freebsd-nq/usr.sbin/bhyve/ioapic.c

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Add support for PCI-to-ISA LPC bridge emulation. If the LPC bus is attached to a virtual machine then we implicitly create COM1 and COM2 ISA devices. Prior to this change the only way of attaching a COM port to the virtual machine was by presenting it as a PCI device that is mapped at the legacy I/O address 0x3F8 or 0x2F8. There were some issues with the original approach: - It did not work at all with UEFI because UEFI will reprogram the PCI device BARs and remap the COM1/COM2 ports at non-legacy addresses. - OpenBSD GENERIC kernel does not create a /dev/console because it expects the uart device at the legacy 0x3F8/0x2F8 address to be an ISA device. - It was functional with a FreeBSD guest but caused the console to appear on /dev/ttyu2 which was not intuitive. The uart emulation is now independent of the bus on which it resides. Thus it is possible to have uart devices on the PCI bus in addition to the legacy COM1/COM2 devices behind the LPC bus. The command line option to attach ISA COM1/COM2 ports to a virtual machine is "-s <bus>,lpc -l com1,stdio". The command line option to create a PCI-attached uart device is: "-s <bus>,uart[,stdio]" The command line option to create PCI-attached COM1/COM2 device is: "-S <bus>,uart[,stdio]". This style of creating COM ports is deprecated. Discussed with: grehan Reviewed by: grehan Submitted by: Tycho Nightingale (tycho.nightingale@pluribusnetworks.com) M share/examples/bhyve/vmrun.sh AM usr.sbin/bhyve/legacy_irq.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/legacy_irq.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/Makefile AM usr.sbin/bhyve/uart_emul.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/bhyverun.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/uart_emul.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_uart.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_emul.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/inout.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_emul.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/inout.h AM usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_lpc.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_lpc.h
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/*-
* SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-2-Clause-FreeBSD
*
* Copyright (c) 2014 Hudson River Trading LLC
* Written by: John H. Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
Add support for PCI-to-ISA LPC bridge emulation. If the LPC bus is attached to a virtual machine then we implicitly create COM1 and COM2 ISA devices. Prior to this change the only way of attaching a COM port to the virtual machine was by presenting it as a PCI device that is mapped at the legacy I/O address 0x3F8 or 0x2F8. There were some issues with the original approach: - It did not work at all with UEFI because UEFI will reprogram the PCI device BARs and remap the COM1/COM2 ports at non-legacy addresses. - OpenBSD GENERIC kernel does not create a /dev/console because it expects the uart device at the legacy 0x3F8/0x2F8 address to be an ISA device. - It was functional with a FreeBSD guest but caused the console to appear on /dev/ttyu2 which was not intuitive. The uart emulation is now independent of the bus on which it resides. Thus it is possible to have uart devices on the PCI bus in addition to the legacy COM1/COM2 devices behind the LPC bus. The command line option to attach ISA COM1/COM2 ports to a virtual machine is "-s <bus>,lpc -l com1,stdio". The command line option to create a PCI-attached uart device is: "-s <bus>,uart[,stdio]" The command line option to create PCI-attached COM1/COM2 device is: "-S <bus>,uart[,stdio]". This style of creating COM ports is deprecated. Discussed with: grehan Reviewed by: grehan Submitted by: Tycho Nightingale (tycho.nightingale@pluribusnetworks.com) M share/examples/bhyve/vmrun.sh AM usr.sbin/bhyve/legacy_irq.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/legacy_irq.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/Makefile AM usr.sbin/bhyve/uart_emul.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/bhyverun.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/uart_emul.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_uart.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_emul.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/inout.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_emul.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/inout.h AM usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_lpc.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_lpc.h
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* All rights reserved.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
* are met:
* 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
* documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
