Add Xen interface header files. These are taken fairly directly from
the Xen tree and hence the style is not entirely in accordance with
Linux guidelines. There is a tension between fitting with Linux coding
rules and ease of maintenance.
Signed-off-by: Ian Pratt <[email protected]>
Signed-off-by: Christian Limpach <[email protected]>
Signed-off-by: Chris Wright <[email protected]>
---
include/xen/interface/arch-x86_32.h | 197 +++++++++++++++
include/xen/interface/event_channel.h | 205 +++++++++++++++
include/xen/interface/features.h | 53 ++++
include/xen/interface/grant_table.h | 311 +++++++++++++++++++++++
include/xen/interface/io/blkif.h | 85 ++++++
include/xen/interface/io/console.h | 33 ++
include/xen/interface/io/netif.h | 84 ++++++
include/xen/interface/io/ring.h | 262 ++++++++++++++++++++
include/xen/interface/io/xenbus.h | 42 +++
include/xen/interface/io/xs_wire.h | 97 +++++++
include/xen/interface/memory.h | 155 +++++++++++
include/xen/interface/physdev.h | 71 +++++
include/xen/interface/sched.h | 87 ++++++
include/xen/interface/vcpu.h | 119 +++++++++
include/xen/interface/version.h | 70 +++++
include/xen/interface/xen.h | 441 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
16 files changed, 2312 insertions(+)
--- /dev/null
+++ linus-2.6/include/xen/interface/arch-x86_32.h
@@ -0,0 +1,197 @@
+/******************************************************************************
+ * arch-x86_32.h
+ *
+ * Guest OS interface to x86 32-bit Xen.
+ *
+ * Copyright (c) 2004, K A Fraser
+ */
+
+#ifndef __XEN_PUBLIC_ARCH_X86_32_H__
+#define __XEN_PUBLIC_ARCH_X86_32_H__
+
+#ifdef __XEN__
+#define __DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE(name, type) \
+ typedef struct { type *p; } __guest_handle_ ## name
+#else
+#define __DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE(name, type) \
+ typedef type * __guest_handle_ ## name
+#endif
+
+#define DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE_STRUCT(name) \
+ __DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE(name, struct name)
+#define DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE(name) __DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE(name, name)
+#define GUEST_HANDLE(name) __guest_handle_ ## name
+
+#ifndef __ASSEMBLY__
+/* Guest handles for primitive C types. */
+__DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE(uchar, unsigned char);
+__DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE(uint, unsigned int);
+__DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE(ulong, unsigned long);
+DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE(char);
+DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE(int);
+DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE(long);
+DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE(void);
+#endif
+
+/*
+ * SEGMENT DESCRIPTOR TABLES
+ */
+/*
+ * A number of GDT entries are reserved by Xen. These are not situated at the
+ * start of the GDT because some stupid OSes export hard-coded selector values
+ * in their ABI. These hard-coded values are always near the start of the GDT,
+ * so Xen places itself out of the way, at the far end of the GDT.
+ */
+#define FIRST_RESERVED_GDT_PAGE 14
+#define FIRST_RESERVED_GDT_BYTE (FIRST_RESERVED_GDT_PAGE * 4096)
+#define FIRST_RESERVED_GDT_ENTRY (FIRST_RESERVED_GDT_BYTE / 8)
+
+/*
+ * These flat segments are in the Xen-private section of every GDT. Since these
+ * are also present in the initial GDT, many OSes will be able to avoid
+ * installing their own GDT.
+ */
+#define FLAT_RING1_CS 0xe019 /* GDT index 259 */
+#define FLAT_RING1_DS 0xe021 /* GDT index 260 */
+#define FLAT_RING1_SS 0xe021 /* GDT index 260 */
+#define FLAT_RING3_CS 0xe02b /* GDT index 261 */
+#define FLAT_RING3_DS 0xe033 /* GDT index 262 */
+#define FLAT_RING3_SS 0xe033 /* GDT index 262 */
+
+#define FLAT_KERNEL_CS FLAT_RING1_CS
+#define FLAT_KERNEL_DS FLAT_RING1_DS
+#define FLAT_KERNEL_SS FLAT_RING1_SS
+#define FLAT_USER_CS FLAT_RING3_CS
+#define FLAT_USER_DS FLAT_RING3_DS
+#define FLAT_USER_SS FLAT_RING3_SS
+
+/* And the trap vector is... */
+#define TRAP_INSTR "int $0x82"
+
+/*
+ * Virtual addresses beyond this are not modifiable by guest OSes. The
+ * machine->physical mapping table starts at this address, read-only.
