1/*P:010 2 * A hypervisor allows multiple Operating Systems to run on a single machine. 3 * To quote David Wheeler: "Any problem in computer science can be solved with 4 * another layer of indirection." 5 * 6 * We keep things simple in two ways. First, we start with a normal Linux 7 * kernel and insert a module (lg.ko) which allows us to run other Linux 8 * kernels the same way we'd run processes. We call the first kernel the Host, 9 * and the others the Guests. The program which sets up and configures Guests 10 * (such as the example in tools/lguest/lguest.c) is called the Launcher. 11 * 12 * Secondly, we only run specially modified Guests, not normal kernels: setting 13 * CONFIG_LGUEST_GUEST to "y" compiles this file into the kernel so it knows 14 * how to be a Guest at boot time. This means that you can use the same kernel 15 * you boot normally (ie. as a Host) as a Guest. 16 * 17 * These Guests know that they cannot do privileged operations, such as disable 18 * interrupts, and that they have to ask the Host to do such things explicitly. 19 * This file consists of all the replacements for such low-level native 20 * hardware operations: these special Guest versions call the Host. 21 * 22 * So how does the kernel know it's a Guest? We'll see that later, but let's 23 * just say that we end up here where we replace the native functions various 24 * "paravirt" structures with our Guest versions, then boot like normal. 25:*/ 26 27/* 28 * Copyright (C) 2006, Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au> IBM Corporation. 29 * 30 * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify 31 * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by 32 * the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or 33 * (at your option) any later version. 34 * 35 * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but 36 * WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of 37 * MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, GOOD TITLE or 38 * NON INFRINGEMENT. See the GNU General Public License for more 39 * details. 40 * 41 * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License 42 * along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software 43 * Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. 44 */ 45#include <linux/kernel.h> 46#include <linux/start_kernel.h> 47#include <linux/string.h> 48#include <linux/console.h> 49#include <linux/screen_info.h> 50#include <linux/irq.h> 51#include <linux/interrupt.h> 52#include <linux/clocksource.h> 53#include <linux/clockchips.h> 54#include <linux/lguest.h> 55#include <linux/lguest_launcher.h> 56#include <linux/virtio_console.h> 57#include <linux/pm.h> 58#include <linux/export.h> 59#include <linux/pci.h> 60#include <linux/virtio_pci.h> 61#include <asm/acpi.h> 62#include <asm/apic.h> 63#include <asm/lguest.h> 64#include <asm/paravirt.h> 65#include <asm/param.h> 66#include <asm/page.h> 67#include <asm/pgtable.h> 68#include <asm/desc.h> 69#include <asm/setup.h> 70#include <asm/e820.h> 71#include <asm/mce.h> 72#include <asm/io.h> 73#include <asm/fpu/api.h> 74#include <asm/stackprotector.h> 75#include <asm/reboot.h> /* for struct machine_ops */ 76#include <asm/kvm_para.h> 77#include <asm/pci_x86.h> 78#include <asm/pci-direct.h> 79 80/*G:010 81 * Welcome to the Guest! 82 * 83 * The Guest in our tale is a simple creature: identical to the Host but 84 * behaving in simplified but equivalent ways. In particular, the Guest is the 85 * same kernel as the Host (or at least, built from the same source code). 86:*/ 87 88struct lguest_data lguest_data = { 89 .hcall_status = { [0 ... LHCALL_RING_SIZE-1] = 0xFF }, 90 .noirq_iret = (u32)lguest_noirq_iret, 91 .kernel_address = PAGE_OFFSET, 92 .blocked_interrupts = { 1 }, /* Block timer interrupts */ 93 .syscall_vec = IA32_SYSCALL_VECTOR, 94}; 95 96/*G:037 97 * async_hcall() is pretty simple: I'm quite proud of it really. We have a 98 * ring buffer of stored hypercalls which the Host will run though next time we 99 * do a normal hypercall. Each entry in the ring has 5 slots for the hypercall 100 * arguments, and a "hcall_status" word which is 0 if the call is ready to go, 101 * and 255 once the Host has finished with it. 102 * 103 * If we come around to a slot which hasn't been finished, then the table is 104 * full and we just make the hypercall directly. This has the nice side 105 * effect of causing the Host to run all the stored calls in the ring buffer 106 * which empties it for next time! 107 */ 108static void async_hcall(unsigned long call, unsigned long arg1, 109 unsigned long arg2, unsigned long arg3, 110 unsigned long arg4) 111{ 112 /* Note: This code assumes we're uniprocessor. */ 113 static unsigned int next_call; 114 unsigned long flags; 115 116 /* 117 * Disable interrupts if not already disabled: we don't want an 118 * interrupt handler making a hypercall while we're already doing 119 * one! 120 */ 121 local_irq_save(flags); 122 if (lguest_data.hcall_status[next_call] != 0xFF) { 123 /* Table full, so do normal hcall which will flush table. */ 124 hcall(call, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4); 125 } else { 126 lguest_data.hcalls[next_call].arg0 = call; 127 lguest_data.hcalls[next_call].arg1 = arg1; 128 lguest_data.hcalls[next_call].arg2 = arg2; 129 lguest_data.hcalls[next_call].arg3 = arg3; 130 lguest_data.hcalls[next_call].arg4 = arg4; 131 /* Arguments must all be written before we mark it to go */ 132 wmb(); 133 lguest_data.hcall_status[next_call] = 0; 134 if (++next_call == LHCALL_RING_SIZE) 135 next_call = 0; 136 } 137 local_irq_restore(flags); 138} 139 140/*G:035 141 * Notice the lazy_hcall() above, rather than hcall(). This is our first real 142 * optimization trick! 143 * 144 * When lazy_mode is set, it means we're allowed to defer all hypercalls and do 145 * them as a batch when lazy_mode is eventually turned off. Because hypercalls 146 * are reasonably expensive, batching them up makes sense. For example, a 147 * large munmap might update dozens of page table entries: that code calls 148 * paravirt_enter_lazy_mmu(), does the dozen updates, then calls 149 * lguest_leave_lazy_mode(). 150 * 151 * So, when we're in lazy mode, we call async_hcall() to store the call for 152 * future processing: 153 */ 154static void lazy_hcall1(unsigned long call, unsigned long arg1) 155{ 156 if (paravirt_get_lazy_mode() == PARAVIRT_LAZY_NONE) 157 hcall(call, arg1, 0, 0, 0); 158 else 159 async_hcall(call, arg1, 0, 0, 0); 160} 161 162/* You can imagine what lazy_hcall2, 3 and 4 look like. :*/ 163static void lazy_hcall2(unsigned long call, 164 unsigned long arg1, 165 unsigned long arg2) 166{ 167 if (paravirt_get_lazy_mode() == PARAVIRT_LAZY_NONE) 168 hcall(call, arg1, arg2, 0, 0); 169 else 170 async_hcall(call, arg1, arg2, 0, 0); 171} 172 173static void lazy_hcall3(unsigned long call, 174 unsigned long arg1, 175 unsigned long arg2, 176 unsigned long arg3) 177{ 178 if (paravirt_get_lazy_mode() == PARAVIRT_LAZY_NONE) 179 hcall(call, arg1, arg2, arg3, 0); 180 else 181 async_hcall(call, arg1, arg2, arg3, 0); 182} 183 184#ifdef CONFIG_X86_PAE 185static void lazy_hcall4(unsigned long call, 186 unsigned long arg1, 187 unsigned long arg2, 188 unsigned long arg3, 189 unsigned long arg4) 190{ 191 if (paravirt_get_lazy_mode() == PARAVIRT_LAZY_NONE) 192 hcall(call, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4); 193 else 194 async_hcall(call, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4); 195} 196#endif 197 198/*G:036 199 * When lazy mode is turned off, we issue the do-nothing hypercall to 200 * flush any stored calls, and call the generic helper to reset the 201 * per-cpu lazy mode variable. 