qemu/docs/devel/memory.rst
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   1==============
   2The memory API
   3==============
   4
   5The memory API models the memory and I/O buses and controllers of a QEMU
   6machine.  It attempts to allow modelling of:
   7
   8- ordinary RAM
   9- memory-mapped I/O (MMIO)
  10- memory controllers that can dynamically reroute physical memory regions
  11  to different destinations
  12
  13The memory model provides support for
  14
  15- tracking RAM changes by the guest
  16- setting up coalesced memory for kvm
  17- setting up ioeventfd regions for kvm
  18
  19Memory is modelled as an acyclic graph of MemoryRegion objects.  Sinks
  20(leaves) are RAM and MMIO regions, while other nodes represent
  21buses, memory controllers, and memory regions that have been rerouted.
  22
  23In addition to MemoryRegion objects, the memory API provides AddressSpace
  24objects for every root and possibly for intermediate MemoryRegions too.
  25These represent memory as seen from the CPU or a device's viewpoint.
  26
  27Types of regions
  28----------------
  29
  30There are multiple types of memory regions (all represented by a single C type
  31MemoryRegion):
  32
  33- RAM: a RAM region is simply a range of host memory that can be made available
  34  to the guest.
  35  You typically initialize these with memory_region_init_ram().  Some special
  36  purposes require the variants memory_region_init_resizeable_ram(),
  37  memory_region_init_ram_from_file(), or memory_region_init_ram_ptr().
  38
  39- MMIO: a range of guest memory that is implemented by host callbacks;
  40  each read or write causes a callback to be called on the host.
  41  You initialize these with memory_region_init_io(), passing it a
  42  MemoryRegionOps structure describing the callbacks.
  43
  44- ROM: a ROM memory region works like RAM for reads (directly accessing
  45  a region of host memory), and forbids writes. You initialize these with
  46  memory_region_init_rom().
  47
  48- ROM device: a ROM device memory region works like RAM for reads
  49  (directly accessing a region of host memory), but like MMIO for
  50  writes (invoking a callback).  You initialize these with
  51  memory_region_init_rom_device().
  52
  53- IOMMU region: an IOMMU region translates addresses of accesses made to it
  54  and forwards them to some other target memory region.  As the name suggests,
  55  these are only needed for modelling an IOMMU, not for simple devices.
  56  You initialize these with memory_region_init_iommu().
  57
  58- container: a container simply includes other memory regions, each at
  59  a different offset.  Containers are useful for grouping several regions
  60  into one unit.  For example, a PCI BAR may be composed of a RAM region
  61  and an MMIO region.
  62
  63  A container's subregions are usually non-overlapping.  In some cases it is
  64  useful to have overlapping regions; for example a memory controller that
  65  can overlay a subregion of RAM with MMIO or ROM, or a PCI controller
  66  that does not prevent card from claiming overlapping BARs.
  67
  68  You initialize a pure container with memory_region_init().
  69
  70- alias: a subsection of another region.  Aliases allow a region to be
  71  split apart into discontiguous regions.  Examples of uses are memory banks
  72  used when the guest address space is smaller than the amount of RAM
  73  addressed, or a memory controller that splits main memory to expose a "PCI
  74  hole".  Aliases may point to any type of region, including other aliases,
  75  but an alias may not point back to itself, directly or indirectly.
  76  You initialize these with memory_region_init_alias().
  77
  78- reservation region: a reservation region is primarily for debugging.
  79  It claims I/O space that is not supposed to be handled by QEMU itself.
  80  The typical use is to track parts of the address space which will be
  81  handled by the host kernel when KVM is enabled.  You initialize these
  82  by passing a NULL callback parameter to memory_region_init_io().
  83
  84It is valid to add subregions to a region which is not a pure container
  85(that is, to an MMIO, RAM or ROM region). This means that the region
  86will act like a container, except that any addresses within the container's
  87region which are not claimed by any subregion are handled by the
  88container itself (ie by its MMIO callbacks or RAM backing). However
  89it is generally possible to achieve the same effect with a pure container
  90one of whose subregions is a low priority "background" region covering
  91the whole address range; this is often clearer and is preferred.
