boot.c 42.0 KB
Newer Older
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
/*P:010
 * A hypervisor allows multiple Operating Systems to run on a single machine.
 * To quote David Wheeler: "Any problem in computer science can be solved with
 * another layer of indirection."
 *
 * We keep things simple in two ways.  First, we start with a normal Linux
 * kernel and insert a module (lg.ko) which allows us to run other Linux
 * kernels the same way we'd run processes.  We call the first kernel the Host,
 * and the others the Guests.  The program which sets up and configures Guests
 * (such as the example in Documentation/lguest/lguest.c) is called the
 * Launcher.
 *
13 14 15 16
 * Secondly, we only run specially modified Guests, not normal kernels: setting
 * CONFIG_LGUEST_GUEST to "y" compiles this file into the kernel so it knows
 * how to be a Guest at boot time.  This means that you can use the same kernel
 * you boot normally (ie. as a Host) as a Guest.
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
17
 *
18 19 20 21 22
 * These Guests know that they cannot do privileged operations, such as disable
 * interrupts, and that they have to ask the Host to do such things explicitly.
 * This file consists of all the replacements for such low-level native
 * hardware operations: these special Guest versions call the Host.
 *
23 24 25
 * So how does the kernel know it's a Guest?  We'll see that later, but let's
 * just say that we end up here where we replace the native functions various
 * "paravirt" structures with our Guest versions, then boot like normal. :*/
26 27

/*
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51
 * Copyright (C) 2006, Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au> IBM Corporation.
 *
 * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
 * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
 * the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
 * (at your option) any later version.
 *
 * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
 * WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
 * MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, GOOD TITLE or
 * NON INFRINGEMENT.  See the GNU General Public License for more
 * details.
 *
 * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
 * along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
 * Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
 */
#include <linux/kernel.h>
#include <linux/start_kernel.h>
#include <linux/string.h>
#include <linux/console.h>
#include <linux/screen_info.h>
#include <linux/irq.h>
#include <linux/interrupt.h>
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
52 53
#include <linux/clocksource.h>
#include <linux/clockchips.h>
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
54 55
#include <linux/lguest.h>
#include <linux/lguest_launcher.h>
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
56
#include <linux/virtio_console.h>
J
Jeff Garzik 已提交
57
#include <linux/pm.h>
58
#include <asm/apic.h>
59
#include <asm/lguest.h>
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68
#include <asm/paravirt.h>
#include <asm/param.h>
#include <asm/page.h>
#include <asm/pgtable.h>
#include <asm/desc.h>
#include <asm/setup.h>
#include <asm/e820.h>
#include <asm/mce.h>
#include <asm/io.h>
69
#include <asm/i387.h>
B
Balaji Rao 已提交
70
#include <asm/reboot.h>		/* for struct machine_ops */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
71

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
72 73 74 75 76 77
/*G:010 Welcome to the Guest!
 *
 * The Guest in our tale is a simple creature: identical to the Host but
 * behaving in simplified but equivalent ways.  In particular, the Guest is the
 * same kernel as the Host (or at least, built from the same source code). :*/

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
78 79 80 81
struct lguest_data lguest_data = {
	.hcall_status = { [0 ... LHCALL_RING_SIZE-1] = 0xFF },
	.noirq_start = (u32)lguest_noirq_start,
	.noirq_end = (u32)lguest_noirq_end,
82
	.kernel_address = PAGE_OFFSET,
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
83
	.blocked_interrupts = { 1 }, /* Block timer interrupts */
84
	.syscall_vec = SYSCALL_VECTOR,
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
85 86
};

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
87
/*G:037 async_hcall() is pretty simple: I'm quite proud of it really.  We have a
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96
 * ring buffer of stored hypercalls which the Host will run though next time we
 * do a normal hypercall.  Each entry in the ring has 4 slots for the hypercall
 * arguments, and a "hcall_status" word which is 0 if the call is ready to go,
 * and 255 once the Host has finished with it.
 *
 * If we come around to a slot which hasn't been finished, then the table is
 * full and we just make the hypercall directly.  This has the nice side
 * effect of causing the Host to run all the stored calls in the ring buffer
 * which empties it for next time! */
A
Adrian Bunk 已提交
97 98
static void async_hcall(unsigned long call, unsigned long arg1,
			unsigned long arg2, unsigned long arg3)
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
99 100 101 102 103
{
	/* Note: This code assumes we're uniprocessor. */
	static unsigned int next_call;
	unsigned long flags;

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
104 105 106
	/* Disable interrupts if not already disabled: we don't want an
	 * interrupt handler making a hypercall while we're already doing
	 * one! */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
107 108 109 110 111
	local_irq_save(flags);
	if (lguest_data.hcall_status[next_call] != 0xFF) {
		/* Table full, so do normal hcall which will flush table. */
		hcall(call, arg1, arg2, arg3);
	} else {
J
Jes Sorensen 已提交
112 113 114 115
		lguest_data.hcalls[next_call].arg0 = call;
		lguest_data.hcalls[next_call].arg1 = arg1;
		lguest_data.hcalls[next_call].arg2 = arg2;
		lguest_data.hcalls[next_call].arg3 = arg3;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
116
		/* Arguments must all be written before we mark it to go */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
117 118 119 120 121 122 123
		wmb();
		lguest_data.hcall_status[next_call] = 0;
		if (++next_call == LHCALL_RING_SIZE)
			next_call = 0;
	}
	local_irq_restore(flags);
}
A
Adrian Bunk 已提交
124

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135
/*G:035 Notice the lazy_hcall() above, rather than hcall().  This is our first
 * real optimization trick!
 *
 * When lazy_mode is set, it means we're allowed to defer all hypercalls and do
 * them as a batch when lazy_mode is eventually turned off.  Because hypercalls
 * are reasonably expensive, batching them up makes sense.  For example, a
 * large munmap might update dozens of page table entries: that code calls
 * paravirt_enter_lazy_mmu(), does the dozen updates, then calls
 * lguest_leave_lazy_mode().
 *
 * So, when we're in lazy mode, we call async_hcall() to store the call for
136
 * future processing: */
A
Adrian Bunk 已提交
137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146
static void lazy_hcall(unsigned long call,
		       unsigned long arg1,
		       unsigned long arg2,
		       unsigned long arg3)
{
	if (paravirt_get_lazy_mode() == PARAVIRT_LAZY_NONE)
		hcall(call, arg1, arg2, arg3);
	else
		async_hcall(call, arg1, arg2, arg3);
}
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
147 148

