lguest.c 63.2 KB
Newer Older
1
/*P:100 This is the Launcher code, a simple program which lays out the
2 3 4
 * "physical" memory for the new Guest by mapping the kernel image and
 * the virtual devices, then opens /dev/lguest to tell the kernel
 * about the Guest and control it. :*/
5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14
#define _LARGEFILE64_SOURCE
#define _GNU_SOURCE
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <err.h>
#include <stdint.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <elf.h>
#include <sys/mman.h>
15
#include <sys/param.h>
16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <sys/wait.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <stdbool.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <ctype.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <sys/ioctl.h>
#include <sys/time.h>
#include <time.h>
#include <netinet/in.h>
#include <net/if.h>
#include <linux/sockios.h>
#include <linux/if_tun.h>
#include <sys/uio.h>
#include <termios.h>
#include <getopt.h>
#include <zlib.h>
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
35 36
#include <assert.h>
#include <sched.h>
37 38
#include <limits.h>
#include <stddef.h>
39
#include <signal.h>
40
#include "linux/lguest_launcher.h"
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
41 42 43 44
#include "linux/virtio_config.h"
#include "linux/virtio_net.h"
#include "linux/virtio_blk.h"
#include "linux/virtio_console.h"
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
45
#include "linux/virtio_rng.h"
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
46
#include "linux/virtio_ring.h"
47
#include "asm/bootparam.h"
48
/*L:110 We can ignore the 39 include files we need for this program, but I do
49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58
 * want to draw attention to the use of kernel-style types.
 *
 * As Linus said, "C is a Spartan language, and so should your naming be."  I
 * like these abbreviations, so we define them here.  Note that u64 is always
 * unsigned long long, which works on all Linux systems: this means that we can
 * use %llu in printf for any u64. */
typedef unsigned long long u64;
typedef uint32_t u32;
typedef uint16_t u16;
typedef uint8_t u8;
59
/*:*/
60 61 62 63 64 65 66

#define PAGE_PRESENT 0x7 	/* Present, RW, Execute */
#define NET_PEERNUM 1
#define BRIDGE_PFX "bridge:"
#ifndef SIOCBRADDIF
#define SIOCBRADDIF	0x89a2		/* add interface to bridge      */
#endif
67 68
/* We can have up to 256 pages for devices. */
#define DEVICE_PAGES 256
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
69 70
/* This will occupy 3 pages: it must be a power of 2. */
#define VIRTQUEUE_NUM 256
71

72 73
/*L:120 verbose is both a global flag and a macro.  The C preprocessor allows
 * this, and although I wouldn't recommend it, it works quite nicely here. */
74 75 76
static bool verbose;
#define verbose(args...) \
	do { if (verbose) printf(args); } while(0)
77 78
/*:*/

79 80 81 82 83
/* File descriptors for the Waker. */
struct {
	int pipe[2];
} waker_fds;

84 85 86 87
/* The pointer to the start of guest memory. */
static void *guest_base;
/* The maximum guest physical address allowed, and maximum possible. */
static unsigned long guest_limit, guest_max;
88 89
/* The pipe for signal hander to write to. */
static int timeoutpipe[2];
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
90
static unsigned int timeout_usec = 500;
91 92
/* The /dev/lguest file descriptor. */
static int lguest_fd;
93

94 95 96
/* a per-cpu variable indicating whose vcpu is currently running */
static unsigned int __thread cpu_id;

97
/* This is our list of devices. */
98 99
struct device_list
{
100 101
	/* Summary information about the devices in our list: ready to pass to
	 * select() to ask which need servicing.*/
102 103 104
	fd_set infds;
	int max_infd;

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
105 106 107 108 109 110
	/* Counter to assign interrupt numbers. */
	unsigned int next_irq;

	/* Counter to print out convenient device numbers. */
	unsigned int device_num;

111
	/* The descriptor page for the devices. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
112 113
	u8 *descpage;

114
	/* A single linked list of devices. */
115
	struct device *dev;
116 117 118
	/* And a pointer to the last device for easy append and also for
	 * configuration appending. */
	struct device *lastdev;
119 120
};

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
121 122 123
/* The list of Guest devices, based on command line arguments. */
static struct device_list devices;

124
/* The device structure describes a single device. */
125 126
struct device
{
127
	/* The linked-list pointer. */
128
	struct device *next;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
129

130
	/* The device's descriptor, as mapped into the Guest. */
131
	struct lguest_device_desc *desc;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
132

133 134 135 136
	/* We can't trust desc values once Guest has booted: we use these. */
	unsigned int feature_len;
	unsigned int num_vq;

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
137 138
	/* The name of this device, for --verbose. */
	const char *name;
139

140 141
	/* If handle_input is set, it wants to be called when this file
	 * descriptor is ready. */
142
	int fd;
143
	bool (*handle_input)(struct device *me);
144

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
145 146
	/* Any queues attached to this device */
	struct virtqueue *vq;
147

148 149 150
	/* Handle status being finalized (ie. feature bits stable). */
	void (*ready)(struct device *me);

151 152 153 154
	/* Device-specific data. */
	void *priv;
};

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171
/* The virtqueue structure describes a queue attached to a device. */
struct virtqueue
{
	struct virtqueue *next;

	/* Which device owns me. */
	struct device *dev;

	/* The configuration for this queue. */
	struct lguest_vqconfig config;

	/* The actual ring of buffers. */
	struct vring vring;

	/* Last available index we saw. */
	u16 last_avail_idx;

172
	/* The routine to call when the Guest pings us, or timeout. */
173
	void (*handle_output)(struct virtqueue *me, bool timeout);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
174

175 176
	/* Is this blocked awaiting a timer? */
	bool blocked;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
177 178
};

B
Balaji Rao 已提交
179 180 181
/* Remember the arguments to the program so we can "reboot" */
static char **main_args;

182 183 184 185
/* We have to be careful with barriers: our devices are all run in separate
 * threads and so we need to make sure that changes visible to the Guest happen
 * in precise order. */
#define wmb() __asm__ __volatile__("" : : : "memory")
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207

/* Convert an iovec element to the given type.
 *
 * This is a fairly ugly trick: we need to know the size of the type and
 * alignment requirement to check the pointer is kosher.  It's also nice to
 * have the name of the type in case we report failure.
 *
 * Typing those three things all the time is cumbersome and error prone, so we
 * have a macro which sets them all up and passes to the real function. */
#define convert(iov, type) \
	((type *)_convert((iov), sizeof(type), __alignof__(type), #type))

static void *_convert(struct iovec *iov, size_t size, size_t align,
		      const char *name)
{
	if (iov->iov_len != size)
		errx(1, "Bad iovec size %zu for %s", iov->iov_len, name);
	if ((unsigned long)iov->iov_base % align != 0)
		errx(1, "Bad alignment %p for %s", iov->iov_base, name);
	return iov->iov_base;
}

208 209 210
/* Wrapper for the last available index.  Makes it easier to change. */
#define lg_last_avail(vq)	((vq)->last_avail_idx)

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
211 212 213 214 215 216 217
/* The virtio configuration space is defined to be little-endian.  x86 is
 * little-endian too, but it's nice to be explicit so we have these helpers. */
#define cpu_to_le16(v16) (v16)
#define cpu_to_le32(v32) (v32)
#define cpu_to_le64(v64) (v64)
#define le16_to_cpu(v16) (v16)
#define le32_to_cpu(v32) (v32)
218
#define le64_to_cpu(v64) (v64)
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
219

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246
/* Is this iovec empty? */
static bool iov_empty(const struct iovec iov[], unsigned int num_iov)
{
	unsigned int i;

	for (i = 0; i < num_iov; i++)
		if (iov[i].iov_len)
			return false;
	return true;
}

/* Take len bytes from the front of this iovec. */
static void iov_consume(struct iovec iov[], unsigned num_iov, unsigned len)
{
	unsigned int i;

	for (i = 0; i < num_iov; i++) {
		unsigned int used;

		used = iov[i].iov_len < len ? iov[i].iov_len : len;
		iov[i].iov_base += used;
		iov[i].iov_len -= used;
		len -= used;
	}
	assert(len == 0);
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
247 248 249 250
/* The device virtqueue descriptors are followed by feature bitmasks. */
static u8 *get_feature_bits(struct device *dev)
{
	return (u8 *)(dev->desc + 1)
251
		+ dev->num_vq * sizeof(struct lguest_vqconfig);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
252 253
}

254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276
/*L:100 The Launcher code itself takes us out into userspace, that scary place
 * where pointers run wild and free!  Unfortunately, like most userspace
 * programs, it's quite boring (which is why everyone likes to hack on the
 * kernel!).  Perhaps if you make up an Lguest Drinking Game at this point, it
 * will get you through this section.  Or, maybe not.
 *
 * The Launcher sets up a big chunk of memory to be the Guest's "physical"
 * memory and stores it in "guest_base".  In other words, Guest physical ==
 * Launcher virtual with an offset.
 *
 * This can be tough to get your head around, but usually it just means that we
 * use these trivial conversion functions when the Guest gives us it's
 * "physical" addresses: */
static void *from_guest_phys(unsigned long addr)
{
	return guest_base + addr;
}

static unsigned long to_guest_phys(const void *addr)
{
	return (addr - guest_base);
}

277 278 279 280 281
/*L:130
 * Loading the Kernel.
 *
 * We start with couple of simple helper routines.  open_or_die() avoids
 * error-checking code cluttering the callers: */
282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289
static int open_or_die(const char *name, int flags)
{
	int fd = open(name, flags);
	if (fd < 0)
		err(1, "Failed to open %s", name);
	return fd;
}

290 291
/* map_zeroed_pages() takes a number of pages. */
static void *map_zeroed_pages(unsigned int num)
292
{
293 294
	int fd = open_or_die("/dev/zero", O_RDONLY);
	void *addr;
295

296
	/* We use a private mapping (ie. if we write to the page, it will be
297 298 299 300 301
	 * copied). */
	addr = mmap(NULL, getpagesize() * num,
		    PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE|PROT_EXEC, MAP_PRIVATE, fd, 0);
	if (addr == MAP_FAILED)
		err(1, "Mmaping %u pages of /dev/zero", num);
302
	close(fd);
303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315

	return addr;
}

/* Get some more pages for a device. */
static void *get_pages(unsigned int num)
{
	void *addr = from_guest_phys(guest_limit);

	guest_limit += num * getpagesize();
	if (guest_limit > guest_max)
		errx(1, "Not enough memory for devices");
	return addr;
316 317
}