+ */
+#ifdef CONFIG_X86_PAE
+#define __HYPERVISOR_VIRT_START 0xF5800000
+#else
+#define __HYPERVISOR_VIRT_START 0xFC000000
+#endif
+
+#ifndef HYPERVISOR_VIRT_START
+#define HYPERVISOR_VIRT_START mk_unsigned_long(__HYPERVISOR_VIRT_START)
+#endif
+
+#ifndef machine_to_phys_mapping
+#define machine_to_phys_mapping ((unsigned long *)HYPERVISOR_VIRT_START)
+#endif
+
+/* Maximum number of virtual CPUs in multi-processor guests. */
+#define MAX_VIRT_CPUS 32
+
+#ifndef __ASSEMBLY__
+
+/*
+ * Send an array of these to HYPERVISOR_set_trap_table()
+ */
+#define TI_GET_DPL(_ti) ((_ti)->flags & 3)
+#define TI_GET_IF(_ti) ((_ti)->flags & 4)
+#define TI_SET_DPL(_ti,_dpl) ((_ti)->flags |= (_dpl))
+#define TI_SET_IF(_ti,_if) ((_ti)->flags |= ((!!(_if))<<2))
+struct trap_info {
+ uint8_t vector; /* exception vector */
+ uint8_t flags; /* 0-3: privilege level; 4: clear event enable? */
+ uint16_t cs; /* code selector */
+ unsigned long address; /* code offset */
+};
+DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE_STRUCT(trap_info);
+
+struct cpu_user_regs {
+ uint32_t ebx;
+ uint32_t ecx;
+ uint32_t edx;
+ uint32_t esi;
+ uint32_t edi;
+ uint32_t ebp;
+ uint32_t eax;
+ uint16_t error_code; /* private */
+ uint16_t entry_vector; /* private */
+ uint32_t eip;
+ uint16_t cs;
+ uint8_t saved_upcall_mask;
+ uint8_t _pad0;
+ uint32_t eflags; /* eflags.IF == !saved_upcall_mask */
+ uint32_t esp;
+ uint16_t ss, _pad1;
+ uint16_t es, _pad2;
+ uint16_t ds, _pad3;
+ uint16_t fs, _pad4;
+ uint16_t gs, _pad5;
+};
+DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE_STRUCT(cpu_user_regs);
+
+typedef uint64_t tsc_timestamp_t; /* RDTSC timestamp */
+
+/*
+ * The following is all CPU context. Note that the fpu_ctxt block is filled
+ * in by FXSAVE if the CPU has feature FXSR; otherwise FSAVE is used.
+ */
+struct vcpu_guest_context {
+ /* FPU registers come first so they can be aligned for FXSAVE/FXRSTOR. */
+ struct { char x[512]; } fpu_ctxt; /* User-level FPU registers */
+#define VGCF_I387_VALID (1<<0)
+#define VGCF_HVM_GUEST (1<<1)
+#define VGCF_IN_KERNEL (1<<2)
+ unsigned long flags; /* VGCF_* flags */
+ struct cpu_user_regs user_regs; /* User-level CPU registers */
+ struct trap_info trap_ctxt[256]; /* Virtual IDT */
+ unsigned long ldt_base, ldt_ents; /* LDT (linear address, # ents) */
+ unsigned long gdt_frames[16], gdt_ents; /* GDT (machine frames, # ents) */
+ unsigned long kernel_ss, kernel_sp; /* Virtual TSS (only SS1/SP1) */
+ unsigned long ctrlreg[8]; /* CR0-CR7 (control registers) */
+ unsigned long debugreg[8]; /* DB0-DB7 (debug registers) */
+ unsigned long event_callback_cs; /* CS:EIP of event callback */
+ unsigned long event_callback_eip;
+ unsigned long failsafe_callback_cs; /* CS:EIP of failsafe callback */
+ unsigned long failsafe_callback_eip;
+ unsigned long vm_assist; /* VMASST_TYPE_* bitmap */
+};
+DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE_STRUCT(vcpu_guest_context);
+
+struct arch_shared_info {
+ unsigned long max_pfn; /* max pfn that appears in table */
+ /* Frame containing list of mfns containing list of mfns containing p2m. */
+ unsigned long pfn_to_mfn_frame_list_list;
+ unsigned long nmi_reason;
+};
+
+struct arch_vcpu_info {
+ unsigned long cr2;
+ unsigned long pad[5]; /* sizeof(struct vcpu_info) == 64 */
+};
+
+#endif /* !__ASSEMBLY__ */
+
+/*
+ * Prefix forces emulation of some non-trapping instructions.
+ * Currently only CPUID.
+ */
+#ifdef __ASSEMBLY__
+#define XEN_EMULATE_PREFIX .byte 0x0f,0x0b,0x78,0x65,0x6e ;
+#define XEN_CPUID XEN_EMULATE_PREFIX cpuid
+#else
+#define XEN_EMULATE_PREFIX ".byte 0x0f,0x0b,0x78,0x65,0x6e ; "
+#define XEN_CPUID XEN_EMULATE_PREFIX "cpuid"
+#endif
+
+#endif
+
+/*
+ * Local variables:
+ * mode: C
+ * c-set-style: "BSD"
+ * c-basic-offset: 4
+ * tab-width: 4
+ * indent-tabs-mode: nil
+ * End:
+ */
--- /dev/null
+++ linus-2.6/include/xen/interface/event_channel.h
@@ -0,0 +1,205 @@
+/******************************************************************************
+ * event_channel.h
+ *
+ * Event channels between domains.
+ *
+ * Copyright (c) 2003-2004, K A Fraser.
+ */
+
+#ifndef __XEN_PUBLIC_EVENT_CHANNEL_H__
+#define __XEN_PUBLIC_EVENT_CHANNEL_H__
+
+typedef uint32_t evtchn_port_t;
+DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE(evtchn_port_t);
+
+/*
+ * EVTCHNOP_alloc_unbound: Allocate a port in domain <dom> and mark as
+ * accepting interdomain bindings from domain <remote_dom>. A fresh port
+ * is allocated in <dom> and returned as <port>.
+ * NOTES:
+ * 1. If the caller is unprivileged then <dom> must be DOMID_SELF.
+ * 2. <rdom> may be DOMID_SELF, allowing loopback connections.