/* When lazy mode is turned off reset the per-cpu lazy mode variable and then
149
 * issue the do-nothing hypercall to flush any stored calls. */
150
static void lguest_leave_lazy_mmu_mode(void)
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
151 152
{
	hcall(LHCALL_FLUSH_ASYNC, 0, 0, 0);
153 154 155 156 157 158 159
	paravirt_leave_lazy_mmu();
}

static void lguest_leave_lazy_cpu_mode(void)
{
	hcall(LHCALL_FLUSH_ASYNC, 0, 0, 0);
	paravirt_leave_lazy_cpu();
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
160
}
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
161

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
162
/*G:033
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
163 164
 * After that diversion we return to our first native-instruction
 * replacements: four functions for interrupt control.
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
165 166 167 168 169 170 171
 *
 * The simplest way of implementing these would be to have "turn interrupts
 * off" and "turn interrupts on" hypercalls.  Unfortunately, this is too slow:
 * these are by far the most commonly called functions of those we override.
 *
 * So instead we keep an "irq_enabled" field inside our "struct lguest_data",
 * which the Guest can update with a single instruction.  The Host knows to
172
 * check there before it tries to deliver an interrupt.
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
173 174
 */

175 176
/* save_flags() is expected to return the processor state (ie. "flags").  The
 * flags word contains all kind of stuff, but in practice Linux only cares
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
177
 * about the interrupt flag.  Our "save_flags()" just returns that. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
178 179 180 181
static unsigned long save_fl(void)
{
	return lguest_data.irq_enabled;
}
182
PV_CALLEE_SAVE_REGS_THUNK(save_fl);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
183

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
184
/* restore_flags() just sets the flags back to the value given. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
185 186 187 188
static void restore_fl(unsigned long flags)
{
	lguest_data.irq_enabled = flags;
}
189
PV_CALLEE_SAVE_REGS_THUNK(restore_fl);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
190

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
191
/* Interrupts go off... */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
192 193 194 195
static void irq_disable(void)
{
	lguest_data.irq_enabled = 0;
}
196
PV_CALLEE_SAVE_REGS_THUNK(irq_disable);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
197

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
198
/* Interrupts go on... */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
199 200 201 202
static void irq_enable(void)
{
	lguest_data.irq_enabled = X86_EFLAGS_IF;
}
203 204
PV_CALLEE_SAVE_REGS_THUNK(irq_enable);

205 206 207 208
/*:*/
/*M:003 Note that we don't check for outstanding interrupts when we re-enable
 * them (or when we unmask an interrupt).  This seems to work for the moment,
 * since interrupts are rare and we'll just get the interrupt on the next timer
209
 * tick, but now we can run with CONFIG_NO_HZ, we should revisit this.  One way
210 211
 * would be to put the "irq_enabled" field in a page by itself, and have the
 * Host write-protect it when an interrupt comes in when irqs are disabled.
212 213 214 215 216 217
 * There will then be a page fault as soon as interrupts are re-enabled.
 *
 * A better method is to implement soft interrupt disable generally for x86:
 * instead of disabling interrupts, we set a flag.  If an interrupt does come
 * in, we then disable them for real.  This is uncommon, so we could simply use
 * a hypercall for interrupt control and not worry about efficiency. :*/
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
218

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226
/*G:034
 * The Interrupt Descriptor Table (IDT).
 *
 * The IDT tells the processor what to do when an interrupt comes in.  Each
 * entry in the table is a 64-bit descriptor: this holds the privilege level,
 * address of the handler, and... well, who cares?  The Guest just asks the
 * Host to make the change anyway, because the Host controls the real IDT.
 */
227 228
static void lguest_write_idt_entry(gate_desc *dt,
				   int entrynum, const gate_desc *g)
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
229
{
230 231 232 233
	/* The gate_desc structure is 8 bytes long: we hand it to the Host in
	 * two 32-bit chunks.  The whole 32-bit kernel used to hand descriptors
	 * around like this; typesafety wasn't a big concern in Linux's early
	 * years. */
234
	u32 *desc = (u32 *)g;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
235
	/* Keep the local copy up to date. */
236
	native_write_idt_entry(dt, entrynum, g);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
237
	/* Tell Host about this new entry. */
238
	hcall(LHCALL_LOAD_IDT_ENTRY, entrynum, desc[0], desc[1]);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
239 240
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
241 242 243
/* Changing to a different IDT is very rare: we keep the IDT up-to-date every
 * time it is written, so we can simply loop through all entries and tell the
 * Host about them. */
244
static void lguest_load_idt(const struct desc_ptr *desc)
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252
{
	unsigned int i;
	struct desc_struct *idt = (void *)desc->address;

