69970fcef9
The RTL8168 quirk correctly describes using bit 31 as a signal to mark a latch/completion, but the code mistakenly uses bit 28. This causes the Realtek driver to spin on this register for quite a while, 20k cycles on Windows 7 v7.092 driver. Then it gets frustrated and tries to set the bit itself and spins for another 20k cycles. For some this still results in a working driver, for others not. About the only thing the code really does in its current form is protect the guest from sneaking in writes to the real hardware MSI-X table. The fix is obviously to use bit 31 as we document that we should. The other problem doesn't seem to affect current drivers as nobody seems to use these window registers for writes to the MSI-X table, but we need to use the stored data when a write is triggered, not the value of the current write, which only provides the offset. Note that only the Windows drivers from Realtek seem to use these registers, the Microsoft drivers provided with Windows 8.1 do not access them, nor do Linux in-kernel drivers. Link: https://bugs.launchpad.net/qemu/+bug/1384892 Signed-off-by: Alex Williamson <alex.williamson@redhat.com> Cc: qemu-stable@nongnu.org # v2.1+ |
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calxeda-xgmac.c | ||
common.c | ||
Makefile.objs | ||
pci.c | ||
platform.c |