virtio.h revision 267393
1/*-
2 * Copyright (c) 2013  Chris Torek <torek @ torek net>
3 * All rights reserved.
4 *
5 * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
6 * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
7 * are met:
8 * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
9 *    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
10 * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
11 *    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
12 *    documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
13 *
14 * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
15 * ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
16 * IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
17 * ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
18 * FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
19 * DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
20 * OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
21 * HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
22 * LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
23 * OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
24 * SUCH DAMAGE.
25 *
26 * $FreeBSD: stable/10/usr.sbin/bhyve/virtio.h 267393 2014-06-12 13:13:15Z jhb $
27 */
28
29#ifndef	_VIRTIO_H_
30#define	_VIRTIO_H_
31
32/*
33 * These are derived from several virtio specifications.
34 *
35 * Some useful links:
36 *    https://github.com/rustyrussel/virtio-spec
37 *    http://people.redhat.com/pbonzini/virtio-spec.pdf
38 */
39
40/*
41 * A virtual device has zero or more "virtual queues" (virtqueue).
42 * Each virtqueue uses at least two 4096-byte pages, laid out thus:
43 *
44 *      +-----------------------------------------------+
45 *      |    "desc":  <N> descriptors, 16 bytes each    |
46 *      |   -----------------------------------------   |
47 *      |   "avail":   2 uint16; <N> uint16; 1 uint16   |
48 *      |   -----------------------------------------   |
49 *      |              pad to 4k boundary               |
50 *      +-----------------------------------------------+
51 *      |   "used": 2 x uint16; <N> elems; 1 uint16     |
52 *      |   -----------------------------------------   |
53 *      |              pad to 4k boundary               |
54 *      +-----------------------------------------------+
55 *
56 * The number <N> that appears here is always a power of two and is
57 * limited to no more than 32768 (as it must fit in a 16-bit field).
58 * If <N> is sufficiently large, the above will occupy more than
59 * two pages.  In any case, all pages must be physically contiguous
60 * within the guest's physical address space.
61 *
62 * The <N> 16-byte "desc" descriptors consist of a 64-bit guest
63 * physical address <addr>, a 32-bit length <len>, a 16-bit
64 * <flags>, and a 16-bit <next> field (all in guest byte order).
65 *
66 * There are three flags that may be set :
67 *	NEXT    descriptor is chained, so use its "next" field
68 *	WRITE   descriptor is for host to write into guest RAM
69 *		(else host is to read from guest RAM)
70 *	INDIRECT   descriptor address field is (guest physical)
71 *		address of a linear array of descriptors
72 *
73 * Unless INDIRECT is set, <len> is the number of bytes that may
74 * be read/written from guest physical address <addr>.  If
75 * INDIRECT is set, WRITE is ignored and <len> provides the length
76 * of the indirect descriptors (and <len> must be a multiple of
77 * 16).  Note that NEXT may still be set in the main descriptor
78 * pointing to the indirect, and should be set in each indirect
79 * descriptor that uses the next descriptor (these should generally
80 * be numbered sequentially).  However, INDIRECT must not be set
81 * in the indirect descriptors.  Upon reaching an indirect descriptor
82 * without a NEXT bit, control returns to the direct descriptors.
83 *
84 * Except inside an indirect, each <next> value must be in the
85 * range [0 .. N) (i.e., the half-open interval).  (Inside an
86 * indirect, each <next> must be in the range [0 .. <len>/16).)
87 *
88 * The "avail" data structures reside in the same pages as the
89 * "desc" structures since both together are used by the device to
90 * pass information to the hypervisor's virtual driver.  These
91 * begin with a 16-bit <flags> field and 16-bit index <idx>, then
92 * have <N> 16-bit <ring> values, followed by one final 16-bit
93 * field <used_event>.  The <N> <ring> entries are simply indices
94 * indices into the descriptor ring (and thus must meet the same
95 * constraints as each <next> value).  However, <idx> is counted
96 * up from 0 (initially) and simply wraps around after 65535; it
97 * is taken mod <N> to find the next available entry.
98 *
99 * The "used" ring occupies a separate page or pages, and contains
100 * values written from the virtual driver back to the guest OS.