	for (i = 0; i < (desc->size+1)/8; i++)
		hcall(LHCALL_LOAD_IDT_ENTRY, i, idt[i].a, idt[i].b);
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264
/*
 * The Global Descriptor Table.
 *
 * The Intel architecture defines another table, called the Global Descriptor
 * Table (GDT).  You tell the CPU where it is (and its size) using the "lgdt"
 * instruction, and then several other instructions refer to entries in the
 * table.  There are three entries which the Switcher needs, so the Host simply
 * controls the entire thing and the Guest asks it to make changes using the
 * LOAD_GDT hypercall.
 *
 * This is the opposite of the IDT code where we have a LOAD_IDT_ENTRY
 * hypercall and use that repeatedly to load a new IDT.  I don't think it
265 266
 * really matters, but wouldn't it be nice if they were the same?  Wouldn't
 * it be even better if you were the one to send the patch to fix it?
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
267
 */
268
static void lguest_load_gdt(const struct desc_ptr *desc)
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
269 270 271 272 273
{
	BUG_ON((desc->size+1)/8 != GDT_ENTRIES);
	hcall(LHCALL_LOAD_GDT, __pa(desc->address), GDT_ENTRIES, 0);
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
274 275 276
/* For a single GDT entry which changes, we do the lazy thing: alter our GDT,
 * then tell the Host to reload the entire thing.  This operation is so rare
 * that this naive implementation is reasonable. */
277 278
static void lguest_write_gdt_entry(struct desc_struct *dt, int entrynum,
				   const void *desc, int type)
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
279
{
280
	native_write_gdt_entry(dt, entrynum, desc, type);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
281 282 283
	hcall(LHCALL_LOAD_GDT, __pa(dt), GDT_ENTRIES, 0);
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
284 285 286
/* OK, I lied.  There are three "thread local storage" GDT entries which change
 * on every context switch (these three entries are how glibc implements
 * __thread variables).  So we have a hypercall specifically for this case. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
287 288
static void lguest_load_tls(struct thread_struct *t, unsigned int cpu)
{
289 290 291
	/* There's one problem which normal hardware doesn't have: the Host
	 * can't handle us removing entries we're currently using.  So we clear
	 * the GS register here: if it's needed it'll be reloaded anyway. */
292
	lazy_load_gs(0);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
293 294 295
	lazy_hcall(LHCALL_LOAD_TLS, __pa(&t->tls_array), cpu, 0);
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
296
/*G:038 That's enough excitement for now, back to ploughing through each of
297
 * the different pv_ops structures (we're about 1/3 of the way through).
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
298 299 300 301
 *
 * This is the Local Descriptor Table, another weird Intel thingy.  Linux only
 * uses this for some strange applications like Wine.  We don't do anything
 * here, so they'll get an informative and friendly Segmentation Fault. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
302 303 304 305
static void lguest_set_ldt(const void *addr, unsigned entries)
{
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314
/* This loads a GDT entry into the "Task Register": that entry points to a
 * structure called the Task State Segment.  Some comments scattered though the
 * kernel code indicate that this used for task switching in ages past, along
 * with blood sacrifice and astrology.
 *
 * Now there's nothing interesting in here that we don't get told elsewhere.
 * But the native version uses the "ltr" instruction, which makes the Host
 * complain to the Guest about a Segmentation Fault and it'll oops.  So we
 * override the native version with a do-nothing version. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
315 316 317 318
static void lguest_load_tr_desc(void)
{
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
319 320
/* The "cpuid" instruction is a way of querying both the CPU identity
 * (manufacturer, model, etc) and its features.  It was introduced before the
321 322 323
 * Pentium in 1993 and keeps getting extended by both Intel, AMD and others.
 * As you might imagine, after a decade and a half this treatment, it is now a
 * giant ball of hair.  Its entry in the current Intel manual runs to 28 pages.
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338
 *
 * This instruction even it has its own Wikipedia entry.  The Wikipedia entry
 * has been translated into 4 languages.  I am not making this up!
 *
 * We could get funky here and identify ourselves as "GenuineLguest", but
 * instead we just use the real "cpuid" instruction.  Then I pretty much turned
 * off feature bits until the Guest booted.  (Don't say that: you'll damage
 * lguest sales!)  Shut up, inner voice!  (Hey, just pointing out that this is
 * hardly future proof.)  Noone's listening!  They don't like you anyway,
 * parenthetic weirdo!
 *
 * Replacing the cpuid so we can turn features off is great for the kernel, but
 * anyone (including userspace) can just use the raw "cpuid" instruction and
 * the Host won't even notice since it isn't privileged.  So we try not to get
 * too worked up about it. */
339 340
static void lguest_cpuid(unsigned int *ax, unsigned int *bx,
			 unsigned int *cx, unsigned int *dx)
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
341
{
342
	int function = *ax;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
343

344
	native_cpuid(ax, bx, cx, dx);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
345 346 347
	switch (function) {
	case 1:	/* Basic feature request. */
		/* We only allow kernel to see SSE3, CMPXCHG16B and SSSE3 */
348
		*cx &= 0x00002201;
349 350
		/* SSE, SSE2, FXSR, MMX, CMOV, CMPXCHG8B, TSC, FPU. */
		*dx &= 0x07808111;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
351 352 353 354 355
		/* The Host can do a nice optimization if it knows that the
		 * kernel mappings (addresses above 0xC0000000 or whatever
		 * PAGE_OFFSET is set to) haven't changed.  But Linux calls
		 * flush_tlb_user() for both user and kernel mappings unless
		 * the Page Global Enable (PGE) feature bit is set. */
356
		*dx |= 0x00002000;
357 358 359 360 361
		/* We also lie, and say we're family id 5.  6 or greater
		 * leads to a rdmsr in early_init_intel which we can't handle.
		 * Family ID is returned as bits 8-12 in ax. */
		*ax &= 0xFFFFF0FF;
		*ax |= 0x00000500;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
362 363 364
		break;
	case 0x80000000:
		/* Futureproof this a little: if they ask how much extended
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
365
		 * processor information there is, limit it to known fields. */
366 367
		if (*ax > 0x80000008)
			*ax = 0x80000008;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
368 369 370 371
		break;
	}
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
372 373 374 375 376
/* Intel has four control registers, imaginatively named cr0, cr2, cr3 and cr4.
 * I assume there's a cr1, but it hasn't bothered us yet, so we'll not bother
 * it.  The Host needs to know when the Guest wants to change them, so we have
 * a whole series of functions like read_cr0() and write_cr0().
 *
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
377
 * We start with cr0.  cr0 allows you to turn on and off all kinds of basic
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385
 * features, but Linux only really cares about one: the horrifically-named Task
 * Switched (TS) bit at bit 3 (ie. 8)
 *
 * What does the TS bit do?  Well, it causes the CPU to trap (interrupt 7) if
 * the floating point unit is used.  Which allows us to restore FPU state
 * lazily after a task switch, and Linux uses that gratefully, but wouldn't a
 * name like "FPUTRAP bit" be a little less cryptic?
 *
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
386 387 388
 * We store cr0 locally because the Host never changes it.  The Guest sometimes
 * wants to read it and we'd prefer not to bother the Host unnecessarily. */
static unsigned long current_cr0;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
389 390
static void lguest_write_cr0(unsigned long val)
{
391
	lazy_hcall(LHCALL_TS, val & X86_CR0_TS, 0, 0);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
392 393 394 395 396 397 398 399
	current_cr0 = val;
}

static unsigned long lguest_read_cr0(void)
{
	return current_cr0;
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
400 401 402
/* Intel provided a special instruction to clear the TS bit for people too cool
 * to use write_cr0() to do it.  This "clts" instruction is faster, because all
 * the vowels have been optimized out. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
403 404 405
static void lguest_clts(void)
{
	lazy_hcall(LHCALL_TS, 0, 0, 0);
406
	current_cr0 &= ~X86_CR0_TS;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
407 408
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
409
/* cr2 is the virtual address of the last page fault, which the Guest only ever
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
410 411
 * reads.  The Host kindly writes this into our "struct lguest_data", so we
 * just read it out of there. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
412 413 414 415 416
static unsigned long lguest_read_cr2(void)
{
	return lguest_data.cr2;
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
417 418 419
/* See lguest_set_pte() below. */
static bool cr3_changed = false;