+ */
+#define EVTCHNOP_alloc_unbound 6
+struct evtchn_alloc_unbound {
+ /* IN parameters */
+ domid_t dom, remote_dom;
+ /* OUT parameters */
+ evtchn_port_t port;
+};
+
+/*
+ * EVTCHNOP_bind_interdomain: Construct an interdomain event channel between
+ * the calling domain and <remote_dom>. <remote_dom,remote_port> must identify
+ * a port that is unbound and marked as accepting bindings from the calling
+ * domain. A fresh port is allocated in the calling domain and returned as
+ * <local_port>.
+ * NOTES:
+ * 2. <remote_dom> may be DOMID_SELF, allowing loopback connections.
+ */
+#define EVTCHNOP_bind_interdomain 0
+struct evtchn_bind_interdomain {
+ /* IN parameters. */
+ domid_t remote_dom;
+ evtchn_port_t remote_port;
+ /* OUT parameters. */
+ evtchn_port_t local_port;
+};
+
+/*
+ * EVTCHNOP_bind_virq: Bind a local event channel to VIRQ <irq> on specified
+ * vcpu.
+ * NOTES:
+ * 1. A virtual IRQ may be bound to at most one event channel per vcpu.
+ * 2. The allocated event channel is bound to the specified vcpu. The binding
+ * may not be changed.
+ */
+#define EVTCHNOP_bind_virq 1
+struct evtchn_bind_virq {
+ /* IN parameters. */
+ uint32_t virq;
+ uint32_t vcpu;
+ /* OUT parameters. */
+ evtchn_port_t port;
+};
+
+/*
+ * EVTCHNOP_bind_pirq: Bind a local event channel to PIRQ <irq>.
+ * NOTES:
+ * 1. A physical IRQ may be bound to at most one event channel per domain.
+ * 2. Only a sufficiently-privileged domain may bind to a physical IRQ.
+ */
+#define EVTCHNOP_bind_pirq 2
+struct evtchn_bind_pirq {
+ /* IN parameters. */
+ uint32_t pirq;
+#define BIND_PIRQ__WILL_SHARE 1
+ uint32_t flags; /* BIND_PIRQ__* */
+ /* OUT parameters. */
+ evtchn_port_t port;
+};
+
+/*
+ * EVTCHNOP_bind_ipi: Bind a local event channel to receive events.
+ * NOTES:
+ * 1. The allocated event channel is bound to the specified vcpu. The binding
+ * may not be changed.
+ */
+#define EVTCHNOP_bind_ipi 7
+struct evtchn_bind_ipi {
+ uint32_t vcpu;
+ /* OUT parameters. */
+ evtchn_port_t port;
+};
+
+/*
+ * EVTCHNOP_close: Close a local event channel <port>. If the channel is
+ * interdomain then the remote end is placed in the unbound state
+ * (EVTCHNSTAT_unbound), awaiting a new connection.
+ */
+#define EVTCHNOP_close 3
+struct evtchn_close {
+ /* IN parameters. */
+ evtchn_port_t port;
+};
+
+/*
+ * EVTCHNOP_send: Send an event to the remote end of the channel whose local
+ * endpoint is <port>.
+ */
+#define EVTCHNOP_send 4
+struct evtchn_send {
+ /* IN parameters. */
+ evtchn_port_t port;
+};
+
+/*
+ * EVTCHNOP_status: Get the current status of the communication channel which
+ * has an endpoint at <dom, port>.
+ * NOTES:
+ * 1. <dom> may be specified as DOMID_SELF.
+ * 2. Only a sufficiently-privileged domain may obtain the status of an event
+ * channel for which <dom> is not DOMID_SELF.
+ */
+#define EVTCHNOP_status 5
+struct evtchn_status {
+ /* IN parameters */
+ domid_t dom;
+ evtchn_port_t port;
+ /* OUT parameters */
+#define EVTCHNSTAT_closed 0 /* Channel is not in use. */
+#define EVTCHNSTAT_unbound 1 /* Channel is waiting interdom connection.*/
+#define EVTCHNSTAT_interdomain 2 /* Channel is connected to remote domain. */
+#define EVTCHNSTAT_pirq 3 /* Channel is bound to a phys IRQ line. */
+#define EVTCHNSTAT_virq 4 /* Channel is bound to a virtual IRQ line */
+#define EVTCHNSTAT_ipi 5 /* Channel is bound to a virtual IPI line */
+ uint32_t status;
+ uint32_t vcpu; /* VCPU to which this channel is bound. */
+ union {
+ struct {
+ domid_t dom;
+ } unbound; /* EVTCHNSTAT_unbound */
+ struct {
+ domid_t dom;
+ evtchn_port_t port;
+ } interdomain; /* EVTCHNSTAT_interdomain */
+ uint32_t pirq; /* EVTCHNSTAT_pirq */
+ uint32_t virq; /* EVTCHNSTAT_virq */
+ } u;
+};
+
+/*
+ * EVTCHNOP_bind_vcpu: Specify which vcpu a channel should notify when an
+ * event is pending.
+ * NOTES:
+ * 1. IPI- and VIRQ-bound channels always notify the vcpu that initialised
+ * the binding. This binding cannot be changed.
+ * 2. All other channels notify vcpu0 by default. This default is set when
+ * the channel is allocated (a port that is freed and subsequently reused
+ * has its binding reset to vcpu0).
+ */
+#define EVTCHNOP_bind_vcpu 8
+struct evtchn_bind_vcpu {
+ /* IN parameters. */
+ evtchn_port_t port;
+ uint32_t vcpu;
+};
+
+/*
+ * EVTCHNOP_unmask: Unmask the specified local event-channel port and deliver
+ * a notification to the appropriate VCPU if an event is pending.
