + xenfb->offset);
break;
default:
/* we must convert stuff */
surface = qemu_create_displaysurface(xenfb->width, xenfb->height);
break;
}
dpy_gfx_replace_surface(xenfb->con, surface);
xen_pv_printf(&xenfb->c.xendev, 1,
"update: resizing: %dx%d @ %d bpp%s\n",
xenfb->width, xenfb->height, xenfb->depth,
is_buffer_shared(surface) ? " (shared)" : "");
xenfb->up_fullscreen = 1;
}
/* run queued updates */
if (xenfb->up_fullscreen) {
xen_pv_printf(&xenfb->c.xendev, 3, "update: fullscreen\n");
xenfb_guest_copy(xenfb, 0, 0, xenfb->width, xenfb->height);
} else if (xenfb->up_count) {
xen_pv_printf(&xenfb->c.xendev, 3, "update: %d rects\n",
xenfb->up_count);
for (i = 0; i < xenfb->up_count; i++)
xenfb_guest_copy(xenfb,
xenfb->up_rects[i].x,
xenfb->up_rects[i].y,
xenfb->up_rects[i].w,
xenfb->up_rects[i].h);
} else {
xen_pv_printf(&xenfb->c.xendev, 3, "update: nothing\n");
}
xenfb->up_count = 0;
xenfb->up_fullscreen = 0;
}
static void xenfb_update_interval(void *opaque, uint64_t interval)
{
struct XenFB *xenfb = opaque;
if (xenfb->feature_update) {
#ifdef XENFB_TYPE_REFRESH_PERIOD
if (xenfb_queue_full(xenfb)) {
return;
}
xenfb_send_refresh_period(xenfb, interval);
#endif
}
}
/* QEMU display state changed, so refresh the framebuffer copy */
static void xenfb_invalidate(void *opaque)
{
struct XenFB *xenfb = opaque;
xenfb->up_fullscreen = 1;
}
static void xenfb_handle_events(struct XenFB *xenfb)
{
uint32_t prod, cons, out_cons;
struct xenfb_page *page = xenfb->c.page;
prod = page->out_prod;
out_cons = page->out_cons;
if (prod - out_cons > XENFB_OUT_RING_LEN) {
return;
}
xen_rmb(); /* ensure we see ring contents up to prod */
for (cons = out_cons; cons != prod; cons++) {
union xenfb_out_event *event = &XENFB_OUT_RING_REF(page, cons);
uint8_t type = event->type;
int x, y, w, h;
switch (type) {
case XENFB_TYPE_UPDATE:
if (xenfb->up_count == UP_QUEUE)
xenfb->up_fullscreen = 1;
if (xenfb->up_fullscreen)
break;
x = MAX(event->update.x, 0);
y = MAX(event->update.y, 0);
w = MIN(event->update.width, xenfb->width - x);
h = MIN(event->update.height, xenfb->height - y);
if (w < 0 || h < 0) {
xen_pv_printf(&xenfb->c.xendev, 1, "bogus update ignored\n");
break;
}
if (x != event->update.x ||
y != event->update.y ||
w != event->update.width ||
h != event->update.height) {
xen_pv_printf(&xenfb->c.xendev, 1, "bogus update clipped\n");
}
if (w == xenfb->width && h > xenfb->height / 2) {
/* scroll detector: updated more than 50% of the lines,
* don't bother keeping track of the rectangles then */
xenfb->up_fullscreen = 1;
} else {
xenfb->up_rects[xenfb->up_count].x = x;
xenfb->up_rects[xenfb->up_count].y = y;
xenfb->up_rects[xenfb->up_count].w = w;
xenfb->up_rects[xenfb->up_count].h = h;
xenfb->up_count++;
}
break;
#ifdef XENFB_TYPE_RESIZE
case XENFB_TYPE_RESIZE:
if (xenfb_configure_fb(xenfb, xenfb->fb_len,
event->resize.width,
event->resize.height,
event->resize.depth,
xenfb->fb_len,
event->resize.offset,
event->resize.stride) < 0)
break;
xenfb_invalidate(xenfb);
break;
#endif
}
}
xen_mb(); /* ensure we're done with ring contents */
page->out_cons = cons;
}
static int fb_init(struct XenLegacyDevice *xendev)
{
#ifdef XENFB_TYPE_RESIZE
xenstore_write_be_int(xendev, "feature-resize", 1);
#endif
return 0;
}
static int fb_initialise(struct XenLegacyDevice *xendev)
{
struct XenFB *fb = container_of(xendev, struct XenFB, c.xendev);
struct xenfb_page *fb_page;
int videoram;
int rc;
if (xenstore_read_fe_int(xendev, "videoram", &videoram) == -1)
videoram = 0;
rc = common_bind(&fb->c);
if (rc != 0)
return rc;
fb_page = fb->c.page;
rc = xenfb_configure_fb(fb, videoram * MiB,
fb_page->width, fb_page->height, fb_page->depth,
fb_page->mem_length, 0, fb_page->line_length);
if (rc != 0)
return rc;
rc = xenfb_map_fb(fb);
if (rc != 0)
return rc;
fb->con = graphic_console_init(NULL, 0, &xenfb_ops, fb);
if (xenstore_read_fe_int(xendev, "feature-update", &fb->feature_update) == -1)
fb->feature_update = 0;
if (fb->feature_update)
xenstore_write_be_int(xendev, "request-update", 1);
xen_pv_printf(xendev, 1, "feature-update=%d, videoram=%d\n",
fb->feature_update, videoram);
return 0;
}
static void fb_disconnect(struct XenLegacyDevice *xendev)
{
struct XenFB *fb = container_of(xendev, struct XenFB, c.xendev);
/*
* FIXME: qemu can't un-init gfx display (yet?).