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
420
/* cr3 is the current toplevel pagetable page: the principle is the same as
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
421 422 423
 * cr0.  Keep a local copy, and tell the Host when it changes.  The only
 * difference is that our local copy is in lguest_data because the Host needs
 * to set it upon our initial hypercall. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
424 425
static void lguest_write_cr3(unsigned long cr3)
{
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
426
	lguest_data.pgdir = cr3;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
427
	lazy_hcall(LHCALL_NEW_PGTABLE, cr3, 0, 0);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
428
	cr3_changed = true;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
429 430 431 432
}

static unsigned long lguest_read_cr3(void)
{
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
433
	return lguest_data.pgdir;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
434 435
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
436
/* cr4 is used to enable and disable PGE, but we don't care. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
437 438 439 440 441 442 443 444 445
static unsigned long lguest_read_cr4(void)
{
	return 0;
}

static void lguest_write_cr4(unsigned long val)
{
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
446 447 448 449 450 451 452 453 454 455 456
/*
 * Page Table Handling.
 *
 * Now would be a good time to take a rest and grab a coffee or similarly
 * relaxing stimulant.  The easy parts are behind us, and the trek gradually
 * winds uphill from here.
 *
 * Quick refresher: memory is divided into "pages" of 4096 bytes each.  The CPU
 * maps virtual addresses to physical addresses using "page tables".  We could
 * use one huge index of 1 million entries: each address is 4 bytes, so that's
 * 1024 pages just to hold the page tables.   But since most virtual addresses
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
457
 * are unused, we use a two level index which saves space.  The cr3 register
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
458 459 460 461 462 463 464
 * contains the physical address of the top level "page directory" page, which
 * contains physical addresses of up to 1024 second-level pages.  Each of these
 * second level pages contains up to 1024 physical addresses of actual pages,
 * or Page Table Entries (PTEs).
 *
 * Here's a diagram, where arrows indicate physical addresses:
 *
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
465
 * cr3 ---> +---------+
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
466 467 468 469 470 471 472 473 474 475 476 477 478 479 480 481 482 483 484 485 486 487 488 489 490 491 492 493 494 495 496 497 498
 *	    |  	   --------->+---------+
 *	    |	      |	     | PADDR1  |
 *	  Top-level   |	     | PADDR2  |
 *	  (PMD) page  |	     | 	       |
 *	    |	      |	   Lower-level |
 *	    |	      |	   (PTE) page  |
 *	    |	      |	     |	       |
 *	      ....    	     	 ....
 *
 * So to convert a virtual address to a physical address, we look up the top
 * level, which points us to the second level, which gives us the physical
 * address of that page.  If the top level entry was not present, or the second
 * level entry was not present, then the virtual address is invalid (we
 * say "the page was not mapped").
 *
 * Put another way, a 32-bit virtual address is divided up like so:
 *
 *  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
 * |<---- 10 bits ---->|<---- 10 bits ---->|<------ 12 bits ------>|
 *    Index into top     Index into second      Offset within page
 *  page directory page    pagetable page
 *
 * The kernel spends a lot of time changing both the top-level page directory
 * and lower-level pagetable pages.  The Guest doesn't know physical addresses,
 * so while it maintains these page tables exactly like normal, it also needs
 * to keep the Host informed whenever it makes a change: the Host will create
 * the real page tables based on the Guests'.
 */

/* The Guest calls this to set a second-level entry (pte), ie. to map a page
 * into a process' address space.  We set the entry then tell the Host the
 * toplevel and address this corresponds to.  The Guest uses one pagetable per
 * process, so we need to tell the Host which one we're changing (mm->pgd). */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
499 500 501 502 503 504 505
static void lguest_set_pte_at(struct mm_struct *mm, unsigned long addr,
			      pte_t *ptep, pte_t pteval)
{
	*ptep = pteval;
	lazy_hcall(LHCALL_SET_PTE, __pa(mm->pgd), addr, pteval.pte_low);
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
506 507 508
/* The Guest calls this to set a top-level entry.  Again, we set the entry then
 * tell the Host which top-level page we changed, and the index of the entry we
 * changed. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
509 510 511 512
static void lguest_set_pmd(pmd_t *pmdp, pmd_t pmdval)
{
	*pmdp = pmdval;
	lazy_hcall(LHCALL_SET_PMD, __pa(pmdp)&PAGE_MASK,
513
		   (__pa(pmdp)&(PAGE_SIZE-1))/4, 0);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
514 515
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
516 517 518 519 520 521
/* There are a couple of legacy places where the kernel sets a PTE, but we
 * don't know the top level any more.  This is useless for us, since we don't
 * know which pagetable is changing or what address, so we just tell the Host
 * to forget all of them.  Fortunately, this is very rare.
 *
 * ... except in early boot when the kernel sets up the initial pagetables,
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
522 523 524
 * which makes booting astonishingly slow: 1.83 seconds!  So we don't even tell
 * the Host anything changed until we've done the first page table switch,
 * which brings boot back to 0.25 seconds. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
525 526 527
static void lguest_set_pte(pte_t *ptep, pte_t pteval)
{
	*ptep = pteval;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
528
	if (cr3_changed)
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
529 530 531
		lazy_hcall(LHCALL_FLUSH_TLB, 1, 0, 0);
}

532
/* Unfortunately for Lguest, the pv_mmu_ops for page tables were based on
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
533 534 535 536 537 538 539 540 541
 * native page table operations.  On native hardware you can set a new page
 * table entry whenever you want, but if you want to remove one you have to do
 * a TLB flush (a TLB is a little cache of page table entries kept by the CPU).
 *
 * So the lguest_set_pte_at() and lguest_set_pmd() functions above are only
 * called when a valid entry is written, not when it's removed (ie. marked not
 * present).  Instead, this is where we come when the Guest wants to remove a
 * page table entry: we tell the Host to set that entry to 0 (ie. the present
 * bit is zero). */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
542 543
static void lguest_flush_tlb_single(unsigned long addr)
{
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
544
	/* Simply set it to zero: if it was not, it will fault back in. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
545
	lazy_hcall(LHCALL_SET_PTE, lguest_data.pgdir, addr, 0);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
546 547
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
548 549 550
/* This is what happens after the Guest has removed a large number of entries.
 * This tells the Host that any of the page table entries for userspace might
 * have changed, ie. virtual addresses below PAGE_OFFSET. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
551 552 553 554 555
static void lguest_flush_tlb_user(void)
{
	lazy_hcall(LHCALL_FLUSH_TLB, 0, 0, 0);
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
556 557 558
/* This is called when the kernel page tables have changed.  That's not very
 * common (unless the Guest is using highmem, which makes the Guest extremely
 * slow), so it's worth separating this from the user flushing above. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
559 560 561 562 563
static void lguest_flush_tlb_kernel(void)
{
	lazy_hcall(LHCALL_FLUSH_TLB, 1, 0, 0);
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
564 565 566 567 568 569 570 571 572 573 574 575 576
/*
 * The Unadvanced Programmable Interrupt Controller.
 *
 * This is an attempt to implement the simplest possible interrupt controller.
 * I spent some time looking though routines like set_irq_chip_and_handler,
 * set_irq_chip_and_handler_name, set_irq_chip_data and set_phasers_to_stun and
 * I *think* this is as simple as it gets.
 *
 * We can tell the Host what interrupts we want blocked ready for using the
 * lguest_data.interrupts bitmap, so disabling (aka "masking") them is as
 * simple as setting a bit.  We don't actually "ack" interrupts as such, we
 * just mask and unmask them.  I wonder if we should be cleverer?
 */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
577 578 579 580 581 582 583 584 585 586
static void disable_lguest_irq(unsigned int irq)
{
	set_bit(irq, lguest_data.blocked_interrupts);
}