318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341
/* This routine is used to load the kernel or initrd.  It tries mmap, but if
 * that fails (Plan 9's kernel file isn't nicely aligned on page boundaries),
 * it falls back to reading the memory in. */
static void map_at(int fd, void *addr, unsigned long offset, unsigned long len)
{
	ssize_t r;

	/* We map writable even though for some segments are marked read-only.
	 * The kernel really wants to be writable: it patches its own
	 * instructions.
	 *
	 * MAP_PRIVATE means that the page won't be copied until a write is
	 * done to it.  This allows us to share untouched memory between
	 * Guests. */
	if (mmap(addr, len, PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE|PROT_EXEC,
		 MAP_FIXED|MAP_PRIVATE, fd, offset) != MAP_FAILED)
		return;

	/* pread does a seek and a read in one shot: saves a few lines. */
	r = pread(fd, addr, len, offset);
	if (r != len)
		err(1, "Reading offset %lu len %lu gave %zi", offset, len, r);
}

342 343 344 345 346
/* This routine takes an open vmlinux image, which is in ELF, and maps it into
 * the Guest memory.  ELF = Embedded Linking Format, which is the format used
 * by all modern binaries on Linux including the kernel.
 *
 * The ELF headers give *two* addresses: a physical address, and a virtual
347 348
 * address.  We use the physical address; the Guest will map itself to the
 * virtual address.
349 350
 *
 * We return the starting address. */
351
static unsigned long map_elf(int elf_fd, const Elf32_Ehdr *ehdr)
352 353 354 355
{
	Elf32_Phdr phdr[ehdr->e_phnum];
	unsigned int i;

356 357
	/* Sanity checks on the main ELF header: an x86 executable with a
	 * reasonable number of correctly-sized program headers. */
358 359 360 361 362 363
	if (ehdr->e_type != ET_EXEC
	    || ehdr->e_machine != EM_386
	    || ehdr->e_phentsize != sizeof(Elf32_Phdr)
	    || ehdr->e_phnum < 1 || ehdr->e_phnum > 65536U/sizeof(Elf32_Phdr))
		errx(1, "Malformed elf header");

364 365 366 367 368
	/* An ELF executable contains an ELF header and a number of "program"
	 * headers which indicate which parts ("segments") of the program to
	 * load where. */

	/* We read in all the program headers at once: */
369 370 371 372 373
	if (lseek(elf_fd, ehdr->e_phoff, SEEK_SET) < 0)
		err(1, "Seeking to program headers");
	if (read(elf_fd, phdr, sizeof(phdr)) != sizeof(phdr))
		err(1, "Reading program headers");

374
	/* Try all the headers: there are usually only three.  A read-only one,
375
	 * a read-write one, and a "note" section which we don't load. */
376
	for (i = 0; i < ehdr->e_phnum; i++) {
377
		/* If this isn't a loadable segment, we ignore it */
378 379 380 381 382 383
		if (phdr[i].p_type != PT_LOAD)
			continue;

		verbose("Section %i: size %i addr %p\n",
			i, phdr[i].p_memsz, (void *)phdr[i].p_paddr);

384
		/* We map this section of the file at its physical address. */
385
		map_at(elf_fd, from_guest_phys(phdr[i].p_paddr),
386
		       phdr[i].p_offset, phdr[i].p_filesz);
387 388
	}

389 390
	/* The entry point is given in the ELF header. */
	return ehdr->e_entry;
391 392
}

393
/*L:150 A bzImage, unlike an ELF file, is not meant to be loaded.  You're
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
394 395
 * supposed to jump into it and it will unpack itself.  We used to have to
 * perform some hairy magic because the unpacking code scared me.
396
 *
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
397 398 399
 * Fortunately, Jeremy Fitzhardinge convinced me it wasn't that hard and wrote
 * a small patch to jump over the tricky bits in the Guest, so now we just read
 * the funky header so we know where in the file to load, and away we go! */
400
static unsigned long load_bzimage(int fd)
401
{
402
	struct boot_params boot;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
403 404 405 406 407
	int r;
	/* Modern bzImages get loaded at 1M. */
	void *p = from_guest_phys(0x100000);

	/* Go back to the start of the file and read the header.  It should be
U
Uwe Hermann 已提交
408
	 * a Linux boot header (see Documentation/x86/i386/boot.txt) */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
409
	lseek(fd, 0, SEEK_SET);
410
	read(fd, &boot, sizeof(boot));
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
411

412 413
	/* Inside the setup_hdr, we expect the magic "HdrS" */
	if (memcmp(&boot.hdr.header, "HdrS", 4) != 0)
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
414 415
		errx(1, "This doesn't look like a bzImage to me");

416 417
	/* Skip over the extra sectors of the header. */
	lseek(fd, (boot.hdr.setup_sects+1) * 512, SEEK_SET);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
418 419 420 421 422

	/* Now read everything into memory. in nice big chunks. */
	while ((r = read(fd, p, 65536)) > 0)
		p += r;

423 424
	/* Finally, code32_start tells us where to enter the kernel. */
	return boot.hdr.code32_start;
425 426
}

427
/*L:140 Loading the kernel is easy when it's a "vmlinux", but most kernels
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
428 429
 * come wrapped up in the self-decompressing "bzImage" format.  With a little
 * work, we can load those, too. */
430
static unsigned long load_kernel(int fd)
431 432 433
{
	Elf32_Ehdr hdr;

434
	/* Read in the first few bytes. */
435 436 437
	if (read(fd, &hdr, sizeof(hdr)) != sizeof(hdr))
		err(1, "Reading kernel");

438
	/* If it's an ELF file, it starts with "\177ELF" */
439
	if (memcmp(hdr.e_ident, ELFMAG, SELFMAG) == 0)
440
		return map_elf(fd, &hdr);
441

442
	/* Otherwise we assume it's a bzImage, and try to load it. */
443
	return load_bzimage(fd);
444 445
}

446 447 448 449 450
/* This is a trivial little helper to align pages.  Andi Kleen hated it because
 * it calls getpagesize() twice: "it's dumb code."
 *
 * Kernel guys get really het up about optimization, even when it's not
 * necessary.  I leave this code as a reaction against that. */
451 452
static inline unsigned long page_align(unsigned long addr)
{
453
	/* Add upwards and truncate downwards. */
454 455 456
	return ((addr + getpagesize()-1) & ~(getpagesize()-1));
}

457 458 459 460 461 462 463
/*L:180 An "initial ram disk" is a disk image loaded into memory along with
 * the kernel which the kernel can use to boot from without needing any
 * drivers.  Most distributions now use this as standard: the initrd contains
 * the code to load the appropriate driver modules for the current machine.
 *
 * Importantly, James Morris works for RedHat, and Fedora uses initrds for its
 * kernels.  He sent me this (and tells me when I break it). */
464 465 466 467 468 469 470
static unsigned long load_initrd(const char *name, unsigned long mem)
{
	int ifd;
	struct stat st;
	unsigned long len;

	ifd = open_or_die(name, O_RDONLY);
471
	/* fstat() is needed to get the file size. */
472 473 474
	if (fstat(ifd, &st) < 0)
		err(1, "fstat() on initrd '%s'", name);

475 476
	/* We map the initrd at the top of memory, but mmap wants it to be
	 * page-aligned, so we round the size up for that. */
477
	len = page_align(st.st_size);
478
	map_at(ifd, from_guest_phys(mem - len), 0, st.st_size);
479 480
	/* Once a file is mapped, you can close the file descriptor.  It's a
	 * little odd, but quite useful. */
481
	close(ifd);
482
	verbose("mapped initrd %s size=%lu @ %p\n", name, len, (void*)mem-len);
483 484

	/* We return the initrd size. */
485 486
	return len;
}
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
487
/*:*/
488

489 490
/* Simple routine to roll all the commandline arguments together with spaces
 * between them. */
491 492 493 494 495
static void concat(char *dst, char *args[])
{
	unsigned int i, len = 0;

	for (i = 0; args[i]; i++) {
496 497 498 499
		if (i) {
			strcat(dst+len, " ");
			len++;
		}
500
		strcpy(dst+len, args[i]);
501
		len += strlen(args[i]);
502 503 504 505 506
	}
	/* In case it's empty. */
	dst[len] = '\0';
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
507 508
/*L:185 This is where we actually tell the kernel to initialize the Guest.  We
 * saw the arguments it expects when we looked at initialize() in lguest_user.c:
509 510
 * the base of Guest "physical" memory, the top physical page to allow and the
 * entry point for the Guest. */
511
static void tell_kernel(unsigned long start)
512
{
513 514
	unsigned long args[] = { LHREQ_INITIALIZE,
				 (unsigned long)guest_base,
515
				 guest_limit / getpagesize(), start };
516 517
	verbose("Guest: %p - %p (%#lx)\n",
		guest_base, guest_base + guest_limit, guest_limit);
518 519
	lguest_fd = open_or_die("/dev/lguest", O_RDWR);
	if (write(lguest_fd, args, sizeof(args)) < 0)
520 521
		err(1, "Writing to /dev/lguest");
}
522
/*:*/
523

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
524
static void add_device_fd(int fd)
525
{
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
526 527 528
	FD_SET(fd, &devices.infds);
	if (fd > devices.max_infd)
		devices.max_infd = fd;
529 530
}

531 532 533
/*L:200
 * The Waker.
 *
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
534 535 536 537
 * With console, block and network devices, we can have lots of input which we
 * need to process.  We could try to tell the kernel what file descriptors to
 * watch, but handing a file descriptor mask through to the kernel is fairly
 * icky.
538
 *
539
 * Instead, we clone off a thread which watches the file descriptors and writes
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
540 541
 * the LHREQ_BREAK command to the /dev/lguest file descriptor to tell the Host
 * stop running the Guest.  This causes the Launcher to return from the
542 543 544 545
 * /dev/lguest read with -EAGAIN, where it will write to /dev/lguest to reset
 * the LHREQ_BREAK and wake us up again.
 *
 * This, of course, is merely a different *kind* of icky.
546 547 548 549
 *
 * Given my well-known antipathy to threads, I'd prefer to use processes.  But
 * it's easier to share Guest memory with threads, and trivial to share the
 * devices.infds as the Launcher changes it.
550
 */
551
static int waker(void *unused)
552
{
553 554
	/* Close the write end of the pipe: only the Launcher has it open. */
	close(waker_fds.pipe[1]);
555 556

	for (;;) {
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
557
		fd_set rfds = devices.infds;
558
		unsigned long args[] = { LHREQ_BREAK, 1 };
559 560 561 562 563 564
		unsigned int maxfd = devices.max_infd;