+ */
+#define EVTCHNOP_unmask 9
+struct evtchn_unmask {
+ /* IN parameters. */
+ evtchn_port_t port;
+};
+
+struct evtchn_op {
+ uint32_t cmd; /* EVTCHNOP_* */
+ union {
+ struct evtchn_alloc_unbound alloc_unbound;
+ struct evtchn_bind_interdomain bind_interdomain;
+ struct evtchn_bind_virq bind_virq;
+ struct evtchn_bind_pirq bind_pirq;
+ struct evtchn_bind_ipi bind_ipi;
+ struct evtchn_close close;
+ struct evtchn_send send;
+ struct evtchn_status status;
+ struct evtchn_bind_vcpu bind_vcpu;
+ struct evtchn_unmask unmask;
+ } u;
+};
+DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE_STRUCT(evtchn_op);
+
+#endif /* __XEN_PUBLIC_EVENT_CHANNEL_H__ */
+
+/*
+ * Local variables:
+ * mode: C
+ * c-set-style: "BSD"
+ * c-basic-offset: 4
+ * tab-width: 4
+ * indent-tabs-mode: nil
+ * End:
+ */
--- /dev/null
+++ linus-2.6/include/xen/interface/features.h
@@ -0,0 +1,53 @@
+/******************************************************************************
+ * features.h
+ *
+ * Feature flags, reported by XENVER_get_features.
+ *
+ * Copyright (c) 2006, Keir Fraser <[email protected]>
+ */
+
+#ifndef __XEN_PUBLIC_FEATURES_H__
+#define __XEN_PUBLIC_FEATURES_H__
+
+/*
+ * If set, the guest does not need to write-protect its pagetables, and can
+ * update them via direct writes.
+ */
+#define XENFEAT_writable_page_tables 0
+
+/*
+ * If set, the guest does not need to write-protect its segment descriptor
+ * tables, and can update them via direct writes.
+ */
+#define XENFEAT_writable_descriptor_tables 1
+
+/*
+ * If set, translation between the guest's 'pseudo-physical' address space
+ * and the host's machine address space are handled by the hypervisor. In this
+ * mode the guest does not need to perform phys-to/from-machine translations
+ * when performing page table operations.
+ */
+#define XENFEAT_auto_translated_physmap 2
+
+/* If set, the guest is running in supervisor mode (e.g., x86 ring 0). */
+#define XENFEAT_supervisor_mode_kernel 3
+
+/*
+ * If set, the guest does not need to allocate x86 PAE page directories
+ * below 4GB. This flag is usually implied by auto_translated_physmap.
+ */
+#define XENFEAT_pae_pgdir_above_4gb 4
+
+#define XENFEAT_NR_SUBMAPS 1
+
+#endif /* __XEN_PUBLIC_FEATURES_H__ */
+
+/*
+ * Local variables:
+ * mode: C
+ * c-set-style: "BSD"
+ * c-basic-offset: 4
+ * tab-width: 4
+ * indent-tabs-mode: nil
+ * End:
+ */
--- /dev/null
+++ linus-2.6/include/xen/interface/grant_table.h
@@ -0,0 +1,311 @@
+/******************************************************************************
+ * grant_table.h
+ *
+ * Interface for granting foreign access to page frames, and receiving
+ * page-ownership transfers.
+ *
+ * Copyright (c) 2004, K A Fraser
+ */
+
+#ifndef __XEN_PUBLIC_GRANT_TABLE_H__
+#define __XEN_PUBLIC_GRANT_TABLE_H__
+
+
+/***********************************
+ * GRANT TABLE REPRESENTATION
+ */
+
+/* Some rough guidelines on accessing and updating grant-table entries
+ * in a concurrency-safe manner. For more information, Linux contains a
+ * reference implementation for guest OSes (arch/i386/mach-xen/grant_table.c).
+ *
+ * NB. WMB is a no-op on current-generation x86 processors. However, a
+ * compiler barrier will still be required.
+ *
+ * Introducing a valid entry into the grant table:
+ * 1. Write ent->domid.
+ * 2. Write ent->frame:
+ * GTF_permit_access: Frame to which access is permitted.
+ * GTF_accept_transfer: Pseudo-phys frame slot being filled by new
+ * frame, or zero if none.
+ * 3. Write memory barrier (WMB).
+ * 4. Write ent->flags, inc. valid type.
+ *
+ * Invalidating an unused GTF_permit_access entry:
+ * 1. flags = ent->flags.
+ * 2. Observe that !(flags & (GTF_reading|GTF_writing)).
+ * 3. Check result of SMP-safe CMPXCHG(&ent->flags, flags, 0).
+ * NB. No need for WMB as reuse of entry is control-dependent on success of
+ * step 3, and all architectures guarantee ordering of ctrl-dep writes.
+ *
+ * Invalidating an in-use GTF_permit_access entry:
+ * This cannot be done directly. Request assistance from the domain controller
+ * which can set a timeout on the use of a grant entry and take necessary
+ * action. (NB. This is not yet implemented!).
+ *
+ * Invalidating an unused GTF_accept_transfer entry:
+ * 1. flags = ent->flags.
+ * 2. Observe that !(flags & GTF_transfer_committed). [*]
+ * 3. Check result of SMP-safe CMPXCHG(&ent->flags, flags, 0).
+ * NB. No need for WMB as reuse of entry is control-dependent on success of
+ * step 3, and all architectures guarantee ordering of ctrl-dep writes.
