Carsten Otte | 5ecee4b | 2008-03-25 18:47:38 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | *** BIG FAT WARNING *** |
| 2 | The kvm module is currently in EXPERIMENTAL state for s390. This means that |
| 3 | the interface to the module is not yet considered to remain stable. Thus, be |
| 4 | prepared that we keep breaking your userspace application and guest |
| 5 | compatibility over and over again until we feel happy with the result. Make sure |
| 6 | your guest kernel, your host kernel, and your userspace launcher are in a |
| 7 | consistent state. |
| 8 | |
| 9 | This Documentation describes the unique ioctl calls to /dev/kvm, the resulting |
| 10 | kvm-vm file descriptors, and the kvm-vcpu file descriptors that differ from x86. |
| 11 | |
| 12 | 1. ioctl calls to /dev/kvm |
| 13 | KVM does support the following ioctls on s390 that are common with other |
| 14 | architectures and do behave the same: |
| 15 | KVM_GET_API_VERSION |
| 16 | KVM_CREATE_VM (*) see note |
| 17 | KVM_CHECK_EXTENSION |
| 18 | KVM_GET_VCPU_MMAP_SIZE |
| 19 | |
| 20 | Notes: |
| 21 | * KVM_CREATE_VM may fail on s390, if the calling process has multiple |
| 22 | threads and has not called KVM_S390_ENABLE_SIE before. |
| 23 | |
| 24 | In addition, on s390 the following architecture specific ioctls are supported: |
| 25 | ioctl: KVM_S390_ENABLE_SIE |
| 26 | args: none |
| 27 | see also: include/linux/kvm.h |
| 28 | This call causes the kernel to switch on PGSTE in the user page table. This |
| 29 | operation is needed in order to run a virtual machine, and it requires the |
| 30 | calling process to be single-threaded. Note that the first call to KVM_CREATE_VM |
| 31 | will implicitly try to switch on PGSTE if the user process has not called |
| 32 | KVM_S390_ENABLE_SIE before. User processes that want to launch multiple threads |
| 33 | before creating a virtual machine have to call KVM_S390_ENABLE_SIE, or will |
| 34 | observe an error calling KVM_CREATE_VM. Switching on PGSTE is a one-time |
| 35 | operation, is not reversible, and will persist over the entire lifetime of |
| 36 | the calling process. It does not have any user-visible effect other than a small |
| 37 | performance penalty. |
| 38 | |
| 39 | 2. ioctl calls to the kvm-vm file descriptor |
| 40 | KVM does support the following ioctls on s390 that are common with other |
| 41 | architectures and do behave the same: |
| 42 | KVM_CREATE_VCPU |
| 43 | KVM_SET_USER_MEMORY_REGION (*) see note |
| 44 | KVM_GET_DIRTY_LOG (**) see note |
| 45 | |
| 46 | Notes: |
| 47 | * kvm does only allow exactly one memory slot on s390, which has to start |
| 48 | at guest absolute address zero and at a user address that is aligned on any |
| 49 | page boundary. This hardware "limitation" allows us to have a few unique |
| 50 | optimizations. The memory slot doesn't have to be filled |
| 51 | with memory actually, it may contain sparse holes. That said, with different |
| 52 | user memory layout this does still allow a large flexibility when |
| 53 | doing the guest memory setup. |
| 54 | ** KVM_GET_DIRTY_LOG doesn't work properly yet. The user will receive an empty |
| 55 | log. This ioctl call is only needed for guest migration, and we intend to |
| 56 | implement this one in the future. |
| 57 | |
| 58 | In addition, on s390 the following architecture specific ioctls for the kvm-vm |
| 59 | file descriptor are supported: |
| 60 | ioctl: KVM_S390_INTERRUPT |
| 61 | args: struct kvm_s390_interrupt * |
