qemu-patch-raspberry4/include/hw/arm/virt.h
Yanan Wang 31511b6fe0 hw/arm/virt: Only describe cpu topology since virt-6.2
On existing older machine types, without cpu topology described
in ACPI or DT, the guest will populate one by default. With the
topology described, it will read the information and set up its
topology as instructed, but that may not be the same as what was
getting used by default. It's possible that an user application
has a dependency on the default topology and if the default one
gets changed it will probably behave differently.

Based on above consideration we'd better only describe topology
information to the guest on 6.2 and later machine types.

Signed-off-by: Yanan Wang <wangyanan55@huawei.com>
Reviewed-by: Andrew Jones <drjones@redhat.com>
Message-Id: <20211020142125.7516-2-wangyanan55@huawei.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
2021-10-20 18:17:54 -07:00

196 lines
5.2 KiB
C

/*
*
* Copyright (c) 2015 Linaro Limited
*
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
* under the terms and conditions of the GNU General Public License,
* version 2 or later, as published by the Free Software Foundation.
*
* This program is distributed in the hope 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/>.
*
* Emulate a virtual board which works by passing Linux all the information
* it needs about what devices are present via the device tree.
* There are some restrictions about what we can do here:
* + we can only present devices whose Linux drivers will work based
* purely on the device tree with no platform data at all
* + we want to present a very stripped-down minimalist platform,
* both because this reduces the security attack surface from the guest
* and also because it reduces our exposure to being broken when
* the kernel updates its device tree bindings and requires further
* information in a device binding that we aren't providing.
* This is essentially the same approach kvmtool uses.
*/
#ifndef QEMU_ARM_VIRT_H
#define QEMU_ARM_VIRT_H
#include "exec/hwaddr.h"
#include "qemu/notify.h"
#include "hw/boards.h"
#include "hw/arm/boot.h"
#include "hw/block/flash.h"
#include "sysemu/kvm.h"
#include "hw/intc/arm_gicv3_common.h"
#include "qom/object.h"
#define NUM_GICV2M_SPIS 64
#define NUM_VIRTIO_TRANSPORTS 32
#define NUM_SMMU_IRQS 4
#define ARCH_GIC_MAINT_IRQ 9
#define ARCH_TIMER_VIRT_IRQ 11
#define ARCH_TIMER_S_EL1_IRQ 13
#define ARCH_TIMER_NS_EL1_IRQ 14
#define ARCH_TIMER_NS_EL2_IRQ 10
#define VIRTUAL_PMU_IRQ 7
#define PPI(irq) ((irq) + 16)
/* See Linux kernel arch/arm64/include/asm/pvclock-abi.h */
#define PVTIME_SIZE_PER_CPU 64
enum {
VIRT_FLASH,
VIRT_MEM,
VIRT_CPUPERIPHS,
VIRT_GIC_DIST,
VIRT_GIC_CPU,
VIRT_GIC_V2M,
VIRT_GIC_HYP,
VIRT_GIC_VCPU,
VIRT_GIC_ITS,
VIRT_GIC_REDIST,
VIRT_SMMU,
VIRT_UART,
VIRT_MMIO,
VIRT_RTC,
VIRT_FW_CFG,
VIRT_PCIE,
VIRT_PCIE_MMIO,
VIRT_PCIE_PIO,
VIRT_PCIE_ECAM,
VIRT_PLATFORM_BUS,
VIRT_GPIO,
VIRT_SECURE_UART,
VIRT_SECURE_MEM,
VIRT_SECURE_GPIO,
VIRT_PCDIMM_ACPI,
VIRT_ACPI_GED,
VIRT_NVDIMM_ACPI,
VIRT_PVTIME,
VIRT_LOWMEMMAP_LAST,
};
/* indices of IO regions located after the RAM */
enum {
VIRT_HIGH_GIC_REDIST2 = VIRT_LOWMEMMAP_LAST,
VIRT_HIGH_PCIE_ECAM,
VIRT_HIGH_PCIE_MMIO,
};
typedef enum VirtIOMMUType {
VIRT_IOMMU_NONE,
VIRT_IOMMU_SMMUV3,
VIRT_IOMMU_VIRTIO,
} VirtIOMMUType;
typedef enum VirtMSIControllerType {
VIRT_MSI_CTRL_NONE,
VIRT_MSI_CTRL_GICV2M,
VIRT_MSI_CTRL_ITS,
} VirtMSIControllerType;
typedef enum VirtGICType {
VIRT_GIC_VERSION_MAX,
VIRT_GIC_VERSION_HOST,
VIRT_GIC_VERSION_2,
VIRT_GIC_VERSION_3,
VIRT_GIC_VERSION_NOSEL,
} VirtGICType;
struct VirtMachineClass {
MachineClass parent;
bool disallow_affinity_adjustment;
bool no_its;
bool no_tcg_its;
bool no_pmu;
bool claim_edge_triggered_timers;
bool smbios_old_sys_ver;
bool no_highmem_ecam;
bool no_ged; /* Machines < 4.2 have no support for ACPI GED device */
bool kvm_no_adjvtime;
bool no_kvm_steal_time;
bool acpi_expose_flash;
bool no_secure_gpio;
/* Machines < 6.2 have no support for describing cpu topology to guest */
bool no_cpu_topology;
};
struct VirtMachineState {
MachineState parent;
Notifier machine_done;
DeviceState *platform_bus_dev;
FWCfgState *fw_cfg;
PFlashCFI01 *flash[2];
bool secure;
bool highmem;
bool highmem_ecam;
bool its;
bool tcg_its;
bool virt;
bool ras;
bool mte;
OnOffAuto acpi;
VirtGICType gic_version;
VirtIOMMUType iommu;
bool default_bus_bypass_iommu;
VirtMSIControllerType msi_controller;
uint16_t virtio_iommu_bdf;
struct arm_boot_info bootinfo;
MemMapEntry *memmap;
char *pciehb_nodename;
const int *irqmap;
int fdt_size;
uint32_t clock_phandle;
uint32_t gic_phandle;
uint32_t msi_phandle;
uint32_t iommu_phandle;
int psci_conduit;
hwaddr highest_gpa;
DeviceState *gic;
DeviceState *acpi_dev;
Notifier powerdown_notifier;
PCIBus *bus;
char *oem_id;
char *oem_table_id;
};
#define VIRT_ECAM_ID(high) (high ? VIRT_HIGH_PCIE_ECAM : VIRT_PCIE_ECAM)
#define TYPE_VIRT_MACHINE MACHINE_TYPE_NAME("virt")
OBJECT_DECLARE_TYPE(VirtMachineState, VirtMachineClass, VIRT_MACHINE)
void virt_acpi_setup(VirtMachineState *vms);
bool virt_is_acpi_enabled(VirtMachineState *vms);
/* Return the number of used redistributor regions */
static inline int virt_gicv3_redist_region_count(VirtMachineState *vms)
{
uint32_t redist0_capacity =
vms->memmap[VIRT_GIC_REDIST].size / GICV3_REDIST_SIZE;
assert(vms->gic_version == VIRT_GIC_VERSION_3);
return MACHINE(vms)->smp.cpus > redist0_capacity ? 2 : 1;
}
#endif /* QEMU_ARM_VIRT_H */