		/* We also listen to the pipe from the Launcher. */
		FD_SET(waker_fds.pipe[0], &rfds);
		if (waker_fds.pipe[0] > maxfd)
			maxfd = waker_fds.pipe[0];
565

566
		/* Wait until input is ready from one of the devices. */
567 568 569 570 571 572 573 574 575 576 577 578 579
		select(maxfd+1, &rfds, NULL, NULL, NULL);

		/* Message from Launcher? */
		if (FD_ISSET(waker_fds.pipe[0], &rfds)) {
			char c;
			/* If this fails, then assume Launcher has exited.
			 * Don't do anything on exit: we're just a thread! */
			if (read(waker_fds.pipe[0], &c, 1) != 1)
				_exit(0);
			continue;
		}

		/* Send LHREQ_BREAK command to snap the Launcher out of it. */
580
		pwrite(lguest_fd, args, sizeof(args), cpu_id);
581
	}
582
	return 0;
583 584
}

585
/* This routine just sets up a pipe to the Waker process. */
586
static void setup_waker(void)
587 588 589 590
{
	/* This pipe is closed when Launcher dies, telling Waker. */
	if (pipe(waker_fds.pipe) != 0)
		err(1, "Creating pipe for Waker");
591

592 593
	if (clone(waker, malloc(4096) + 4096, CLONE_VM | SIGCHLD, NULL) == -1)
		err(1, "Creating Waker");
594 595
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
596
/*
597 598
 * Device Handling.
 *
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
599
 * When the Guest gives us a buffer, it sends an array of addresses and sizes.
600
 * We need to make sure it's not trying to reach into the Launcher itself, so
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
601
 * we have a convenient routine which checks it and exits with an error message
602 603
 * if something funny is going on:
 */
604 605 606
static void *_check_pointer(unsigned long addr, unsigned int size,
			    unsigned int line)
{
607 608
	/* We have to separately check addr and addr+size, because size could
	 * be huge and addr + size might wrap around. */
609
	if (addr >= guest_limit || addr + size >= guest_limit)
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
610
		errx(1, "%s:%i: Invalid address %#lx", __FILE__, line, addr);
611 612
	/* We return a pointer for the caller's convenience, now we know it's
	 * safe to use. */
613
	return from_guest_phys(addr);
614
}
615
/* A macro which transparently hands the line number to the real function. */
616 617
#define check_pointer(addr,size) _check_pointer(addr, size, __LINE__)

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
618 619 620
/* Each buffer in the virtqueues is actually a chain of descriptors.  This
 * function returns the next descriptor in the chain, or vq->vring.num if we're
 * at the end. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
621 622 623 624 625 626 627 628 629 630 631 632 633 634 635 636 637 638 639 640 641 642 643 644 645 646 647 648 649 650 651
static unsigned next_desc(struct virtqueue *vq, unsigned int i)
{
	unsigned int next;

	/* If this descriptor says it doesn't chain, we're done. */
	if (!(vq->vring.desc[i].flags & VRING_DESC_F_NEXT))
		return vq->vring.num;

	/* Check they're not leading us off end of descriptors. */
	next = vq->vring.desc[i].next;
	/* Make sure compiler knows to grab that: we don't want it changing! */
	wmb();

	if (next >= vq->vring.num)
		errx(1, "Desc next is %u", next);

	return next;
}

/* This looks in the virtqueue and for the first available buffer, and converts
 * it to an iovec for convenient access.  Since descriptors consist of some
 * number of output then some number of input descriptors, it's actually two
 * iovecs, but we pack them into one and note how many of each there were.
 *
 * This function returns the descriptor number found, or vq->vring.num (which
 * is never a valid descriptor number) if none was found. */
static unsigned get_vq_desc(struct virtqueue *vq,
			    struct iovec iov[],
			    unsigned int *out_num, unsigned int *in_num)
{
	unsigned int i, head;
652
	u16 last_avail;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
653 654

	/* Check it isn't doing very strange things with descriptor numbers. */
655 656
	last_avail = lg_last_avail(vq);
	if ((u16)(vq->vring.avail->idx - last_avail) > vq->vring.num)
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
657
		errx(1, "Guest moved used index from %u to %u",
658
		     last_avail, vq->vring.avail->idx);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
659 660

	/* If there's nothing new since last we looked, return invalid. */
661
	if (vq->vring.avail->idx == last_avail)
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
662 663 664 665
		return vq->vring.num;

	/* Grab the next descriptor number they're advertising, and increment
	 * the index we've seen. */
666 667
	head = vq->vring.avail->ring[last_avail % vq->vring.num];
	lg_last_avail(vq)++;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
668 669 670 671 672 673 674 675 676 677 678 679 680 681 682 683 684 685 686 687 688 689 690 691 692 693 694 695 696 697

	/* If their number is silly, that's a fatal mistake. */
	if (head >= vq->vring.num)
		errx(1, "Guest says index %u is available", head);

	/* When we start there are none of either input nor output. */
	*out_num = *in_num = 0;

	i = head;
	do {
		/* Grab the first descriptor, and check it's OK. */
		iov[*out_num + *in_num].iov_len = vq->vring.desc[i].len;
		iov[*out_num + *in_num].iov_base
			= check_pointer(vq->vring.desc[i].addr,
					vq->vring.desc[i].len);
		/* If this is an input descriptor, increment that count. */
		if (vq->vring.desc[i].flags & VRING_DESC_F_WRITE)
			(*in_num)++;
		else {
			/* If it's an output descriptor, they're all supposed
			 * to come before any input descriptors. */
			if (*in_num)
				errx(1, "Descriptor has out after in");
			(*out_num)++;
		}

		/* If we've got too many, that implies a descriptor loop. */
		if (*out_num + *in_num > vq->vring.num)
			errx(1, "Looped descriptor");
	} while ((i = next_desc(vq, i)) != vq->vring.num);
698

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
699
	return head;
700 701
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
702
/* After we've used one of their buffers, we tell them about it.  We'll then
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
703 704
 * want to send them an interrupt, using trigger_irq(). */
static void add_used(struct virtqueue *vq, unsigned int head, int len)
705
{
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
706 707
	struct vring_used_elem *used;

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
708 709
	/* The virtqueue contains a ring of used buffers.  Get a pointer to the
	 * next entry in that used ring. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
710 711 712 713 714 715
	used = &vq->vring.used->ring[vq->vring.used->idx % vq->vring.num];
	used->id = head;
	used->len = len;
	/* Make sure buffer is written before we update index. */
	wmb();
	vq->vring.used->idx++;
716 717
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
718
/* This actually sends the interrupt for this virtqueue */
719
static void trigger_irq(struct virtqueue *vq)
720
{
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
721 722
	unsigned long buf[] = { LHREQ_IRQ, vq->config.irq };

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
723 724
	/* If they don't want an interrupt, don't send one, unless empty. */
	if ((vq->vring.avail->flags & VRING_AVAIL_F_NO_INTERRUPT)
725
	    && lg_last_avail(vq) != vq->vring.avail->idx)
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
726 727 728
		return;

	/* Send the Guest an interrupt tell them we used something up. */
729
	if (write(lguest_fd, buf, sizeof(buf)) != 0)
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
730
		err(1, "Triggering irq %i", vq->config.irq);
731 732
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
733
/* And here's the combo meal deal.  Supersize me! */
734
static void add_used_and_trigger(struct virtqueue *vq, unsigned head, int len)
735
{
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
736
	add_used(vq, head, len);
737
	trigger_irq(vq);
738 739
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
740 741 742 743 744
/*
 * The Console
 *
 * Here is the input terminal setting we save, and the routine to restore them
 * on exit so the user gets their terminal back. */
745 746 747 748 749 750
static struct termios orig_term;
static void restore_term(void)
{
	tcsetattr(STDIN_FILENO, TCSANOW, &orig_term);
}

751
/* We associate some data with the console for our exit hack. */
752 753
struct console_abort
{
754
	/* How many times have they hit ^C? */
755
	int count;
756
	/* When did they start? */
757 758 759
	struct timeval start;
};

760
/* This is the routine which handles console input (ie. stdin). */
761
static bool handle_console_input(struct device *dev)
762 763
{
	int len;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
764 765
	unsigned int head, in_num, out_num;
	struct iovec iov[dev->vq->vring.num];
766 767
	struct console_abort *abort = dev->priv;

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
768 769
	/* First we need a console buffer from the Guests's input virtqueue. */
	head = get_vq_desc(dev->vq, iov, &out_num, &in_num);
770 771 772 773 774 775 776

	/* If they're not ready for input, stop listening to this file
	 * descriptor.  We'll start again once they add an input buffer. */
	if (head == dev->vq->vring.num)
		return false;

	if (out_num)
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
777
		errx(1, "Output buffers in console in queue?");
778

779 780
	/* This is why we convert to iovecs: the readv() call uses them, and so
	 * it reads straight into the Guest's buffer. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
781
	len = readv(dev->fd, iov, in_num);
782
	if (len <= 0) {
783
		/* This implies that the console is closed, is /dev/null, or
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
784
		 * something went terribly wrong. */
785
		warnx("Failed to get console input, ignoring console.");
786
		/* Put the input terminal back. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
787
		restore_term();
788 789 790
		/* Remove callback from input vq, so it doesn't restart us. */
		dev->vq->handle_output = NULL;
		/* Stop listening to this fd: don't call us again. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
791
		return false;
792 793
	}

794
	/* Tell the Guest about the new input. */
795
	add_used_and_trigger(dev->vq, head, len);
796

797 798 799 800 801
	/* Three ^C within one second?  Exit.
	 *
	 * This is such a hack, but works surprisingly well.  Each ^C has to be
	 * in a buffer by itself, so they can't be too fast.  But we check that
	 * we get three within about a second, so they can't be too slow. */
802 803 804 805 806 807 808
	if (len == 1 && ((char *)iov[0].iov_base)[0] == 3) {
		if (!abort->count++)
			gettimeofday(&abort->start, NULL);
		else if (abort->count == 3) {
			struct timeval now;
			gettimeofday(&now, NULL);
			if (now.tv_sec <= abort->start.tv_sec+1) {
809
				unsigned long args[] = { LHREQ_BREAK, 0 };
810 811
				/* Close the fd so Waker will know it has to
				 * exit. */
812 813
				close(waker_fds.pipe[1]);
				/* Just in case Waker is blocked in BREAK, send
814
				 * unbreak now. */
815
				write(lguest_fd, args, sizeof(args));
816 817 818 819 820
				exit(2);
			}
			abort->count = 0;
		}
	} else
821
		/* Any other key resets the abort counter. */
822 823
		abort->count = 0;