  92Subregions cannot be added to an alias region.
  93
  94Migration
  95---------
  96
  97Where the memory region is backed by host memory (RAM, ROM and
  98ROM device memory region types), this host memory needs to be
  99copied to the destination on migration. These APIs which allocate
 100the host memory for you will also register the memory so it is
 101migrated:
 102
 103- memory_region_init_ram()
 104- memory_region_init_rom()
 105- memory_region_init_rom_device()
 106
 107For most devices and boards this is the correct thing. If you
 108have a special case where you need to manage the migration of
 109the backing memory yourself, you can call the functions:
 110
 111- memory_region_init_ram_nomigrate()
 112- memory_region_init_rom_nomigrate()
 113- memory_region_init_rom_device_nomigrate()
 114
 115which only initialize the MemoryRegion and leave handling
 116migration to the caller.
 117
 118The functions:
 119
 120- memory_region_init_resizeable_ram()
 121- memory_region_init_ram_from_file()
 122- memory_region_init_ram_from_fd()
 123- memory_region_init_ram_ptr()
 124- memory_region_init_ram_device_ptr()
 125
 126are for special cases only, and so they do not automatically
 127register the backing memory for migration; the caller must
 128manage migration if necessary.
 129
 130Region names
 131------------
 132
 133Regions are assigned names by the constructor.  For most regions these are
 134only used for debugging purposes, but RAM regions also use the name to identify
 135live migration sections.  This means that RAM region names need to have ABI
 136stability.
 137
 138Region lifecycle
 139----------------
 140
 141A region is created by one of the memory_region_init*() functions and
 142attached to an object, which acts as its owner or parent.  QEMU ensures
 143that the owner object remains alive as long as the region is visible to
 144the guest, or as long as the region is in use by a virtual CPU or another
 145device.  For example, the owner object will not die between an
 146address_space_map operation and the corresponding address_space_unmap.
 147
 148After creation, a region can be added to an address space or a
 149container with memory_region_add_subregion(), and removed using
 150memory_region_del_subregion().
 151
 152Various region attributes (read-only, dirty logging, coalesced mmio,
 153ioeventfd) can be changed during the region lifecycle.  They take effect
 154as soon as the region is made visible.  This can be immediately, later,
 155or never.
 156
 157Destruction of a memory region happens automatically when the owner
 158object dies.
 159
 160If however the memory region is part of a dynamically allocated data
 161structure, you should call object_unparent() to destroy the memory region
 162before the data structure is freed.  For an example see VFIOMSIXInfo
 163and VFIOQuirk in hw/vfio/pci.c.
 164
 165You must not destroy a memory region as long as it may be in use by a
 166device or CPU.  In order to do this, as a general rule do not create or
 167destroy memory regions dynamically during a device's lifetime, and only
 168call object_unparent() in the memory region owner's instance_finalize
 169callback.  The dynamically allocated data structure that contains the
 170memory region then should obviously be freed in the instance_finalize
 171callback as well.
 172
 173If you break this rule, the following situation can happen:
 174
 175- the memory region's owner had a reference taken via memory_region_ref
 176  (for example by address_space_map)
 177
 178- the region is unparented, and has no owner anymore
 179
 180- when address_space_unmap is called, the reference to the memory region's
 181  owner is leaked.
 182
 183
 184There is an exception to the above rule: it is okay to call
 185object_unparent at any time for an alias or a container region.  It is
 186therefore also okay to create or destroy alias and container regions
 187dynamically during a device's lifetime.
 188
 189This exceptional usage is valid because aliases and containers only help
 190QEMU building the guest's memory map; they are never accessed directly.
 191memory_region_ref and memory_region_unref are never called on aliases
 192or containers, and the above situation then cannot happen.  Exploiting
 193this exception is rarely necessary, and therefore it is discouraged,
 194but nevertheless it is used in a few places.