202 */ 203static void lguest_leave_lazy_mmu_mode(void) 204{ 205 hcall(LHCALL_FLUSH_ASYNC, 0, 0, 0, 0); 206 paravirt_leave_lazy_mmu(); 207} 208 209/* 210 * We also catch the end of context switch; we enter lazy mode for much of 211 * that too, so again we need to flush here. 212 * 213 * (Technically, this is lazy CPU mode, and normally we're in lazy MMU 214 * mode, but unlike Xen, lguest doesn't care about the difference). 215 */ 216static void lguest_end_context_switch(struct task_struct *next) 217{ 218 hcall(LHCALL_FLUSH_ASYNC, 0, 0, 0, 0); 219 paravirt_end_context_switch(next); 220} 221 222/*G:032 223 * After that diversion we return to our first native-instruction 224 * replacements: four functions for interrupt control. 225 * 226 * The simplest way of implementing these would be to have "turn interrupts 227 * off" and "turn interrupts on" hypercalls. Unfortunately, this is too slow: 228 * these are by far the most commonly called functions of those we override. 229 * 230 * So instead we keep an "irq_enabled" field inside our "struct lguest_data", 231 * which the Guest can update with a single instruction. The Host knows to 232 * check there before it tries to deliver an interrupt. 233 */ 234 235/* 236 * save_flags() is expected to return the processor state (ie. "flags"). The 237 * flags word contains all kind of stuff, but in practice Linux only cares 238 * about the interrupt flag. Our "save_flags()" just returns that. 239 */ 240asmlinkage __visible unsigned long lguest_save_fl(void) 241{ 242 return lguest_data.irq_enabled; 243} 244 245/* Interrupts go off... */ 246asmlinkage __visible void lguest_irq_disable(void) 247{ 248 lguest_data.irq_enabled = 0; 249} 250 251/* 252 * Let's pause a moment. Remember how I said these are called so often? 253 * Jeremy Fitzhardinge optimized them so hard early in 2009 that he had to 254 * break some rules. In particular, these functions are assumed to save their 255 * own registers if they need to: normal C functions assume they can trash the 256 * eax register. To use normal C functions, we use 257 * PV_CALLEE_SAVE_REGS_THUNK(), which pushes %eax onto the stack, calls the 258 * C function, then restores it. 259 */ 260PV_CALLEE_SAVE_REGS_THUNK(lguest_save_fl); 261PV_CALLEE_SAVE_REGS_THUNK(lguest_irq_disable); 262/*:*/ 263 264/* These are in head_32.S */ 265extern void lg_irq_enable(void); 266extern void lg_restore_fl(unsigned long flags); 267 268/*M:003 269 * We could be more efficient in our checking of outstanding interrupts, rather 270 * than using a branch. One way would be to put the "irq_enabled" field in a 271 * page by itself, and have the Host write-protect it when an interrupt comes 272 * in when irqs are disabled. There will then be a page fault as soon as 273 * interrupts are re-enabled. 274 * 275 * A better method is to implement soft interrupt disable generally for x86: 276 * instead of disabling interrupts, we set a flag. If an interrupt does come 277 * in, we then disable them for real. This is uncommon, so we could simply use 278 * a hypercall for interrupt control and not worry about efficiency. 279:*/ 280 281/*G:034 282 * The Interrupt Descriptor Table (IDT). 283 * 284 * The IDT tells the processor what to do when an interrupt comes in. Each 285 * entry in the table is a 64-bit descriptor: this holds the privilege level, 286 * address of the handler, and... well, who cares? The Guest just asks the 287 * Host to make the change anyway, because the Host controls the real IDT. 288 */ 289static void lguest_write_idt_entry(gate_desc *dt, 290 int entrynum, const gate_desc *g) 291{ 292 /* 293 * The gate_desc structure is 8 bytes long: we hand it to the Host in 294 * two 32-bit chunks. The whole 32-bit kernel used to hand descriptors 295 * around like this; typesafety wasn't a big concern in Linux's early 296 * years. 297 */ 298 u32 *desc = (u32 *)g; 299 /* Keep the local copy up to date. */ 300 native_write_idt_entry(dt, entrynum, g); 301 /* Tell Host about this new entry. */ 302 hcall(LHCALL_LOAD_IDT_ENTRY, entrynum, desc[0], desc[1], 0); 303} 304 305/* 306 * Changing to a different IDT is very rare: we keep the IDT up-to-date every 307 * time it is written, so we can simply loop through all entries and tell the 308 * Host about them. 309 */ 310static void lguest_load_idt(const struct desc_ptr *desc) 311{ 312 unsigned int i; 313 struct desc_struct *idt = (void *)desc->address; 314 315 for (i = 0; i < (desc->size+1)/8; i++) 316 hcall(LHCALL_LOAD_IDT_ENTRY, i, idt[i].a, idt[i].b, 0); 317} 318 319/* 320 * The Global Descriptor Table. 321 * 322 * The Intel architecture defines another table, called the Global Descriptor 323 * Table (GDT). You tell the CPU where it is (and its size) using the "lgdt" 324 * instruction, and then several other instructions refer to entries in the 325 * table. There are three entries which the Switcher needs, so the Host simply 326 * controls the entire thing and the Guest asks it to make changes using the 327 * LOAD_GDT hypercall. 328 * 329 * This is the exactly like the IDT code. 330 */ 331static void lguest_load_gdt(const struct desc_ptr *desc) 332{ 333 unsigned int i; 334 struct desc_struct *gdt = (void *)desc->address; 335 336 for (i = 0; i < (desc->size+1)/8; i++) 337 hcall(LHCALL_LOAD_GDT_ENTRY, i, gdt[i].a, gdt[i].b, 0); 338} 339 340/* 341 * For a single GDT entry which changes, we simply change our copy and 342 * then tell the host about it. 343 */ 344static void lguest_write_gdt_entry(struct desc_struct *dt, int entrynum, 345 const void *desc, int type) 346{ 347 native_write_gdt_entry(dt, entrynum, desc, type); 348 /* Tell Host about this new entry. */ 349 hcall(LHCALL_LOAD_GDT_ENTRY, entrynum, 350 dt[entrynum].a, dt[entrynum].b, 0); 351} 352 353/* 354 * There are three "thread local storage" GDT entries which change 355 * on every context switch (these three entries are how glibc implements 356 * __thread variables). As an optimization, we have a hypercall 357 * specifically for this case. 358 * 359 * Wouldn't it be nicer to have a general LOAD_GDT_ENTRIES hypercall 360 * which took a range of entries? 361 */ 362static void lguest_load_tls(struct thread_struct *t, unsigned int cpu) 363{ 364 /* 365 * There's one problem which normal hardware doesn't have: the Host 366 * can't handle us removing entries we're currently using. So we clear 367 * the GS register here: if it's needed it'll be reloaded anyway. 