824
	/* Everything went OK! */
825 826 827
	return true;
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
828 829
/* Handling output for console is simple: we just get all the output buffers
 * and write them to stdout. */
830
static void handle_console_output(struct virtqueue *vq, bool timeout)
831
{
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
832 833 834 835 836 837 838 839 840
	unsigned int head, out, in;
	int len;
	struct iovec iov[vq->vring.num];

	/* Keep getting output buffers from the Guest until we run out. */
	while ((head = get_vq_desc(vq, iov, &out, &in)) != vq->vring.num) {
		if (in)
			errx(1, "Input buffers in output queue?");
		len = writev(STDOUT_FILENO, iov, out);
841
		add_used_and_trigger(vq, head, len);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
842
	}
843 844
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
845 846 847
/* This is called when we no longer want to hear about Guest changes to a
 * virtqueue.  This is more efficient in high-traffic cases, but it means we
 * have to set a timer to check if any more changes have occurred. */
848 849 850 851 852 853 854 855 856 857
static void block_vq(struct virtqueue *vq)
{
	struct itimerval itm;

	vq->vring.used->flags |= VRING_USED_F_NO_NOTIFY;
	vq->blocked = true;

	itm.it_interval.tv_sec = 0;
	itm.it_interval.tv_usec = 0;
	itm.it_value.tv_sec = 0;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
858
	itm.it_value.tv_usec = timeout_usec;
859 860 861 862

	setitimer(ITIMER_REAL, &itm, NULL);
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
863 864 865 866
/*
 * The Network
 *
 * Handling output for network is also simple: we get all the output buffers
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
867
 * and write them (ignoring the first element) to this device's file descriptor
868 869
 * (/dev/net/tun).
 */
870
static void handle_net_output(struct virtqueue *vq, bool timeout)
871
{
872
	unsigned int head, out, in, num = 0;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
873 874
	int len;
	struct iovec iov[vq->vring.num];
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
875
	static int last_timeout_num;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
876 877 878 879 880

	/* Keep getting output buffers from the Guest until we run out. */
	while ((head = get_vq_desc(vq, iov, &out, &in)) != vq->vring.num) {
		if (in)
			errx(1, "Input buffers in output queue?");
881 882 883
		len = writev(vq->dev->fd, iov, out);
		if (len < 0)
			err(1, "Writing network packet to tun");
884
		add_used_and_trigger(vq, head, len);
885
		num++;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
886
	}
887 888 889 890

	/* Block further kicks and set up a timer if we saw anything. */
	if (!timeout && num)
		block_vq(vq);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
891

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
892 893 894 895 896
	/* We never quite know how long should we wait before we check the
	 * queue again for more packets.  We start at 500 microseconds, and if
	 * we get fewer packets than last time, we assume we made the timeout
	 * too small and increase it by 10 microseconds.  Otherwise, we drop it
	 * by one microsecond every time.  It seems to work well enough. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
897 898 899 900 901 902 903
	if (timeout) {
		if (num < last_timeout_num)
			timeout_usec += 10;
		else if (timeout_usec > 1)
			timeout_usec--;
		last_timeout_num = num;
	}
904 905
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
906 907
/* This is where we handle a packet coming in from the tun device to our
 * Guest. */
908
static bool handle_tun_input(struct device *dev)
909
{
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
910
	unsigned int head, in_num, out_num;
911
	int len;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
912
	struct iovec iov[dev->vq->vring.num];
913

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
914 915 916
	/* First we need a network buffer from the Guests's recv virtqueue. */
	head = get_vq_desc(dev->vq, iov, &out_num, &in_num);
	if (head == dev->vq->vring.num) {
917
		/* Now, it's expected that if we try to send a packet too
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
918 919 920
		 * early, the Guest won't be ready yet.  Wait until the device
		 * status says it's ready. */
		/* FIXME: Actually want DRIVER_ACTIVE here. */
921 922 923 924 925

		/* Now tell it we want to know if new things appear. */
		dev->vq->vring.used->flags &= ~VRING_USED_F_NO_NOTIFY;
		wmb();

926 927
		/* We'll turn this back on if input buffers are registered. */
		return false;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
928 929 930
	} else if (out_num)
		errx(1, "Output buffers in network recv queue?");

931
	/* Read the packet from the device directly into the Guest's buffer. */
932
	len = readv(dev->fd, iov, in_num);
933 934
	if (len <= 0)
		err(1, "reading network");
935

936
	/* Tell the Guest about the new packet. */
937
	add_used_and_trigger(dev->vq, head, len);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
938

939
	verbose("tun input packet len %i [%02x %02x] (%s)\n", len,
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
940 941 942
		((u8 *)iov[1].iov_base)[0], ((u8 *)iov[1].iov_base)[1],
		head != dev->vq->vring.num ? "sent" : "discarded");

943
	/* All good. */
944 945 946
	return true;
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
947 948
/*L:215 This is the callback attached to the network and console input
 * virtqueues: it ensures we try again, in case we stopped console or net
949
 * delivery because Guest didn't have any buffers. */
950
static void enable_fd(struct virtqueue *vq, bool timeout)
951 952
{
	add_device_fd(vq->dev->fd);
953 954
	/* Snap the Waker out of its select loop. */
	write(waker_fds.pipe[1], "", 1);
955 956
}

957
static void net_enable_fd(struct virtqueue *vq, bool timeout)
958 959 960
{
	/* We don't need to know again when Guest refills receive buffer. */
	vq->vring.used->flags |= VRING_USED_F_NO_NOTIFY;
961
	enable_fd(vq, timeout);
962 963
}

964 965
/* When the Guest tells us they updated the status field, we handle it. */
static void update_device_status(struct device *dev)
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
966 967 968
{
	struct virtqueue *vq;

969 970 971
	/* This is a reset. */
	if (dev->desc->status == 0) {
		verbose("Resetting device %s\n", dev->name);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
972

973
		/* Clear any features they've acked. */
974 975
		memset(get_feature_bits(dev) + dev->feature_len, 0,
		       dev->feature_len);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
976

977 978 979
		/* Zero out the virtqueues. */
		for (vq = dev->vq; vq; vq = vq->next) {
			memset(vq->vring.desc, 0,
980
			       vring_size(vq->config.num, LGUEST_VRING_ALIGN));
981
			lg_last_avail(vq) = 0;
982 983 984 985 986 987 988
		}
	} else if (dev->desc->status & VIRTIO_CONFIG_S_FAILED) {
		warnx("Device %s configuration FAILED", dev->name);
	} else if (dev->desc->status & VIRTIO_CONFIG_S_DRIVER_OK) {
		unsigned int i;

		verbose("Device %s OK: offered", dev->name);
989
		for (i = 0; i < dev->feature_len; i++)
990
			verbose(" %02x", get_feature_bits(dev)[i]);
991
		verbose(", accepted");
992
		for (i = 0; i < dev->feature_len; i++)
993
			verbose(" %02x", get_feature_bits(dev)
994
				[dev->feature_len+i]);
995 996 997

		if (dev->ready)
			dev->ready(dev);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
998 999 1000
	}
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1001
/* This is the generic routine we call when the Guest uses LHCALL_NOTIFY. */
1002
static void handle_output(unsigned long addr)
1003 1004
{
	struct device *i;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1005 1006
	struct virtqueue *vq;

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1007
	/* Check each device and virtqueue. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1008
	for (i = devices.dev; i; i = i->next) {
1009
		/* Notifications to device descriptors update device status. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1010
		if (from_guest_phys(addr) == i->desc) {
1011
			update_device_status(i);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1012 1013 1014 1015
			return;
		}

		/* Notifications to virtqueues mean output has occurred. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1016
		for (vq = i->vq; vq; vq = vq->next) {
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1017 1018 1019 1020 1021 1022 1023
			if (vq->config.pfn != addr/getpagesize())
				continue;

			/* Guest should acknowledge (and set features!)  before
			 * using the device. */
			if (i->desc->status == 0) {
				warnx("%s gave early output", i->name);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1024 1025
				return;
			}
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1026 1027 1028 1029

			if (strcmp(vq->dev->name, "console") != 0)
				verbose("Output to %s\n", vq->dev->name);
			if (vq->handle_output)
1030
				vq->handle_output(vq, false);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1031
			return;
1032 1033
		}
	}
1034

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1035 1036 1037 1038 1039 1040 1041
	/* Early console write is done using notify on a nul-terminated string
	 * in Guest memory. */
	if (addr >= guest_limit)
		errx(1, "Bad NOTIFY %#lx", addr);

	write(STDOUT_FILENO, from_guest_phys(addr),
	      strnlen(from_guest_phys(addr), guest_limit - addr));
1042 1043
}

1044
static void handle_timeout(void)
1045 1046 1047 1048 1049 1050 1051 1052 1053 1054 1055 1056 1057 1058 1059 1060 1061
{
	char buf[32];
	struct device *i;
	struct virtqueue *vq;

	/* Clear the pipe */
	read(timeoutpipe[0], buf, sizeof(buf));

	/* Check each device and virtqueue: flush blocked ones. */
	for (i = devices.dev; i; i = i->next) {
		for (vq = i->vq; vq; vq = vq->next) {
			if (!vq->blocked)
				continue;

			vq->vring.used->flags &= ~VRING_USED_F_NO_NOTIFY;
			vq->blocked = false;
			if (vq->handle_output)
1062
				vq->handle_output(vq, true);
1063 1064 1065 1066
		}
	}
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1067
/* This is called when the Waker wakes us up: check for incoming file
1068
 * descriptors. */
1069
static void handle_input(void)
1070
{
1071
	/* select() wants a zeroed timeval to mean "don't wait". */
1072 1073 1074 1075
	struct timeval poll = { .tv_sec = 0, .tv_usec = 0 };

	for (;;) {
		struct device *i;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1076
		fd_set fds = devices.infds;
1077
		int num;
1078

1079 1080 1081 1082
		num = select(devices.max_infd+1, &fds, NULL, NULL, &poll);
		/* Could get interrupted */
		if (num < 0)
			continue;
1083
		/* If nothing is ready, we're done. */
1084
		if (num == 0)
1085 1086
			break;

