| .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 |
| |
| ==================================== |
| Nested KVM on POWER |
| ==================================== |
| |
| Introduction |
| ============ |
| |
| This document explains how a guest operating system can act as a |
| hypervisor and run nested guests through the use of hypercalls, if the |
| hypervisor has implemented them. The terms L0, L1, and L2 are used to |
| refer to different software entities. L0 is the hypervisor mode entity |
| that would normally be called the "host" or "hypervisor". L1 is a |
| guest virtual machine that is directly run under L0 and is initiated |
| and controlled by L0. L2 is a guest virtual machine that is initiated |
| and controlled by L1 acting as a hypervisor. |
| |
| Existing API |
| ============ |
| |
| Linux/KVM has had support for Nesting as an L0 or L1 since 2018 |
| |
| The L0 code was added:: |
| |
| commit 8e3f5fc1045dc49fd175b978c5457f5f51e7a2ce |
| Author: Paul Mackerras <paulus@ozlabs.org> |
| Date: Mon Oct 8 16:31:03 2018 +1100 |
| KVM: PPC: Book3S HV: Framework and hcall stubs for nested virtualization |
| |
| The L1 code was added:: |
| |
| commit 360cae313702cdd0b90f82c261a8302fecef030a |
| Author: Paul Mackerras <paulus@ozlabs.org> |
| Date: Mon Oct 8 16:31:04 2018 +1100 |
| KVM: PPC: Book3S HV: Nested guest entry via hypercall |
| |
| This API works primarily using a single hcall h_enter_nested(). This |
| call made by the L1 to tell the L0 to start an L2 vCPU with the given |
| state. The L0 then starts this L2 and runs until an L2 exit condition |
| is reached. Once the L2 exits, the state of the L2 is given back to |
| the L1 by the L0. The full L2 vCPU state is always transferred from |
| and to L1 when the L2 is run. The L0 doesn't keep any state on the L2 |
| vCPU (except in the short sequence in the L0 on L1 -> L2 entry and L2 |
| -> L1 exit). |
| |
| The only state kept by the L0 is the partition table. The L1 registers |
| it's partition table using the h_set_partition_table() hcall. All |
| other state held by the L0 about the L2s is cached state (such as |
| shadow page tables). |
| |
| The L1 may run any L2 or vCPU without first informing the L0. It |
| simply starts the vCPU using h_enter_nested(). The creation of L2s and |
| vCPUs is done implicitly whenever h_enter_nested() is called. |
| |
| In this document, we call this existing API the v1 API. |
| |
| New PAPR API |
| =============== |
| |
| The new PAPR API changes from the v1 API such that the creating L2 and |
| associated vCPUs is explicit. In this document, we call this the v2 |
| API. |
| |
| h_enter_nested() is replaced with H_GUEST_VCPU_RUN(). Before this can |
| be called the L1 must explicitly create the L2 using h_guest_create() |
| and any associated vCPUs() created with h_guest_create_vCPU(). Getting |
| and setting vCPU state can also be performed using h_guest_{g|s}et |
| hcall. |
| |
| The basic execution flow is for an L1 to create an L2, run it, and |
| delete it is: |
| |
| - L1 and L0 negotiate capabilities with H_GUEST_{G,S}ET_CAPABILITIES() |
| (normally at L1 boot time). |
| |
| - L1 requests the L0 create an L2 with H_GUEST_CREATE() and receives a token |
| |
| - L1 requests the L0 create an L2 vCPU with H_GUEST_CREATE_VCPU() |
| |
| - L1 and L0 communicate the vCPU state using the H_GUEST_{G,S}ET() hcall |
| |
| - L1 requests the L0 runs the vCPU running H_GUEST_VCPU_RUN() hcall |
| |
| - L1 deletes L2 with H_GUEST_DELETE() |
| |
| More details of the individual hcalls follows: |
| |
| HCALL Details |
| ============= |
| |
| This documentation is provided to give an overall understating of the |
| API. It doesn't aim to provide all the details required to implement |
| an L1 or L0. Latest version of PAPR can be referred to for more details. |
| |
| All these HCALLs are made by the L1 to the L0. |
| |
| H_GUEST_GET_CAPABILITIES() |
| -------------------------- |
| |
| This is called to get the capabilities of the L0 nested |
| hypervisor. This includes capabilities such the CPU versions (eg |
| POWER9, POWER10) that are supported as L2s:: |
| |
| H_GUEST_GET_CAPABILITIES(uint64 flags) |