368 */ 369 lazy_load_gs(0); 370 lazy_hcall2(LHCALL_LOAD_TLS, __pa(&t->tls_array), cpu); 371} 372 373/*G:038 374 * That's enough excitement for now, back to ploughing through each of the 375 * different pv_ops structures (we're about 1/3 of the way through). 376 * 377 * This is the Local Descriptor Table, another weird Intel thingy. Linux only 378 * uses this for some strange applications like Wine. We don't do anything 379 * here, so they'll get an informative and friendly Segmentation Fault. 380 */ 381static void lguest_set_ldt(const void *addr, unsigned entries) 382{ 383} 384 385/* 386 * This loads a GDT entry into the "Task Register": that entry points to a 387 * structure called the Task State Segment. Some comments scattered though the 388 * kernel code indicate that this used for task switching in ages past, along 389 * with blood sacrifice and astrology. 390 * 391 * Now there's nothing interesting in here that we don't get told elsewhere. 392 * But the native version uses the "ltr" instruction, which makes the Host 393 * complain to the Guest about a Segmentation Fault and it'll oops. So we 394 * override the native version with a do-nothing version. 395 */ 396static void lguest_load_tr_desc(void) 397{ 398} 399 400/* 401 * The "cpuid" instruction is a way of querying both the CPU identity 402 * (manufacturer, model, etc) and its features. It was introduced before the 403 * Pentium in 1993 and keeps getting extended by both Intel, AMD and others. 404 * As you might imagine, after a decade and a half this treatment, it is now a 405 * giant ball of hair. Its entry in the current Intel manual runs to 28 pages. 406 * 407 * This instruction even it has its own Wikipedia entry. The Wikipedia entry 408 * has been translated into 6 languages. I am not making this up! 409 * 410 * We could get funky here and identify ourselves as "GenuineLguest", but 411 * instead we just use the real "cpuid" instruction. Then I pretty much turned 412 * off feature bits until the Guest booted. (Don't say that: you'll damage 413 * lguest sales!) Shut up, inner voice! (Hey, just pointing out that this is 414 * hardly future proof.) No one's listening! They don't like you anyway, 415 * parenthetic weirdo! 416 * 417 * Replacing the cpuid so we can turn features off is great for the kernel, but 418 * anyone (including userspace) can just use the raw "cpuid" instruction and 419 * the Host won't even notice since it isn't privileged. So we try not to get 420 * too worked up about it. 421 */ 422static void lguest_cpuid(unsigned int *ax, unsigned int *bx, 423 unsigned int *cx, unsigned int *dx) 424{ 425 int function = *ax; 426 427 native_cpuid(ax, bx, cx, dx); 428 switch (function) { 429 /* 430 * CPUID 0 gives the highest legal CPUID number (and the ID string). 431 * We futureproof our code a little by sticking to known CPUID values. 432 */ 433 case 0: 434 if (*ax > 5) 435 *ax = 5; 436 break; 437 438 /* 439 * CPUID 1 is a basic feature request. 440 * 441 * CX: we only allow kernel to see SSE3, CMPXCHG16B and SSSE3 442 * DX: SSE, SSE2, FXSR, MMX, CMOV, CMPXCHG8B, TSC, FPU and PAE. 443 */ 444 case 1: 445 *cx &= 0x00002201; 446 *dx &= 0x07808151; 447 /* 448 * The Host can do a nice optimization if it knows that the 449 * kernel mappings (addresses above 0xC0000000 or whatever 450 * PAGE_OFFSET is set to) haven't changed. But Linux calls 451 * flush_tlb_user() for both user and kernel mappings unless 452 * the Page Global Enable (PGE) feature bit is set. 453 */ 454 *dx |= 0x00002000; 455 /* 456 * We also lie, and say we're family id 5. 6 or greater 457 * leads to a rdmsr in early_init_intel which we can't handle. 458 * Family ID is returned as bits 8-12 in ax. 459 */ 460 *ax &= 0xFFFFF0FF; 461 *ax |= 0x00000500; 462 break; 463 464 /* 465 * This is used to detect if we're running under KVM. We might be, 466 * but that's a Host matter, not us. So say we're not. 467 */ 468 case KVM_CPUID_SIGNATURE: 469 *bx = *cx = *dx = 0; 470 break; 471 472 /* 473 * 0x80000000 returns the highest Extended Function, so we futureproof 474 * like we do above by limiting it to known fields. 475 */ 476 case 0x80000000: 477 if (*ax > 0x80000008) 478 *ax = 0x80000008; 479 break; 480 481 /* 482 * PAE systems can mark pages as non-executable. Linux calls this the 483 * NX bit. Intel calls it XD (eXecute Disable), AMD EVP (Enhanced 484 * Virus Protection). We just switch it off here, since we don't 485 * support it. 486 */ 487 case 0x80000001: 488 *dx &= ~(1 << 20); 489 break; 490 } 491} 492 493/* 494 * Intel has four control registers, imaginatively named cr0, cr2, cr3 and cr4. 495 * I assume there's a cr1, but it hasn't bothered us yet, so we'll not bother 496 * it. The Host needs to know when the Guest wants to change them, so we have 497 * a whole series of functions like read_cr0() and write_cr0(). 498 * 499 * We start with cr0. cr0 allows you to turn on and off all kinds of basic 500 * features, but Linux only really cares about one: the horrifically-named Task 501 * Switched (TS) bit at bit 3 (ie. 8) 502 * 503 * What does the TS bit do? Well, it causes the CPU to trap (interrupt 7) if 504 * the floating point unit is used. Which allows us to restore FPU state 505 * lazily after a task switch, and Linux uses that gratefully, but wouldn't a 506 * name like "FPUTRAP bit" be a little less cryptic? 507 * 508 * We store cr0 locally because the Host never changes it. The Guest sometimes 509 * wants to read it and we'd prefer not to bother the Host unnecessarily. 510 */ 511static unsigned long current_cr0; 512static void lguest_write_cr0(unsigned long val) 513{ 514 lazy_hcall1(LHCALL_TS, val & X86_CR0_TS); 515 current_cr0 = val; 516} 517 518static unsigned long lguest_read_cr0(void) 519{ 520 return current_cr0; 521} 522 523/* 524 * Intel provided a special instruction to clear the TS bit for people too cool 525 * to use write_cr0() to do it. This "clts" instruction is faster, because all 526 * the vowels have been optimized out. 527 */ 528static void lguest_clts(void) 529{ 530 lazy_hcall1(LHCALL_TS, 0); 531 current_cr0 &= ~X86_CR0_TS; 532} 533 534/* 535 * cr2 is the virtual address of the last page fault, which the Guest only ever 536 * reads. The Host kindly writes this into our "struct lguest_data", so we 537 * just read it out of there. 538 */ 539static unsigned long lguest_read_cr2(void) 540{ 541 return lguest_data.cr2; 542} 543 544/* See lguest_set_pte() below. */ 545static bool cr3_changed = false; 546static unsigned long current_cr3; 547 548/* 549 * cr3 is the current toplevel pagetable page: the principle is the same as 550 * cr0. Keep a local copy, and tell the Host when it changes. 551 */ 552static void lguest_write_cr3(unsigned long cr3) 553{ 554 lazy_hcall1(LHCALL_NEW_PGTABLE, cr3); 555 current_cr3 = cr3; 556 557 /* These two page tables are simple, linear, and used during boot */ 558 if (cr3 != __pa_symbol(swapper_pg_dir) && 559 cr3 != __pa_symbol(initial_page_table)) 560 cr3_changed = true; 561} 562 563static unsigned long lguest_read_cr3(void) 564{ 565 return current_cr3; 566} 567 568/* cr4 is used to enable and disable PGE, but we don't care. */ 569static unsigned long lguest_read_cr4(void) 570{ 571 return 0; 572} 573 574static void lguest_write_cr4(unsigned long val) 575{ 576} 577 578/* 579 * Page Table Handling. 