1087 1088
		/* Otherwise, call the device(s) which have readable file
		 * descriptors and a method of handling them.  */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1089
		for (i = devices.dev; i; i = i->next) {
1090
			if (i->handle_input && FD_ISSET(i->fd, &fds)) {
1091
				if (i->handle_input(i))
1092 1093
					continue;

1094
				/* If handle_input() returns false, it means we
1095 1096 1097
				 * should no longer service it.  Networking and
				 * console do this when there's no input
				 * buffers to deliver into.  Console also uses
1098
				 * it when it discovers that stdin is closed. */
1099
				FD_CLR(i->fd, &devices.infds);
1100 1101
			}
		}
1102 1103 1104

		/* Is this the timeout fd? */
		if (FD_ISSET(timeoutpipe[0], &fds))
1105
			handle_timeout();
1106 1107 1108
	}
}

1109 1110 1111 1112 1113
/*L:190
 * Device Setup
 *
 * All devices need a descriptor so the Guest knows it exists, and a "struct
 * device" so the Launcher can keep track of it.  We have common helper
1114 1115
 * routines to allocate and manage them.
 */
1116

1117 1118 1119 1120 1121 1122 1123
/* The layout of the device page is a "struct lguest_device_desc" followed by a
 * number of virtqueue descriptors, then two sets of feature bits, then an
 * array of configuration bytes.  This routine returns the configuration
 * pointer. */
static u8 *device_config(const struct device *dev)
{
	return (void *)(dev->desc + 1)
1124 1125
		+ dev->num_vq * sizeof(struct lguest_vqconfig)
		+ dev->feature_len * 2;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1126 1127
}

1128 1129 1130 1131
/* This routine allocates a new "struct lguest_device_desc" from descriptor
 * table page just above the Guest's normal memory.  It returns a pointer to
 * that descriptor. */
static struct lguest_device_desc *new_dev_desc(u16 type)
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1132
{
1133 1134
	struct lguest_device_desc d = { .type = type };
	void *p;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1135

1136 1137 1138 1139 1140 1141
	/* Figure out where the next device config is, based on the last one. */
	if (devices.lastdev)
		p = device_config(devices.lastdev)
			+ devices.lastdev->desc->config_len;
	else
		p = devices.descpage;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1142

1143 1144 1145
	/* We only have one page for all the descriptors. */
	if (p + sizeof(d) > (void *)devices.descpage + getpagesize())
		errx(1, "Too many devices");
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1146

1147 1148
	/* p might not be aligned, so we memcpy in. */
	return memcpy(p, &d, sizeof(d));
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1149 1150
}

1151 1152
/* Each device descriptor is followed by the description of its virtqueues.  We
 * specify how many descriptors the virtqueue is to have. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1153
static void add_virtqueue(struct device *dev, unsigned int num_descs,
1154
			  void (*handle_output)(struct virtqueue *, bool))
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1155 1156 1157 1158 1159
{
	unsigned int pages;
	struct virtqueue **i, *vq = malloc(sizeof(*vq));
	void *p;

1160
	/* First we need some memory for this virtqueue. */
1161
	pages = (vring_size(num_descs, LGUEST_VRING_ALIGN) + getpagesize() - 1)
1162
		/ getpagesize();
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1163 1164
	p = get_pages(pages);

1165 1166 1167 1168
	/* Initialize the virtqueue */
	vq->next = NULL;
	vq->last_avail_idx = 0;
	vq->dev = dev;
1169
	vq->blocked = false;
1170

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1171 1172 1173 1174 1175 1176
	/* Initialize the configuration. */
	vq->config.num = num_descs;
	vq->config.irq = devices.next_irq++;
	vq->config.pfn = to_guest_phys(p) / getpagesize();

	/* Initialize the vring. */
1177
	vring_init(&vq->vring, num_descs, p, LGUEST_VRING_ALIGN);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1178

1179 1180 1181 1182 1183 1184
	/* Append virtqueue to this device's descriptor.  We use
	 * device_config() to get the end of the device's current virtqueues;
	 * we check that we haven't added any config or feature information
	 * yet, otherwise we'd be overwriting them. */
	assert(dev->desc->config_len == 0 && dev->desc->feature_len == 0);
	memcpy(device_config(dev), &vq->config, sizeof(vq->config));
1185
	dev->num_vq++;
1186 1187 1188
	dev->desc->num_vq++;

	verbose("Virtqueue page %#lx\n", to_guest_phys(p));
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1189 1190 1191 1192 1193 1194

	/* Add to tail of list, so dev->vq is first vq, dev->vq->next is
	 * second.  */
	for (i = &dev->vq; *i; i = &(*i)->next);
	*i = vq;

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1195 1196
	/* Set the routine to call when the Guest does something to this
	 * virtqueue. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1197
	vq->handle_output = handle_output;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1198

1199 1200
	/* As an optimization, set the advisory "Don't Notify Me" flag if we
	 * don't have a handler */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1201 1202
	if (!handle_output)
		vq->vring.used->flags = VRING_USED_F_NO_NOTIFY;
1203 1204
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1205
/* The first half of the feature bitmask is for us to advertise features.  The
1206
 * second half is for the Guest to accept features. */
1207 1208
static void add_feature(struct device *dev, unsigned bit)
{
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1209
	u8 *features = get_feature_bits(dev);
1210 1211 1212 1213

	/* We can't extend the feature bits once we've added config bytes */
	if (dev->desc->feature_len <= bit / CHAR_BIT) {
		assert(dev->desc->config_len == 0);
1214
		dev->feature_len = dev->desc->feature_len = (bit/CHAR_BIT) + 1;
1215 1216 1217 1218 1219 1220 1221 1222 1223 1224 1225 1226 1227 1228 1229 1230 1231 1232 1233
	}

	features[bit / CHAR_BIT] |= (1 << (bit % CHAR_BIT));
}

/* This routine sets the configuration fields for an existing device's
 * descriptor.  It only works for the last device, but that's OK because that's
 * how we use it. */
static void set_config(struct device *dev, unsigned len, const void *conf)
{
	/* Check we haven't overflowed our single page. */
	if (device_config(dev) + len > devices.descpage + getpagesize())
		errx(1, "Too many devices");

	/* Copy in the config information, and store the length. */
	memcpy(device_config(dev), conf, len);
	dev->desc->config_len = len;
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1234
/* This routine does all the creation and setup of a new device, including
1235 1236 1237
 * calling new_dev_desc() to allocate the descriptor and device memory.
 *
 * See what I mean about userspace being boring? */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1238
static struct device *new_device(const char *name, u16 type, int fd,
1239
				 bool (*handle_input)(struct device *))
1240 1241 1242
{
	struct device *dev = malloc(sizeof(*dev));

1243
	/* Now we populate the fields one at a time. */
1244
	dev->fd = fd;
1245 1246
	/* If we have an input handler for this file descriptor, then we add it
	 * to the device_list's fdset and maxfd. */
1247
	if (handle_input)
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1248 1249
		add_device_fd(dev->fd);
	dev->desc = new_dev_desc(type);
1250
	dev->handle_input = handle_input;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1251
	dev->name = name;
1252
	dev->vq = NULL;
1253
	dev->ready = NULL;
1254 1255
	dev->feature_len = 0;
	dev->num_vq = 0;
1256 1257 1258 1259 1260 1261 1262 1263 1264 1265 1266

	/* Append to device list.  Prepending to a single-linked list is
	 * easier, but the user expects the devices to be arranged on the bus
	 * in command-line order.  The first network device on the command line
	 * is eth0, the first block device /dev/vda, etc. */
	if (devices.lastdev)
		devices.lastdev->next = dev;
	else
		devices.dev = dev;
	devices.lastdev = dev;

1267 1268 1269
	return dev;
}

1270 1271
/* Our first setup routine is the console.  It's a fairly simple device, but
 * UNIX tty handling makes it uglier than it could be. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1272
static void setup_console(void)
1273 1274 1275
{
	struct device *dev;

1276
	/* If we can save the initial standard input settings... */
1277 1278
	if (tcgetattr(STDIN_FILENO, &orig_term) == 0) {
		struct termios term = orig_term;
1279 1280
		/* Then we turn off echo, line buffering and ^C etc.  We want a
		 * raw input stream to the Guest. */
1281 1282
		term.c_lflag &= ~(ISIG|ICANON|ECHO);
		tcsetattr(STDIN_FILENO, TCSANOW, &term);
1283 1284
		/* If we exit gracefully, the original settings will be
		 * restored so the user can see what they're typing. */
1285 1286 1287
		atexit(restore_term);
	}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1288 1289
	dev = new_device("console", VIRTIO_ID_CONSOLE,
			 STDIN_FILENO, handle_console_input);
1290
	/* We store the console state in dev->priv, and initialize it. */
1291 1292 1293
	dev->priv = malloc(sizeof(struct console_abort));
	((struct console_abort *)dev->priv)->count = 0;

1294 1295 1296
	/* The console needs two virtqueues: the input then the output.  When
	 * they put something the input queue, we make sure we're listening to
	 * stdin.  When they put something in the output queue, we write it to
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1297
	 * stdout. */
1298
	add_virtqueue(dev, VIRTQUEUE_NUM, enable_fd);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1299 1300 1301
	add_virtqueue(dev, VIRTQUEUE_NUM, handle_console_output);

	verbose("device %u: console\n", devices.device_num++);
1302
}
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1303
/*:*/
1304