101 * This begins with a 16-bit <flags> and 16-bit <idx>, then there
102 * are <N> "vring_used" elements, followed by a 16-bit <avail_event>.
103 * The <N> "vring_used" elements consist of a 32-bit <id> and a
104 * 32-bit <len> (vu_tlen below).  The <id> is simply the index of
105 * the head of a descriptor chain the guest made available
106 * earlier, and the <len> is the number of bytes actually written,
107 * e.g., in the case of a network driver that provided a large
108 * receive buffer but received only a small amount of data.
109 *
110 * The two event fields, <used_event> and <avail_event>, in the
111 * avail and used rings (respectively -- note the reversal!), are
112 * always provided, but are used only if the virtual device
113 * negotiates the VIRTIO_RING_F_EVENT_IDX feature during feature
114 * negotiation.  Similarly, both rings provide a flag --
115 * VRING_AVAIL_F_NO_INTERRUPT and VRING_USED_F_NO_NOTIFY -- in
116 * their <flags> field, indicating that the guest does not need an
117 * interrupt, or that the hypervisor driver does not need a
118 * notify, when descriptors are added to the corresponding ring.
119 * (These are provided only for interrupt optimization and need
120 * not be implemented.)
121 */
122#define VRING_ALIGN	4096
123
124#define VRING_DESC_F_NEXT	(1 << 0)
125#define VRING_DESC_F_WRITE	(1 << 1)
126#define VRING_DESC_F_INDIRECT	(1 << 2)
127
128struct virtio_desc {			/* AKA vring_desc */
129	uint64_t	vd_addr;	/* guest physical address */
130	uint32_t	vd_len;		/* length of scatter/gather seg */
131	uint16_t	vd_flags;	/* VRING_F_DESC_* */
132	uint16_t	vd_next;	/* next desc if F_NEXT */
133} __packed;
134
135struct virtio_used {			/* AKA vring_used_elem */
136	uint32_t	vu_idx;		/* head of used descriptor chain */
137	uint32_t	vu_tlen;	/* length written-to */
138} __packed;
139
140#define VRING_AVAIL_F_NO_INTERRUPT   1
141
142struct vring_avail {
143	uint16_t	va_flags;	/* VRING_AVAIL_F_* */
144	uint16_t	va_idx;		/* counts to 65535, then cycles */
145	uint16_t	va_ring[];	/* size N, reported in QNUM value */
146/*	uint16_t	va_used_event;	-- after N ring entries */
147} __packed;
148
149#define	VRING_USED_F_NO_NOTIFY		1
150struct vring_used {
151	uint16_t	vu_flags;	/* VRING_USED_F_* */
152	uint16_t	vu_idx;		/* counts to 65535, then cycles */
153	struct virtio_used vu_ring[];	/* size N */
154/*	uint16_t	vu_avail_event;	-- after N ring entries */
155} __packed;
156
157/*
158 * The address of any given virtual queue is determined by a single
159 * Page Frame Number register.  The guest writes the PFN into the
160 * PCI config space.  However, a device that has two or more
161 * virtqueues can have a different PFN, and size, for each queue.
162 * The number of queues is determinable via the PCI config space
163 * VTCFG_R_QSEL register.  Writes to QSEL select the queue: 0 means
164 * queue #0, 1 means queue#1, etc.  Once a queue is selected, the
165 * remaining PFN and QNUM registers refer to that queue.
166 *
167 * QNUM is a read-only register containing a nonzero power of two
168 * that indicates the (hypervisor's) queue size.  Or, if reading it
169 * produces zero, the hypervisor does not have a corresponding
170 * queue.  (The number of possible queues depends on the virtual
171 * device.  The block device has just one; the network device
172 * provides either two -- 0 = receive, 1 = transmit -- or three,
173 * with 2 = control.)
174 *
175 * PFN is a read/write register giving the physical page address of
176 * the virtqueue in guest memory (the guest must allocate enough space
177 * based on the hypervisor's provided QNUM).
178 *
179 * QNOTIFY is effectively write-only: when the guest writes a queue
180 * number to the register, the hypervisor should scan the specified
181 * virtqueue. (Reading QNOTIFY currently always gets 0).