580 * 581 * Now would be a good time to take a rest and grab a coffee or similarly 582 * relaxing stimulant. The easy parts are behind us, and the trek gradually 583 * winds uphill from here. 584 * 585 * Quick refresher: memory is divided into "pages" of 4096 bytes each. The CPU 586 * maps virtual addresses to physical addresses using "page tables". We could 587 * use one huge index of 1 million entries: each address is 4 bytes, so that's 588 * 1024 pages just to hold the page tables. But since most virtual addresses 589 * are unused, we use a two level index which saves space. The cr3 register 590 * contains the physical address of the top level "page directory" page, which 591 * contains physical addresses of up to 1024 second-level pages. Each of these 592 * second level pages contains up to 1024 physical addresses of actual pages, 593 * or Page Table Entries (PTEs). 594 * 595 * Here's a diagram, where arrows indicate physical addresses: 596 * 597 * cr3 ---> +---------+ 598 * | --------->+---------+ 599 * | | | PADDR1 | 600 * Mid-level | | PADDR2 | 601 * (PMD) page | | | 602 * | | Lower-level | 603 * | | (PTE) page | 604 * | | | | 605 * .... .... 606 * 607 * So to convert a virtual address to a physical address, we look up the top 608 * level, which points us to the second level, which gives us the physical 609 * address of that page. If the top level entry was not present, or the second 610 * level entry was not present, then the virtual address is invalid (we 611 * say "the page was not mapped"). 612 * 613 * Put another way, a 32-bit virtual address is divided up like so: 614 * 615 * 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 616 * |<---- 10 bits ---->|<---- 10 bits ---->|<------ 12 bits ------>| 617 * Index into top Index into second Offset within page 618 * page directory page pagetable page 619 * 620 * Now, unfortunately, this isn't the whole story: Intel added Physical Address 621 * Extension (PAE) to allow 32 bit systems to use 64GB of memory (ie. 36 bits). 622 * These are held in 64-bit page table entries, so we can now only fit 512 623 * entries in a page, and the neat three-level tree breaks down. 624 * 625 * The result is a four level page table: 626 * 627 * cr3 --> [ 4 Upper ] 628 * [ Level ] 629 * [ Entries ] 630 * [(PUD Page)]---> +---------+ 631 * | --------->+---------+ 632 * | | | PADDR1 | 633 * Mid-level | | PADDR2 | 634 * (PMD) page | | | 635 * | | Lower-level | 636 * | | (PTE) page | 637 * | | | | 638 * .... .... 639 * 640 * 641 * And the virtual address is decoded as: 642 * 643 * 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 644 * |<-2->|<--- 9 bits ---->|<---- 9 bits --->|<------ 12 bits ------>| 645 * Index into Index into mid Index into lower Offset within page 646 * top entries directory page pagetable page 647 * 648 * It's too hard to switch between these two formats at runtime, so Linux only 649 * supports one or the other depending on whether CONFIG_X86_PAE is set. Many 650 * distributions turn it on, and not just for people with silly amounts of 651 * memory: the larger PTE entries allow room for the NX bit, which lets the 652 * kernel disable execution of pages and increase security. 653 * 654 * This was a problem for lguest, which couldn't run on these distributions; 655 * then Matias Zabaljauregui figured it all out and implemented it, and only a 656 * handful of puppies were crushed in the process! 657 * 658 * Back to our point: the kernel spends a lot of time changing both the 659 * top-level page directory and lower-level pagetable pages. The Guest doesn't 660 * know physical addresses, so while it maintains these page tables exactly 661 * like normal, it also needs to keep the Host informed whenever it makes a 662 * change: the Host will create the real page tables based on the Guests'. 663 */ 664 665/* 666 * The Guest calls this after it has set a second-level entry (pte), ie. to map 667 * a page into a process' address space. We tell the Host the toplevel and 668 * address this corresponds to. The Guest uses one pagetable per process, so 669 * we need to tell the Host which one we're changing (mm->pgd). 670 */ 671static void lguest_pte_update(struct mm_struct *mm, unsigned long addr, 672 pte_t *ptep) 673{ 674#ifdef CONFIG_X86_PAE 675 /* PAE needs to hand a 64 bit page table entry, so it uses two args. */ 676 lazy_hcall4(LHCALL_SET_PTE, __pa(mm->pgd), addr, 677 ptep->pte_low, ptep->pte_high); 678#else 679 lazy_hcall3(LHCALL_SET_PTE, __pa(mm->pgd), addr, ptep->pte_low); 680#endif 681} 682 683/* This is the "set and update" combo-meal-deal version. */ 684static void lguest_set_pte_at(struct mm_struct *mm, unsigned long addr, 685 pte_t *ptep, pte_t pteval) 686{ 687 native_set_pte(ptep, pteval); 688 lguest_pte_update(mm, addr, ptep); 689} 690 691/* 692 * The Guest calls lguest_set_pud to set a top-level entry and lguest_set_pmd 693 * to set a middle-level entry when PAE is activated. 694 * 695 * Again, we set the entry then tell the Host which page we changed, 696 * and the index of the entry we changed. 697 */ 698#ifdef CONFIG_X86_PAE 699static void lguest_set_pud(pud_t *pudp, pud_t pudval) 700{ 701 native_set_pud(pudp, pudval); 702 703 /* 32 bytes aligned pdpt address and the index. */ 704 lazy_hcall2(LHCALL_SET_PGD, __pa(pudp) & 0xFFFFFFE0, 705 (__pa(pudp) & 0x1F) / sizeof(pud_t)); 706} 707 708static void lguest_set_pmd(pmd_t *pmdp, pmd_t pmdval) 709{ 710 native_set_pmd(pmdp, pmdval); 711 lazy_hcall2(LHCALL_SET_PMD, __pa(pmdp) & PAGE_MASK, 712 (__pa(pmdp) & (PAGE_SIZE - 1)) / sizeof(pmd_t)); 713} 714#else 715 716/* The Guest calls lguest_set_pmd to set a top-level entry when !PAE. */ 717static void lguest_set_pmd(pmd_t *pmdp, pmd_t pmdval) 718{ 719 native_set_pmd(pmdp, pmdval); 720 lazy_hcall2(LHCALL_SET_PGD, __pa(pmdp) & PAGE_MASK, 721 (__pa(pmdp) & (PAGE_SIZE - 1)) / sizeof(pmd_t)); 722} 723#endif 724 725/* 726 * There are a couple of legacy places where the kernel sets a PTE, but we 727 * don't know the top level any more. This is useless for us, since we don't 728 * know which pagetable is changing or what address, so we just tell the Host 729 * to forget all of them. Fortunately, this is very rare. 730 * 731 * ... except in early boot when the kernel sets up the initial pagetables, 732 * which makes booting astonishingly slow: 48 seconds! So we don't even tell 733 * the Host anything changed until we've done the first real page table switch, 734 * which brings boot back to 4.3 seconds. 