9277d81f5c
Signed-off-by: Ville Skyttä <ville.skytta@iki.fi> Reviewed-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com> Message-id: 20180612065150.21110-1-ville.skytta@iki.fi Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
79 lines
2.6 KiB
Plaintext
79 lines
2.6 KiB
Plaintext
When used with the "pseries" machine type, QEMU-system-ppc64 implements
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a set of hypervisor calls using a subset of the server "PAPR" specification
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(IBM internal at this point), which is also what IBM's proprietary hypervisor
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adheres too.
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The subset is selected based on the requirements of Linux as a guest.
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In addition to those calls, we have added our own private hypervisor
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calls which are mostly used as a private interface between the firmware
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running in the guest and QEMU.
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All those hypercalls start at hcall number 0xf000 which correspond
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to an implementation specific range in PAPR.
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- H_RTAS (0xf000)
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RTAS is a set of runtime services generally provided by the firmware
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inside the guest to the operating system. It predates the existence
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of hypervisors (it was originally an extension to Open Firmware) and
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is still used by PAPR to provide various services that aren't performance
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sensitive.
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We currently implement the RTAS services in QEMU itself. The actual RTAS
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"firmware" blob in the guest is a small stub of a few instructions which
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calls our private H_RTAS hypervisor call to pass the RTAS calls to QEMU.
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Arguments:
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r3 : H_RTAS (0xf000)
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r4 : Guest physical address of RTAS parameter block
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Returns:
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H_SUCCESS : Successfully called the RTAS function (RTAS result
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will have been stored in the parameter block)
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H_PARAMETER : Unknown token
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- H_LOGICAL_MEMOP (0xf001)
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When the guest runs in "real mode" (in powerpc lingua this means
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with MMU disabled, ie guest effective == guest physical), it only
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has access to a subset of memory and no IOs.
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PAPR provides a set of hypervisor calls to perform cacheable or
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non-cacheable accesses to any guest physical addresses that the
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guest can use in order to access IO devices while in real mode.
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This is typically used by the firmware running in the guest.
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However, doing a hypercall for each access is extremely inefficient
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(even more so when running KVM) when accessing the frame buffer. In
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that case, things like scrolling become unusably slow.
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This hypercall allows the guest to request a "memory op" to be applied
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to memory. The supported memory ops at this point are to copy a range
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of memory (supports overlap of source and destination) and XOR which
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is used by our SLOF firmware to invert the screen.
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Arguments:
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r3: H_LOGICAL_MEMOP (0xf001)
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r4: Guest physical address of destination
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r5: Guest physical address of source
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r6: Individual element size
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0 = 1 byte
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1 = 2 bytes
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2 = 4 bytes
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3 = 8 bytes
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r7: Number of elements
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r8: Operation
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0 = copy
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1 = xor
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Returns:
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H_SUCCESS : Success
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H_PARAMETER : Invalid argument
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