+ * [*] If GTF_transfer_committed is set then the grant entry is 'committed'.
+ * The guest must /not/ modify the grant entry until the address of the
+ * transferred frame is written. It is safe for the guest to spin waiting
+ * for this to occur (detect by observing GTF_transfer_completed in
+ * ent->flags).
+ *
+ * Invalidating a committed GTF_accept_transfer entry:
+ * 1. Wait for (ent->flags & GTF_transfer_completed).
+ *
+ * Changing a GTF_permit_access from writable to read-only:
+ * Use SMP-safe CMPXCHG to set GTF_readonly, while checking !GTF_writing.
+ *
+ * Changing a GTF_permit_access from read-only to writable:
+ * Use SMP-safe bit-setting instruction.
+ */
+
+/*
+ * A grant table comprises a packed array of grant entries in one or more
+ * page frames shared between Xen and a guest.
+ * [XEN]: This field is written by Xen and read by the sharing guest.
+ * [GST]: This field is written by the guest and read by Xen.
+ */
+struct grant_entry {
+ /* GTF_xxx: various type and flag information. [XEN,GST] */
+ uint16_t flags;
+ /* The domain being granted foreign privileges. [GST] */
+ domid_t domid;
+ /*
+ * GTF_permit_access: Frame that @domid is allowed to map and access. [GST]
+ * GTF_accept_transfer: Frame whose ownership transferred by @domid. [XEN]
+ */
+ uint32_t frame;
+};
+
+/*
+ * Type of grant entry.
+ * GTF_invalid: This grant entry grants no privileges.
+ * GTF_permit_access: Allow @domid to map/access @frame.
+ * GTF_accept_transfer: Allow @domid to transfer ownership of one page frame
+ * to this guest. Xen writes the page number to @frame.
+ */
+#define GTF_invalid (0U<<0)
+#define GTF_permit_access (1U<<0)
+#define GTF_accept_transfer (2U<<0)
+#define GTF_type_mask (3U<<0)
+
+/*
+ * Subflags for GTF_permit_access.
+ * GTF_readonly: Restrict @domid to read-only mappings and accesses. [GST]
+ * GTF_reading: Grant entry is currently mapped for reading by @domid. [XEN]
+ * GTF_writing: Grant entry is currently mapped for writing by @domid. [XEN]
+ */
+#define _GTF_readonly (2)
+#define GTF_readonly (1U<<_GTF_readonly)
+#define _GTF_reading (3)
+#define GTF_reading (1U<<_GTF_reading)
+#define _GTF_writing (4)
+#define GTF_writing (1U<<_GTF_writing)
+
+/*
+ * Subflags for GTF_accept_transfer:
+ * GTF_transfer_committed: Xen sets this flag to indicate that it is committed
+ * to transferring ownership of a page frame. When a guest sees this flag
+ * it must /not/ modify the grant entry until GTF_transfer_completed is
+ * set by Xen.
+ * GTF_transfer_completed: It is safe for the guest to spin-wait on this flag
+ * after reading GTF_transfer_committed. Xen will always write the frame
+ * address, followed by ORing this flag, in a timely manner.
+ */
+#define _GTF_transfer_committed (2)
+#define GTF_transfer_committed (1U<<_GTF_transfer_committed)
+#define _GTF_transfer_completed (3)
+#define GTF_transfer_completed (1U<<_GTF_transfer_completed)
+
+
+/***********************************
+ * GRANT TABLE QUERIES AND USES
+ */
+
+/*
+ * Reference to a grant entry in a specified domain's grant table.
+ */
+typedef uint32_t grant_ref_t;
+
+/*
+ * Handle to track a mapping created via a grant reference.
+ */
+typedef uint32_t grant_handle_t;
+
+/*
+ * GNTTABOP_map_grant_ref: Map the grant entry (<dom>,<ref>) for access
+ * by devices and/or host CPUs. If successful, <handle> is a tracking number
+ * that must be presented later to destroy the mapping(s). On error, <handle>
+ * is a negative status code.
+ * NOTES:
+ * 1. If GNTPIN_map_for_dev is specified then <dev_bus_addr> is the address
+ * via which I/O devices may access the granted frame.
+ * 2. If GNTPIN_map_for_host is specified then a mapping will be added at
+ * either a host virtual address in the current address space, or at
+ * a PTE at the specified machine address. The type of mapping to
+ * perform is selected through the GNTMAP_contains_pte flag, and the
+ * address is specified in <host_addr>.
+ * 3. Mappings should only be destroyed via GNTTABOP_unmap_grant_ref. If a
+ * host mapping is destroyed by other means then it is *NOT* guaranteed
+ * to be accounted to the correct grant reference!
+ */
+#define GNTTABOP_map_grant_ref 0
+struct gnttab_map_grant_ref {
+ /* IN parameters. */
+ uint64_t host_addr;
+ uint32_t flags; /* GNTMAP_* */
+ grant_ref_t ref;
+ domid_t dom;
+ /* OUT parameters. */
+ int16_t status; /* GNTST_* */
+ grant_handle_t handle;
+ uint64_t dev_bus_addr;
+};
+DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE_STRUCT(gnttab_map_grant_ref);
+
+/*
+ * GNTTABOP_unmap_grant_ref: Destroy one or more grant-reference mappings
+ * tracked by <handle>. If <host_addr> or <dev_bus_addr> is zero, that
+ * field is ignored. If non-zero, they must refer to a device/host mapping
+ * that is tracked by <handle>
+ * NOTES:
+ * 1. The call may fail in an undefined manner if either mapping is not
+ * tracked by <handle>.