| |
| Parameters: |
| Input: |
| flags: Reserved |
| Output: |
| R3: Return code |
| R4: Hypervisor Supported Capabilities bitmap 1 |
| |
| H_GUEST_SET_CAPABILITIES() |
| -------------------------- |
| |
| This is called to inform the L0 of the capabilities of the L1 |
| hypervisor. The set of flags passed here are the same as |
| H_GUEST_GET_CAPABILITIES() |
| |
| Typically, GET will be called first and then SET will be called with a |
| subset of the flags returned from GET. This process allows the L0 and |
| L1 to negotiate an agreed set of capabilities:: |
| |
| H_GUEST_SET_CAPABILITIES(uint64 flags, |
| uint64 capabilitiesBitmap1) |
| Parameters: |
| Input: |
| flags: Reserved |
| capabilitiesBitmap1: Only capabilities advertised through |
| H_GUEST_GET_CAPABILITIES |
| Output: |
| R3: Return code |
| R4: If R3 = H_P2: The number of invalid bitmaps |
| R5: If R3 = H_P2: The index of first invalid bitmap |
| |
| H_GUEST_CREATE() |
| ---------------- |
| |
| This is called to create an L2. A unique ID of the L2 created |
| (similar to an LPID) is returned, which can be used on subsequent HCALLs to |
| identify the L2:: |
| |
| H_GUEST_CREATE(uint64 flags, |
| uint64 continueToken); |
| Parameters: |
| Input: |
| flags: Reserved |
| continueToken: Initial call set to -1. Subsequent calls, |
| after H_Busy or H_LongBusyOrder has been |
| returned, value that was returned in R4. |
| Output: |
| R3: Return code. Notable: |
| H_Not_Enough_Resources: Unable to create Guest VCPU due to not |
| enough Hypervisor memory. See H_GUEST_CREATE_GET_STATE(flags = |
| takeOwnershipOfVcpuState) |
| R4: If R3 = H_Busy or_H_LongBusyOrder -> continueToken |
| |
| H_GUEST_CREATE_VCPU() |
| --------------------- |
| |
| This is called to create a vCPU associated with an L2. The L2 id |
| (returned from H_GUEST_CREATE()) should be passed it. Also passed in |
| is a unique (for this L2) vCPUid. This vCPUid is allocated by the |
| L1:: |
| |
| H_GUEST_CREATE_VCPU(uint64 flags, |
| uint64 guestId, |
| uint64 vcpuId); |
| Parameters: |
| Input: |
| flags: Reserved |
| guestId: ID obtained from H_GUEST_CREATE |
| vcpuId: ID of the vCPU to be created. This must be within the |
| range of 0 to 2047 |
| Output: |
| R3: Return code. Notable: |
| H_Not_Enough_Resources: Unable to create Guest VCPU due to not |
| enough Hypervisor memory. See H_GUEST_CREATE_GET_STATE(flags = |
| takeOwnershipOfVcpuState) |
| |
| H_GUEST_GET_STATE() |
| ------------------- |
| |
| This is called to get state associated with an L2 (Guest-wide or vCPU specific). |
| This info is passed via the Guest State Buffer (GSB), a standard format as |
| explained later in this doc, necessary details below: |
| |
| This can get either L2 wide or vcpu specific information. Examples of |
| L2 wide is the timebase offset or process scoped page table |
| info. Examples of vCPU specific are GPRs or VSRs. A bit in the flags |
| parameter specifies if this call is L2 wide or vCPU specific and the |
| IDs in the GSB must match this. |
| |
| The L1 provides a pointer to the GSB as a parameter to this call. Also |
| provided is the L2 and vCPU IDs associated with the state to set. |
| |
| The L1 writes only the IDs and sizes in the GSB. L0 writes the |
| associated values for each ID in the GSB:: |
| |
| H_GUEST_GET_STATE(uint64 flags, |
| uint64 guestId, |
| uint64 vcpuId, |
| uint64 dataBuffer, |
| uint64 dataBufferSizeInBytes); |
| Parameters: |
| Input: |
| flags: |
| Bit 0: getGuestWideState: Request state of the Guest instead |
| of an individual VCPU. |
| Bit 1: takeOwnershipOfVcpuState Indicate the L1 is taking |
| over ownership of the VCPU state and that the L0 can free |
| the storage holding the state. The VCPU state will need to |
| be returned to the Hypervisor via H_GUEST_SET_STATE prior |
| to H_GUEST_RUN_VCPU being called for this VCPU. The data |
| returned in the dataBuffer is in a Hypervisor internal |
| format. |
| Bits 2-63: Reserved |
| guestId: ID obtained from H_GUEST_CREATE |
| vcpuId: ID of the vCPU pass to H_GUEST_CREATE_VCPU |
| dataBuffer: A L1 real address of the GSB. |
