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KVM: arm/arm64: GICv4: Theory of operations

Yet another braindump so I can free some cells...

Acked-by: Christoffer Dall <christoffer.dall@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Marc Zyngier <marc.zyngier@arm.com>
Signed-off-by: Christoffer Dall <christoffer.dall@linaro.org>
hifive-unleashed-5.1
Marc Zyngier 2017-10-27 15:28:55 +01:00 committed by Christoffer Dall
parent a75460547e
commit ed8703a506
1 changed files with 67 additions and 0 deletions

View File

@ -23,6 +23,73 @@
#include "vgic.h"
/*
* How KVM uses GICv4 (insert rude comments here):
*
* The vgic-v4 layer acts as a bridge between several entities:
* - The GICv4 ITS representation offered by the ITS driver
* - VFIO, which is in charge of the PCI endpoint
* - The virtual ITS, which is the only thing the guest sees
*
* The configuration of VLPIs is triggered by a callback from VFIO,
* instructing KVM that a PCI device has been configured to deliver
* MSIs to a vITS.
*
* kvm_vgic_v4_set_forwarding() is thus called with the routing entry,
* and this is used to find the corresponding vITS data structures
* (ITS instance, device, event and irq) using a process that is
* extremely similar to the injection of an MSI.
*
* At this stage, we can link the guest's view of an LPI (uniquely
* identified by the routing entry) and the host irq, using the GICv4
* driver mapping operation. Should the mapping succeed, we've then
* successfully upgraded the guest's LPI to a VLPI. We can then start
* with updating GICv4's view of the property table and generating an
* INValidation in order to kickstart the delivery of this VLPI to the
* guest directly, without software intervention. Well, almost.
*
* When the PCI endpoint is deconfigured, this operation is reversed
* with VFIO calling kvm_vgic_v4_unset_forwarding().
*
* Once the VLPI has been mapped, it needs to follow any change the
* guest performs on its LPI through the vITS. For that, a number of
* command handlers have hooks to communicate these changes to the HW:
* - Any invalidation triggers a call to its_prop_update_vlpi()
* - The INT command results in a irq_set_irqchip_state(), which
* generates an INT on the corresponding VLPI.
* - The CLEAR command results in a irq_set_irqchip_state(), which
* generates an CLEAR on the corresponding VLPI.
* - DISCARD translates into an unmap, similar to a call to
* kvm_vgic_v4_unset_forwarding().
* - MOVI is translated by an update of the existing mapping, changing
* the target vcpu, resulting in a VMOVI being generated.
* - MOVALL is translated by a string of mapping updates (similar to
* the handling of MOVI). MOVALL is horrible.
*
* Note that a DISCARD/MAPTI sequence emitted from the guest without
* reprogramming the PCI endpoint after MAPTI does not result in a
* VLPI being mapped, as there is no callback from VFIO (the guest
* will get the interrupt via the normal SW injection). Fixing this is
* not trivial, and requires some horrible messing with the VFIO
* internals. Not fun. Don't do that.
*
* Then there is the scheduling. Each time a vcpu is about to run on a
* physical CPU, KVM must tell the corresponding redistributor about
* it. And if we've migrated our vcpu from one CPU to another, we must
* tell the ITS (so that the messages reach the right redistributor).
* This is done in two steps: first issue a irq_set_affinity() on the
* irq corresponding to the vcpu, then call its_schedule_vpe(). You
* must be in a non-preemptible context. On exit, another call to
* its_schedule_vpe() tells the redistributor that we're done with the
* vcpu.
*
* Finally, the doorbell handling: Each vcpu is allocated an interrupt
* which will fire each time a VLPI is made pending whilst the vcpu is
* not running. Each time the vcpu gets blocked, the doorbell
* interrupt gets enabled. When the vcpu is unblocked (for whatever
* reason), the doorbell interrupt is disabled.
*/
#define DB_IRQ_FLAGS (IRQ_NOAUTOEN | IRQ_DISABLE_UNLAZY | IRQ_NO_BALANCING)
static irqreturn_t vgic_v4_doorbell_handler(int irq, void *info)