+ * 3. After executing a batch of unmaps, it is guaranteed that no stale
+ * mappings will remain in the device or host TLBs.
+ */
+#define GNTTABOP_unmap_grant_ref 1
+struct gnttab_unmap_grant_ref {
+ /* IN parameters. */
+ uint64_t host_addr;
+ uint64_t dev_bus_addr;
+ grant_handle_t handle;
+ /* OUT parameters. */
+ int16_t status; /* GNTST_* */
+};
+DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE_STRUCT(gnttab_unmap_grant_ref);
+
+/*
+ * GNTTABOP_setup_table: Set up a grant table for <dom> comprising at least
+ * <nr_frames> pages. The frame addresses are written to the <frame_list>.
+ * Only <nr_frames> addresses are written, even if the table is larger.
+ * NOTES:
+ * 1. <dom> may be specified as DOMID_SELF.
+ * 2. Only a sufficiently-privileged domain may specify <dom> != DOMID_SELF.
+ * 3. Xen may not support more than a single grant-table page per domain.
+ */
+#define GNTTABOP_setup_table 2
+struct gnttab_setup_table {
+ /* IN parameters. */
+ domid_t dom;
+ uint32_t nr_frames;
+ /* OUT parameters. */
+ int16_t status; /* GNTST_* */
+ GUEST_HANDLE(ulong) frame_list;
+};
+DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE_STRUCT(gnttab_setup_table);
+
+/*
+ * GNTTABOP_dump_table: Dump the contents of the grant table to the
+ * xen console. Debugging use only.
+ */
+#define GNTTABOP_dump_table 3
+struct gnttab_dump_table {
+ /* IN parameters. */
+ domid_t dom;
+ /* OUT parameters. */
+ int16_t status; /* GNTST_* */
+};
+DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE_STRUCT(gnttab_dump_table);
+
+/*
+ * GNTTABOP_transfer_grant_ref: Transfer <frame> to a foreign domain. The
+ * foreign domain has previously registered its interest in the transfer via
+ * <domid, ref>.
+ *
+ * Note that, even if the transfer fails, the specified page no longer belongs
+ * to the calling domain *unless* the error is GNTST_bad_page.
+ */
+#define GNTTABOP_transfer 4
+struct gnttab_transfer {
+ /* IN parameters. */
+ unsigned long mfn;
+ domid_t domid;
+ grant_ref_t ref;
+ /* OUT parameters. */
+ int16_t status;
+};
+DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE_STRUCT(gnttab_transfer);
+
+/*
+ * Bitfield values for update_pin_status.flags.
+ */
+ /* Map the grant entry for access by I/O devices. */
+#define _GNTMAP_device_map (0)
+#define GNTMAP_device_map (1<<_GNTMAP_device_map)
+ /* Map the grant entry for access by host CPUs. */
+#define _GNTMAP_host_map (1)
+#define GNTMAP_host_map (1<<_GNTMAP_host_map)
+ /* Accesses to the granted frame will be restricted to read-only access. */
+#define _GNTMAP_readonly (2)
+#define GNTMAP_readonly (1<<_GNTMAP_readonly)
+ /*
+ * GNTMAP_host_map subflag:
+ * 0 => The host mapping is usable only by the guest OS.
+ * 1 => The host mapping is usable by guest OS + current application.
+ */
+#define _GNTMAP_application_map (3)
+#define GNTMAP_application_map (1<<_GNTMAP_application_map)
+
+ /*
+ * GNTMAP_contains_pte subflag:
+ * 0 => This map request contains a host virtual address.
+ * 1 => This map request contains the machine addess of the PTE to update.
+ */
+#define _GNTMAP_contains_pte (4)
+#define GNTMAP_contains_pte (1<<_GNTMAP_contains_pte)
+
+/*
+ * Values for error status returns. All errors are -ve.
+ */
+#define GNTST_okay (0) /* Normal return. */
+#define GNTST_general_error (-1) /* General undefined error. */
+#define GNTST_bad_domain (-2) /* Unrecognsed domain id. */
+#define GNTST_bad_gntref (-3) /* Unrecognised or inappropriate gntref. */
+#define GNTST_bad_handle (-4) /* Unrecognised or inappropriate handle. */
+#define GNTST_bad_virt_addr (-5) /* Inappropriate virtual address to map. */
+#define GNTST_bad_dev_addr (-6) /* Inappropriate device address to unmap.*/
+#define GNTST_no_device_space (-7) /* Out of space in I/O MMU. */
+#define GNTST_permission_denied (-8) /* Not enough privilege for operation. */
+#define GNTST_bad_page (-9) /* Specified page was invalid for op. */
+
+#define GNTTABOP_error_msgs { \
+ "okay", \
+ "undefined error", \
+ "unrecognised domain id", \
+ "invalid grant reference", \
+ "invalid mapping handle", \
+ "invalid virtual address", \
+ "invalid device address", \
+ "no spare translation slot in the I/O MMU", \
+ "permission denied", \
+ "bad page" \
+}
+
+#endif /* __XEN_PUBLIC_GRANT_TABLE_H__ */
+
+/*
+ * Local variables:
+ * mode: C
+ * c-set-style: "BSD"
+ * c-basic-offset: 4
+ * tab-width: 4
+ * indent-tabs-mode: nil
+ * End:
+ */
--- /dev/null
+++ linus-2.6/include/xen/interface/io/blkif.h
@@ -0,0 +1,85 @@
+/******************************************************************************
+ * blkif.h
+ *
+ * Unified block-device I/O interface for Xen guest OSes.