735 */ 736static void lguest_set_pte(pte_t *ptep, pte_t pteval) 737{ 738 native_set_pte(ptep, pteval); 739 if (cr3_changed) 740 lazy_hcall1(LHCALL_FLUSH_TLB, 1); 741} 742 743#ifdef CONFIG_X86_PAE 744/* 745 * With 64-bit PTE values, we need to be careful setting them: if we set 32 746 * bits at a time, the hardware could see a weird half-set entry. These 747 * versions ensure we update all 64 bits at once. 748 */ 749static void lguest_set_pte_atomic(pte_t *ptep, pte_t pte) 750{ 751 native_set_pte_atomic(ptep, pte); 752 if (cr3_changed) 753 lazy_hcall1(LHCALL_FLUSH_TLB, 1); 754} 755 756static void lguest_pte_clear(struct mm_struct *mm, unsigned long addr, 757 pte_t *ptep) 758{ 759 native_pte_clear(mm, addr, ptep); 760 lguest_pte_update(mm, addr, ptep); 761} 762 763static void lguest_pmd_clear(pmd_t *pmdp) 764{ 765 lguest_set_pmd(pmdp, __pmd(0)); 766} 767#endif 768 769/* 770 * Unfortunately for Lguest, the pv_mmu_ops for page tables were based on 771 * native page table operations. On native hardware you can set a new page 772 * table entry whenever you want, but if you want to remove one you have to do 773 * a TLB flush (a TLB is a little cache of page table entries kept by the CPU). 774 * 775 * So the lguest_set_pte_at() and lguest_set_pmd() functions above are only 776 * called when a valid entry is written, not when it's removed (ie. marked not 777 * present). Instead, this is where we come when the Guest wants to remove a 778 * page table entry: we tell the Host to set that entry to 0 (ie. the present 779 * bit is zero). 780 */ 781static void lguest_flush_tlb_single(unsigned long addr) 782{ 783 /* Simply set it to zero: if it was not, it will fault back in. */ 784 lazy_hcall3(LHCALL_SET_PTE, current_cr3, addr, 0); 785} 786 787/* 788 * This is what happens after the Guest has removed a large number of entries. 789 * This tells the Host that any of the page table entries for userspace might 790 * have changed, ie. virtual addresses below PAGE_OFFSET. 791 */ 792static void lguest_flush_tlb_user(void) 793{ 794 lazy_hcall1(LHCALL_FLUSH_TLB, 0); 795} 796 797/* 798 * This is called when the kernel page tables have changed. That's not very 799 * common (unless the Guest is using highmem, which makes the Guest extremely 800 * slow), so it's worth separating this from the user flushing above. 801 */ 802static void lguest_flush_tlb_kernel(void) 803{ 804 lazy_hcall1(LHCALL_FLUSH_TLB, 1); 805} 806 807/* 808 * The Unadvanced Programmable Interrupt Controller. 809 * 810 * This is an attempt to implement the simplest possible interrupt controller. 811 * I spent some time looking though routines like set_irq_chip_and_handler, 812 * set_irq_chip_and_handler_name, set_irq_chip_data and set_phasers_to_stun and 813 * I *think* this is as simple as it gets. 814 * 815 * We can tell the Host what interrupts we want blocked ready for using the 816 * lguest_data.interrupts bitmap, so disabling (aka "masking") them is as 817 * simple as setting a bit. We don't actually "ack" interrupts as such, we 818 * just mask and unmask them. I wonder if we should be cleverer? 819 */ 820static void disable_lguest_irq(struct irq_data *data) 821{ 822 set_bit(data->irq, lguest_data.blocked_interrupts); 823} 824 825static void enable_lguest_irq(struct irq_data *data) 826{ 827 clear_bit(data->irq, lguest_data.blocked_interrupts); 828} 829 830/* This structure describes the lguest IRQ controller. */ 831static struct irq_chip lguest_irq_controller = { 832 .name = "lguest", 833 .irq_mask = disable_lguest_irq, 834 .irq_mask_ack = disable_lguest_irq, 835 .irq_unmask = enable_lguest_irq, 836}; 837 838/* 839 * Interrupt descriptors are allocated as-needed, but low-numbered ones are 840 * reserved by the generic x86 code. So we ignore irq_alloc_desc_at if it 841 * tells us the irq is already used: other errors (ie. ENOMEM) we take 842 * seriously. 843 */ 844static int lguest_setup_irq(unsigned int irq) 845{ 846 struct irq_desc *desc; 847 int err; 848 849 /* Returns -ve error or vector number. */ 850 err = irq_alloc_desc_at(irq, 0); 851 if (err < 0 && err != -EEXIST) 852 return err; 853 854 /* 855 * Tell the Linux infrastructure that the interrupt is 856 * controlled by our level-based lguest interrupt controller. 857 */ 858 irq_set_chip_and_handler_name(irq, &lguest_irq_controller, 859 handle_level_irq, "level"); 860 861 /* Some systems map "vectors" to interrupts weirdly. Not us! */ 862 desc = irq_to_desc(irq); 863 __this_cpu_write(vector_irq[FIRST_EXTERNAL_VECTOR + irq], desc); 864 return 0; 865} 866 867static int lguest_enable_irq(struct pci_dev *dev) 868{ 869 int err; 870 u8 line = 0; 871 872 /* We literally use the PCI interrupt line as the irq number. */ 873 pci_read_config_byte(dev, PCI_INTERRUPT_LINE, &line); 874 err = lguest_setup_irq(line); 875 if (!err) 876 dev->irq = line; 877 return err; 878} 879 880/* We don't do hotplug PCI, so this shouldn't be called. */ 881static void lguest_disable_irq(struct pci_dev *dev) 882{ 883 WARN_ON(1); 884} 885 886/* 887 * This sets up the Interrupt Descriptor Table (IDT) entry for each hardware 888 * interrupt (except 128, which is used for system calls). 889 */ 890static void __init lguest_init_IRQ(void) 891{ 892 unsigned int i; 893 894 for (i = FIRST_EXTERNAL_VECTOR; i < FIRST_SYSTEM_VECTOR; i++) { 895 if (i != IA32_SYSCALL_VECTOR) 896 set_intr_gate(i, irq_entries_start + 897 8 * (i - FIRST_EXTERNAL_VECTOR)); 898 } 899 900 /* 901 * This call is required to set up for 4k stacks, where we have 902 * separate stacks for hard and soft interrupts. 903 */ 904 irq_ctx_init(smp_processor_id()); 905} 906 907/* 908 * Time. 909 * 910 * It would be far better for everyone if the Guest had its own clock, but 911 * until then the Host gives us the time on every interrupt. 912 */ 913static void lguest_get_wallclock(struct timespec *now) 914{ 915 *now = lguest_data.time; 916} 917 918/* 919 * The TSC is an Intel thing called the Time Stamp Counter. The Host tells us 920 * what speed it runs at, or 0 if it's unusable as a reliable clock source. 921 * This matches what we want here: if we return 0 from this function, the x86 922 * TSC clock will give up and not register itself. 923 */ 924static unsigned long lguest_tsc_khz(void) 925{ 926 return lguest_data.tsc_khz; 927} 928 929/* 930 * If we can't use the TSC, the kernel falls back to our lower-priority 931 * "lguest_clock", where we read the time value given to us by the Host. 932 */ 933static cycle_t lguest_clock_read(struct clocksource *cs) 934{ 935 unsigned long sec, nsec; 936 937 /* 938 * Since the time is in two parts (seconds and nanoseconds), we risk 939 * reading it just as it's changing from 99 & 0.999999999 to 100 and 0, 940 * and getting 99 and 0. As Linux tends to come apart under the stress 941 * of time travel, we must be careful: 942 */ 943 do { 944 /* First we read the seconds part. */ 945 sec = lguest_data.time.tv_sec; 946 /* 947 * This read memory barrier tells the compiler and the CPU that 948 * this can't be reordered: we have to complete the above 949 * before going on. 950 */ 951 rmb(); 952 /* Now we read the nanoseconds part. */ 953 nsec = lguest_data.time.tv_nsec; 954 /* Make sure we've done that. */ 955 rmb(); 956 /* Now if the seconds part has changed, try again. */ 957 } while (unlikely(lguest_data.time.tv_sec != sec)); 958 959 /* Our lguest clock is in real nanoseconds. */ 960 return sec*1000000000ULL + nsec; 961} 962 963/* This is the fallback clocksource: lower priority than the TSC clocksource. */ 964static struct clocksource lguest_clock = { 965 .name = "lguest", 966 .rating = 200, 967 .read = lguest_clock_read, 968 .mask = CLOCKSOURCE_MASK(64), 969 .flags = CLOCK_SOURCE_IS_CONTINUOUS, 970}; 971 972/* 973 * We also need a "struct clock_event_device": Linux asks us to set it to go 974 * off some time in the future. Actually, James Morris figured all this out, I 975 * just applied the patch. 