* Replacing the framebuffer with anonymous shared memory
* instead. This releases the guest pages and keeps qemu happy.
*/
xen: Switch uses of xc_map_foreign_{pages,bulk} to use libxenforeignmemory API. In Xen 4.7 we are refactoring parts libxenctrl into a number of separate libraries which will provide backward and forward API and ABI compatiblity. One such library will be libxenforeignmemory which provides access to privileged foreign mappings and which will provide an interface equivalent to xc_map_foreign_{pages,bulk}. The new xenforeignmemory_map() function behaves like xc_map_foreign_pages() when the err argument is NULL and like xc_map_foreign_bulk() when err is non-NULL, which maps into the shim here onto checking err == NULL and calling the appropriate old function. Note that xenforeignmemory_map() takes the number of pages before the arrays themselves, in order to support potentially future use of variable-length-arrays in the prototype (in the future, when Xen's baseline toolchain requirements are new enough to ensure VLAs are supported). In preparation for adding support for libxenforeignmemory add support to the <=4.0 and <=4.6 compat code in xen_common.h to allow us to switch to using the new API. These shims will disappear for versions of Xen which include libxenforeignmemory. Since libxenforeignmemory will have its own handle type but for <= 4.6 the functionality is provided by using a libxenctrl handle we introduce a new global xen_fmem alongside the existing xen_xc. In fact we make xen_fmem a pointer to the existing xen_xc, which then works correctly with both <=4.0 (xc handle is an int) and <=4.6 (xc handle is a pointer). In the latter case xen_fmem is actually a double indirect pointer, but it all falls out in the wash. Unlike libxenctrl libxenforeignmemory has an explicit unmap function, rather than just specifying that munmap should be used, so the unmap paths are updated to use xenforeignmemory_unmap, which is a shim for munmap on these versions of xen. The mappings in xen-hvm.c do not appear to be unmapped (which makes sense for a qemu-dm process) In fb_disconnect this results in a change from simply mmap over the existing mapping (with an implicit munmap) to expliclty unmapping with xenforeignmemory_unmap and then mapping the required anonymous memory in the same hole. I don't think this is a problem since any other thread which was racily touching this region would already be running the risk of hitting the mapping halfway through the call. If this is thought to be a problem then we could consider adding an extra API to the libxenforeignmemory interface to replace a foreign mapping with anonymous shared memory, but I'd prefer not to. Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell <ian.campbell@citrix.com> Reviewed-by: Stefano Stabellini <stefano.stabellini@eu.citrix.com> Signed-off-by: Stefano Stabellini <stefano.stabellini@eu.citrix.com>
2016-01-15 14:23:41 +01:00
xenforeignmemory_unmap(xen_fmem, fb->pixels, fb->fbpages);
fb->pixels = mmap(fb->pixels, fb->fbpages * XC_PAGE_SIZE,
PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE, MAP_SHARED | MAP_ANON,
-1, 0);
if (fb->pixels == MAP_FAILED) {
xen_pv_printf(xendev, 0,
"Couldn't replace the framebuffer with anonymous memory errno=%d\n",
errno);
}
common_unbind(&fb->c);
fb->feature_update = 0;
fb->bug_trigger = 0;
}
static void fb_frontend_changed(struct XenLegacyDevice *xendev,
const char *node)
{
struct XenFB *fb = container_of(xendev, struct XenFB, c.xendev);
/*
* Set state to Connected *again* once the frontend switched
* to connected. We must trigger the watch a second time to
* workaround a frontend bug.
*/
if (fb->bug_trigger == 0 && strcmp(node, "state") == 0 &&
xendev->fe_state == XenbusStateConnected &&
xendev->be_state == XenbusStateConnected) {
xen_pv_printf(xendev, 2, "re-trigger connected (frontend bug)\n");
xen_be_set_state(xendev, XenbusStateConnected);
fb->bug_trigger = 1; /* only once */
}
}
static void fb_event(struct XenLegacyDevice *xendev)
{
struct XenFB *xenfb = container_of(xendev, struct XenFB, c.xendev);
xenfb_handle_events(xenfb);
xen_pv_send_notify(&xenfb->c.xendev);
}
/* -------------------------------------------------------------------- */
struct XenDevOps xen_kbdmouse_ops = {
.size = sizeof(struct XenInput),
.init = input_init,
.initialise = input_initialise,
.connected = input_connected,
.disconnect = input_disconnect,
.event = input_event,
};
struct XenDevOps xen_framebuffer_ops = {
.size = sizeof(struct XenFB),
.init = fb_init,
.initialise = fb_initialise,
.disconnect = fb_disconnect,
.event = fb_event,
.frontend_changed = fb_frontend_changed,
};
static const GraphicHwOps xenfb_ops = {
.invalidate = xenfb_invalidate,
.gfx_update = xenfb_update,
.update_interval = xenfb_update_interval,
};