freebsd-nq/stand/userboot/userboot.h

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/*-
* Copyright (c) 2011 Doug Rabson
* 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
* 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
* 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.
*
* $FreeBSD$
*/
/*
* USERBOOT interface versions
*/
#define USERBOOT_VERSION_1 1
#define USERBOOT_VERSION_2 2
#define USERBOOT_VERSION_3 3
/*
* Version 4 added more generic callbacks for setting up
* registers and descriptors. The callback structure is
* backward compatible (new callbacks have been added at
* the tail end).
*/
#define USERBOOT_VERSION_4 4
userboot: handle guest interpreter mismatches more intelligently The switch to lualoader creates a problem with userboot: the host is inclined to build userboot with Lua, but the host userboot's interpreter must match what's available on the guest. For almost all FreeBSD guests in the wild, Lua is not yet available and a Lua-based userboot will fail. This revision updates userboot protocol to version 5, which adds a swap_interpreter callback to request a different interpreter, and tries to determine the proper interpreter to be used based on how the guest /boot/loader is compiled. This is still a bit of a guess, but it's likely the best possible guess we can make in order to get it right. The interpreter is now embedded in the resulting executable, so we can open /boot/loader on the guest and hunt that down to derive the interpreter it was built with. Using -l with bhyveload will not allow an intepreter swap, even if the loader specified happens to be a userboot with the wrong interpreter. We'll simply complain about the mismatch and bail out. For legacy guests without the interpreter marker, we assume they're 4th. For new guests with the interpreter marker, we'll read it and swap over to the proper interpreter if it doesn't match what the userboot we're using was compiled with. Both flavors of userboot are installed by default, userboot_4th.so and userboot_lua.so. This fixes the build WITHOUT_FORTH as a coincidence, which was broken by userboot being forced to 4th. Reviewed by: imp, jhb, araujo (earlier version) Approved by: re (gjb) Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16945
2018-09-01 02:23:45 +00:00
/*
* Version 5 added a callback for indicating that the guest
* should be restarted with a different interpreter. The callback
* structure is still backward compatible.
*/
#define USERBOOT_VERSION_5 5
/*
* Exit codes from the loader
*/
#define USERBOOT_EXIT_QUIT 1
#define USERBOOT_EXIT_REBOOT 2
struct loader_callbacks {
/*
* Console i/o
*/
/*
* Wait until a key is pressed on the console and then return it
*/
int (*getc)(void *arg);
/*
* Write the character ch to the console
*/
void (*putc)(void *arg, int ch);
/*
* Return non-zero if a key can be read from the console
*/
int (*poll)(void *arg);
/*
* Host filesystem i/o
*/
/*
* Open a file in the host filesystem
*/
int (*open)(void *arg, const char *filename, void **h_return);
/*
* Close a file
*/
int (*close)(void *arg, void *h);
/*
* Return non-zero if the file is a directory
*/
int (*isdir)(void *arg, void *h);
/*
* Read size bytes from a file. The number of bytes remaining
* in dst after reading is returned in *resid_return
*/
int (*read)(void *arg, void *h, void *dst, size_t size,
size_t *resid_return);
/*
* Read an entry from a directory. The entry's inode number is
* returned in *fileno_return, its type in *type_return and
* the name length in *namelen_return. The name itself is
* copied to the buffer name which must be at least PATH_MAX
* in size.
*/
int (*readdir)(void *arg, void *h, uint32_t *fileno_return,
uint8_t *type_return, size_t *namelen_return, char *name);
/*
* Seek to a location within an open file
*/
int (*seek)(void *arg, void *h, uint64_t offset,
int whence);
/*
* Return some stat(2) related information about the file
*/
int (*stat)(void *arg, void *h, struct stat *stp);
/*
* Disk image i/o
*/
/*
* Read from a disk image at the given offset
*/
int (*diskread)(void *arg, int unit, uint64_t offset,
void *dst, size_t size, size_t *resid_return);
/*
* Write to a disk image at the given offset
*/
int (*diskwrite)(void *arg, int unit, uint64_t offset,
void *src, size_t size, size_t *resid_return);
/*
* Guest virtual machine i/o
*/
/*
* Copy to the guest address space
*/
int (*copyin)(void *arg, const void *from,
uint64_t to, size_t size);
/*
* Copy from the guest address space
*/
int (*copyout)(void *arg, uint64_t from,
void *to, size_t size);
/*
* Set a guest register value
*/
void (*setreg)(void *arg, int, uint64_t);
/*
* Set a guest MSR value
*/
void (*setmsr)(void *arg, int, uint64_t);
/*
* Set a guest CR value
*/
void (*setcr)(void *arg, int, uint64_t);
/*
* Set the guest GDT address
*/
void (*setgdt)(void *arg, uint64_t, size_t);
/*
* Transfer control to the guest at the given address
*/
void (*exec)(void *arg, uint64_t pc);
/*
* Misc
*/
/*
* Sleep for usec microseconds
*/
void (*delay)(void *arg, int usec);
/*
* Exit with the given exit code
*/
void (*exit)(void *arg, int v);
/*
* Return guest physical memory map details
*/
void (*getmem)(void *arg, uint64_t *lowmem,
uint64_t *highmem);
/*
* ioctl interface to the disk device
*/
int (*diskioctl)(void *arg, int unit, u_long cmd,
void *data);
/*
* Returns an environment variable in the form "name=value".
*
* If there are no more variables that need to be set in the
* loader environment then return NULL.
*
* 'num' is used as a handle for the callback to identify which
* environment variable to return next. It will begin at 0 and
* each invocation will add 1 to the previous value of 'num'.
*/
char * (*getenv)(void *arg, int num);
/*
* Version 4 additions.
*/
int (*vm_set_register)(void *arg, int vcpu, int reg, uint64_t val);
int (*vm_set_desc)(void *arg, int vcpu, int reg, uint64_t base,
u_int limit, u_int access);
userboot: handle guest interpreter mismatches more intelligently The switch to lualoader creates a problem with userboot: the host is inclined to build userboot with Lua, but the host userboot's interpreter must match what's available on the guest. For almost all FreeBSD guests in the wild, Lua is not yet available and a Lua-based userboot will fail. This revision updates userboot protocol to version 5, which adds a swap_interpreter callback to request a different interpreter, and tries to determine the proper interpreter to be used based on how the guest /boot/loader is compiled. This is still a bit of a guess, but it's likely the best possible guess we can make in order to get it right. The interpreter is now embedded in the resulting executable, so we can open /boot/loader on the guest and hunt that down to derive the interpreter it was built with. Using -l with bhyveload will not allow an intepreter swap, even if the loader specified happens to be a userboot with the wrong interpreter. We'll simply complain about the mismatch and bail out. For legacy guests without the interpreter marker, we assume they're 4th. For new guests with the interpreter marker, we'll read it and swap over to the proper interpreter if it doesn't match what the userboot we're using was compiled with. Both flavors of userboot are installed by default, userboot_4th.so and userboot_lua.so. This fixes the build WITHOUT_FORTH as a coincidence, which was broken by userboot being forced to 4th. Reviewed by: imp, jhb, araujo (earlier version) Approved by: re (gjb) Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16945
2018-09-01 02:23:45 +00:00
/*
* Version 5 addition.
*/
void (*swap_interpreter)(void *arg, const char *interp);
};