static void enable_lguest_irq(unsigned int irq)
{
	clear_bit(irq, lguest_data.blocked_interrupts);
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
587
/* This structure describes the lguest IRQ controller. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
588 589 590 591 592 593 594
static struct irq_chip lguest_irq_controller = {
	.name		= "lguest",
	.mask		= disable_lguest_irq,
	.mask_ack	= disable_lguest_irq,
	.unmask		= enable_lguest_irq,
};

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
595 596 597 598
/* This sets up the Interrupt Descriptor Table (IDT) entry for each hardware
 * interrupt (except 128, which is used for system calls), and then tells the
 * Linux infrastructure that each interrupt is controlled by our level-based
 * lguest interrupt controller. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
599 600 601 602 603 604
static void __init lguest_init_IRQ(void)
{
	unsigned int i;

	for (i = 0; i < LGUEST_IRQS; i++) {
		int vector = FIRST_EXTERNAL_VECTOR + i;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
605 606 607
		/* Some systems map "vectors" to interrupts weirdly.  Lguest has
		 * a straightforward 1 to 1 mapping, so force that here. */
		__get_cpu_var(vector_irq)[vector] = i;
608 609
		if (vector != SYSCALL_VECTOR)
			set_intr_gate(vector, interrupt[i]);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
610
	}
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
611 612
	/* This call is required to set up for 4k stacks, where we have
	 * separate stacks for hard and soft interrupts. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
613 614 615
	irq_ctx_init(smp_processor_id());
}

616 617 618 619 620 621 622
void lguest_setup_irq(unsigned int irq)
{
	irq_to_desc_alloc_cpu(irq, 0);
	set_irq_chip_and_handler_name(irq, &lguest_irq_controller,
				      handle_level_irq, "level");
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
623 624 625 626
/*
 * Time.
 *
 * It would be far better for everyone if the Guest had its own clock, but
627
 * until then the Host gives us the time on every interrupt.
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
628
 */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
629 630
static unsigned long lguest_get_wallclock(void)
{
631
	return lguest_data.time.tv_sec;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
632 633
}

634 635 636 637
/* The TSC is an Intel thing called the Time Stamp Counter.  The Host tells us
 * what speed it runs at, or 0 if it's unusable as a reliable clock source.
 * This matches what we want here: if we return 0 from this function, the x86
 * TSC clock will give up and not register itself. */
638
static unsigned long lguest_tsc_khz(void)
639 640 641 642
{
	return lguest_data.tsc_khz;
}

643 644
/* If we can't use the TSC, the kernel falls back to our lower-priority
 * "lguest_clock", where we read the time value given to us by the Host. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
645 646
static cycle_t lguest_clock_read(void)
{
647 648
	unsigned long sec, nsec;

649 650 651 652
	/* Since the time is in two parts (seconds and nanoseconds), we risk
	 * reading it just as it's changing from 99 & 0.999999999 to 100 and 0,
	 * and getting 99 and 0.  As Linux tends to come apart under the stress
	 * of time travel, we must be careful: */
653 654 655 656 657 658 659 660 661 662 663 664 665 666
	do {
		/* First we read the seconds part. */
		sec = lguest_data.time.tv_sec;
		/* This read memory barrier tells the compiler and the CPU that
		 * this can't be reordered: we have to complete the above
		 * before going on. */
		rmb();
		/* Now we read the nanoseconds part. */
		nsec = lguest_data.time.tv_nsec;
		/* Make sure we've done that. */
		rmb();
		/* Now if the seconds part has changed, try again. */
	} while (unlikely(lguest_data.time.tv_sec != sec));

667
	/* Our lguest clock is in real nanoseconds. */
668
	return sec*1000000000ULL + nsec;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
669 670
}

671
/* This is the fallback clocksource: lower priority than the TSC clocksource. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
672 673
static struct clocksource lguest_clock = {
	.name		= "lguest",
674
	.rating		= 200,
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
675
	.read		= lguest_clock_read,
676
	.mask		= CLOCKSOURCE_MASK(64),
677 678
	.mult		= 1 << 22,
	.shift		= 22,
679
	.flags		= CLOCK_SOURCE_IS_CONTINUOUS,
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
680 681 682 683 684 685 686 687
};

/* We also need a "struct clock_event_device": Linux asks us to set it to go
 * off some time in the future.  Actually, James Morris figured all this out, I
 * just applied the patch. */
static int lguest_clockevent_set_next_event(unsigned long delta,
                                           struct clock_event_device *evt)
{
688 689
	/* FIXME: I don't think this can ever happen, but James tells me he had
	 * to put this code in.  Maybe we should remove it now.  Anyone? */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
690 691 692
	if (delta < LG_CLOCK_MIN_DELTA) {
		if (printk_ratelimit())
			printk(KERN_DEBUG "%s: small delta %lu ns\n",
693
			       __func__, delta);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
694 695
		return -ETIME;
	}
696 697

	/* Please wake us this far in the future. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
698 699 700 701 702 703 704 705 706 707 708 709 710 711 712 713 714 715
	hcall(LHCALL_SET_CLOCKEVENT, delta, 0, 0);
	return 0;
}

static void lguest_clockevent_set_mode(enum clock_event_mode mode,
                                      struct clock_event_device *evt)
{
	switch (mode) {
	case CLOCK_EVT_MODE_UNUSED:
	case CLOCK_EVT_MODE_SHUTDOWN:
		/* A 0 argument shuts the clock down. */
		hcall(LHCALL_SET_CLOCKEVENT, 0, 0, 0);
		break;
	case CLOCK_EVT_MODE_ONESHOT:
		/* This is what we expect. */
		break;
	case CLOCK_EVT_MODE_PERIODIC:
		BUG();
T
Thomas Gleixner 已提交
716 717
	case CLOCK_EVT_MODE_RESUME:
		break;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
718 719 720 721 722 723 724 725 726 727 728 729 730 731 732 733 734 735
	}
}

