Commit Graph

23 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Neel Natu
f80330a820 Add a parameter to 'vcpu_set_state()' to enforce that the vcpu is in the IDLE
state before the requested state transition. This guarantees that there is
exactly one ioctl() operating on a vcpu at any point in time and prevents
unintended state transitions.

More details available here:
http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-virtualization/2013-December/001825.html

Reviewed by:	grehan
Reported by:	Markiyan Kushnir (markiyan.kushnir at gmail.com)
MFC after:	3 days
2013-12-22 20:29:59 +00:00
Neel Natu
4f8be175d5 Add an API to deliver message signalled interrupts to vcpus. This allows
callers treat the MSI 'addr' and 'data' fields as opaque and also lets
bhyve implement multiple destination modes: physical, flat and clustered.

Submitted by:	Tycho Nightingale (tycho.nightingale@pluribusnetworks.com)
Reviewed by:	grehan@
2013-12-16 19:59:31 +00:00
Neel Natu
b5b28fc9dc Add support for level triggered interrupt pins on the vioapic. Prior to this
commit level triggered interrupts would work as long as the pin was not shared
among multiple interrupt sources.

The vlapic now keeps track of level triggered interrupts in the trigger mode
register and will forward the EOI for a level triggered interrupt to the
vioapic. The vioapic in turn uses the EOI to sample the level on the pin and
re-inject the vector if the pin is still asserted.

The vhpet is the first consumer of level triggered interrupts and advertises
that it can generate interrupts on pins 20 through 23 of the vioapic.

Discussed with:	grehan@
2013-11-27 22:18:08 +00:00
Neel Natu
08e3ff329a Add HPET device emulation to bhyve.
bhyve supports a single timer block with 8 timers. The timers are all 32-bit
and capable of being operated in periodic mode. All timers support interrupt
delivery using MSI. Timers 0 and 1 also support legacy interrupt routing.

At the moment the timers are not connected to any ioapic pins but that will
be addressed in a subsequent commit.

This change is based on a patch from Tycho Nightingale (tycho.nightingale@pluribusnetworks.com).
2013-11-25 19:04:51 +00:00
Neel Natu
ac7304a758 Add an ioctl to assert and deassert an ioapic pin atomically. This will be used
to inject edge triggered legacy interrupts into the guest.

Start using the new API in device models that use edge triggered interrupts:
viz. the 8254 timer and the LPC/uart device emulation.

Submitted by:	Tycho Nightingale (tycho.nightingale@pluribusnetworks.com)
2013-11-23 03:56:03 +00:00
Neel Natu
565bbb8698 Move the ioapic device model from userspace into vmm.ko. This is needed for
upcoming in-kernel device emulations like the HPET.

The ioctls VM_IOAPIC_ASSERT_IRQ and VM_IOAPIC_DEASSERT_IRQ are used to
manipulate the ioapic pin state.

Discussed with:	grehan@
Submitted by:	Tycho Nightingale (tycho.nightingale@pluribusnetworks.com)
2013-11-12 22:51:03 +00:00
Neel Natu
e2f5d9a129 Remove unnecessary includes of <machine/pmap.h>
Requested by:	alc@
2013-10-29 02:25:18 +00:00
Neel Natu
d38cae4aad Fix the witness warning that warned against calling uiomove() while holding
the 'vmmdev_mtx' in vmmdev_rw().

Rely on the 'si_threadcount' accounting to ensure that we never destroy the
VM device node while it has operations in progress (e.g. ioctl, mmap etc).

Reported by:	grehan
Reviewed by:	grehan
2013-10-16 00:58:47 +00:00
Neel Natu
318224bbe6 Merge projects/bhyve_npt_pmap into head.
Make the amd64/pmap code aware of nested page table mappings used by bhyve
guests. This allows bhyve to associate each guest with its own vmspace and
deal with nested page faults in the context of that vmspace. This also
enables features like accessed/dirty bit tracking, swapping to disk and
transparent superpage promotions of guest memory.

Guest vmspace:
Each bhyve guest has a unique vmspace to represent the physical memory
allocated to the guest. Each memory segment allocated by the guest is
mapped into the guest's address space via the 'vmspace->vm_map' and is
backed by an object of type OBJT_DEFAULT.

pmap types:
The amd64/pmap now understands two types of pmaps: PT_X86 and PT_EPT.