 195
 196For regions that "have no owner" (NULL is passed at creation time), the
 197machine object is actually used as the owner.  Since instance_finalize is
 198never called for the machine object, you must never call object_unparent
 199on regions that have no owner, unless they are aliases or containers.
 200
 201
 202Overlapping regions and priority
 203--------------------------------
 204Usually, regions may not overlap each other; a memory address decodes into
 205exactly one target.  In some cases it is useful to allow regions to overlap,
 206and sometimes to control which of an overlapping regions is visible to the
 207guest.  This is done with memory_region_add_subregion_overlap(), which
 208allows the region to overlap any other region in the same container, and
 209specifies a priority that allows the core to decide which of two regions at
 210the same address are visible (highest wins).
 211Priority values are signed, and the default value is zero. This means that
 212you can use memory_region_add_subregion_overlap() both to specify a region
 213that must sit 'above' any others (with a positive priority) and also a
 214background region that sits 'below' others (with a negative priority).
 215
 216If the higher priority region in an overlap is a container or alias, then
 217the lower priority region will appear in any "holes" that the higher priority
 218region has left by not mapping subregions to that area of its address range.
 219(This applies recursively -- if the subregions are themselves containers or
 220aliases that leave holes then the lower priority region will appear in these
 221holes too.)
 222
 223For example, suppose we have a container A of size 0x8000 with two subregions
 224B and C. B is a container mapped at 0x2000, size 0x4000, priority 2; C is
 225an MMIO region mapped at 0x0, size 0x6000, priority 1. B currently has two
 226of its own subregions: D of size 0x1000 at offset 0 and E of size 0x1000 at
 227offset 0x2000. As a diagram::
 228
 229        0      1000   2000   3000   4000   5000   6000   7000   8000
 230        |------|------|------|------|------|------|------|------|
 231  A:    [                                                      ]
 232  C:    [CCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCC]
 233  B:                  [                          ]
 234  D:                  [DDDDD]
 235  E:                                [EEEEE]
 236
 237The regions that will be seen within this address range then are::
 238
 239  [CCCCCCCCCCCC][DDDDD][CCCCC][EEEEE][CCCCC]
 240
 241Since B has higher priority than C, its subregions appear in the flat map
 242even where they overlap with C. In ranges where B has not mapped anything
 243C's region appears.
 244
 245If B had provided its own MMIO operations (ie it was not a pure container)
 246then these would be used for any addresses in its range not handled by
 247D or E, and the result would be::
 248
 249  [CCCCCCCCCCCC][DDDDD][BBBBB][EEEEE][BBBBB]
 250
 251Priority values are local to a container, because the priorities of two
 252regions are only compared when they are both children of the same container.
 253This means that the device in charge of the container (typically modelling
 254a bus or a memory controller) can use them to manage the interaction of
 255its child regions without any side effects on other parts of the system.
 256In the example above, the priorities of D and E are unimportant because
 257they do not overlap each other. It is the relative priority of B and C
 258that causes D and E to appear on top of C: D and E's priorities are never
 259compared against the priority of C.