/* This describes our primitive timer chip. */
static struct clock_event_device lguest_clockevent = {
	.name                   = "lguest",
	.features               = CLOCK_EVT_FEAT_ONESHOT,
	.set_next_event         = lguest_clockevent_set_next_event,
	.set_mode               = lguest_clockevent_set_mode,
	.rating                 = INT_MAX,
	.mult                   = 1,
	.shift                  = 0,
	.min_delta_ns           = LG_CLOCK_MIN_DELTA,
	.max_delta_ns           = LG_CLOCK_MAX_DELTA,
};

/* This is the Guest timer interrupt handler (hardware interrupt 0).  We just
 * call the clockevent infrastructure and it does whatever needs doing. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
736 737
static void lguest_time_irq(unsigned int irq, struct irq_desc *desc)
{
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
738 739 740 741 742 743
	unsigned long flags;

	/* Don't interrupt us while this is running. */
	local_irq_save(flags);
	lguest_clockevent.event_handler(&lguest_clockevent);
	local_irq_restore(flags);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
744 745
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
746 747 748 749
/* At some point in the boot process, we get asked to set up our timing
 * infrastructure.  The kernel doesn't expect timer interrupts before this, but
 * we cleverly initialized the "blocked_interrupts" field of "struct
 * lguest_data" so that timer interrupts were blocked until now. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
750 751
static void lguest_time_init(void)
{
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
752
	/* Set up the timer interrupt (0) to go to our simple timer routine */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
753 754
	set_irq_handler(0, lguest_time_irq);

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
755 756
	clocksource_register(&lguest_clock);

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
757 758
	/* We can't set cpumask in the initializer: damn C limitations!  Set it
	 * here and register our timer device. */
759
	lguest_clockevent.cpumask = cpumask_of(0);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
760 761
	clockevents_register_device(&lguest_clockevent);

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
762
	/* Finally, we unblock the timer interrupt. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
763
	enable_lguest_irq(0);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
764 765
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
766 767 768 769 770 771 772
/*
 * Miscellaneous bits and pieces.
 *
 * Here is an oddball collection of functions which the Guest needs for things
 * to work.  They're pretty simple.
 */

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
773
/* The Guest needs to tell the Host what stack it expects traps to use.  For
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
774 775 776 777 778 779 780
 * native hardware, this is part of the Task State Segment mentioned above in
 * lguest_load_tr_desc(), but to help hypervisors there's this special call.
 *
 * We tell the Host the segment we want to use (__KERNEL_DS is the kernel data
 * segment), the privilege level (we're privilege level 1, the Host is 0 and
 * will not tolerate us trying to use that), the stack pointer, and the number
 * of pages in the stack. */
781
static void lguest_load_sp0(struct tss_struct *tss,
782
			    struct thread_struct *thread)
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
783
{
784
	lazy_hcall(LHCALL_SET_STACK, __KERNEL_DS|0x1, thread->sp0,
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
785 786 787
		   THREAD_SIZE/PAGE_SIZE);
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
788
/* Let's just say, I wouldn't do debugging under a Guest. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
789 790 791 792 793
static void lguest_set_debugreg(int regno, unsigned long value)
{
	/* FIXME: Implement */
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
794 795 796 797 798 799 800 801 802 803
/* There are times when the kernel wants to make sure that no memory writes are
 * caught in the cache (that they've all reached real hardware devices).  This
 * doesn't matter for the Guest which has virtual hardware.
 *
 * On the Pentium 4 and above, cpuid() indicates that the Cache Line Flush
 * (clflush) instruction is available and the kernel uses that.  Otherwise, it
 * uses the older "Write Back and Invalidate Cache" (wbinvd) instruction.
 * Unlike clflush, wbinvd can only be run at privilege level 0.  So we can
 * ignore clflush, but replace wbinvd.
 */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
804 805 806 807
static void lguest_wbinvd(void)
{
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
808 809 810 811 812
/* If the Guest expects to have an Advanced Programmable Interrupt Controller,
 * we play dumb by ignoring writes and returning 0 for reads.  So it's no
 * longer Programmable nor Controlling anything, and I don't think 8 lines of
 * code qualifies for Advanced.  It will also never interrupt anything.  It
 * does, however, allow us to get through the Linux boot code. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
813
#ifdef CONFIG_X86_LOCAL_APIC
814
static void lguest_apic_write(u32 reg, u32 v)
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
815 816 817
{
}

818
static u32 lguest_apic_read(u32 reg)
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
819 820 821
{
	return 0;
}
S
Suresh Siddha 已提交
822 823 824 825 826 827 828 829 830 831 832 833 834 835 836 837 838 839 840 841 842 843

static u64 lguest_apic_icr_read(void)
{
	return 0;
}

static void lguest_apic_icr_write(u32 low, u32 id)
{
	/* Warn to see if there's any stray references */
	WARN_ON(1);
}

static void lguest_apic_wait_icr_idle(void)
{
	return;
}

static u32 lguest_apic_safe_wait_icr_idle(void)
{
	return 0;
}

Y
Yinghai Lu 已提交
844 845 846 847 848 849 850 851
static void set_lguest_basic_apic_ops(void)
{
	apic->read = lguest_apic_read;
	apic->write = lguest_apic_write;
	apic->icr_read = lguest_apic_icr_read;
	apic->icr_write = lguest_apic_icr_write;
	apic->wait_icr_idle = lguest_apic_wait_icr_idle;
	apic->safe_wait_icr_idle = lguest_apic_safe_wait_icr_idle;
S
Suresh Siddha 已提交
852
};
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
853 854
#endif

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
855
/* STOP!  Until an interrupt comes in. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
856 857 858 859 860
static void lguest_safe_halt(void)
{
	hcall(LHCALL_HALT, 0, 0, 0);
}

861 862
/* The SHUTDOWN hypercall takes a string to describe what's happening, and
 * an argument which says whether this to restart (reboot) the Guest or not.
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
863 864 865
 *
 * Note that the Host always prefers that the Guest speak in physical addresses
 * rather than virtual addresses, so we use __pa() here. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
866 867
static void lguest_power_off(void)
{
B
Balaji Rao 已提交
868
	hcall(LHCALL_SHUTDOWN, __pa("Power down"), LGUEST_SHUTDOWN_POWEROFF, 0);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
869 870
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
871 872 873 874 875
/*
 * Panicing.
 *
 * Don't.  But if you did, this is what happens.
 */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
876 877
static int lguest_panic(struct notifier_block *nb, unsigned long l, void *p)
{
B
Balaji Rao 已提交
878
	hcall(LHCALL_SHUTDOWN, __pa(p), LGUEST_SHUTDOWN_POWEROFF, 0);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
879
	/* The hcall won't return, but to keep gcc happy, we're "done". */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
880 881 882 883 884 885 886
	return NOTIFY_DONE;
}

static struct notifier_block paniced = {
	.notifier_call = lguest_panic
};