Add support for PCI-to-ISA LPC bridge emulation. If the LPC bus is attached to a virtual machine then we implicitly create COM1 and COM2 ISA devices. Prior to this change the only way of attaching a COM port to the virtual machine was by presenting it as a PCI device that is mapped at the legacy I/O address 0x3F8 or 0x2F8. There were some issues with the original approach: - It did not work at all with UEFI because UEFI will reprogram the PCI device BARs and remap the COM1/COM2 ports at non-legacy addresses. - OpenBSD GENERIC kernel does not create a /dev/console because it expects the uart device at the legacy 0x3F8/0x2F8 address to be an ISA device. - It was functional with a FreeBSD guest but caused the console to appear on /dev/ttyu2 which was not intuitive. The uart emulation is now independent of the bus on which it resides. Thus it is possible to have uart devices on the PCI bus in addition to the legacy COM1/COM2 devices behind the LPC bus. The command line option to attach ISA COM1/COM2 ports to a virtual machine is "-s <bus>,lpc -l com1,stdio". The command line option to create a PCI-attached uart device is: "-s <bus>,uart[,stdio]" The command line option to create PCI-attached COM1/COM2 device is: "-S <bus>,uart[,stdio]". This style of creating COM ports is deprecated. Discussed with: grehan Reviewed by: grehan Submitted by: Tycho Nightingale (tycho.nightingale@pluribusnetworks.com) M share/examples/bhyve/vmrun.sh AM usr.sbin/bhyve/legacy_irq.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/legacy_irq.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/Makefile AM usr.sbin/bhyve/uart_emul.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/bhyverun.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/uart_emul.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_uart.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_emul.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/inout.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_emul.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/inout.h AM usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_lpc.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_lpc.h
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* ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
* IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
* ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
Add support for PCI-to-ISA LPC bridge emulation. If the LPC bus is attached to a virtual machine then we implicitly create COM1 and COM2 ISA devices. Prior to this change the only way of attaching a COM port to the virtual machine was by presenting it as a PCI device that is mapped at the legacy I/O address 0x3F8 or 0x2F8. There were some issues with the original approach: - It did not work at all with UEFI because UEFI will reprogram the PCI device BARs and remap the COM1/COM2 ports at non-legacy addresses. - OpenBSD GENERIC kernel does not create a /dev/console because it expects the uart device at the legacy 0x3F8/0x2F8 address to be an ISA device. - It was functional with a FreeBSD guest but caused the console to appear on /dev/ttyu2 which was not intuitive. The uart emulation is now independent of the bus on which it resides. Thus it is possible to have uart devices on the PCI bus in addition to the legacy COM1/COM2 devices behind the LPC bus. The command line option to attach ISA COM1/COM2 ports to a virtual machine is "-s <bus>,lpc -l com1,stdio". The command line option to create a PCI-attached uart device is: "-s <bus>,uart[,stdio]" The command line option to create PCI-attached COM1/COM2 device is: "-S <bus>,uart[,stdio]". This style of creating COM ports is deprecated. Discussed with: grehan Reviewed by: grehan Submitted by: Tycho Nightingale (tycho.nightingale@pluribusnetworks.com) M share/examples/bhyve/vmrun.sh AM usr.sbin/bhyve/legacy_irq.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/legacy_irq.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/Makefile AM usr.sbin/bhyve/uart_emul.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/bhyverun.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/uart_emul.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_uart.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_emul.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/inout.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_emul.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/inout.h AM usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_lpc.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_lpc.h
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* FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
* DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
* OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
* HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
* LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
* OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
* SUCH DAMAGE.