1305 1306 1307 1308 1309 1310 1311 1312 1313 1314 1315 1316 1317 1318 1319 1320 1321 1322
static void timeout_alarm(int sig)
{
	write(timeoutpipe[1], "", 1);
}

static void setup_timeout(void)
{
	if (pipe(timeoutpipe) != 0)
		err(1, "Creating timeout pipe");

	if (fcntl(timeoutpipe[1], F_SETFL,
		  fcntl(timeoutpipe[1], F_GETFL) | O_NONBLOCK) != 0)
		err(1, "Making timeout pipe nonblocking");

	add_device_fd(timeoutpipe[0]);
	signal(SIGALRM, timeout_alarm);
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1323 1324 1325
/*M:010 Inter-guest networking is an interesting area.  Simplest is to have a
 * --sharenet=<name> option which opens or creates a named pipe.  This can be
 * used to send packets to another guest in a 1:1 manner.
1326
 *
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1327 1328
 * More sopisticated is to use one of the tools developed for project like UML
 * to do networking.
1329
 *
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1330 1331 1332 1333 1334 1335 1336 1337
 * Faster is to do virtio bonding in kernel.  Doing this 1:1 would be
 * completely generic ("here's my vring, attach to your vring") and would work
 * for any traffic.  Of course, namespace and permissions issues need to be
 * dealt with.  A more sophisticated "multi-channel" virtio_net.c could hide
 * multiple inter-guest channels behind one interface, although it would
 * require some manner of hotplugging new virtio channels.
 *
 * Finally, we could implement a virtio network switch in the kernel. :*/
1338 1339 1340

static u32 str2ip(const char *ipaddr)
{
1341
	unsigned int b[4];
1342

1343 1344 1345 1346 1347 1348 1349 1350 1351 1352 1353 1354 1355 1356 1357 1358 1359
	if (sscanf(ipaddr, "%u.%u.%u.%u", &b[0], &b[1], &b[2], &b[3]) != 4)
		errx(1, "Failed to parse IP address '%s'", ipaddr);
	return (b[0] << 24) | (b[1] << 16) | (b[2] << 8) | b[3];
}

static void str2mac(const char *macaddr, unsigned char mac[6])
{
	unsigned int m[6];
	if (sscanf(macaddr, "%02x:%02x:%02x:%02x:%02x:%02x",
		   &m[0], &m[1], &m[2], &m[3], &m[4], &m[5]) != 6)
		errx(1, "Failed to parse mac address '%s'", macaddr);
	mac[0] = m[0];
	mac[1] = m[1];
	mac[2] = m[2];
	mac[3] = m[3];
	mac[4] = m[4];
	mac[5] = m[5];
1360 1361
}

1362 1363 1364 1365 1366
/* This code is "adapted" from libbridge: it attaches the Host end of the
 * network device to the bridge device specified by the command line.
 *
 * This is yet another James Morris contribution (I'm an IP-level guy, so I
 * dislike bridging), and I just try not to break it. */
1367 1368 1369 1370 1371 1372 1373 1374 1375 1376 1377 1378 1379
static void add_to_bridge(int fd, const char *if_name, const char *br_name)
{
	int ifidx;
	struct ifreq ifr;

	if (!*br_name)
		errx(1, "must specify bridge name");

	ifidx = if_nametoindex(if_name);
	if (!ifidx)
		errx(1, "interface %s does not exist!", if_name);

	strncpy(ifr.ifr_name, br_name, IFNAMSIZ);
1380
	ifr.ifr_name[IFNAMSIZ-1] = '\0';
1381 1382 1383 1384 1385
	ifr.ifr_ifindex = ifidx;
	if (ioctl(fd, SIOCBRADDIF, &ifr) < 0)
		err(1, "can't add %s to bridge %s", if_name, br_name);
}

1386 1387
/* This sets up the Host end of the network device with an IP address, brings
 * it up so packets will flow, the copies the MAC address into the hwaddr
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1388
 * pointer. */
1389
static void configure_device(int fd, const char *tapif, u32 ipaddr)
1390 1391 1392 1393 1394
{
	struct ifreq ifr;
	struct sockaddr_in *sin = (struct sockaddr_in *)&ifr.ifr_addr;

	memset(&ifr, 0, sizeof(ifr));
1395 1396 1397
	strcpy(ifr.ifr_name, tapif);

	/* Don't read these incantations.  Just cut & paste them like I did! */
1398 1399 1400
	sin->sin_family = AF_INET;
	sin->sin_addr.s_addr = htonl(ipaddr);
	if (ioctl(fd, SIOCSIFADDR, &ifr) != 0)
1401
		err(1, "Setting %s interface address", tapif);
1402 1403
	ifr.ifr_flags = IFF_UP;
	if (ioctl(fd, SIOCSIFFLAGS, &ifr) != 0)
1404 1405 1406 1407
		err(1, "Bringing interface %s up", tapif);
}

static int get_tun_device(char tapif[IFNAMSIZ])
1408 1409
{
	struct ifreq ifr;
1410 1411 1412 1413
	int netfd;

	/* Start with this zeroed.  Messy but sure. */
	memset(&ifr, 0, sizeof(ifr));
1414

1415 1416 1417 1418
	/* We open the /dev/net/tun device and tell it we want a tap device.  A
	 * tap device is like a tun device, only somehow different.  To tell
	 * the truth, I completely blundered my way through this code, but it
	 * works now! */
1419
	netfd = open_or_die("/dev/net/tun", O_RDWR);
1420
	ifr.ifr_flags = IFF_TAP | IFF_NO_PI | IFF_VNET_HDR;
1421 1422 1423
	strcpy(ifr.ifr_name, "tap%d");
	if (ioctl(netfd, TUNSETIFF, &ifr) != 0)
		err(1, "configuring /dev/net/tun");
1424

1425 1426 1427 1428
	if (ioctl(netfd, TUNSETOFFLOAD,
		  TUN_F_CSUM|TUN_F_TSO4|TUN_F_TSO6|TUN_F_TSO_ECN) != 0)
		err(1, "Could not set features for tun device");

1429 1430
	/* We don't need checksums calculated for packets coming in this
	 * device: trust us! */
1431 1432
	ioctl(netfd, TUNSETNOCSUM, 1);

1433 1434 1435 1436 1437 1438 1439 1440 1441 1442 1443 1444 1445 1446 1447 1448 1449 1450 1451
	memcpy(tapif, ifr.ifr_name, IFNAMSIZ);
	return netfd;
}

/*L:195 Our network is a Host<->Guest network.  This can either use bridging or
 * routing, but the principle is the same: it uses the "tun" device to inject
 * packets into the Host as if they came in from a normal network card.  We
 * just shunt packets between the Guest and the tun device. */
static void setup_tun_net(char *arg)
{
	struct device *dev;
	int netfd, ipfd;
	u32 ip = INADDR_ANY;
	bool bridging = false;
	char tapif[IFNAMSIZ], *p;
	struct virtio_net_config conf;

	netfd = get_tun_device(tapif);

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1452 1453
	/* First we create a new network device. */
	dev = new_device("net", VIRTIO_ID_NET, netfd, handle_tun_input);
1454

1455 1456
	/* Network devices need a receive and a send queue, just like
	 * console. */
1457
	add_virtqueue(dev, VIRTQUEUE_NUM, net_enable_fd);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1458
	add_virtqueue(dev, VIRTQUEUE_NUM, handle_net_output);
1459

1460 1461
	/* We need a socket to perform the magic network ioctls to bring up the
	 * tap interface, connect to the bridge etc.  Any socket will do! */
1462 1463 1464 1465
	ipfd = socket(PF_INET, SOCK_DGRAM, IPPROTO_IP);
	if (ipfd < 0)
		err(1, "opening IP socket");

1466
	/* If the command line was --tunnet=bridge:<name> do bridging. */
1467
	if (!strncmp(BRIDGE_PFX, arg, strlen(BRIDGE_PFX))) {
1468 1469 1470 1471 1472 1473 1474 1475
		arg += strlen(BRIDGE_PFX);
		bridging = true;
	}

	/* A mac address may follow the bridge name or IP address */
	p = strchr(arg, ':');
	if (p) {
		str2mac(p+1, conf.mac);
1476
		add_feature(dev, VIRTIO_NET_F_MAC);
1477 1478 1479 1480 1481 1482 1483
		*p = '\0';
	}

	/* arg is now either an IP address or a bridge name */
	if (bridging)
		add_to_bridge(ipfd, tapif, arg);
	else
1484 1485
		ip = str2ip(arg);

1486 1487
	/* Set up the tun device. */
	configure_device(ipfd, tapif, ip);
1488

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1489
	add_feature(dev, VIRTIO_F_NOTIFY_ON_EMPTY);
1490 1491 1492 1493 1494 1495 1496 1497 1498
	/* Expect Guest to handle everything except UFO */
	add_feature(dev, VIRTIO_NET_F_CSUM);
	add_feature(dev, VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_CSUM);
	add_feature(dev, VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_TSO4);
	add_feature(dev, VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_TSO6);
	add_feature(dev, VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_ECN);
	add_feature(dev, VIRTIO_NET_F_HOST_TSO4);
	add_feature(dev, VIRTIO_NET_F_HOST_TSO6);
	add_feature(dev, VIRTIO_NET_F_HOST_ECN);
1499
	set_config(dev, sizeof(conf), &conf);
1500

1501
	/* We don't need the socket any more; setup is done. */
1502 1503
	close(ipfd);

1504 1505 1506 1507 1508 1509 1510 1511
	devices.device_num++;

	if (bridging)
		verbose("device %u: tun %s attached to bridge: %s\n",
			devices.device_num, tapif, arg);
	else
		verbose("device %u: tun %s: %s\n",
			devices.device_num, tapif, arg);
1512
}
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1513

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1514 1515 1516 1517
/* Our block (disk) device should be really simple: the Guest asks for a block
 * number and we read or write that position in the file.  Unfortunately, that
 * was amazingly slow: the Guest waits until the read is finished before
 * running anything else, even if it could have been doing useful work.
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1518
 *
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1519 1520
 * We could use async I/O, except it's reputed to suck so hard that characters
 * actually go missing from your code when you try to use it.
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1521 1522 1523
 *
 * So we farm the I/O out to thread, and communicate with it via a pipe. */

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1524
/* This hangs off device->priv. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1525 1526 1527 1528 1529 1530 1531 1532 1533 1534 1535 1536 1537 1538 1539 1540
struct vblk_info
{
	/* The size of the file. */
	off64_t len;

	/* The file descriptor for the file. */
	int fd;

	/* IO thread listens on this file descriptor [0]. */
	int workpipe[2];

	/* IO thread writes to this file descriptor to mark it done, then
	 * Launcher triggers interrupt to Guest. */
	int done_fd;
};

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1541 1542 1543 1544 1545 1546
/*L:210
 * The Disk
 *
 * Remember that the block device is handled by a separate I/O thread.  We head
 * straight into the core of that thread here:
 */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1547 1548 1549 1550 1551
static bool service_io(struct device *dev)
{
	struct vblk_info *vblk = dev->priv;
	unsigned int head, out_num, in_num, wlen;
	int ret;
1552
	u8 *in;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1553 1554 1555 1556
	struct virtio_blk_outhdr *out;
	struct iovec iov[dev->vq->vring.num];
	off64_t off;

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1557
	/* See if there's a request waiting.  If not, nothing to do. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1558 1559 1560 1561
	head = get_vq_desc(dev->vq, iov, &out_num, &in_num);
	if (head == dev->vq->vring.num)
		return false;