182 */
183
184/*
185 * PFN register shift amount
186 */
187#define VRING_PFN               12
188
189/*
190 * Virtio device types
191 *
192 * XXX Should really be merged with <dev/virtio/virtio.h> defines
193 */
194#define	VIRTIO_TYPE_NET		1
195#define	VIRTIO_TYPE_BLOCK	2
196#define	VIRTIO_TYPE_CONSOLE	3
197#define	VIRTIO_TYPE_ENTROPY	4
198#define	VIRTIO_TYPE_BALLOON	5
199#define	VIRTIO_TYPE_IOMEMORY	6
200#define	VIRTIO_TYPE_RPMSG	7
201#define	VIRTIO_TYPE_SCSI	8
202#define	VIRTIO_TYPE_9P		9
203
204/* experimental IDs start at 65535 and work down */
205
206/*
207 * PCI vendor/device IDs
208 */
209#define	VIRTIO_VENDOR		0x1AF4
210#define	VIRTIO_DEV_NET		0x1000
211#define	VIRTIO_DEV_BLOCK	0x1001
212
213/*
214 * PCI config space constants.
215 *
216 * If MSI-X is enabled, the ISR register is generally not used,
217 * and the configuration vector and queue vector appear at offsets
218 * 20 and 22 with the remaining configuration registers at 24.
219 * If MSI-X is not enabled, those two registers disappear and
220 * the remaining configuration registers start at offset 20.
221 */
222#define VTCFG_R_HOSTCAP		0
223#define VTCFG_R_GUESTCAP	4
224#define VTCFG_R_PFN		8
225#define VTCFG_R_QNUM		12
226#define VTCFG_R_QSEL		14
227#define VTCFG_R_QNOTIFY		16
228#define VTCFG_R_STATUS		18
229#define VTCFG_R_ISR		19
230#define VTCFG_R_CFGVEC		20
231#define VTCFG_R_QVEC		22
232#define VTCFG_R_CFG0		20	/* No MSI-X */
233#define VTCFG_R_CFG1		24	/* With MSI-X */
234#define VTCFG_R_MSIX		20
235
236/*
237 * Bits in VTCFG_R_STATUS.  Guests need not actually set any of these,
238 * but a guest writing 0 to this register means "please reset".
239 */
240#define	VTCFG_STATUS_ACK	0x01	/* guest OS has acknowledged dev */
241#define	VTCFG_STATUS_DRIVER	0x02	/* guest OS driver is loaded */
242#define	VTCFG_STATUS_DRIVER_OK	0x04	/* guest OS driver ready */
243#define	VTCFG_STATUS_FAILED	0x80	/* guest has given up on this dev */
244
245/*
246 * Bits in VTCFG_R_ISR.  These apply only if not using MSI-X.
247 *
248 * (We don't [yet?] ever use CONF_CHANGED.)
249 */
250#define	VTCFG_ISR_QUEUES	0x01	/* re-scan queues */
251#define	VTCFG_ISR_CONF_CHANGED	0x80	/* configuration changed */
252
253#define VIRTIO_MSI_NO_VECTOR	0xFFFF
254
255/*
256 * Feature flags.
257 * Note: bits 0 through 23 are reserved to each device type.
258 */
259#define	VIRTIO_F_NOTIFY_ON_EMPTY	(1 << 24)
260#define	VIRTIO_RING_F_INDIRECT_DESC	(1 << 28)
261#define	VIRTIO_RING_F_EVENT_IDX		(1 << 29)
262
263/* From section 2.3, "Virtqueue Configuration", of the virtio specification */
264static inline size_t
265vring_size(u_int qsz)
266{
267	size_t size;
268
269	/* constant 3 below = va_flags, va_idx, va_used_event */
270	size = sizeof(struct virtio_desc) * qsz + sizeof(uint16_t) * (3 + qsz);
271	size = roundup2(size, VRING_ALIGN);
272
273	/* constant 3 below = vu_flags, vu_idx, vu_avail_event */
274	size += sizeof(uint16_t) * 3 + sizeof(struct virtio_used) * qsz;
275	size = roundup2(size, VRING_ALIGN);
276
277	return (size);
278}
279
280struct vmctx;
281struct pci_devinst;
282struct vqueue_info;
283
284/*
285 * A virtual device, with some number (possibly 0) of virtual
286 * queues and some size (possibly 0) of configuration-space
287 * registers private to the device.  The virtio_softc should come
288 * at the front of each "derived class", so that a pointer to the
289 * virtio_softc is also a pointer to the more specific, derived-
290 * from-virtio driver's softc.