+ *
+ * Copyright (c) 2003-2004, Keir Fraser
+ */
+
+#ifndef __XEN_PUBLIC_IO_BLKIF_H__
+#define __XEN_PUBLIC_IO_BLKIF_H__
+
+#include "ring.h"
+#include "../grant_table.h"
+
+/*
+ * Front->back notifications: When enqueuing a new request, sending a
+ * notification can be made conditional on req_event (i.e., the generic
+ * hold-off mechanism provided by the ring macros). Backends must set
+ * req_event appropriately (e.g., using RING_FINAL_CHECK_FOR_REQUESTS()).
+ *
+ * Back->front notifications: When enqueuing a new response, sending a
+ * notification can be made conditional on rsp_event (i.e., the generic
+ * hold-off mechanism provided by the ring macros). Frontends must set
+ * rsp_event appropriately (e.g., using RING_FINAL_CHECK_FOR_RESPONSES()).
+ */
+
+#ifndef blkif_vdev_t
+#define blkif_vdev_t uint16_t
+#endif
+#define blkif_sector_t uint64_t
+
+#define BLKIF_OP_READ 0
+#define BLKIF_OP_WRITE 1
+
+/*
+ * Maximum scatter/gather segments per request.
+ * This is carefully chosen so that sizeof(struct blkif_ring) <= PAGE_SIZE.
+ * NB. This could be 12 if the ring indexes weren't stored in the same page.
+ */
+#define BLKIF_MAX_SEGMENTS_PER_REQUEST 11
+
+struct blkif_request {
+ uint8_t operation; /* BLKIF_OP_??? */
+ uint8_t nr_segments; /* number of segments */
+ blkif_vdev_t handle; /* only for read/write requests */
+ uint64_t id; /* private guest value, echoed in resp */
+ blkif_sector_t sector_number;/* start sector idx on disk (r/w only) */
+ struct blkif_request_segment {
+ grant_ref_t gref; /* reference to I/O buffer frame */
+ /* @first_sect: first sector in frame to transfer (inclusive). */
+ /* @last_sect: last sector in frame to transfer (inclusive). */
+ uint8_t first_sect, last_sect;
+ } seg[BLKIF_MAX_SEGMENTS_PER_REQUEST];
+};
+
+struct blkif_response {
+ uint64_t id; /* copied from request */
+ uint8_t operation; /* copied from request */
+ int16_t status; /* BLKIF_RSP_??? */
+};
+
+#define BLKIF_RSP_ERROR -1 /* non-specific 'error' */
+#define BLKIF_RSP_OKAY 0 /* non-specific 'okay' */
+
+/*
+ * Generate blkif ring structures and types.
+ */
+
+DEFINE_RING_TYPES(blkif, struct blkif_request, struct blkif_response);
+
+#define VDISK_CDROM 0x1
+#define VDISK_REMOVABLE 0x2
+#define VDISK_READONLY 0x4
+
+#endif /* __XEN_PUBLIC_IO_BLKIF_H__ */
+
+/*
+ * Local variables:
+ * mode: C
+ * c-set-style: "BSD"
+ * c-basic-offset: 4
+ * tab-width: 4
+ * indent-tabs-mode: nil
+ * End:
+ */
--- /dev/null
+++ linus-2.6/include/xen/interface/io/console.h
@@ -0,0 +1,33 @@
+/******************************************************************************
+ * console.h
+ *
+ * Console I/O interface for Xen guest OSes.
+ *
+ * Copyright (c) 2005, Keir Fraser
+ */
+
+#ifndef __XEN_PUBLIC_IO_CONSOLE_H__
+#define __XEN_PUBLIC_IO_CONSOLE_H__
+
+typedef uint32_t XENCONS_RING_IDX;
+
+#define MASK_XENCONS_IDX(idx, ring) ((idx) & (sizeof(ring)-1))
+
+struct xencons_interface {
+ char in[1024];
+ char out[2048];
+ XENCONS_RING_IDX in_cons, in_prod;
+ XENCONS_RING_IDX out_cons, out_prod;
+};
+
+#endif /* __XEN_PUBLIC_IO_CONSOLE_H__ */
+
+/*
+ * Local variables:
+ * mode: C
+ * c-set-style: "BSD"
+ * c-basic-offset: 4
+ * tab-width: 4
+ * indent-tabs-mode: nil
+ * End:
+ */
--- /dev/null
+++ linus-2.6/include/xen/interface/io/netif.h
@@ -0,0 +1,84 @@
+/******************************************************************************
+ * netif.h
+ *
+ * Unified network-device I/O interface for Xen guest OSes.
+ *
+ * Copyright (c) 2003-2004, Keir Fraser
+ */
+
+#ifndef __XEN_PUBLIC_IO_NETIF_H__
+#define __XEN_PUBLIC_IO_NETIF_H__
+
+#include "ring.h"
+#include "../grant_table.h"
+
+/*
+ * Note that there is *never* any need to notify the backend when
+ * enqueuing receive requests (struct netif_rx_request). Notifications
+ * after enqueuing any other type of message should be conditional on
+ * the appropriate req_event or rsp_event field in the shared ring.