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1562 1563 1564
	/* Every block request should contain at least one output buffer
	 * (detailing the location on disk and the type of request) and one
	 * input buffer (to hold the result). */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1565 1566 1567 1568 1569
	if (out_num == 0 || in_num == 0)
		errx(1, "Bad virtblk cmd %u out=%u in=%u",
		     head, out_num, in_num);

	out = convert(&iov[0], struct virtio_blk_outhdr);
1570
	in = convert(&iov[out_num+in_num-1], u8);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1571 1572
	off = out->sector * 512;

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1573 1574 1575 1576
	/* The block device implements "barriers", where the Guest indicates
	 * that it wants all previous writes to occur before this write.  We
	 * don't have a way of asking our kernel to do a barrier, so we just
	 * synchronize all the data in the file.  Pretty poor, no? */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1577 1578 1579
	if (out->type & VIRTIO_BLK_T_BARRIER)
		fdatasync(vblk->fd);

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1580 1581
	/* In general the virtio block driver is allowed to try SCSI commands.
	 * It'd be nice if we supported eject, for example, but we don't. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1582 1583
	if (out->type & VIRTIO_BLK_T_SCSI_CMD) {
		fprintf(stderr, "Scsi commands unsupported\n");
1584
		*in = VIRTIO_BLK_S_UNSUPP;
1585
		wlen = sizeof(*in);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1586 1587 1588 1589 1590 1591 1592 1593 1594 1595 1596 1597 1598 1599 1600 1601 1602 1603 1604 1605
	} else if (out->type & VIRTIO_BLK_T_OUT) {
		/* Write */

		/* Move to the right location in the block file.  This can fail
		 * if they try to write past end. */
		if (lseek64(vblk->fd, off, SEEK_SET) != off)
			err(1, "Bad seek to sector %llu", out->sector);

		ret = writev(vblk->fd, iov+1, out_num-1);
		verbose("WRITE to sector %llu: %i\n", out->sector, ret);

		/* Grr... Now we know how long the descriptor they sent was, we
		 * make sure they didn't try to write over the end of the block
		 * file (possibly extending it). */
		if (ret > 0 && off + ret > vblk->len) {
			/* Trim it back to the correct length */
			ftruncate64(vblk->fd, vblk->len);
			/* Die, bad Guest, die. */
			errx(1, "Write past end %llu+%u", off, ret);
		}
1606
		wlen = sizeof(*in);
1607
		*in = (ret >= 0 ? VIRTIO_BLK_S_OK : VIRTIO_BLK_S_IOERR);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1608 1609 1610 1611 1612 1613 1614 1615 1616 1617 1618
	} else {
		/* Read */

		/* Move to the right location in the block file.  This can fail
		 * if they try to read past end. */
		if (lseek64(vblk->fd, off, SEEK_SET) != off)
			err(1, "Bad seek to sector %llu", out->sector);

		ret = readv(vblk->fd, iov+1, in_num-1);
		verbose("READ from sector %llu: %i\n", out->sector, ret);
		if (ret >= 0) {
1619
			wlen = sizeof(*in) + ret;
1620
			*in = VIRTIO_BLK_S_OK;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1621
		} else {
1622
			wlen = sizeof(*in);
1623
			*in = VIRTIO_BLK_S_IOERR;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1624 1625 1626
		}
	}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1627 1628 1629 1630 1631 1632 1633
	/* OK, so we noted that it was pretty poor to use an fdatasync as a
	 * barrier.  But Christoph Hellwig points out that we need a sync
	 * *afterwards* as well: "Barriers specify no reordering to the front
	 * or the back."  And Jens Axboe confirmed it, so here we are: */
	if (out->type & VIRTIO_BLK_T_BARRIER)
		fdatasync(vblk->fd);

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1634 1635 1636 1637 1638 1639 1640 1641 1642 1643 1644 1645 1646 1647 1648 1649 1650 1651 1652 1653
	/* We can't trigger an IRQ, because we're not the Launcher.  It does
	 * that when we tell it we're done. */
	add_used(dev->vq, head, wlen);
	return true;
}

/* This is the thread which actually services the I/O. */
static int io_thread(void *_dev)
{
	struct device *dev = _dev;
	struct vblk_info *vblk = dev->priv;
	char c;

	/* Close other side of workpipe so we get 0 read when main dies. */
	close(vblk->workpipe[1]);
	/* Close the other side of the done_fd pipe. */
	close(dev->fd);

	/* When this read fails, it means Launcher died, so we follow. */
	while (read(vblk->workpipe[0], &c, 1) == 1) {
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1654
		/* We acknowledge each request immediately to reduce latency,
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1655
		 * rather than waiting until we've done them all.  I haven't
1656 1657 1658 1659
		 * measured to see if it makes any difference.
		 *
		 * That would be an interesting test, wouldn't it?  You could
		 * also try having more than one I/O thread. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1660 1661 1662 1663 1664 1665
		while (service_io(dev))
			write(vblk->done_fd, &c, 1);
	}
	return 0;
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1666
/* Now we've seen the I/O thread, we return to the Launcher to see what happens
1667
 * when that thread tells us it's completed some I/O. */
1668
static bool handle_io_finish(struct device *dev)
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1669 1670 1671
{
	char c;

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1672 1673
	/* If the I/O thread died, presumably it printed the error, so we
	 * simply exit. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1674 1675 1676 1677
	if (read(dev->fd, &c, 1) != 1)
		exit(1);

	/* It did some work, so trigger the irq. */
1678
	trigger_irq(dev->vq);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1679 1680 1681
	return true;
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1682
/* When the Guest submits some I/O, we just need to wake the I/O thread. */
1683
static void handle_virtblk_output(struct virtqueue *vq, bool timeout)
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1684 1685 1686 1687 1688 1689 1690 1691 1692 1693
{
	struct vblk_info *vblk = vq->dev->priv;
	char c = 0;

	/* Wake up I/O thread and tell it to go to work! */
	if (write(vblk->workpipe[1], &c, 1) != 1)
		/* Presumably it indicated why it died. */
		exit(1);
}

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1694
/*L:198 This actually sets up a virtual block device. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1695 1696 1697 1698 1699 1700
static void setup_block_file(const char *filename)
{
	int p[2];
	struct device *dev;
	struct vblk_info *vblk;
	void *stack;
1701
	struct virtio_blk_config conf;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1702 1703 1704 1705 1706 1707 1708

	/* This is the pipe the I/O thread will use to tell us I/O is done. */
	pipe(p);

	/* The device responds to return from I/O thread. */
	dev = new_device("block", VIRTIO_ID_BLOCK, p[0], handle_io_finish);

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1709
	/* The device has one virtqueue, where the Guest places requests. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1710 1711 1712 1713 1714 1715 1716 1717 1718
	add_virtqueue(dev, VIRTQUEUE_NUM, handle_virtblk_output);

	/* Allocate the room for our own bookkeeping */
	vblk = dev->priv = malloc(sizeof(*vblk));

	/* First we open the file and store the length. */
	vblk->fd = open_or_die(filename, O_RDWR|O_LARGEFILE);
	vblk->len = lseek64(vblk->fd, 0, SEEK_END);

1719 1720 1721
	/* We support barriers. */
	add_feature(dev, VIRTIO_BLK_F_BARRIER);

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1722
	/* Tell Guest how many sectors this device has. */
1723
	conf.capacity = cpu_to_le64(vblk->len / 512);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1724 1725 1726

	/* Tell Guest not to put in too many descriptors at once: two are used
	 * for the in and out elements. */
1727 1728 1729 1730
	add_feature(dev, VIRTIO_BLK_F_SEG_MAX);
	conf.seg_max = cpu_to_le32(VIRTQUEUE_NUM - 2);

	set_config(dev, sizeof(conf), &conf);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1731 1732 1733 1734

	/* The I/O thread writes to this end of the pipe when done. */
	vblk->done_fd = p[1];

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1735 1736
	/* This is the second pipe, which is how we tell the I/O thread about
	 * more work. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1737 1738
	pipe(vblk->workpipe);

1739 1740
	/* Create stack for thread and run it.  Since stack grows upwards, we
	 * point the stack pointer to the end of this region. */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1741
	stack = malloc(32768);
B
Balaji Rao 已提交
1742 1743
	/* SIGCHLD - We dont "wait" for our cloned thread, so prevent it from
	 * becoming a zombie. */
1744
	if (clone(io_thread, stack + 32768, CLONE_VM | SIGCHLD, dev) == -1)
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1745 1746 1747 1748 1749 1750 1751
		err(1, "Creating clone");

	/* We don't need to keep the I/O thread's end of the pipes open. */
	close(vblk->done_fd);
	close(vblk->workpipe[0]);

	verbose("device %u: virtblock %llu sectors\n",
1752
		devices.device_num, le64_to_cpu(conf.capacity));
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1753
}
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1754 1755 1756 1757 1758 1759 1760

/* Our random number generator device reads from /dev/random into the Guest's
 * input buffers.  The usual case is that the Guest doesn't want random numbers
 * and so has no buffers although /dev/random is still readable, whereas
 * console is the reverse.
 *
 * The same logic applies, however. */
1761
static bool handle_rng_input(struct device *dev)
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1762 1763 1764 1765 1766 1767 1768 1769 1770 1771 1772 1773 1774 1775 1776 1777 1778 1779 1780 1781 1782 1783 1784 1785 1786 1787 1788 1789
{
	int len;
	unsigned int head, in_num, out_num, totlen = 0;
	struct iovec iov[dev->vq->vring.num];

	/* First we need a buffer from the Guests's virtqueue. */
	head = get_vq_desc(dev->vq, iov, &out_num, &in_num);

	/* If they're not ready for input, stop listening to this file
	 * descriptor.  We'll start again once they add an input buffer. */
	if (head == dev->vq->vring.num)
		return false;

	if (out_num)
		errx(1, "Output buffers in rng?");

	/* This is why we convert to iovecs: the readv() call uses them, and so
	 * it reads straight into the Guest's buffer.  We loop to make sure we
	 * fill it. */
	while (!iov_empty(iov, in_num)) {
		len = readv(dev->fd, iov, in_num);
		if (len <= 0)
			err(1, "Read from /dev/random gave %i", len);
		iov_consume(iov, in_num, len);
		totlen += len;
	}

	/* Tell the Guest about the new input. */
1790
	add_used_and_trigger(dev->vq, head, totlen);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1791 1792 1793 1794 1795 1796 1797 1798 1799 1800 1801 1802 1803 1804 1805 1806 1807 1808 1809 1810 1811