The PT_X86 pmap type is used by the vmspace associated with the host kernel
as well as user processes executing on the host. The PT_EPT pmap is used by
the vmspace associated with a bhyve guest.

Page Table Entries:
The EPT page table entries as mostly similar in functionality to regular
page table entries although there are some differences in terms of what
bits are used to express that functionality. For e.g. the dirty bit is
represented by bit 9 in the nested PTE as opposed to bit 6 in the regular
x86 PTE. Therefore the bitmask representing the dirty bit is now computed
at runtime based on the type of the pmap. Thus PG_M that was previously a
macro now becomes a local variable that is initialized at runtime using
'pmap_modified_bit(pmap)'.

An additional wrinkle associated with EPT mappings is that older Intel
processors don't have hardware support for tracking accessed/dirty bits in
the PTE. This means that the amd64/pmap code needs to emulate these bits to
provide proper accounting to the VM subsystem. This is achieved by using
the following mapping for EPT entries that need emulation of A/D bits:
               Bit Position           Interpreted By
PG_V               52                 software (accessed bit emulation handler)
PG_RW              53                 software (dirty bit emulation handler)
PG_A               0                  hardware (aka EPT_PG_RD)
PG_M               1                  hardware (aka EPT_PG_WR)

The idea to use the mapping listed above for A/D bit emulation came from
Alan Cox (alc@).

The final difference with respect to x86 PTEs is that some EPT implementations
do not support superpage mappings. This is recorded in the 'pm_flags' field
of the pmap.

TLB invalidation:
The amd64/pmap code has a number of ways to do invalidation of mappings
that may be cached in the TLB: single page, multiple pages in a range or the
entire TLB. All of these funnel into a single EPT invalidation routine called
'pmap_invalidate_ept()'. This routine bumps up the EPT generation number and
sends an IPI to the host cpus that are executing the guest's vcpus. On a
subsequent entry into the guest it will detect that the EPT has changed and
invalidate the mappings from the TLB.

Guest memory access:
Since the guest memory is no longer wired we need to hold the host physical
page that backs the guest physical page before we can access it. The helper
functions 'vm_gpa_hold()/vm_gpa_release()' are available for this purpose.

PCI passthru:
Guest's with PCI passthru devices will wire the entire guest physical address
space. The MMIO BAR associated with the passthru device is backed by a
vm_object of type OBJT_SG. An IOMMU domain is created only for guest's that
have one or more PCI passthru devices attached to them.

Limitations:
There isn't a way to map a guest physical page without execute permissions.
This is because the amd64/pmap code interprets the guest physical mappings as
user mappings since they are numerically below VM_MAXUSER_ADDRESS. Since PG_U
shares the same bit position as EPT_PG_EXECUTE all guest mappings become
automatically executable.

Thanks to Alan Cox and Konstantin Belousov for their rigorous code reviews
as well as their support and encouragement.

Thanks for John Baldwin for reviewing the use of OBJT_SG as the backing
object for pci passthru mmio regions.

Special thanks to Peter Holm for testing the patch on short notice.

Approved by:	re
Discussed with:	grehan
Reviewed by:	alc, kib
Tested by:	pho
2013-10-05 21:22:35 +00:00
Neel Natu
0acb0d84c5 Support array-type of stats in bhyve.
An array-type stat in vmm.ko is defined as follows:
VMM_STAT_ARRAY(IPIS_SENT, VM_MAXCPU, "ipis sent to vcpu");

It is incremented as follows:
vmm_stat_array_incr(vm, vcpuid, IPIS_SENT, array_index, 1);

And output of 'bhyvectl --get-stats' looks like:
ipis sent to vcpu[0]     3114
ipis sent to vcpu[1]     0

Reviewed by:	grehan
Obtained from:	NetApp
2013-05-10 02:59:49 +00:00
Neel Natu
26d66b9d58 Use the MAKEDEV_CHECKNAME flag to check for an invalid device name and return
an error instead of panicking.

Obtained from:	NetApp
2013-04-13 05:11:21 +00:00
Neel Natu
d5408b1d26 If vmm.ko could not be initialized correctly then prevent the creation of
virtual machines subsequently.

