Use a simpler method for extracting the affected slot on the eject
command. Also update the terminology to reflect that this a slot rather
than a bdf (which is what device id refers to elsewhere.)
Signed-off-by: Rob Bradford <robert.bradford@intel.com>
Refactor the serial buffer handling in order to write the serial
buffer's output to a PTY connected after the serial device stops being
written to by the guest.
This change moves the serial buffer initialization inside the serial
manager. That is done to allow the serial buffer to be made aware of
the PTY and epoll fds needed in order to modify the
EpollDispatch::File trigger. These are then used by the serial buffer
to trigger an epoll event when the PTY fd is writable and the buffer
has content in it. They are also used to remove the trigger when the
buffer is emptied in order to avoid unnecessary wake-ups.
Signed-off-by: William Douglas <william.douglas@intel.com>
In preparation for reorganizing how the serial output is constructed
add methods to the serial devices for setting the out buffer after the
device is created.
Also add a method to enable flushing the output buffer to be used to
write the buffer to the PTY fd once the PTY is writable.
Signed-off-by: William Douglas <william.douglas@intel.com>
In integration test, we fetch latest EDK2 code on its master branch and
build. While the update on EDK2 master is frequent. And the building is
time consuming. It takes a lot of time in CI and local test. Floating on
top of a busy master branch also bring potential risk in tracking and
debugging.
Now that Cloud Hypervisor support in EDK2 has been steady, we can pin
the EDK2 software versions to avoid unnecessary updating and building.
We can update the versions manually every after several months.
The commit also optimizes the build process by applying multi-threaded
compiling.
Signed-off-by: Michael Zhao <michael.zhao@arm.com>
Added a bash function in integration test script to checkout source code
of a GIT repo with specified branch and commit.
Signed-off-by: Michael Zhao <michael.zhao@arm.com>
These packages will be used to compile `stress` from source, and
the `stress` will be used by the virtio-balloon integration test.
Signed-off-by: Henry Wang <Henry.Wang@arm.com>
Both read_exact_from() and write_all_to() functions from the GuestMemory
trait implementation in vm-memory are buggy. They should retry until
they wrote or read the amount of data that was expected, but instead
they simply return an error when this happens. This causes the migration
to fail when trying to send important amount of data through the
migration socket, due to large memory regions.
This should be eventually fixed in vm-memory, and here is the link to
follow up on the issue: https://github.com/rust-vmm/vm-memory/issues/174
Signed-off-by: Sebastien Boeuf <sebastien.boeuf@intel.com>
This resolves issues between released version of cargo fuzz and nightly.
See rust-fuzz/cargo-fuzz#276
Signed-off-by: Rob Bradford <robert.bradford@intel.com>
Refactored the test case `test_virtio_iommu` to adapt architectures and
different choices among ACPI and FDT. In the case of ACPI, a Focal image
with modified kernel is tested.
Signed-off-by: Michael Zhao <michael.zhao@arm.com>
On AArch64, ACPI must work with UEFI (EDK2). This way, the kernel is
always loaded from the disk image. We can not specify a direct custom
kernel while using ACPI.
To use a custom kernel, we have to replace the kernel file in the disk
image by:
- Making a copy of the Focal `raw` image
- Mounting the rootfs with `libguestfs-tools`
- Replacing the compressed kernel file
Signed-off-by: Michael Zhao <michael.zhao@arm.com>
Installed `libguestfs-tools` to replace kernel file in cloud image.
Installed a kernel as `libguestfs-tools` requires.
Signed-off-by: Michael Zhao <michael.zhao@arm.com>
Implement the infrastructure that lets a virtio-mem device map the guest
memory into the device. This is necessary since with virtio-mem zones
memory can be added or removed and the vfio-user device must be
informed.
Fixes: #3025
Signed-off-by: Rob Bradford <robert.bradford@intel.com>
By moving this from the VfioUserPciDevice to DeviceManager the client
can be reused for handling DMA mapping behind an IOMMU.
Signed-off-by: Rob Bradford <robert.bradford@intel.com>
For vfio-user the mapping handler is per device and needs to be removed
when the device in unplugged.
For VFIO the mapping handler is for the default VFIO container (used
when no vIOMMU is used - using a vIOMMU does not require mappings with
virtio-mem)
To represent these two use cases use an enum for the handlers that are
stored.
Signed-off-by: Rob Bradford <robert.bradford@intel.com>
Adding the snapshot/restore support along with migration as well,
allowing a VM with a virtio-balloon device attached to be properly
migrated.
Signed-off-by: Sebastien Boeuf <sebastien.boeuf@intel.com>
Given the 'virtiofsd' executable is used in multiple CI workers,
installing them directly to the docker image is more efficient and can
save CI time.
Signed-off-by: Bo Chen <chen.bo@intel.com>
Looking up devices on the port I/O bus is time consuming during the
boot at there is an O(lg n) tree lookup and the overhead from taking a
lock on the bus contents.
Avoid this by adding a fast path uses the hardcoded port address and
size and directs PCI config requests directly to the device.