	/* Everything went OK! */
	return true;
}

/* And this creates a "hardware" random number device for the Guest. */
static void setup_rng(void)
{
	struct device *dev;
	int fd;

	fd = open_or_die("/dev/random", O_RDONLY);

	/* The device responds to return from I/O thread. */
	dev = new_device("rng", VIRTIO_ID_RNG, fd, handle_rng_input);

	/* The device has one virtqueue, where the Guest places inbufs. */
	add_virtqueue(dev, VIRTQUEUE_NUM, enable_fd);

	verbose("device %u: rng\n", devices.device_num++);
}
1812
/* That's the end of device setup. */
B
Balaji Rao 已提交
1813

1814
/*L:230 Reboot is pretty easy: clean up and exec() the Launcher afresh. */
B
Balaji Rao 已提交
1815 1816 1817 1818
static void __attribute__((noreturn)) restart_guest(void)
{
	unsigned int i;

1819 1820
	/* Since we don't track all open fds, we simply close everything beyond
	 * stderr. */
B
Balaji Rao 已提交
1821 1822
	for (i = 3; i < FD_SETSIZE; i++)
		close(i);
1823 1824

	/* The exec automatically gets rid of the I/O and Waker threads. */
B
Balaji Rao 已提交
1825 1826 1827
	execv(main_args[0], main_args);
	err(1, "Could not exec %s", main_args[0]);
}
1828

1829
/*L:220 Finally we reach the core of the Launcher which runs the Guest, serves
1830
 * its input and output, and finally, lays it to rest. */
1831
static void __attribute__((noreturn)) run_guest(void)
1832 1833
{
	for (;;) {
1834
		unsigned long args[] = { LHREQ_BREAK, 0 };
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1835
		unsigned long notify_addr;
1836 1837 1838
		int readval;

		/* We read from the /dev/lguest device to run the Guest. */
1839 1840
		readval = pread(lguest_fd, &notify_addr,
				sizeof(notify_addr), cpu_id);
1841

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1842 1843 1844
		/* One unsigned long means the Guest did HCALL_NOTIFY */
		if (readval == sizeof(notify_addr)) {
			verbose("Notify on address %#lx\n", notify_addr);
1845
			handle_output(notify_addr);
1846
			continue;
1847
		/* ENOENT means the Guest died.  Reading tells us why. */
1848 1849
		} else if (errno == ENOENT) {
			char reason[1024] = { 0 };
1850
			pread(lguest_fd, reason, sizeof(reason)-1, cpu_id);
1851
			errx(1, "%s", reason);
B
Balaji Rao 已提交
1852 1853 1854
		/* ERESTART means that we need to reboot the guest */
		} else if (errno == ERESTART) {
			restart_guest();
1855
		/* EAGAIN means a signal (timeout).
1856
		 * Anything else means a bug or incompatible change. */
1857 1858
		} else if (errno != EAGAIN)
			err(1, "Running guest failed");
1859

1860 1861 1862 1863
		/* Only service input on thread for CPU 0. */
		if (cpu_id != 0)
			continue;

R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1864
		/* Service input, then unset the BREAK to release the Waker. */
1865
		handle_input();
1866
		if (pwrite(lguest_fd, args, sizeof(args), cpu_id) < 0)
1867 1868 1869
			err(1, "Resetting break");
	}
}
1870
/*L:240
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1871 1872 1873
 * This is the end of the Launcher.  The good news: we are over halfway
 * through!  The bad news: the most fiendish part of the code still lies ahead
 * of us.
1874
 *
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1875 1876 1877
 * Are you ready?  Take a deep breath and join me in the core of the Host, in
 * "make Host".
 :*/
1878 1879 1880 1881 1882

static struct option opts[] = {
	{ "verbose", 0, NULL, 'v' },
	{ "tunnet", 1, NULL, 't' },
	{ "block", 1, NULL, 'b' },
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1883
	{ "rng", 0, NULL, 'r' },
1884 1885 1886 1887 1888 1889
	{ "initrd", 1, NULL, 'i' },
	{ NULL },
};
static void usage(void)
{
	errx(1, "Usage: lguest [--verbose] "
1890
	     "[--tunnet=(<ipaddr>:<macaddr>|bridge:<bridgename>:<macaddr>)\n"
1891 1892 1893 1894
	     "|--block=<filename>|--initrd=<filename>]...\n"
	     "<mem-in-mb> vmlinux [args...]");
}

1895
/*L:105 The main routine is where the real work begins: */
1896 1897
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
1898 1899
	/* Memory, top-level pagetable, code startpoint and size of the
	 * (optional) initrd. */
1900
	unsigned long mem = 0, start, initrd_size = 0;
1901 1902
	/* Two temporaries. */
	int i, c;
1903
	/* The boot information for the Guest. */
1904
	struct boot_params *boot;
1905
	/* If they specify an initrd file to load. */
1906 1907
	const char *initrd_name = NULL;

B
Balaji Rao 已提交
1908 1909 1910 1911 1912 1913
	/* Save the args: we "reboot" by execing ourselves again. */
	main_args = argv;
	/* We don't "wait" for the children, so prevent them from becoming
	 * zombies. */
	signal(SIGCHLD, SIG_IGN);

1914 1915 1916
	/* First we initialize the device list.  Since console and network
	 * device receive input from a file descriptor, we keep an fdset
	 * (infds) and the maximum fd number (max_infd) with the head of the
1917
	 * list.  We also keep a pointer to the last device.  Finally, we keep
1918 1919
	 * the next interrupt number to use for devices (1: remember that 0 is
	 * used by the timer). */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1920 1921
	FD_ZERO(&devices.infds);
	devices.max_infd = -1;
1922
	devices.lastdev = NULL;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1923
	devices.next_irq = 1;
1924

1925
	cpu_id = 0;
1926 1927 1928 1929
	/* We need to know how much memory so we can set up the device
	 * descriptor and memory pages for the devices as we parse the command
	 * line.  So we quickly look through the arguments to find the amount
	 * of memory now. */
1930 1931
	for (i = 1; i < argc; i++) {
		if (argv[i][0] != '-') {
1932 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939 1940
			mem = atoi(argv[i]) * 1024 * 1024;
			/* We start by mapping anonymous pages over all of
			 * guest-physical memory range.  This fills it with 0,
			 * and ensures that the Guest won't be killed when it
			 * tries to access it. */
			guest_base = map_zeroed_pages(mem / getpagesize()
						      + DEVICE_PAGES);
			guest_limit = mem;
			guest_max = mem + DEVICE_PAGES*getpagesize();
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1941
			devices.descpage = get_pages(1);
1942 1943 1944
			break;
		}
	}
1945 1946

	/* The options are fairly straight-forward */
1947 1948 1949 1950 1951 1952
	while ((c = getopt_long(argc, argv, "v", opts, NULL)) != EOF) {
		switch (c) {
		case 'v':
			verbose = true;
			break;
		case 't':
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1953
			setup_tun_net(optarg);
1954 1955
			break;
		case 'b':
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1956
			setup_block_file(optarg);
1957
			break;
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1958 1959 1960
		case 'r':
			setup_rng();
			break;
1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968
		case 'i':
			initrd_name = optarg;
			break;
		default:
			warnx("Unknown argument %s", argv[optind]);
			usage();
		}
	}
1969 1970
	/* After the other arguments we expect memory and kernel image name,
	 * followed by command line arguments for the kernel. */
1971 1972 1973
	if (optind + 2 > argc)
		usage();

1974 1975
	verbose("Guest base is at %p\n", guest_base);

1976
	/* We always have a console device */
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
1977
	setup_console();
1978

1979 1980 1981
	/* We can timeout waiting for Guest network transmit. */
	setup_timeout();

1982
	/* Now we load the kernel */
1983
	start = load_kernel(open_or_die(argv[optind+1], O_RDONLY));
1984

1985 1986 1987
	/* Boot information is stashed at physical address 0 */
	boot = from_guest_phys(0);

1988
	/* Map the initrd image if requested (at top of physical memory) */
1989 1990
	if (initrd_name) {
		initrd_size = load_initrd(initrd_name, mem);
1991 1992
		/* These are the location in the Linux boot header where the
		 * start and size of the initrd are expected to be found. */
1993 1994
		boot->hdr.ramdisk_image = mem - initrd_size;
		boot->hdr.ramdisk_size = initrd_size;
1995
		/* The bootloader type 0xFF means "unknown"; that's OK. */
1996
		boot->hdr.type_of_loader = 0xFF;
1997 1998
	}

1999 2000
	/* The Linux boot header contains an "E820" memory map: ours is a
	 * simple, single region. */
2001 2002
	boot->e820_entries = 1;
	boot->e820_map[0] = ((struct e820entry) { 0, mem, E820_RAM });
2003
	/* The boot header contains a command line pointer: we put the command
2004 2005
	 * line after the boot header. */
	boot->hdr.cmd_line_ptr = to_guest_phys(boot + 1);
R
Rusty Russell 已提交
2006
	/* We use a simple helper to copy the arguments separated by spaces. */
2007
	concat((char *)(boot + 1), argv+optind+2);
2008

2009
	/* Boot protocol version: 2.07 supports the fields for lguest. */
2010
	boot->hdr.version = 0x207;
2011 2012

	/* The hardware_subarch value of "1" tells the Guest it's an lguest. */
2013
	boot->hdr.hardware_subarch = 1;
2014

2015 2016
	/* Tell the entry path not to try to reload segment registers. */
	boot->hdr.loadflags |= KEEP_SEGMENTS;
2017

2018 2019
	/* We tell the kernel to initialize the Guest: this returns the open
	 * /dev/lguest file descriptor. */
2020
	tell_kernel(start);
2021

2022 2023 2024
	/* We clone off a thread, which wakes the Launcher whenever one of the
	 * input file descriptors needs attention.  We call this the Waker, and
	 * we'll cover it in a moment. */
2025
	setup_waker();
2026

2027
	/* Finally, run the Guest.  This doesn't return. */
2028
	run_guest();
2029
}
2030 2031 2032 2033 2034 2035 2036 2037 2038 2039 2040 2041
/*:*/

/*M:999
 * Mastery is done: you now know everything I do.
 *
 * But surely you have seen code, features and bugs in your wanderings which
 * you now yearn to attack?  That is the real game, and I look forward to you
 * patching and forking lguest into the Your-Name-Here-visor.
 *
 * Farewell, and good coding!
 * Rusty Russell.
 */