*/
#include <sys/cdefs.h>
__FBSDID("$FreeBSD$");
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <machine/vmm.h>
#include <vmmapi.h>
#include "ioapic.h"
#include "pci_emul.h"
#include "pci_lpc.h"
Add support for PCI-to-ISA LPC bridge emulation. If the LPC bus is attached to a virtual machine then we implicitly create COM1 and COM2 ISA devices. Prior to this change the only way of attaching a COM port to the virtual machine was by presenting it as a PCI device that is mapped at the legacy I/O address 0x3F8 or 0x2F8. There were some issues with the original approach: - It did not work at all with UEFI because UEFI will reprogram the PCI device BARs and remap the COM1/COM2 ports at non-legacy addresses. - OpenBSD GENERIC kernel does not create a /dev/console because it expects the uart device at the legacy 0x3F8/0x2F8 address to be an ISA device. - It was functional with a FreeBSD guest but caused the console to appear on /dev/ttyu2 which was not intuitive. The uart emulation is now independent of the bus on which it resides. Thus it is possible to have uart devices on the PCI bus in addition to the legacy COM1/COM2 devices behind the LPC bus. The command line option to attach ISA COM1/COM2 ports to a virtual machine is "-s <bus>,lpc -l com1,stdio". The command line option to create a PCI-attached uart device is: "-s <bus>,uart[,stdio]" The command line option to create PCI-attached COM1/COM2 device is: "-S <bus>,uart[,stdio]". This style of creating COM ports is deprecated. Discussed with: grehan Reviewed by: grehan Submitted by: Tycho Nightingale (tycho.nightingale@pluribusnetworks.com) M share/examples/bhyve/vmrun.sh AM usr.sbin/bhyve/legacy_irq.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/legacy_irq.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/Makefile AM usr.sbin/bhyve/uart_emul.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/bhyverun.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/uart_emul.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_uart.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_emul.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/inout.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_emul.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/inout.h AM usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_lpc.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_lpc.h
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/*
* Assign PCI INTx interrupts to I/O APIC pins in a round-robin
* fashion. Note that we have no idea what the HPET is using, but the
* HPET is also programmable whereas this is intended for hardwired
* PCI interrupts.
*
* This assumes a single I/O APIC where pins >= 16 are permitted for
* PCI devices.
Add support for PCI-to-ISA LPC bridge emulation. If the LPC bus is attached to a virtual machine then we implicitly create COM1 and COM2 ISA devices. Prior to this change the only way of attaching a COM port to the virtual machine was by presenting it as a PCI device that is mapped at the legacy I/O address 0x3F8 or 0x2F8. There were some issues with the original approach: - It did not work at all with UEFI because UEFI will reprogram the PCI device BARs and remap the COM1/COM2 ports at non-legacy addresses. - OpenBSD GENERIC kernel does not create a /dev/console because it expects the uart device at the legacy 0x3F8/0x2F8 address to be an ISA device. - It was functional with a FreeBSD guest but caused the console to appear on /dev/ttyu2 which was not intuitive. The uart emulation is now independent of the bus on which it resides. Thus it is possible to have uart devices on the PCI bus in addition to the legacy COM1/COM2 devices behind the LPC bus. The command line option to attach ISA COM1/COM2 ports to a virtual machine is "-s <bus>,lpc -l com1,stdio". The command line option to create a PCI-attached uart device is: "-s <bus>,uart[,stdio]" The command line option to create PCI-attached COM1/COM2 device is: "-S <bus>,uart[,stdio]". This style of creating COM ports is deprecated. Discussed with: grehan Reviewed by: grehan Submitted by: Tycho Nightingale (tycho.nightingale@pluribusnetworks.com) M share/examples/bhyve/vmrun.sh AM usr.sbin/bhyve/legacy_irq.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/legacy_irq.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/Makefile AM usr.sbin/bhyve/uart_emul.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/bhyverun.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/uart_emul.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_uart.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_emul.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/inout.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_emul.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/inout.h AM usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_lpc.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_lpc.h
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*/
static int pci_pins;