| 62 | see also: include/linux/kvm.h |
| 63 | This ioctl is used to submit a floating interrupt for a virtual machine. |
| 64 | Floating interrupts may be delivered to any virtual cpu in the configuration. |
| 65 | Only some interrupt types defined in include/linux/kvm.h make sense when |
| 66 | submitted as floating interrupts. The following interrupts are not considered |
| 67 | to be useful as floating interrupts, and a call to inject them will result in |
| 68 | -EINVAL error code: program interrupts and interprocessor signals. Valid |
| 69 | floating interrupts are: |
| 70 | KVM_S390_INT_VIRTIO |
| 71 | KVM_S390_INT_SERVICE |
| 72 | |
| 73 | 3. ioctl calls to the kvm-vcpu file descriptor |
| 74 | KVM does support the following ioctls on s390 that are common with other |
| 75 | architectures and do behave the same: |
| 76 | KVM_RUN |
| 77 | KVM_GET_REGS |
| 78 | KVM_SET_REGS |
| 79 | KVM_GET_SREGS |
| 80 | KVM_SET_SREGS |
| 81 | KVM_GET_FPU |
| 82 | KVM_SET_FPU |
| 83 | |
| 84 | In addition, on s390 the following architecture specific ioctls for the |
| 85 | kvm-vcpu file descriptor are supported: |
| 86 | ioctl: KVM_S390_INTERRUPT |
| 87 | args: struct kvm_s390_interrupt * |
| 88 | see also: include/linux/kvm.h |
| 89 | This ioctl is used to submit an interrupt for a specific virtual cpu. |
| 90 | Only some interrupt types defined in include/linux/kvm.h make sense when |
| 91 | submitted for a specific cpu. The following interrupts are not considered |
| 92 | to be useful, and a call to inject them will result in -EINVAL error code: |
| 93 | service processor calls and virtio interrupts. Valid interrupt types are: |
| 94 | KVM_S390_PROGRAM_INT |
| 95 | KVM_S390_SIGP_STOP |
| 96 | KVM_S390_RESTART |
| 97 | KVM_S390_SIGP_SET_PREFIX |
| 98 | KVM_S390_INT_EMERGENCY |
| 99 | |
| 100 | ioctl: KVM_S390_STORE_STATUS |
| 101 | args: unsigned long |
| 102 | see also: include/linux/kvm.h |
| 103 | This ioctl stores the state of the cpu at the guest real address given as |
| 104 | argument, unless one of the following values defined in include/linux/kvm.h |
Daniel Mack | 3ad2f3f | 2010-02-03 08:01:28 +0800 | [diff] [blame] | 105 | is given as argument: |
Carsten Otte | 5ecee4b | 2008-03-25 18:47:38 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 106 | KVM_S390_STORE_STATUS_NOADDR - the CPU stores its status to the save area in |
| 107 | absolute lowcore as defined by the principles of operation |
| 108 | KVM_S390_STORE_STATUS_PREFIXED - the CPU stores its status to the save area in |
| 109 | its prefix page just like the dump tool that comes with zipl. This is useful |
| 110 | to create a system dump for use with lkcdutils or crash. |
| 111 | |
| 112 | ioctl: KVM_S390_SET_INITIAL_PSW |
| 113 | args: struct kvm_s390_psw * |
| 114 | see also: include/linux/kvm.h |
| 115 | This ioctl can be used to set the processor status word (psw) of a stopped cpu |
| 116 | prior to running it with KVM_RUN. Note that this call is not required to modify |
| 117 | the psw during sie intercepts that fall back to userspace because struct kvm_run |
| 118 | does contain the psw, and this value is evaluated during reentry of KVM_RUN |
| 119 | after the intercept exit was recognized. |
| 120 | |
| 121 | ioctl: KVM_S390_INITIAL_RESET |
| 122 | args: none |
| 123 | see also: include/linux/kvm.h |
| 124 | This ioctl can be used to perform an initial cpu reset as defined by the |
| 125 | principles of operation. The target cpu has to be in stopped state. |