| If takeOwnershipOfVcpuState, size must be at least the size |
| returned by ID=0x0001 |
| dataBufferSizeInBytes: Size of dataBuffer |
| Output: |
| R3: Return code |
| R4: If R3 = H_Invalid_Element_Id: The array index of the bad |
| element ID. |
| If R3 = H_Invalid_Element_Size: The array index of the bad |
| element size. |
| If R3 = H_Invalid_Element_Value: The array index of the bad |
| element value. |
| |
| H_GUEST_SET_STATE() |
| ------------------- |
| |
| This is called to set L2 wide or vCPU specific L2 state. This info is |
| passed via the Guest State Buffer (GSB), necessary details below: |
| |
| This can set either L2 wide or vcpu specific information. Examples of |
| L2 wide is the timebase offset or process scoped page table |
| info. Examples of vCPU specific are GPRs or VSRs. A bit in the flags |
| parameter specifies if this call is L2 wide or vCPU specific and the |
| IDs in the GSB must match this. |
| |
| The L1 provides a pointer to the GSB as a parameter to this call. Also |
| provided is the L2 and vCPU IDs associated with the state to set. |
| |
| The L1 writes all values in the GSB and the L0 only reads the GSB for |
| this call:: |
| |
| H_GUEST_SET_STATE(uint64 flags, |
| uint64 guestId, |
| uint64 vcpuId, |
| uint64 dataBuffer, |
| uint64 dataBufferSizeInBytes); |
| Parameters: |
| Input: |
| flags: |
| Bit 0: getGuestWideState: Request state of the Guest instead |
| of an individual VCPU. |
| Bit 1: returnOwnershipOfVcpuState Return Guest VCPU state. See |
| GET_STATE takeOwnershipOfVcpuState |
| Bits 2-63: Reserved |
| guestId: ID obtained from H_GUEST_CREATE |
| vcpuId: ID of the vCPU pass to H_GUEST_CREATE_VCPU |
| dataBuffer: A L1 real address of the GSB. |
| If takeOwnershipOfVcpuState, size must be at least the size |
| returned by ID=0x0001 |
| dataBufferSizeInBytes: Size of dataBuffer |
| Output: |
| R3: Return code |
| R4: If R3 = H_Invalid_Element_Id: The array index of the bad |
| element ID. |
| If R3 = H_Invalid_Element_Size: The array index of the bad |
| element size. |
| If R3 = H_Invalid_Element_Value: The array index of the bad |
| element value. |
| |
| H_GUEST_RUN_VCPU() |
| ------------------ |
| |
| This is called to run an L2 vCPU. The L2 and vCPU IDs are passed in as |
| parameters. The vCPU runs with the state set previously using |
| H_GUEST_SET_STATE(). When the L2 exits, the L1 will resume from this |
| hcall. |
| |
| This hcall also has associated input and output GSBs. Unlike |
| H_GUEST_{S,G}ET_STATE(), these GSB pointers are not passed in as |
| parameters to the hcall (This was done in the interest of |
| performance). The locations of these GSBs must be preregistered using |
| the H_GUEST_SET_STATE() call with ID 0x0c00 and 0x0c01 (see table |
| below). |
| |
| The input GSB may contain only VCPU specific elements to be set. This |
| GSB may also contain zero elements (ie 0 in the first 4 bytes of the |
| GSB) if nothing needs to be set. |
| |
| On exit from the hcall, the output buffer is filled with elements |
| determined by the L0. The reason for the exit is contained in GPR4 (ie |
| NIP is put in GPR4). The elements returned depend on the exit |
| type. For example, if the exit reason is the L2 doing a hcall (GPR4 = |
| 0xc00), then GPR3-12 are provided in the output GSB as this is the |
| state likely needed to service the hcall. If additional state is |
| needed, H_GUEST_GET_STATE() may be called by the L1. |
| |
| To synthesize interrupts in the L2, when calling H_GUEST_RUN_VCPU() |
| the L1 may set a flag (as a hcall parameter) and the L0 will |
| synthesize the interrupt in the L2. Alternatively, the L1 may |
| synthesize the interrupt itself using H_GUEST_SET_STATE() or the |
| H_GUEST_RUN_VCPU() input GSB to set the state appropriately:: |
| |
| H_GUEST_RUN_VCPU(uint64 flags, |
| uint64 guestId, |
| uint64 vcpuId, |
| uint64 dataBuffer, |
| uint64 dataBufferSizeInBytes); |
| Parameters: |
| Input: |
| flags: |
| Bit 0: generateExternalInterrupt: Generate an external interrupt |
| Bit 1: generatePrivilegedDoorbell: Generate a Privileged Doorbell |
| Bit 2: sendToSystemReset”: Generate a System Reset Interrupt |
| Bits 3-63: Reserved |