Add support for PCI-to-ISA LPC bridge emulation. If the LPC bus is attached to a virtual machine then we implicitly create COM1 and COM2 ISA devices. Prior to this change the only way of attaching a COM port to the virtual machine was by presenting it as a PCI device that is mapped at the legacy I/O address 0x3F8 or 0x2F8. There were some issues with the original approach: - It did not work at all with UEFI because UEFI will reprogram the PCI device BARs and remap the COM1/COM2 ports at non-legacy addresses. - OpenBSD GENERIC kernel does not create a /dev/console because it expects the uart device at the legacy 0x3F8/0x2F8 address to be an ISA device. - It was functional with a FreeBSD guest but caused the console to appear on /dev/ttyu2 which was not intuitive. The uart emulation is now independent of the bus on which it resides. Thus it is possible to have uart devices on the PCI bus in addition to the legacy COM1/COM2 devices behind the LPC bus. The command line option to attach ISA COM1/COM2 ports to a virtual machine is "-s <bus>,lpc -l com1,stdio". The command line option to create a PCI-attached uart device is: "-s <bus>,uart[,stdio]" The command line option to create PCI-attached COM1/COM2 device is: "-S <bus>,uart[,stdio]". This style of creating COM ports is deprecated. Discussed with: grehan Reviewed by: grehan Submitted by: Tycho Nightingale (tycho.nightingale@pluribusnetworks.com) M share/examples/bhyve/vmrun.sh AM usr.sbin/bhyve/legacy_irq.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/legacy_irq.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/Makefile AM usr.sbin/bhyve/uart_emul.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/bhyverun.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/uart_emul.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_uart.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_emul.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/inout.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_emul.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/inout.h AM usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_lpc.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_lpc.h
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void
ioapic_init(struct vmctx *ctx)
Add support for PCI-to-ISA LPC bridge emulation. If the LPC bus is attached to a virtual machine then we implicitly create COM1 and COM2 ISA devices. Prior to this change the only way of attaching a COM port to the virtual machine was by presenting it as a PCI device that is mapped at the legacy I/O address 0x3F8 or 0x2F8. There were some issues with the original approach: - It did not work at all with UEFI because UEFI will reprogram the PCI device BARs and remap the COM1/COM2 ports at non-legacy addresses. - OpenBSD GENERIC kernel does not create a /dev/console because it expects the uart device at the legacy 0x3F8/0x2F8 address to be an ISA device. - It was functional with a FreeBSD guest but caused the console to appear on /dev/ttyu2 which was not intuitive. The uart emulation is now independent of the bus on which it resides. Thus it is possible to have uart devices on the PCI bus in addition to the legacy COM1/COM2 devices behind the LPC bus. The command line option to attach ISA COM1/COM2 ports to a virtual machine is "-s <bus>,lpc -l com1,stdio". The command line option to create a PCI-attached uart device is: "-s <bus>,uart[,stdio]" The command line option to create PCI-attached COM1/COM2 device is: "-S <bus>,uart[,stdio]". This style of creating COM ports is deprecated. Discussed with: grehan Reviewed by: grehan Submitted by: Tycho Nightingale (tycho.nightingale@pluribusnetworks.com) M share/examples/bhyve/vmrun.sh AM usr.sbin/bhyve/legacy_irq.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/legacy_irq.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/Makefile AM usr.sbin/bhyve/uart_emul.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/bhyverun.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/uart_emul.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_uart.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_emul.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/inout.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_emul.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/inout.h AM usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_lpc.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_lpc.h
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{
if (vm_ioapic_pincount(ctx, &pci_pins) < 0) {
pci_pins = 0;
return;
}
/* Ignore the first 16 pins. */
if (pci_pins <= 16) {
pci_pins = 0;
return;
}
pci_pins -= 16;
Add support for PCI-to-ISA LPC bridge emulation. If the LPC bus is attached to a virtual machine then we implicitly create COM1 and COM2 ISA devices. Prior to this change the only way of attaching a COM port to the virtual machine was by presenting it as a PCI device that is mapped at the legacy I/O address 0x3F8 or 0x2F8. There were some issues with the original approach: - It did not work at all with UEFI because UEFI will reprogram the PCI device BARs and remap the COM1/COM2 ports at non-legacy addresses. - OpenBSD GENERIC kernel does not create a /dev/console because it expects the uart device at the legacy 0x3F8/0x2F8 address to be an ISA device. - It was functional with a FreeBSD guest but caused the console to appear on /dev/ttyu2 which was not intuitive. The uart emulation is now independent of the bus on which it resides. Thus it is possible to have uart devices on the PCI bus in addition to the legacy COM1/COM2 devices behind the LPC bus. The command line option to attach ISA COM1/COM2 ports to a virtual machine is "-s <bus>,lpc -l com1,stdio". The command line option to create a PCI-attached uart device is: "-s <bus>,uart[,stdio]" The command line option to create PCI-attached COM1/COM2 device is: "-S <bus>,uart[,stdio]". This style of creating COM ports is deprecated. Discussed with: grehan Reviewed by: grehan Submitted by: Tycho Nightingale (tycho.nightingale@pluribusnetworks.com) M share/examples/bhyve/vmrun.sh AM usr.sbin/bhyve/legacy_irq.