976 */ 977static int lguest_clockevent_set_next_event(unsigned long delta, 978 struct clock_event_device *evt) 979{ 980 /* FIXME: I don't think this can ever happen, but James tells me he had 981 * to put this code in. Maybe we should remove it now. Anyone? */ 982 if (delta < LG_CLOCK_MIN_DELTA) { 983 if (printk_ratelimit()) 984 printk(KERN_DEBUG "%s: small delta %lu ns\n", 985 __func__, delta); 986 return -ETIME; 987 } 988 989 /* Please wake us this far in the future. */ 990 hcall(LHCALL_SET_CLOCKEVENT, delta, 0, 0, 0); 991 return 0; 992} 993 994static int lguest_clockevent_shutdown(struct clock_event_device *evt) 995{ 996 /* A 0 argument shuts the clock down. */ 997 hcall(LHCALL_SET_CLOCKEVENT, 0, 0, 0, 0); 998 return 0; 999} 1000
1001/* This describes our primitive timer chip. */ 1002static struct clock_event_device lguest_clockevent = { 1003 .name = "lguest", 1004 .features = CLOCK_EVT_FEAT_ONESHOT, 1005 .set_next_event = lguest_clockevent_set_next_event, 1006 .set_state_shutdown = lguest_clockevent_shutdown, 1007 .rating = INT_MAX, 1008 .mult = 1, 1009 .shift = 0, 1010 .min_delta_ns = LG_CLOCK_MIN_DELTA, 1011 .max_delta_ns = LG_CLOCK_MAX_DELTA, 1012}; 1013 1014/* 1015 * This is the Guest timer interrupt handler (hardware interrupt 0). We just 1016 * call the clockevent infrastructure and it does whatever needs doing. 1017 */ 1018static void lguest_time_irq(struct irq_desc *desc) 1019{ 1020 unsigned long flags; 1021 1022 /* Don't interrupt us while this is running. */ 1023 local_irq_save(flags); 1024 lguest_clockevent.event_handler(&lguest_clockevent); 1025 local_irq_restore(flags); 1026} 1027 1028/* 1029 * At some point in the boot process, we get asked to set up our timing 1030 * infrastructure. The kernel doesn't expect timer interrupts before this, but 1031 * we cleverly initialized the "blocked_interrupts" field of "struct 1032 * lguest_data" so that timer interrupts were blocked until now. 1033 */ 1034static void lguest_time_init(void) 1035{ 1036 /* Set up the timer interrupt (0) to go to our simple timer routine */ 1037 if (lguest_setup_irq(0) != 0) 1038 panic("Could not set up timer irq"); 1039 irq_set_handler(0, lguest_time_irq); 1040 1041 clocksource_register_hz(&lguest_clock, NSEC_PER_SEC); 1042 1043 /* We can't set cpumask in the initializer: damn C limitations! Set it 1044 * here and register our timer device. */ 1045 lguest_clockevent.cpumask = cpumask_of(0); 1046 clockevents_register_device(&lguest_clockevent); 1047 1048 /* Finally, we unblock the timer interrupt. */ 1049 clear_bit(0, lguest_data.blocked_interrupts); 1050} 1051 1052/* 1053 * Miscellaneous bits and pieces. 1054 * 1055 * Here is an oddball collection of functions which the Guest needs for things 1056 * to work. They're pretty simple. 1057 */ 1058 1059/* 1060 * The Guest needs to tell the Host what stack it expects traps to use. For 1061 * native hardware, this is part of the Task State Segment mentioned above in 1062 * lguest_load_tr_desc(), but to help hypervisors there's this special call. 1063 * 1064 * We tell the Host the segment we want to use (__KERNEL_DS is the kernel data 1065 * segment), the privilege level (we're privilege level 1, the Host is 0 and 1066 * will not tolerate us trying to use that), the stack pointer, and the number 1067 * of pages in the stack. 1068 */ 1069static void lguest_load_sp0(struct tss_struct *tss, 1070 struct thread_struct *thread) 1071{ 1072 lazy_hcall3(LHCALL_SET_STACK, __KERNEL_DS | 0x1, thread->sp0, 1073 THREAD_SIZE / PAGE_SIZE); 1074 tss->x86_tss.sp0 = thread->sp0; 1075} 1076 1077/* Let's just say, I wouldn't do debugging under a Guest. */ 1078static unsigned long lguest_get_debugreg(int regno) 1079{ 1080 /* FIXME: Implement */ 1081 return 0; 1082} 1083 1084static void lguest_set_debugreg(int regno, unsigned long value) 1085{ 1086 /* FIXME: Implement */ 1087} 1088 1089/* 1090 * There are times when the kernel wants to make sure that no memory writes are 1091 * caught in the cache (that they've all reached real hardware devices). This 1092 * doesn't matter for the Guest which has virtual hardware. 1093 * 1094 * On the Pentium 4 and above, cpuid() indicates that the Cache Line Flush 1095 * (clflush) instruction is available and the kernel uses that. Otherwise, it 1096 * uses the older "Write Back and Invalidate Cache" (wbinvd) instruction. 1097 * Unlike clflush, wbinvd can only be run at privilege level 0. So we can 1098 * ignore clflush, but replace wbinvd. 1099 */ 1100static void lguest_wbinvd(void) 1101{ 1102} 1103 1104/* 1105 * If the Guest expects to have an Advanced Programmable Interrupt Controller, 1106 * we play dumb by ignoring writes and returning 0 for reads. So it's no 1107 * longer Programmable nor Controlling anything, and I don't think 8 lines of 1108 * code qualifies for Advanced. It will also never interrupt anything. It 1109 * does, however, allow us to get through the Linux boot code. 1110 */ 1111#ifdef CONFIG_X86_LOCAL_APIC 1112static void lguest_apic_write(u32 reg, u32 v) 1113{ 1114} 1115 1116static u32 lguest_apic_read(u32 reg) 1117{ 1118 return 0; 1119} 1120 1121static u64 lguest_apic_icr_read(void) 1122{ 1123 return 0; 1124} 1125 1126static void lguest_apic_icr_write(u32 low, u32 id) 1127{ 1128 /* Warn to see if there's any stray references */ 1129 WARN_ON(1); 1130} 1131 1132static void lguest_apic_wait_icr_idle(void) 1133{ 1134 return; 1135} 1136 1137static u32 lguest_apic_safe_wait_icr_idle(void) 1138{ 1139 return 0; 1140} 1141 1142static void set_lguest_basic_apic_ops(void) 1143{ 1144 apic->read = lguest_apic_read; 1145 apic->write = lguest_apic_write; 1146 apic->icr_read = lguest_apic_icr_read; 1147 apic->icr_write = lguest_apic_icr_write; 1148 apic->wait_icr_idle = lguest_apic_wait_icr_idle; 1149 apic->safe_wait_icr_idle = lguest_apic_safe_wait_icr_idle; 1150}; 1151#endif 1152 1153/* STOP! Until an interrupt comes in. */ 1154static void lguest_safe_halt(void) 1155{ 1156 hcall(LHCALL_HALT, 0, 0, 0, 0); 1157} 1158 1159/* 1160 * The SHUTDOWN hypercall takes a string to describe what's happening, and 1161 * an argument which says whether this to restart (reboot) the Guest or not. 1162 * 1163 * Note that the Host always prefers that the Guest speak in physical addresses 1164 * rather than virtual addresses, so we use __pa() here. 1165 */ 1166static void lguest_power_off(void) 1167{ 1168 hcall(LHCALL_SHUTDOWN, __pa("Power down"), 1169 LGUEST_SHUTDOWN_POWEROFF, 0, 0); 1170} 1171 1172/* 1173 * Panicing. 1174 * 1175 * Don't. But if you did, this is what happens. 