| guestId: ID obtained from H_GUEST_CREATE |
| vcpuId: ID of the vCPU pass to H_GUEST_CREATE_VCPU |
| Output: |
| R3: Return code |
| R4: If R3 = H_Success: The reason L1 VCPU exited (ie. NIA) |
| 0x000: The VCPU stopped running for an unspecified reason. An |
| example of this is the Hypervisor stopping a VCPU running |
| due to an outstanding interrupt for the Host Partition. |
| 0x980: HDEC |
| 0xC00: HCALL |
| 0xE00: HDSI |
| 0xE20: HISI |
| 0xE40: HEA |
| 0xF80: HV Fac Unavail |
| If R3 = H_Invalid_Element_Id, H_Invalid_Element_Size, or |
| H_Invalid_Element_Value: R4 is offset of the invalid element |
| in the input buffer. |
| |
| H_GUEST_DELETE() |
| ---------------- |
| |
| This is called to delete an L2. All associated vCPUs are also |
| deleted. No specific vCPU delete call is provided. |
| |
| A flag may be provided to delete all guests. This is used to reset the |
| L0 in the case of kdump/kexec:: |
| |
| H_GUEST_DELETE(uint64 flags, |
| uint64 guestId) |
| Parameters: |
| Input: |
| flags: |
| Bit 0: deleteAllGuests: deletes all guests |
| Bits 1-63: Reserved |
| guestId: ID obtained from H_GUEST_CREATE |
| Output: |
| R3: Return code |
| |
| Guest State Buffer |
| ================== |
| |
| The Guest State Buffer (GSB) is the main method of communicating state |
| about the L2 between the L1 and L0 via H_GUEST_{G,S}ET() and |
| H_GUEST_VCPU_RUN() calls. |
| |
| State may be associated with a whole L2 (eg timebase offset) or a |
| specific L2 vCPU (eg. GPR state). Only L2 VCPU state maybe be set by |
| H_GUEST_VCPU_RUN(). |
| |
| All data in the GSB is big endian (as is standard in PAPR) |
| |
| The Guest state buffer has a header which gives the number of |
| elements, followed by the GSB elements themselves. |
| |
| GSB header: |
| |
| +----------+----------+-------------------------------------------+ |
| | Offset | Size | Purpose | |
| | Bytes | Bytes | | |
| +==========+==========+===========================================+ |
| | 0 | 4 | Number of elements | |
| +----------+----------+-------------------------------------------+ |
| | 4 | | Guest state buffer elements | |
| +----------+----------+-------------------------------------------+ |
| |
| GSB element: |
| |
| +----------+----------+-------------------------------------------+ |
| | Offset | Size | Purpose | |
| | Bytes | Bytes | | |
| +==========+==========+===========================================+ |
| | 0 | 2 | ID | |
| +----------+----------+-------------------------------------------+ |
| | 2 | 2 | Size of Value | |
| +----------+----------+-------------------------------------------+ |
| | 4 | As above | Value | |
| +----------+----------+-------------------------------------------+ |
| |
| The ID in the GSB element specifies what is to be set. This includes |
| archtected state like GPRs, VSRs, SPRs, plus also some meta data about |
| the partition like the timebase offset and partition scoped page |
| table information. |
| |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | ID | Size | RW | Thread | Details | |
| | | Bytes | | Guest | | |
| | | | | Scope | | |
| +========+=======+====+========+==================================+ |
| | 0x0000 | | RW | TG | NOP element | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x0001 | 0x08 | R | G | Size of L0 vCPU state. See: | |
| | | | | | H_GUEST_GET_STATE: | |
| | | | | | flags = takeOwnershipOfVcpuState | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x0002 | 0x08 | R | G | Size Run vCPU out buffer | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x0003 | 0x04 | RW | G | Logical PVR | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x0004 | 0x08 | RW | G | TB Offset (L1 relative) | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x0005 | 0x18 | RW | G |Partition scoped page tbl info: | |
| | | | | | | |
| | | | | |- 0x00 Addr part scope table | |
| | | | | |- 0x08 Num addr bits | |
| | | | | |- 0x10 Size root dir | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x0006 | 0x10 | RW | G |Process Table Information: | |
| | | | | | | |
| | | | | |- 0x0 Addr proc scope table | |