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/legacy_irq.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/Makefile AM usr.sbin/bhyve/uart_emul.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/bhyverun.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/uart_emul.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_uart.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_emul.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/inout.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_emul.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/inout.h AM usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_lpc.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_lpc.h
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}
int
ioapic_pci_alloc_irq(struct pci_devinst *pi)
Add support for PCI-to-ISA LPC bridge emulation. If the LPC bus is attached to a virtual machine then we implicitly create COM1 and COM2 ISA devices. Prior to this change the only way of attaching a COM port to the virtual machine was by presenting it as a PCI device that is mapped at the legacy I/O address 0x3F8 or 0x2F8. There were some issues with the original approach: - It did not work at all with UEFI because UEFI will reprogram the PCI device BARs and remap the COM1/COM2 ports at non-legacy addresses. - OpenBSD GENERIC kernel does not create a /dev/console because it expects the uart device at the legacy 0x3F8/0x2F8 address to be an ISA device. - It was functional with a FreeBSD guest but caused the console to appear on /dev/ttyu2 which was not intuitive. The uart emulation is now independent of the bus on which it resides. Thus it is possible to have uart devices on the PCI bus in addition to the legacy COM1/COM2 devices behind the LPC bus. The command line option to attach ISA COM1/COM2 ports to a virtual machine is "-s <bus>,lpc -l com1,stdio". The command line option to create a PCI-attached uart device is: "-s <bus>,uart[,stdio]" The command line option to create PCI-attached COM1/COM2 device is: "-S <bus>,uart[,stdio]". This style of creating COM ports is deprecated. Discussed with: grehan Reviewed by: grehan Submitted by: Tycho Nightingale (tycho.nightingale@pluribusnetworks.com) M share/examples/bhyve/vmrun.sh AM usr.sbin/bhyve/legacy_irq.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/legacy_irq.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/Makefile AM usr.sbin/bhyve/uart_emul.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/bhyverun.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/uart_emul.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_uart.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_emul.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/inout.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_emul.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/inout.h AM usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_lpc.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_lpc.h
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{
static int last_pin;
Add support for PCI-to-ISA LPC bridge emulation. If the LPC bus is attached to a virtual machine then we implicitly create COM1 and COM2 ISA devices. Prior to this change the only way of attaching a COM port to the virtual machine was by presenting it as a PCI device that is mapped at the legacy I/O address 0x3F8 or 0x2F8. There were some issues with the original approach: - It did not work at all with UEFI because UEFI will reprogram the PCI device BARs and remap the COM1/COM2 ports at non-legacy addresses. - OpenBSD GENERIC kernel does not create a /dev/console because it expects the uart device at the legacy 0x3F8/0x2F8 address to be an ISA device. - It was functional with a FreeBSD guest but caused the console to appear on /dev/ttyu2 which was not intuitive. The uart emulation is now independent of the bus on which it resides. Thus it is possible to have uart devices on the PCI bus in addition to the legacy COM1/COM2 devices behind the LPC bus. The command line option to attach ISA COM1/COM2 ports to a virtual machine is "-s <bus>,lpc -l com1,stdio". The command line option to create a PCI-attached uart device is: "-s <bus>,uart[,stdio]" The command line option to create PCI-attached COM1/COM2 device is: "-S <bus>,uart[,stdio]". This style of creating COM ports is deprecated. Discussed with: grehan Reviewed by: grehan Submitted by: Tycho Nightingale (tycho.nightingale@pluribusnetworks.com) M share/examples/bhyve/vmrun.sh AM usr.sbin/bhyve/legacy_irq.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/legacy_irq.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/Makefile AM usr.sbin/bhyve/uart_emul.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/bhyverun.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/uart_emul.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_uart.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_emul.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/inout.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_emul.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/inout.h AM usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_lpc.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_lpc.h