1176 */ 1177static int lguest_panic(struct notifier_block *nb, unsigned long l, void *p) 1178{ 1179 hcall(LHCALL_SHUTDOWN, __pa(p), LGUEST_SHUTDOWN_POWEROFF, 0, 0); 1180 /* The hcall won't return, but to keep gcc happy, we're "done". */ 1181 return NOTIFY_DONE; 1182} 1183 1184static struct notifier_block paniced = { 1185 .notifier_call = lguest_panic 1186}; 1187 1188/* Setting up memory is fairly easy. */ 1189static __init char *lguest_memory_setup(void) 1190{ 1191 /* 1192 * The Linux bootloader header contains an "e820" memory map: the 1193 * Launcher populated the first entry with our memory limit. 1194 */ 1195 e820_add_region(boot_params.e820_map[0].addr, 1196 boot_params.e820_map[0].size, 1197 boot_params.e820_map[0].type); 1198 1199 /* This string is for the boot messages. */ 1200 return "LGUEST"; 1201} 1202 1203/* Offset within PCI config space of BAR access capability. */ 1204static int console_cfg_offset = 0; 1205static int console_access_cap; 1206 1207/* Set up so that we access off in bar0 (on bus 0, device 1, function 0) */ 1208static void set_cfg_window(u32 cfg_offset, u32 off) 1209{ 1210 write_pci_config_byte(0, 1, 0, 1211 cfg_offset + offsetof(struct virtio_pci_cap, bar), 1212 0); 1213 write_pci_config(0, 1, 0, 1214 cfg_offset + offsetof(struct virtio_pci_cap, length), 1215 4); 1216 write_pci_config(0, 1, 0, 1217 cfg_offset + offsetof(struct virtio_pci_cap, offset), 1218 off); 1219} 1220 1221static void write_bar_via_cfg(u32 cfg_offset, u32 off, u32 val) 1222{ 1223 /* 1224 * We could set this up once, then leave it; nothing else in the * 1225 * kernel should touch these registers. But if it went wrong, that 1226 * would be a horrible bug to find. 1227 */ 1228 set_cfg_window(cfg_offset, off); 1229 write_pci_config(0, 1, 0, 1230 cfg_offset + sizeof(struct virtio_pci_cap), val); 1231} 1232 1233static void probe_pci_console(void) 1234{ 1235 u8 cap, common_cap = 0, device_cap = 0; 1236 u32 device_len; 1237 1238 /* Avoid recursive printk into here. */ 1239 console_cfg_offset = -1; 1240 1241 if (!early_pci_allowed()) { 1242 printk(KERN_ERR "lguest: early PCI access not allowed!\n"); 1243 return; 1244 } 1245 1246 /* We expect a console PCI device at BUS0, slot 1. */ 1247 if (read_pci_config(0, 1, 0, 0) != 0x10431AF4) { 1248 printk(KERN_ERR "lguest: PCI device is %#x!\n", 1249 read_pci_config(0, 1, 0, 0)); 1250 return; 1251 } 1252 1253 /* Find the capabilities we need (must be in bar0) */ 1254 cap = read_pci_config_byte(0, 1, 0, PCI_CAPABILITY_LIST); 1255 while (cap) { 1256 u8 vndr = read_pci_config_byte(0, 1, 0, cap); 1257 if (vndr == PCI_CAP_ID_VNDR) { 1258 u8 type, bar; 1259 1260 type = read_pci_config_byte(0, 1, 0, 1261 cap + offsetof(struct virtio_pci_cap, cfg_type)); 1262 bar = read_pci_config_byte(0, 1, 0, 1263 cap + offsetof(struct virtio_pci_cap, bar)); 1264 1265 switch (type) { 1266 case VIRTIO_PCI_CAP_DEVICE_CFG: 1267 if (bar == 0) 1268 device_cap = cap; 1269 break; 1270 case VIRTIO_PCI_CAP_PCI_CFG: 1271 console_access_cap = cap; 1272 break; 1273 } 1274 } 1275 cap = read_pci_config_byte(0, 1, 0, cap + PCI_CAP_LIST_NEXT); 1276 } 1277 if (!device_cap || !console_access_cap) { 1278 printk(KERN_ERR "lguest: No caps (%u/%u/%u) in console!\n", 1279 common_cap, device_cap, console_access_cap); 1280 return; 1281 } 1282 1283 /* 1284 * Note that we can't check features, until we've set the DRIVER 1285 * status bit. We don't want to do that until we have a real driver, 1286 * so we just check that the device-specific config has room for 1287 * emerg_wr. If it doesn't support VIRTIO_CONSOLE_F_EMERG_WRITE 1288 * it should ignore the access. 1289 */ 1290 device_len = read_pci_config(0, 1, 0, 1291 device_cap + offsetof(struct virtio_pci_cap, length)); 1292 if (device_len < (offsetof(struct virtio_console_config, emerg_wr) 1293 + sizeof(u32))) { 1294 printk(KERN_ERR "lguest: console missing emerg_wr field\n"); 1295 return; 1296 } 1297 1298 console_cfg_offset = read_pci_config(0, 1, 0, 1299 device_cap + offsetof(struct virtio_pci_cap, offset)); 1300 printk(KERN_INFO "lguest: Console via virtio-pci emerg_wr\n"); 1301} 1302 1303/* 1304 * We will eventually use the virtio console device to produce console output, 1305 * but before that is set up we use the virtio PCI console's backdoor mmio 1306 * access and the "emergency" write facility (which is legal even before the 1307 * device is configured). 1308 */ 1309static __init int early_put_chars(u32 vtermno, const char *buf, int count) 1310{ 1311 /* If we couldn't find PCI console, forget it. */ 1312 if (console_cfg_offset < 0) 1313 return count; 1314 1315 if (unlikely(!console_cfg_offset)) { 1316 probe_pci_console(); 1317 if (console_cfg_offset < 0) 1318 return count; 1319 } 1320 1321 write_bar_via_cfg(console_access_cap, 1322 console_cfg_offset 1323 + offsetof(struct virtio_console_config, emerg_wr), 1324 buf[0]); 1325 return 1; 1326} 1327 1328/* 1329 * Rebooting also tells the Host we're finished, but the RESTART flag tells the 1330 * Launcher to reboot us. 1331 */ 1332static void lguest_restart(char *reason) 1333{ 1334 hcall(LHCALL_SHUTDOWN, __pa(reason), LGUEST_SHUTDOWN_RESTART, 0, 0); 1335} 1336 1337/*G:050 1338 * Patching (Powerfully Placating Performance Pedants) 1339 * 1340 * We have already seen that pv_ops structures let us replace simple native 1341 * instructions with calls to the appropriate back end all throughout the 1342 * kernel. This allows the same kernel to run as a Guest and as a native 1343 * kernel, but it's slow because of all the indirect branches. 1344 * 1345 * Remember that David Wheeler quote about "Any problem in computer science can 1346 * be solved with another layer of indirection"? The rest of that quote is 1347 * "... But that usually will create another problem." This is the first of 1348 * those problems. 1349 * 1350 * Our current solution is to allow the paravirt back end to optionally patch 1351 * over the indirect calls to replace them with something more efficient. We 1352 * patch two of the simplest of the most commonly called functions: disable 1353 * interrupts and save interrupts. We usually have 6 or 10 bytes to patch 1354 * into: the Guest versions of these operations are small enough that we can 1355 * fit comfortably. 1356 * 1357 * First we need assembly templates of each of the patchable Guest operations, 1358 * and these are in head_32.S. 1359 */ 1360 1361/*G:060 We construct a table from the assembler templates: */ 1362static const struct lguest_insns 1363{ 1364 const char *start, *end; 1365} lguest_insns[] = { 1366 [PARAVIRT_PATCH(pv_irq_ops.irq_disable)] = { lgstart_cli, lgend_cli }, 1367 [PARAVIRT_PATCH(pv_irq_ops.save_fl)] = { lgstart_pushf, lgend_pushf }, 1368}; 1369 1370/* 1371 * Now our patch routine is fairly simple (based on the native one in 1372 * paravirt.c). If we have a replacement, we copy it in and return how much of 1373 * the available space we used. 1374 */ 1375static unsigned lguest_patch(u8 type, u16 clobber, void *ibuf, 1376 unsigned long addr, unsigned len) 1377{ 1378 unsigned int insn_len; 1379 1380 /* Don't do anything special if we don't have a replacement */ 1381 if (type >= ARRAY_SIZE(lguest_insns) || !lguest_insns[type].start) 1382 return paravirt_patch_default(type, clobber, ibuf, addr, len); 1383 1384 insn_len = lguest_insns[type].end - lguest_insns[type].start; 1385 1386 /* Similarly if it can't fit (doesn't happen, but let's be thorough). */ 1387 if (len < insn_len) 1388 return paravirt_patch_default(type, clobber, ibuf, addr, len); 1389 1390 /* Copy in our instructions. */ 1391 memcpy(ibuf, lguest_insns[type].start, insn_len); 1392 return insn_len; 1393} 1394 1395/*G:029 1396 * Once we get to lguest_init(), we know we're a Guest. The various 1397 * pv_ops structures in the kernel provide points for (almost) every routine we 1398 * have to override to avoid privileged instructions. 