| | | | | |- 0x8 Table size. | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x0007-| | | | Reserved | |
| | 0x0BFF | | | | | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x0C00 | 0x10 | RW | T |Run vCPU Input Buffer: | |
| | | | | | | |
| | | | | |- 0x0 Addr of buffer | |
| | | | | |- 0x8 Buffer Size. | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x0C01 | 0x10 | RW | T |Run vCPU Output Buffer: | |
| | | | | | | |
| | | | | |- 0x0 Addr of buffer | |
| | | | | |- 0x8 Buffer Size. | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x0C02 | 0x08 | RW | T | vCPU VPA Address | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x0C03-| | | | Reserved | |
| | 0x0FFF | | | | | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x1000-| 0x08 | RW | T | GPR 0-31 | |
| | 0x101F | | | | | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x1020 | 0x08 | T | T | HDEC expiry TB | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x1021 | 0x08 | RW | T | NIA | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x1022 | 0x08 | RW | T | MSR | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x1023 | 0x08 | RW | T | LR | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x1024 | 0x08 | RW | T | XER | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x1025 | 0x08 | RW | T | CTR | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x1026 | 0x08 | RW | T | CFAR | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x1027 | 0x08 | RW | T | SRR0 | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x1028 | 0x08 | RW | T | SRR1 | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x1029 | 0x08 | RW | T | DAR | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x102A | 0x08 | RW | T | DEC expiry TB | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x102B | 0x08 | RW | T | VTB | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x102C | 0x08 | RW | T | LPCR | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x102D | 0x08 | RW | T | HFSCR | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x102E | 0x08 | RW | T | FSCR | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x102F | 0x08 | RW | T | FPSCR | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x1030 | 0x08 | RW | T | DAWR0 | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x1031 | 0x08 | RW | T | DAWR1 | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x1032 | 0x08 | RW | T | CIABR | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x1033 | 0x08 | RW | T | PURR | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x1034 | 0x08 | RW | T | SPURR | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x1035 | 0x08 | RW | T | IC | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x1036-| 0x08 | RW | T | SPRG 0-3 | |
| | 0x1039 | | | | | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x103A | 0x08 | W | T | PPR | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x103B | 0x08 | RW | T | MMCR 0-3 | |
| | 0x103E | | | | | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x103F | 0x08 | RW | T | MMCRA | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x1040 | 0x08 | RW | T | SIER | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x1041 | 0x08 | RW | T | SIER 2 | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x1042 | 0x08 | RW | T | SIER 3 | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x1043 | 0x08 | RW | T | BESCR | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x1044 | 0x08 | RW | T | EBBHR | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x1045 | 0x08 | RW | T | EBBRR | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x1046 | 0x08 | RW | T | AMR | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x1047 | 0x08 | RW | T | IAMR | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x1048 | 0x08 | RW | T | AMOR | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x1049 | 0x08 | RW | T | UAMOR | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x104A | 0x08 | RW | T | SDAR | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x104B | 0x08 | RW | T | SIAR | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x104C | 0x08 | RW | T | DSCR | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x104D | 0x08 | RW | T | TAR | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x104E | 0x08 | RW | T | DEXCR | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x104F | 0x08 | RW | T | HDEXCR | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x1050 | 0x08 | RW | T | HASHKEYR | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x1051 | 0x08 | RW | T | HASHPKEYR | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x1052 | 0x08 | RW | T | CTRL | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x1053-| | | | Reserved | |