291 *
292 * Note: inside each hypervisor virtio driver, changes to these
293 * data structures must be locked against other threads, if any.
294 * Except for PCI config space register read/write, we assume each
295 * driver does the required locking, but we need a pointer to the
296 * lock (if there is one) for PCI config space read/write ops.
297 *
298 * When the guest reads or writes the device's config space, the
299 * generic layer checks for operations on the special registers
300 * described above.  If the offset of the register(s) being read
301 * or written is past the CFG area (CFG0 or CFG1), the request is
302 * passed on to the virtual device, after subtracting off the
303 * generic-layer size.  (So, drivers can just use the offset as
304 * an offset into "struct config", for instance.)
305 *
306 * (The virtio layer also makes sure that the read or write is to/
307 * from a "good" config offset, hence vc_cfgsize, and on BAR #0.
308 * However, the driver must verify the read or write size and offset
309 * and that no one is writing a readonly register.)
310 *
311 * The BROKED flag ("this thing done gone and broked") is for future
312 * use.
313 */
314#define	VIRTIO_USE_MSIX		0x01
315#define	VIRTIO_EVENT_IDX	0x02	/* use the event-index values */
316#define	VIRTIO_BROKED		0x08	/* ??? */
317
318struct virtio_softc {
319	struct virtio_consts *vs_vc;	/* constants (see below) */
320	int	vs_flags;		/* VIRTIO_* flags from above */
321	pthread_mutex_t *vs_mtx;	/* POSIX mutex, if any */
322	struct pci_devinst *vs_pi;	/* PCI device instance */
323	uint32_t vs_negotiated_caps;	/* negotiated capabilities */
324	struct vqueue_info *vs_queues;	/* one per vc_nvq */
325	int	vs_curq;		/* current queue */
326	uint8_t	vs_status;		/* value from last status write */
327	uint8_t	vs_isr;			/* ISR flags, if not MSI-X */
328	uint16_t vs_msix_cfg_idx;	/* MSI-X vector for config event */
329};
330
331#define	VS_LOCK(vs)							\
332do {									\
333	if (vs->vs_mtx)							\
334		pthread_mutex_lock(vs->vs_mtx);				\
335} while (0)
336
337#define	VS_UNLOCK(vs)							\
338do {									\
339	if (vs->vs_mtx)							\
340		pthread_mutex_unlock(vs->vs_mtx);			\
341} while (0)
342
343struct virtio_consts {
344	const char *vc_name;		/* name of driver (for diagnostics) */
345	int	vc_nvq;			/* number of virtual queues */
346	size_t	vc_cfgsize;		/* size of dev-specific config regs */
347	void	(*vc_reset)(void *);	/* called on virtual device reset */
348	void	(*vc_qnotify)(void *, struct vqueue_info *);
349					/* called on QNOTIFY if no VQ notify */
350	int	(*vc_cfgread)(void *, int, int, uint32_t *);
351					/* called to read config regs */
352	int	(*vc_cfgwrite)(void *, int, int, uint32_t);
353					/* called to write config regs */
354	uint32_t vc_hv_caps;		/* hypervisor-provided capabilities */
355};
356
357/*
358 * Data structure allocated (statically) per virtual queue.
359 *
360 * Drivers may change vq_qsize after a reset.  When the guest OS
361 * requests a device reset, the hypervisor first calls
362 * vs->vs_vc->vc_reset(); then the data structure below is
363 * reinitialized (for each virtqueue: vs->vs_vc->vc_nvq).
364 *
365 * The remaining fields should only be fussed-with by the generic
366 * code.
367 *
368 * Note: the addresses of vq_desc, vq_avail, and vq_used are all
369 * computable from each other, but it's a lot simpler if we just
370 * keep a pointer to each one.  The event indices are similarly
371 * (but more easily) computable, and this time we'll compute them:
372 * they're just XX_ring[N].
