1518562b49
By default, QEMU will allow devices to be plugged into a bus up to the bus class's device count limit. If the user creates a device on the command line or via the monitor and doesn't explicitly specify the bus to plug it in, QEMU will plug it into the first non-full bus that it finds. This is fine in most cases, but some machines have multiple buses of a given type, some of which are dedicated to on-board devices and some of which have an externally exposed connector for user-pluggable devices. One example is I2C buses. Provide a new function qbus_mark_full() so that a machine model can mark this kind of "internal only" bus as 'full' after it has created all the devices that should be plugged into that bus. The "find a non-full bus" algorithm will then skip the internal-only bus when looking for a place to plug in user-created devices. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 20210903151435.22379-2-peter.maydell@linaro.org |
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.. | ||
authz | ||
block | ||
chardev | ||
crypto | ||
disas | ||
exec | ||
fpu | ||
hw | ||
io | ||
libdecnumber | ||
migration | ||
monitor | ||
net | ||
qapi | ||
qemu | ||
qom | ||
scsi | ||
semihosting | ||
standard-headers | ||
sysemu | ||
tcg | ||
ui | ||
user | ||
elf.h | ||
glib-compat.h | ||
qemu-common.h | ||
qemu-io.h | ||
trace-tcg.h |