Command line:
target/release/cloud-hypervisor --kernel ~/src/linux/vmlinux --cmdline "root=/dev/vda1 console=ttyS0" --serial tty --console off --disk path=~/workloads/focal-server-cloudimg-amd64-custom-20210609-0.raw --api-socket /tmp/api
PIO exit: 17913
PCI fast path: 17871
Percentage on fast path: 99.8%
perf before:
marvin:~/src/cloud-hypervisor (main *)$ perf report -g | grep resolve
6.20% 6.20% vcpu0 cloud-hypervisor [.] vm_device:🚌:Bus::resolve
perf after:
marvin:~/src/cloud-hypervisor (2021-09-17-ioapic-fast-path *)$ perf report -g | grep resolve
0.08% 0.08% vcpu0 cloud-hypervisor [.] vm_device:🚌:Bus::resolve
The compromise required to implement this fast path is bringing the
creation of the PciConfigIo device into the DeviceManager::new() so that
it can be used in the VmmOps struct which is created before
DeviceManager::create_devices() is called.
Signed-off-by: Rob Bradford <robert.bradford@intel.com>
Added a section in "Usage" chapter of "iommu.md" to introduce the
special behavior when virtio-iommu is working with FDT on AArch64.
Signed-off-by: Michael Zhao <michael.zhao@arm.com>
For AArch64, now virtual IOMMU is only tested on FDT, not ACPI.
In the case of FDT, the behavior of IOMMU is a bit different with ACPI.
All the devices on the PCI bus will be attached to the virtual IOMMU,
except the virtio-iommu device itself. So these devices will all be
added to IOMMU groups, and appear in folder '/sys/kernel/iommu_groups/'.
The result is, on AArch64 IOMMU group '0' contains "0000:00:01.0" which
is the console device. But on X86, console device is not attached to
IOMMU. So the IOMMU group '0' contains "0000:00:02.0" which is the first
disk.
Signed-off-by: Michael Zhao <michael.zhao@arm.com>
The MSI IOVA address on X86 and AArch64 is different.
This commit refactored the code to receive the MSI IOVA address and size
from device_manager, which provides the actual IOVA space data for both
architectures.
Signed-off-by: Michael Zhao <michael.zhao@arm.com>
Move the definition of MSI space to layout.rs, so other crates can
reference it. Now it is needed by virtio-iommu.
Signed-off-by: Michael Zhao <michael.zhao@arm.com>
Add a virtio-iommu node into FDT if iommu option is turned on. Now we
support only one virtio-iommu device.
Signed-off-by: Michael Zhao <michael.zhao@arm.com>
This change switches from handling serial input in the VMM thread to
its own thread controlled by the SerialManager.
The motivation for this change is to avoid the VMM thread being unable
to process events while serial input is happening and vice versa.
The change also makes future work flushing the serial buffer on PTY
connections easier.
Signed-off-by: William Douglas <william.douglas@intel.com>
This change adds a SerialManager with its own epoll handling that
should be created and run by the DeviceManager when creating an
appropriately configured console (serial tty or pty).
Both stdin and pty input are handled by the SerialManager. The stdin
and pty specific methods used by the VMM should be removed in a future
commit.
Signed-off-by: William Douglas <william.douglas@intel.com>
The clone method for PtyPair should have been an impl of the Clone
trait but the method ended up not being used. Future work will make
use of the trait however so correct the missing trait implementation.
Signed-off-by: William Douglas <william.douglas@intel.com>
libc::getrandom need to be called inside unsafe and it is not
cross-platform friendly.
Change it to getrandom::getrandom that is safe and cross-platform
friendly.
Signed-off-by: Hui Zhu <teawater@antfin.com>
Updating kvm-ioctls from 0.9.0 to 0.10.0 now that Cloud Hypervisor
relies on kvm-bindings 0.5.0.
Signed-off-by: Sebastien Boeuf <sebastien.boeuf@intel.com>
For most use cases, there is no need to create multiple VFIO containers
as it causes unwanted behaviors. Especially when passing multiple
devices from the same IOMMU group, we need to use the same container so
that it can properly list the groups that have been already opened. The
correct logic was already there in vfio-ioctls, but it was incorrectly
used from our VMM implementation.
For the special case where we put a VFIO device behind a vIOMMU, we must
create one container per device, as we need to control the DMA mappings
per device, which is performed at the container level. Because we must
keep one container per device, the vIOMMU use case prevents multiple
devices attached to the same IOMMU group to be passed through the VM.
But this is a limitation that we are fine with, especially since the
vIOMMU doesn't let us group multiple devices in the same group from a
guest perspective.
Signed-off-by: Sebastien Boeuf <sebastien.boeuf@intel.com>
This allows Cloud Hypervisor to be run under `perf` as some of the
signals will already be blocked in the child process.
Signed-off-by: Rob Bradford <robert.bradford@intel.com>
Update the kvm-bindings dependency so that Cloud Hypervisor now depends
on the version 0.5.0, which is based on Linux kernel v5.13.0. We still
have to rely on a forked version to be able to serialize all the KVM
structures we need.
Signed-off-by: Sebastien Boeuf <sebastien.boeuf@intel.com>