Submitted by:	Chris Torek
2013-04-12 01:16:52 +00:00
Neel Natu
485b3300cc Implement guest vcpu pinning using 'pthread_setaffinity_np(3)'.
Prior to this change pinning was implemented via an ioctl (VM_SET_PINNING)
that called 'sched_bind()' on behalf of the user thread.

The ULE implementation of 'sched_bind()' bumps up 'td_pinned' which in turn
runs afoul of the assertion '(td_pinned == 0)' in userret().

Using the cpuset affinity to implement pinning of the vcpu threads works with
both 4BSD and ULE schedulers and has the happy side-effect of getting rid
of a bunch of code in vmm.ko.

Discussed with:	grehan
2013-02-11 20:36:07 +00:00
Neel Natu
75dd336603 Provide per-vcpu locks instead of relying on a single big lock.
This also gets rid of all the witness.watch warnings related to calling
malloc(M_WAITOK) while holding a mutex.

Reviewed by:	grehan
2012-10-12 18:32:44 +00:00
Neel Natu
cdc5b9e7b1 Fix warnings generated by 'debug.witness.watch' during VM creation and
destruction for calling malloc() with M_WAITOK while holding a mutex.

Do not allow vmm.ko to be unloaded until all virtual machines are destroyed.
2012-10-11 19:39:54 +00:00
Neel Natu
7ce04d0ad9 Allocate memory pages for the guest from the host's free page queue.
It is no longer necessary to hard-partition the memory between the host
and guests at boot time.
2012-10-08 23:41:26 +00:00
Neel Natu
f7d51510f1 Change vm_malloc() to map pages in the guest physical address space in 4KB
chunks. This breaks the assumption that the entire memory segment is
contiguously allocated in the host physical address space.

This also paves the way to satisfy the 4KB page allocations by requesting
free pages from the VM subsystem as opposed to hard-partitioning host memory
at boot time.
2012-10-04 02:27:14 +00:00
Neel Natu
341f19c949 Get rid of assumptions in the hypervisor that the host physical memory
associated with guest physical memory is contiguous.

In this case vm_malloc() was using vm_gpa2hpa() to indirectly infer whether
or not the address range had already been allocated.

Replace this instead with an explicit API 'vm_gpa_available()' that returns
TRUE if a page is available for allocation in guest physical address space.
2012-09-29 01:15:45 +00:00
Neel Natu
e90273829b Add ioctls to control the X2APIC capability exposed by the virtual machine to
the guest.

At the moment this simply sets the state in the 'vcpu' instance but there is
no code that acts upon these settings.
2012-09-25 19:08:51 +00:00
Peter Grehan
177fd53318 Add sysctls to display the total and free amount of hard-wired mem for VMs
# sysctl hw.vmm
   hw.vmm.mem_free: 2145386496
   hw.vmm.mem_total: 2145386496

Submitted by:	Takeshi HASEGAWA hasegaw at gmail com
2012-08-26 01:41:41 +00:00
Peter Grehan
cd942e0f25 MSI-x interrupt support for PCI pass-thru devices.
Includes instruction emulation for memory r/w access. This
opens the door for io-apic, local apic, hpet timer, and
legacy device emulation.

Submitted by:	ryan dot berryhill at sandvine dot com
Reviewed by:	grehan
Obtained from:	Sandvine
2012-04-28 16:28:00 +00:00
John Baldwin
34a6b2d627 First cut at porting the kernel portions of 221828 and 221905 from the
BHyVe reference branch to HEAD.
2011-05-14 20:35:01 +00:00
Peter Grehan
366f60834f Import of bhyve hypervisor and utilities, part 1.
vmm.ko - kernel module for VT-x, VT-d and hypervisor control
  bhyve  - user-space sequencer and i/o emulation
  vmmctl - dump of hypervisor register state
  libvmm - front-end to vmm.ko chardev interface

bhyve was designed and implemented by Neel Natu.

Thanks to the following folk from NetApp who helped to make this available:
	Joe CaraDonna
	Peter Snyder
	Jeff Heller
	Sandeep Mann
	Steve Miller
	Brian Pawlowski
2011-05-13 04:54:01 +00:00