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if (pci_pins == 0)
Add support for PCI-to-ISA LPC bridge emulation. If the LPC bus is attached to a virtual machine then we implicitly create COM1 and COM2 ISA devices. Prior to this change the only way of attaching a COM port to the virtual machine was by presenting it as a PCI device that is mapped at the legacy I/O address 0x3F8 or 0x2F8. There were some issues with the original approach: - It did not work at all with UEFI because UEFI will reprogram the PCI device BARs and remap the COM1/COM2 ports at non-legacy addresses. - OpenBSD GENERIC kernel does not create a /dev/console because it expects the uart device at the legacy 0x3F8/0x2F8 address to be an ISA device. - It was functional with a FreeBSD guest but caused the console to appear on /dev/ttyu2 which was not intuitive. The uart emulation is now independent of the bus on which it resides. Thus it is possible to have uart devices on the PCI bus in addition to the legacy COM1/COM2 devices behind the LPC bus. The command line option to attach ISA COM1/COM2 ports to a virtual machine is "-s <bus>,lpc -l com1,stdio". The command line option to create a PCI-attached uart device is: "-s <bus>,uart[,stdio]" The command line option to create PCI-attached COM1/COM2 device is: "-S <bus>,uart[,stdio]". This style of creating COM ports is deprecated. Discussed with: grehan Reviewed by: grehan Submitted by: Tycho Nightingale (tycho.nightingale@pluribusnetworks.com) M share/examples/bhyve/vmrun.sh AM usr.sbin/bhyve/legacy_irq.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/legacy_irq.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/Makefile AM usr.sbin/bhyve/uart_emul.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/bhyverun.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/uart_emul.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_uart.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_emul.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/inout.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_emul.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/inout.h AM usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_lpc.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_lpc.h
2013-10-29 00:18:11 +00:00
return (-1);
if (lpc_bootrom()) {
/* For external bootrom use fixed mapping. */
return (16 + (4 + pi->pi_slot + pi->pi_lintr.pin) % 8);
}
return (16 + (last_pin++ % pci_pins));
Add support for PCI-to-ISA LPC bridge emulation. If the LPC bus is attached to a virtual machine then we implicitly create COM1 and COM2 ISA devices. Prior to this change the only way of attaching a COM port to the virtual machine was by presenting it as a PCI device that is mapped at the legacy I/O address 0x3F8 or 0x2F8. There were some issues with the original approach: - It did not work at all with UEFI because UEFI will reprogram the PCI device BARs and remap the COM1/COM2 ports at non-legacy addresses. - OpenBSD GENERIC kernel does not create a /dev/console because it expects the uart device at the legacy 0x3F8/0x2F8 address to be an ISA device. - It was functional with a FreeBSD guest but caused the console to appear on /dev/ttyu2 which was not intuitive. The uart emulation is now independent of the bus on which it resides. Thus it is possible to have uart devices on the PCI bus in addition to the legacy COM1/COM2 devices behind the LPC bus. The command line option to attach ISA COM1/COM2 ports to a virtual machine is "-s <bus>,lpc -l com1,stdio". The command line option to create a PCI-attached uart device is: "-s <bus>,uart[,stdio]" The command line option to create PCI-attached COM1/COM2 device is: "-S <bus>,uart[,stdio]". This style of creating COM ports is deprecated. Discussed with: grehan Reviewed by: grehan Submitted by: Tycho Nightingale (tycho.nightingale@pluribusnetworks.com) M share/examples/bhyve/vmrun.sh AM usr.sbin/bhyve/legacy_irq.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/legacy_irq.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/Makefile AM usr.sbin/bhyve/uart_emul.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/bhyverun.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/uart_emul.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_uart.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_emul.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/inout.c M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_emul.h M usr.sbin/bhyve/inout.h AM usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_lpc.c AM usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_lpc.h
2013-10-29 00:18:11 +00:00
}