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
887
/* Setting up memory is fairly easy. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
888 889
static __init char *lguest_memory_setup(void)
{
890 891 892
	/* We do this here and not earlier because lockcheck used to barf if we
	 * did it before start_kernel().  I think we fixed that, so it'd be
	 * nice to move it back to lguest_init.  Patch welcome... */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
893 894
	atomic_notifier_chain_register(&panic_notifier_list, &paniced);

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
895 896
	/* The Linux bootloader header contains an "e820" memory map: the
	 * Launcher populated the first entry with our memory limit. */
897
	e820_add_region(boot_params.e820_map[0].addr,
898 899
			  boot_params.e820_map[0].size,
			  boot_params.e820_map[0].type);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
900 901

	/* This string is for the boot messages. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
902 903 904
	return "LGUEST";
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
905 906 907
/* We will eventually use the virtio console device to produce console output,
 * but before that is set up we use LHCALL_NOTIFY on normal memory to produce
 * console output. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
908 909 910 911 912
static __init int early_put_chars(u32 vtermno, const char *buf, int count)
{
	char scratch[17];
	unsigned int len = count;

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
913 914
	/* We use a nul-terminated string, so we have to make a copy.  Icky,
	 * huh? */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
915 916 917 918 919 920 921 922 923 924
	if (len > sizeof(scratch) - 1)
		len = sizeof(scratch) - 1;
	scratch[len] = '\0';
	memcpy(scratch, buf, len);
	hcall(LHCALL_NOTIFY, __pa(scratch), 0, 0);

	/* This routine returns the number of bytes actually written. */
	return len;
}

925 926 927 928 929 930 931
/* Rebooting also tells the Host we're finished, but the RESTART flag tells the
 * Launcher to reboot us. */
static void lguest_restart(char *reason)
{
	hcall(LHCALL_SHUTDOWN, __pa(reason), LGUEST_SHUTDOWN_RESTART, 0);
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
932 933 934
/*G:050
 * Patching (Powerfully Placating Performance Pedants)
 *
935 936 937
 * We have already seen that pv_ops structures let us replace simple native
 * instructions with calls to the appropriate back end all throughout the
 * kernel.  This allows the same kernel to run as a Guest and as a native
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
938 939 940 941 942 943 944 945 946 947
 * kernel, but it's slow because of all the indirect branches.
 *
 * Remember that David Wheeler quote about "Any problem in computer science can
 * be solved with another layer of indirection"?  The rest of that quote is
 * "... But that usually will create another problem."  This is the first of
 * those problems.
 *
 * Our current solution is to allow the paravirt back end to optionally patch
 * over the indirect calls to replace them with something more efficient.  We
 * patch the four most commonly called functions: disable interrupts, enable
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
948
 * interrupts, restore interrupts and save interrupts.  We usually have 6 or 10
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
949 950 951 952
 * bytes to patch into: the Guest versions of these operations are small enough
 * that we can fit comfortably.
 *
 * First we need assembly templates of each of the patchable Guest operations,
A
Atsushi SAKAI 已提交
953
 * and these are in i386_head.S. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
954 955

/*G:060 We construct a table from the assembler templates: */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
956 957 958 959
static const struct lguest_insns
{
	const char *start, *end;
} lguest_insns[] = {
960 961 962 963
	[PARAVIRT_PATCH(pv_irq_ops.irq_disable)] = { lgstart_cli, lgend_cli },
	[PARAVIRT_PATCH(pv_irq_ops.irq_enable)] = { lgstart_sti, lgend_sti },
	[PARAVIRT_PATCH(pv_irq_ops.restore_fl)] = { lgstart_popf, lgend_popf },
	[PARAVIRT_PATCH(pv_irq_ops.save_fl)] = { lgstart_pushf, lgend_pushf },
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
964
};
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
965 966 967 968

/* Now our patch routine is fairly simple (based on the native one in
 * paravirt.c).  If we have a replacement, we copy it in and return how much of
 * the available space we used. */
969 970
static unsigned lguest_patch(u8 type, u16 clobber, void *ibuf,
			     unsigned long addr, unsigned len)
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
971 972 973
{
	unsigned int insn_len;

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
974
	/* Don't do anything special if we don't have a replacement */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
975
	if (type >= ARRAY_SIZE(lguest_insns) || !lguest_insns[type].start)
976
		return paravirt_patch_default(type, clobber, ibuf, addr, len);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
977 978 979

	insn_len = lguest_insns[type].end - lguest_insns[type].start;

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
980 981
	/* Similarly if we can't fit replacement (shouldn't happen, but let's
	 * be thorough). */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
982
	if (len < insn_len)
983
		return paravirt_patch_default(type, clobber, ibuf, addr, len);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
984

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
985
	/* Copy in our instructions. */
986
	memcpy(ibuf, lguest_insns[type].start, insn_len);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
987 988 989
	return insn_len;
}

990 991 992
/*G:030 Once we get to lguest_init(), we know we're a Guest.  The various
 * pv_ops structures in the kernel provide points for (almost) every routine we
 * have to override to avoid privileged instructions. */
993
__init void lguest_init(void)
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
994
{
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
995 996
	/* We're under lguest, paravirt is enabled, and we're running at
	 * privilege level 1, not 0 as normal. */
997 998 999
	pv_info.name = "lguest";
	pv_info.paravirt_enabled = 1;
	pv_info.kernel_rpl = 1;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1000

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1001 1002
	/* We set up all the lguest overrides for sensitive operations.  These
	 * are detailed with the operations themselves. */
1003 1004 1005

	/* interrupt-related operations */
	pv_irq_ops.init_IRQ = lguest_init_IRQ;
1006 1007 1008 1009
	pv_irq_ops.save_fl = PV_CALLEE_SAVE(save_fl);
	pv_irq_ops.restore_fl = PV_CALLEE_SAVE(restore_fl);
	pv_irq_ops.irq_disable = PV_CALLEE_SAVE(irq_disable);
	pv_irq_ops.irq_enable = PV_CALLEE_SAVE(irq_enable);
1010 1011 1012 1013 1014 1015 1016 1017 1018 1019 1020
	pv_irq_ops.safe_halt = lguest_safe_halt;

	/* init-time operations */
	pv_init_ops.memory_setup = lguest_memory_setup;
	pv_init_ops.patch = lguest_patch;

