Commit Graph

6 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Roman Bogorodskiy
25ee22bdbc bhyve: fix disks address allocation
As bhyve currently doesn't use controller addressing and simply
uses 1 implicit controller for 1 disk device, the scheme looks the
following:

 pci addrees -> (implicit controller) -> disk device

So in fact we identify disk devices by pci address of implicit
controller and just pass it this way to bhyve in a form:

 -s pci_addr,ahci-(cd|hd),/path/to/disk

Therefore, we cannot use virDeviceInfoPCIAddressWanted() because it
does not expect that disk devices might need PCI address assignment.

As a result, if a disk was specified without address, it will not be
generated and domain will to start.

Until proper controller addressing is implemented in the bhyve
driver, force each disk to have PCI address generated if it was not
specified by user.
2016-08-29 09:37:06 +03:00
Laine Stump
d05da3fc72 bhyve: auto-assign addresses when <address type='pci'/> is specified
Rather than only assigning a PCI address when no address is given at
all, also do it when the config says that the address type is 'pci',
but it gives no address.
2016-05-20 13:54:26 -04:00
Martin Kletzander
c36b1f7b6a Change virDevicePCIAddress to virPCIDeviceAddress
We had both and the only difference was that the latter also included
information about multifunction setting.  The problem with that was that
we couldn't use functions made for only one of the structs (e.g.
parsing).  To consolidate those two structs, use the one in virpci.h,
include that in domain_conf.h and add the multifunction member in it.

Signed-off-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
2016-05-02 15:46:23 +02:00
Laine Stump
d1cc4605d7 conf/qemu: change the way VIR_PCI_CONNECT_TYPE_* flags work
The flags used to determine which devices could be plugged into which
controllers were quite confusing, as they tried to create classes of
connections, then put particular devices into possibly multiple
classes, while sometimes setting multiple flags for the controllers
themselves. The attempt to have a single flag indicate, e.g. that a
root-port or a switch-downstream-port could connect was not only
confusing, it was leading to a situation where it would be impossible
to specify exactly the right combinations for a new controller.

The solution is for the VIR_PCI_CONNECT_TYPE_* flags to have a 1:1
correspondence with each type of PCI controller, plus a flag for a PCI
endpoint device and another for a PCIe endpoint device (the only
exception to this is that pci-bridge and pcie-expander-bus controllers
have their upstream connection classified as
VIR_PCI_CONNECT_TYPE_PCI_DEVICE since they can be plugged into
*exactly* the same ports as any endpoint device).  Each device then
has a single flag for connect type (plus the HOTPLUG flag if that
device can e hotplugged), and each controller sets the CONNECT bits
for all controllers that can be plugged into it, as well as for either
type of endpoint device that can be plugged in (and the HOTPLUG flag
if it can accept hotplugged devices).

With this change, it is *slightly* easier to understand the matching
of connections (as long as you remember that the flag for a
device/upstream-facing connection of a controller is the same as that
device's type, while the flags for a controller's downstream
connections is the OR of all device types that can be plugged into
that controller). More importantly, it will be possible to correctly
specify what can be plugged into a pcie-switch-expander-bus, when
support for it is added.
2016-04-14 14:00:34 -04:00
Conrad Meyer
0dba4a4d42 drvbhyve: Clean-up some used ATTRIBUTE_UNUSEDs. 2014-11-13 14:05:10 +01:00
Roman Bogorodskiy
aad479dc4e bhyve: implement PCI address allocation
Automatically allocate PCI addresses for devices instead
of hardcoding them in the driver code. The current
allocation schema is to dedicate an entire slot for each devices.

Also, allow having arbitrary number of devices.
2014-06-13 19:25:27 +04:00