1399 */ 1400__init void lguest_init(void) 1401{ 1402 /* We're under lguest. */ 1403 pv_info.name = "lguest"; 1404 /* We're running at privilege level 1, not 0 as normal. */ 1405 pv_info.kernel_rpl = 1; 1406 /* Everyone except Xen runs with this set. */ 1407 pv_info.shared_kernel_pmd = 1; 1408 1409 /* 1410 * We set up all the lguest overrides for sensitive operations. These 1411 * are detailed with the operations themselves. 1412 */ 1413 1414 /* Interrupt-related operations */ 1415 pv_irq_ops.save_fl = PV_CALLEE_SAVE(lguest_save_fl); 1416 pv_irq_ops.restore_fl = __PV_IS_CALLEE_SAVE(lg_restore_fl); 1417 pv_irq_ops.irq_disable = PV_CALLEE_SAVE(lguest_irq_disable); 1418 pv_irq_ops.irq_enable = __PV_IS_CALLEE_SAVE(lg_irq_enable); 1419 pv_irq_ops.safe_halt = lguest_safe_halt; 1420 1421 /* Setup operations */ 1422 pv_init_ops.patch = lguest_patch; 1423 1424 /* Intercepts of various CPU instructions */ 1425 pv_cpu_ops.load_gdt = lguest_load_gdt; 1426 pv_cpu_ops.cpuid = lguest_cpuid; 1427 pv_cpu_ops.load_idt = lguest_load_idt; 1428 pv_cpu_ops.iret = lguest_iret; 1429 pv_cpu_ops.load_sp0 = lguest_load_sp0; 1430 pv_cpu_ops.load_tr_desc = lguest_load_tr_desc; 1431 pv_cpu_ops.set_ldt = lguest_set_ldt; 1432 pv_cpu_ops.load_tls = lguest_load_tls; 1433 pv_cpu_ops.get_debugreg = lguest_get_debugreg; 1434 pv_cpu_ops.set_debugreg = lguest_set_debugreg; 1435 pv_cpu_ops.clts = lguest_clts; 1436 pv_cpu_ops.read_cr0 = lguest_read_cr0; 1437 pv_cpu_ops.write_cr0 = lguest_write_cr0; 1438 pv_cpu_ops.read_cr4 = lguest_read_cr4; 1439 pv_cpu_ops.write_cr4 = lguest_write_cr4; 1440 pv_cpu_ops.write_gdt_entry = lguest_write_gdt_entry; 1441 pv_cpu_ops.write_idt_entry = lguest_write_idt_entry; 1442 pv_cpu_ops.wbinvd = lguest_wbinvd; 1443 pv_cpu_ops.start_context_switch = paravirt_start_context_switch; 1444 pv_cpu_ops.end_context_switch = lguest_end_context_switch; 1445 1446 /* Pagetable management */ 1447 pv_mmu_ops.write_cr3 = lguest_write_cr3; 1448 pv_mmu_ops.flush_tlb_user = lguest_flush_tlb_user; 1449 pv_mmu_ops.flush_tlb_single = lguest_flush_tlb_single; 1450 pv_mmu_ops.flush_tlb_kernel = lguest_flush_tlb_kernel; 1451 pv_mmu_ops.set_pte = lguest_set_pte; 1452 pv_mmu_ops.set_pte_at = lguest_set_pte_at; 1453 pv_mmu_ops.set_pmd = lguest_set_pmd; 1454#ifdef CONFIG_X86_PAE 1455 pv_mmu_ops.set_pte_atomic = lguest_set_pte_atomic; 1456 pv_mmu_ops.pte_clear = lguest_pte_clear; 1457 pv_mmu_ops.pmd_clear = lguest_pmd_clear; 1458 pv_mmu_ops.set_pud = lguest_set_pud; 1459#endif 1460 pv_mmu_ops.read_cr2 = lguest_read_cr2; 1461 pv_mmu_ops.read_cr3 = lguest_read_cr3; 1462 pv_mmu_ops.lazy_mode.enter = paravirt_enter_lazy_mmu; 1463 pv_mmu_ops.lazy_mode.leave = lguest_leave_lazy_mmu_mode; 1464 pv_mmu_ops.lazy_mode.flush = paravirt_flush_lazy_mmu; 1465 pv_mmu_ops.pte_update = lguest_pte_update; 1466 1467#ifdef CONFIG_X86_LOCAL_APIC 1468 /* APIC read/write intercepts */ 1469 set_lguest_basic_apic_ops(); 1470#endif 1471 1472 x86_init.resources.memory_setup = lguest_memory_setup; 1473 x86_init.irqs.intr_init = lguest_init_IRQ; 1474 x86_init.timers.timer_init = lguest_time_init; 1475 x86_platform.calibrate_tsc = lguest_tsc_khz; 1476 x86_platform.get_wallclock = lguest_get_wallclock; 1477 1478 /* 1479 * Now is a good time to look at the implementations of these functions 1480 * before returning to the rest of lguest_init(). 1481 */ 1482 1483 /*G:070 1484 * Now we've seen all the paravirt_ops, we return to 1485 * lguest_init() where the rest of the fairly chaotic boot setup 1486 * occurs. 1487 */ 1488 1489 /* 1490 * The stack protector is a weird thing where gcc places a canary 1491 * value on the stack and then checks it on return. This file is 1492 * compiled with -fno-stack-protector it, so we got this far without 1493 * problems. The value of the canary is kept at offset 20 from the 1494 * %gs register, so we need to set that up before calling C functions 1495 * in other files. 1496 */ 1497 setup_stack_canary_segment(0); 1498 1499 /* 1500 * We could just call load_stack_canary_segment(), but we might as well 1501 * call switch_to_new_gdt() which loads the whole table and sets up the 1502 * per-cpu segment descriptor register %fs as well. 1503 */ 1504 switch_to_new_gdt(0); 1505 1506 /* 1507 * The Host<->Guest Switcher lives at the top of our address space, and 1508 * the Host told us how big it is when we made LGUEST_INIT hypercall: 1509 * it put the answer in lguest_data.reserve_mem 1510 */ 1511 reserve_top_address(lguest_data.reserve_mem); 1512 1513 /* Hook in our special panic hypercall code. */ 1514 atomic_notifier_chain_register(&panic_notifier_list, &paniced); 1515 1516 /* 1517 * This is messy CPU setup stuff which the native boot code does before 1518 * start_kernel, so we have to do, too: 1519 */ 1520 cpu_detect(&new_cpu_data); 1521 /* head.S usually sets up the first capability word, so do it here. */ 1522 new_cpu_data.x86_capability[CPUID_1_EDX] = cpuid_edx(1); 1523 1524 /* Math is always hard! */ 1525 set_cpu_cap(&new_cpu_data, X86_FEATURE_FPU); 1526 1527 /* We don't have features. We have puppies! Puppies! */ 1528#ifdef CONFIG_X86_MCE 1529 mca_cfg.disabled = true; 1530#endif 1531#ifdef CONFIG_ACPI 1532 acpi_disabled = 1; 1533#endif 1534 1535 /* 1536 * We set the preferred console to "hvc". This is the "hypervisor 1537 * virtual console" driver written by the PowerPC people, which we also 1538 * adapted for lguest's use. 1539 */ 1540 add_preferred_console("hvc", 0, NULL); 1541 1542 /* Register our very early console. */ 1543 virtio_cons_early_init(early_put_chars); 1544 1545 /* Don't let ACPI try to control our PCI interrupts. */ 1546 disable_acpi(); 1547 1548 /* We control them ourselves, by overriding these two hooks. */ 1549 pcibios_enable_irq = lguest_enable_irq; 1550 pcibios_disable_irq = lguest_disable_irq; 1551 1552 /* 1553 * Last of all, we set the power management poweroff hook to point to 1554 * the Guest routine to power off, and the reboot hook to our restart 1555 * routine. 1556 */ 1557 pm_power_off = lguest_power_off; 1558 machine_ops.restart = lguest_restart; 1559 1560 /* 1561 * Now we're set up, call i386_start_kernel() in head32.c and we proceed 1562 * to boot as normal. It never returns. 1563 */ 1564 i386_start_kernel(); 1565} 1566/* 1567 * This marks the end of stage II of our journey, The Guest. 1568 * 1569 * It is now time for us to explore the layer of virtual drivers and complete 1570 * our understanding of the Guest in "make Drivers". 1571 */ 1572