| | 0x1FFF | | | | | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x2000 | 0x04 | RW | T | CR | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x2001 | 0x04 | RW | T | PIDR | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x2002 | 0x04 | RW | T | DSISR | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x2003 | 0x04 | RW | T | VSCR | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x2004 | 0x04 | RW | T | VRSAVE | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x2005 | 0x04 | RW | T | DAWRX0 | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x2006 | 0x04 | RW | T | DAWRX1 | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x2007-| 0x04 | RW | T | PMC 1-6 | |
| | 0x200c | | | | | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x200D | 0x04 | RW | T | WORT | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x200E | 0x04 | RW | T | PSPB | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x200F-| | | | Reserved | |
| | 0x2FFF | | | | | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x3000-| 0x10 | RW | T | VSR 0-63 | |
| | 0x303F | | | | | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0x3040-| | | | Reserved | |
| | 0xEFFF | | | | | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0xF000 | 0x08 | R | T | HDAR | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0xF001 | 0x04 | R | T | HDSISR | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0xF002 | 0x04 | R | T | HEIR | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| | 0xF003 | 0x08 | R | T | ASDR | |
| +--------+-------+----+--------+----------------------------------+ |
| |
| |
| Miscellaneous info |
| ================== |
| |
| State not in ptregs/hvregs |
| -------------------------- |
| |
| In the v1 API, some state is not in the ptregs/hvstate. This includes |
| the vector register and some SPRs. For the L1 to set this state for |
| the L2, the L1 loads up these hardware registers before the |
| h_enter_nested() call and the L0 ensures they end up as the L2 state |
| (by not touching them). |
| |
| The v2 API removes this and explicitly sets this state via the GSB. |
| |
| L1 Implementation details: Caching state |
| ---------------------------------------- |
| |
| In the v1 API, all state is sent from the L1 to the L0 and vice versa |
| on every h_enter_nested() hcall. If the L0 is not currently running |
| any L2s, the L0 has no state information about them. The only |
| exception to this is the location of the partition table, registered |
| via h_set_partition_table(). |
| |
| The v2 API changes this so that the L0 retains the L2 state even when |
| it's vCPUs are no longer running. This means that the L1 only needs to |
| communicate with the L0 about L2 state when it needs to modify the L2 |
| state, or when it's value is out of date. This provides an opportunity |
| for performance optimisation. |
| |
| When a vCPU exits from a H_GUEST_RUN_VCPU() call, the L1 internally |
| marks all L2 state as invalid. This means that if the L1 wants to know |
| the L2 state (say via a kvm_get_one_reg() call), it needs call |
| H_GUEST_GET_STATE() to get that state. Once it's read, it's marked as |
| valid in L1 until the L2 is run again. |
| |
| Also, when an L1 modifies L2 vcpu state, it doesn't need to write it |
| to the L0 until that L2 vcpu runs again. Hence when the L1 updates |
| state (say via a kvm_set_one_reg() call), it writes to an internal L1 |
| copy and only flushes this copy to the L0 when the L2 runs again via |
| the H_GUEST_VCPU_RUN() input buffer. |
| |
| This lazy updating of state by the L1 avoids unnecessary |
| H_GUEST_{G|S}ET_STATE() calls. |