	/* Intercepts of various cpu instructions */
	pv_cpu_ops.load_gdt = lguest_load_gdt;
	pv_cpu_ops.cpuid = lguest_cpuid;
	pv_cpu_ops.load_idt = lguest_load_idt;
	pv_cpu_ops.iret = lguest_iret;
1021
	pv_cpu_ops.load_sp0 = lguest_load_sp0;
1022 1023 1024 1025 1026 1027 1028 1029 1030 1031 1032 1033
	pv_cpu_ops.load_tr_desc = lguest_load_tr_desc;
	pv_cpu_ops.set_ldt = lguest_set_ldt;
	pv_cpu_ops.load_tls = lguest_load_tls;
	pv_cpu_ops.set_debugreg = lguest_set_debugreg;
	pv_cpu_ops.clts = lguest_clts;
	pv_cpu_ops.read_cr0 = lguest_read_cr0;
	pv_cpu_ops.write_cr0 = lguest_write_cr0;
	pv_cpu_ops.read_cr4 = lguest_read_cr4;
	pv_cpu_ops.write_cr4 = lguest_write_cr4;
	pv_cpu_ops.write_gdt_entry = lguest_write_gdt_entry;
	pv_cpu_ops.write_idt_entry = lguest_write_idt_entry;
	pv_cpu_ops.wbinvd = lguest_wbinvd;
1034
	pv_cpu_ops.lazy_mode.enter = paravirt_enter_lazy_cpu;
1035
	pv_cpu_ops.lazy_mode.leave = lguest_leave_lazy_cpu_mode;
1036 1037 1038 1039 1040 1041 1042 1043 1044 1045 1046

	/* pagetable management */
	pv_mmu_ops.write_cr3 = lguest_write_cr3;
	pv_mmu_ops.flush_tlb_user = lguest_flush_tlb_user;
	pv_mmu_ops.flush_tlb_single = lguest_flush_tlb_single;
	pv_mmu_ops.flush_tlb_kernel = lguest_flush_tlb_kernel;
	pv_mmu_ops.set_pte = lguest_set_pte;
	pv_mmu_ops.set_pte_at = lguest_set_pte_at;
	pv_mmu_ops.set_pmd = lguest_set_pmd;
	pv_mmu_ops.read_cr2 = lguest_read_cr2;
	pv_mmu_ops.read_cr3 = lguest_read_cr3;
1047
	pv_mmu_ops.lazy_mode.enter = paravirt_enter_lazy_mmu;
1048
	pv_mmu_ops.lazy_mode.leave = lguest_leave_lazy_mmu_mode;
1049

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1050
#ifdef CONFIG_X86_LOCAL_APIC
1051
	/* apic read/write intercepts */
Y
Yinghai Lu 已提交
1052
	set_lguest_basic_apic_ops();
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1053
#endif
1054 1055 1056 1057

	/* time operations */
	pv_time_ops.get_wallclock = lguest_get_wallclock;
	pv_time_ops.time_init = lguest_time_init;
1058
	pv_time_ops.get_tsc_khz = lguest_tsc_khz;
1059

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1060 1061 1062 1063 1064
	/* Now is a good time to look at the implementations of these functions
	 * before returning to the rest of lguest_init(). */

	/*G:070 Now we've seen all the paravirt_ops, we return to
	 * lguest_init() where the rest of the fairly chaotic boot setup
1065
	 * occurs. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1066

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1067 1068 1069 1070 1071
	/* The native boot code sets up initial page tables immediately after
	 * the kernel itself, and sets init_pg_tables_end so they're not
	 * clobbered.  The Launcher places our initial pagetables somewhere at
	 * the top of our physical memory, so we don't need extra space: set
	 * init_pg_tables_end to the end of the kernel. */
1072
	init_pg_tables_start = __pa(pg0);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1073 1074
	init_pg_tables_end = __pa(pg0);

1075 1076 1077
	/* As described in head_32.S, we map the first 128M of memory. */
	max_pfn_mapped = (128*1024*1024) >> PAGE_SHIFT;

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1078 1079
	/* Load the %fs segment register (the per-cpu segment register) with
	 * the normal data segment to get through booting. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1080 1081
	asm volatile ("mov %0, %%fs" : : "r" (__KERNEL_DS) : "memory");

1082 1083 1084
	/* The Host<->Guest Switcher lives at the top of our address space, and
	 * the Host told us how big it is when we made LGUEST_INIT hypercall:
	 * it put the answer in lguest_data.reserve_mem  */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1085 1086
	reserve_top_address(lguest_data.reserve_mem);

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1087 1088
	/* If we don't initialize the lock dependency checker now, it crashes
	 * paravirt_disable_iospace. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1089 1090
	lockdep_init();

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1091 1092 1093 1094
	/* The IDE code spends about 3 seconds probing for disks: if we reserve
	 * all the I/O ports up front it can't get them and so doesn't probe.
	 * Other device drivers are similar (but less severe).  This cuts the
	 * kernel boot time on my machine from 4.1 seconds to 0.45 seconds. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1095 1096
	paravirt_disable_iospace();

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1097 1098
	/* This is messy CPU setup stuff which the native boot code does before
	 * start_kernel, so we have to do, too: */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1099 1100 1101 1102 1103 1104 1105
	cpu_detect(&new_cpu_data);
	/* head.S usually sets up the first capability word, so do it here. */
	new_cpu_data.x86_capability[0] = cpuid_edx(1);

	/* Math is always hard! */
	new_cpu_data.hard_math = 1;

1106
	/* We don't have features.  We have puppies!  Puppies! */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1107 1108 1109 1110 1111 1112 1113 1114
#ifdef CONFIG_X86_MCE
	mce_disabled = 1;
#endif
#ifdef CONFIG_ACPI
	acpi_disabled = 1;
	acpi_ht = 0;
#endif

A
Atsushi SAKAI 已提交
1115
	/* We set the preferred console to "hvc".  This is the "hypervisor
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1116 1117
	 * virtual console" driver written by the PowerPC people, which we also
	 * adapted for lguest's use. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1118 1119
	add_preferred_console("hvc", 0, NULL);

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1120 1121 1122
	/* Register our very early console. */
	virtio_cons_early_init(early_put_chars);

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1123
	/* Last of all, we set the power management poweroff hook to point to
1124 1125
	 * the Guest routine to power off, and the reboot hook to our restart
	 * routine. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1126
	pm_power_off = lguest_power_off;
B
Balaji Rao 已提交
1127
	machine_ops.restart = lguest_restart;
1128

1129
	/* Now we're set up, call i386_start_kernel() in head32.c and we proceed
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1130
	 * to boot as normal.  It never returns. */
1131
	i386_start_kernel();
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1132
}
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1133 1134 1135
/*
 * This marks the end of stage II of our journey, The Guest.
 *
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1136 1137
 * It is now time for us to explore the layer of virtual drivers and complete
 * our understanding of the Guest in "make Drivers".
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1138
 */