 260
 261Visibility
 262----------
 263The memory core uses the following rules to select a memory region when the
 264guest accesses an address:
 265
 266- all direct subregions of the root region are matched against the address, in
 267  descending priority order
 268
 269  - if the address lies outside the region offset/size, the subregion is
 270    discarded
 271  - if the subregion is a leaf (RAM or MMIO), the search terminates, returning
 272    this leaf region
 273  - if the subregion is a container, the same algorithm is used within the
 274    subregion (after the address is adjusted by the subregion offset)
 275  - if the subregion is an alias, the search is continued at the alias target
 276    (after the address is adjusted by the subregion offset and alias offset)
 277  - if a recursive search within a container or alias subregion does not
 278    find a match (because of a "hole" in the container's coverage of its
 279    address range), then if this is a container with its own MMIO or RAM
 280    backing the search terminates, returning the container itself. Otherwise
 281    we continue with the next subregion in priority order
 282
 283- if none of the subregions match the address then the search terminates
 284  with no match found
 285
 286Example memory map
 287------------------
 288
 289::
 290
 291  system_memory: container@0-2^48-1
 292   |
 293   +---- lomem: alias@0-0xdfffffff ---> #ram (0-0xdfffffff)
 294   |
 295   +---- himem: alias@0x100000000-0x11fffffff ---> #ram (0xe0000000-0xffffffff)
 296   |
 297   +---- vga-window: alias@0xa0000-0xbffff ---> #pci (0xa0000-0xbffff)
 298   |      (prio 1)
 299   |
 300   +---- pci-hole: alias@0xe0000000-0xffffffff ---> #pci (0xe0000000-0xffffffff)
 301
 302  pci (0-2^32-1)
 303   |
 304   +--- vga-area: container@0xa0000-0xbffff
 305   |      |
 306   |      +--- alias@0x00000-0x7fff  ---> #vram (0x010000-0x017fff)
 307   |      |
 308   |      +--- alias@0x08000-0xffff  ---> #vram (0x020000-0x027fff)
 309   |
 310   +---- vram: ram@0xe1000000-0xe1ffffff
 311   |
 312   +---- vga-mmio: mmio@0xe2000000-0xe200ffff
 313
 314  ram: ram@0x00000000-0xffffffff
 315
 316This is a (simplified) PC memory map. The 4GB RAM block is mapped into the
 317system address space via two aliases: "lomem" is a 1:1 mapping of the first
 3183.5GB; "himem" maps the last 0.5GB at address 4GB.  This leaves 0.5GB for the
 319so-called PCI hole, that allows a 32-bit PCI bus to exist in a system with
 3204GB of memory.
 321
 322The memory controller diverts addresses in the range 640K-768K to the PCI
 323address space.  This is modelled using the "vga-window" alias, mapped at a
 324higher priority so it obscures the RAM at the same addresses.  The vga window
 325can be removed by programming the memory controller; this is modelled by
 326removing the alias and exposing the RAM underneath.
 327
 328The pci address space is not a direct child of the system address space, since
 329we only want parts of it to be visible (we accomplish this using aliases).
 330It has two subregions: vga-area models the legacy vga window and is occupied
 331by two 32K memory banks pointing at two sections of the framebuffer.
 332In addition the vram is mapped as a BAR at address e1000000, and an additional
 333BAR containing MMIO registers is mapped after it.
 334
 335Note that if the guest maps a BAR outside the PCI hole, it would not be
 336visible as the pci-hole alias clips it to a 0.5GB range.
 337
 338MMIO Operations
 339---------------
 340
 341MMIO regions are provided with ->read() and ->write() callbacks,
 342which are sufficient for most devices. Some devices change behaviour
 343based on the attributes used for the memory transaction, or need
 344to be able to respond that the access should provoke a bus error
 345rather than completing successfully; those devices can use the
 346->read_with_attrs() and ->write_with_attrs() callbacks instead.
 347
 348In addition various constraints can be supplied to control how these
 349callbacks are called:
 350
 351- .valid.min_access_size, .valid.max_access_size define the access sizes
 352  (in bytes) which the device accepts; accesses outside this range will
 353  have device and bus specific behaviour (ignored, or machine check)
 354- .valid.unaligned specifies that the *device being modelled* supports
 355  unaligned accesses; if false, unaligned accesses will invoke the
 356  appropriate bus or CPU specific behaviour.
 357- .impl.min_access_size, .impl.max_access_size define the access sizes
 358  (in bytes) supported by the *implementation*; other access sizes will be
 359  emulated using the ones available.  For example a 4-byte write will be
 360  emulated using four 1-byte writes, if .impl.max_access_size = 1.
 361- .impl.unaligned specifies that the *implementation* supports unaligned
 362  accesses; if false, unaligned accesses will be emulated by two aligned
 363  accesses.
 364
 365API Reference
 366-------------
 367
 368.. kernel-doc:: include/exec/memory.h
 369