373 */
374#define	VQ_ALLOC	0x01	/* set once we have a pfn */
375#define	VQ_BROKED	0x02	/* ??? */
376struct vqueue_info {
377	uint16_t vq_qsize;	/* size of this queue (a power of 2) */
378	void	(*vq_notify)(void *, struct vqueue_info *);
379				/* called instead of vc_notify, if not NULL */
380
381	struct virtio_softc *vq_vs;	/* backpointer to softc */
382	uint16_t vq_num;	/* we're the num'th queue in the softc */
383
384	uint16_t vq_flags;	/* flags (see above) */
385	uint16_t vq_last_avail;	/* a recent value of vq_avail->va_idx */
386	uint16_t vq_save_used;	/* saved vq_used->vu_idx; see vq_endchains */
387	uint16_t vq_msix_idx;	/* MSI-X index, or VIRTIO_MSI_NO_VECTOR */
388
389	uint32_t vq_pfn;	/* PFN of virt queue (not shifted!) */
390
391	volatile struct virtio_desc *vq_desc;	/* descriptor array */
392	volatile struct vring_avail *vq_avail;	/* the "avail" ring */
393	volatile struct vring_used *vq_used;	/* the "used" ring */
394
395};
396/* as noted above, these are sort of backwards, name-wise */
397#define VQ_AVAIL_EVENT_IDX(vq) \
398	(*(volatile uint16_t *)&(vq)->vq_used->vu_ring[(vq)->vq_qsize])
399#define VQ_USED_EVENT_IDX(vq) \
400	((vq)->vq_avail->va_ring[(vq)->vq_qsize])
401
402/*
403 * Is this ring ready for I/O?
404 */
405static inline int
406vq_ring_ready(struct vqueue_info *vq)
407{
408
409	return (vq->vq_flags & VQ_ALLOC);
410}
411
412/*
413 * Are there "available" descriptors?  (This does not count
414 * how many, just returns True if there are some.)
415 */
416static inline int
417vq_has_descs(struct vqueue_info *vq)
418{
419
420	return (vq_ring_ready(vq) && vq->vq_last_avail !=
421	    vq->vq_avail->va_idx);
422}
423
424/*
425 * Called by virtio driver as it starts processing chains.  Each
426 * completed chain (obtained from vq_getchain()) is released by
427 * calling vq_relchain(), then when all are done, vq_endchains()
428 * can tell if / how-many chains were processed and know whether
429 * and how to generate an interrupt.
430 */
431static inline void
432vq_startchains(struct vqueue_info *vq)
433{
434
435	vq->vq_save_used = vq->vq_used->vu_idx;
436}
437
438/*
439 * Deliver an interrupt to guest on the given virtual queue
440 * (if possible, or a generic MSI interrupt if not using MSI-X).
441 */
442static inline void
443vq_interrupt(struct virtio_softc *vs, struct vqueue_info *vq)
444{
445
446	if (pci_msix_enabled(vs->vs_pi))
447		pci_generate_msix(vs->vs_pi, vq->vq_msix_idx);
448	else {
449		VS_LOCK(vs);
450		vs->vs_isr |= VTCFG_ISR_QUEUES;
451		pci_generate_msi(vs->vs_pi, 0);
452		pci_lintr_assert(vs->vs_pi);
453		VS_UNLOCK(vs);
454	}
455}
456
457struct iovec;
458void	vi_softc_linkup(struct virtio_softc *vs, struct virtio_consts *vc,
459			void *dev_softc, struct pci_devinst *pi,
460			struct vqueue_info *queues);
461int	vi_intr_init(struct virtio_softc *vs, int barnum, int use_msix);
462void	vi_reset_dev(struct virtio_softc *);
463void	vi_set_io_bar(struct virtio_softc *, int);
464
465int	vq_getchain(struct vqueue_info *vq,
466		    struct iovec *iov, int n_iov, uint16_t *flags);
467void	vq_relchain(struct vqueue_info *vq, uint32_t iolen);
468void	vq_endchains(struct vqueue_info *vq, int used_all_avail);
469
470uint64_t vi_pci_read(struct vmctx *ctx, int vcpu, struct pci_devinst *pi,
471		     int baridx, uint64_t offset, int size);
472void	vi_pci_write(struct vmctx *ctx, int vcpu, struct pci_devinst *pi,
473		     int baridx, uint64_t offset, int size, uint64_t value);
474#endif	/* _VIRTIO_H_ */
475