+ */
+
+/* Protocol checksum field is blank in the packet (hardware offload)? */
+#define _NETTXF_csum_blank (0)
+#define NETTXF_csum_blank (1U<<_NETTXF_csum_blank)
+
+/* Packet data has been validated against protocol checksum. */
+#define _NETTXF_data_validated (1)
+#define NETTXF_data_validated (1U<<_NETTXF_data_validated)
+
+struct netif_tx_request {
+ grant_ref_t gref; /* Reference to buffer page */
+ uint16_t offset; /* Offset within buffer page */
+ uint16_t flags; /* NETTXF_* */
+ uint16_t id; /* Echoed in response message. */
+ uint16_t size; /* Packet size in bytes. */
+};
+
+struct netif_tx_response {
+ uint16_t id;
+ int16_t status; /* NETIF_RSP_* */
+};
+
+struct netif_rx_request {
+ uint16_t id; /* Echoed in response message. */
+ grant_ref_t gref; /* Reference to incoming granted frame */
+};
+
+/* Packet data has been validated against protocol checksum. */
+#define _NETRXF_data_validated (0)
+#define NETRXF_data_validated (1U<<_NETRXF_data_validated)
+
+/* Protocol checksum field is blank in the packet (hardware offload)? */
+#define _NETRXF_csum_blank (1)
+#define NETRXF_csum_blank (1U<<_NETRXF_csum_blank)
+
+struct netif_rx_response {
+ uint16_t id;
+ uint16_t offset; /* Offset in page of start of received packet */
+ uint16_t flags; /* NETRXF_* */
+ int16_t status; /* -ve: BLKIF_RSP_* ; +ve: Rx'ed pkt size. */
+};
+
+/*
+ * Generate netif ring structures and types.
+ */
+
+DEFINE_RING_TYPES(netif_tx, struct netif_tx_request, struct netif_tx_response);
+DEFINE_RING_TYPES(netif_rx, struct netif_rx_request, struct netif_rx_response);
+
+#define NETIF_RSP_DROPPED -2
+#define NETIF_RSP_ERROR -1
+#define NETIF_RSP_OKAY 0
+
+#endif
+
+/*
+ * Local variables:
+ * mode: C
+ * c-set-style: "BSD"
+ * c-basic-offset: 4
+ * tab-width: 4
+ * indent-tabs-mode: nil
+ * End:
+ */
--- /dev/null
+++ linus-2.6/include/xen/interface/io/ring.h
@@ -0,0 +1,262 @@
+/******************************************************************************
+ * ring.h
+ *
+ * Shared producer-consumer ring macros.
+ *
+ * Tim Deegan and Andrew Warfield November 2004.
+ */
+
+#ifndef __XEN_PUBLIC_IO_RING_H__
+#define __XEN_PUBLIC_IO_RING_H__
+
+typedef unsigned int RING_IDX;
+
+/* Round a 32-bit unsigned constant down to the nearest power of two. */
+#define __RD2(_x) (((_x) & 0x00000002) ? 0x2 : ((_x) & 0x1))
+#define __RD4(_x) (((_x) & 0x0000000c) ? __RD2((_x)>>2)<<2 : __RD2(_x))
+#define __RD8(_x) (((_x) & 0x000000f0) ? __RD4((_x)>>4)<<4 : __RD4(_x))
+#define __RD16(_x) (((_x) & 0x0000ff00) ? __RD8((_x)>>8)<<8 : __RD8(_x))
+#define __RD32(_x) (((_x) & 0xffff0000) ? __RD16((_x)>>16)<<16 : __RD16(_x))
+
+/*
+ * Calculate size of a shared ring, given the total available space for the
+ * ring and indexes (_sz), and the name tag of the request/response structure.
+ * A ring contains as many entries as will fit, rounded down to the nearest
+ * power of two (so we can mask with (size-1) to loop around).
+ */
+#define __RING_SIZE(_s, _sz) \
+ (__RD32(((_sz) - (long)&(_s)->ring + (long)(_s)) / sizeof((_s)->ring[0])))
+
+/*
+ * Macros to make the correct C datatypes for a new kind of ring.
+ *
+ * To make a new ring datatype, you need to have two message structures,
+ * let's say struct request, and struct response already defined.
+ *
+ * In a header where you want the ring datatype declared, you then do:
+ *
+ * DEFINE_RING_TYPES(mytag, struct request, struct response);
+ *
+ * These expand out to give you a set of types, as you can see below.
+ * The most important of these are:
+ *
+ * struct mytag_sring - The shared ring.
+ * struct mytag_front_ring - The 'front' half of the ring.
+ * struct mytag_back_ring - The 'back' half of the ring.
+ *
+ * To initialize a ring in your code you need to know the location and size
+ * of the shared memory area (PAGE_SIZE, for instance). To initialise
+ * the front half:
+ *
+ * struct mytag_front_ring front_ring;
+ * SHARED_RING_INIT((struct mytag_sring *)shared_page);
+ * FRONT_RING_INIT(&front_ring, (struct mytag_sring *)shared_page,
+ * PAGE_SIZE);
+ *
+ * Initializing the back follows similarly (note that only the front
+ * initializes the shared ring):
+ *
+ * struct mytag_back_ring back_ring;
+ * BACK_RING_INIT(&back_ring, (struct mytag_sring *)shared_page,
+ * PAGE_SIZE);
+ */
+
+#define DEFINE_RING_TYPES(__name, __req_t, __rsp_t) \
+ \
+/* Shared ring entry */ \
+union __name##_sring_entry { \
+ __req_t req; \
+ __rsp_t rsp; \
+}; \
+ \
+/* Shared ring page */ \
+struct __name##_sring { \
+ RING_IDX req_prod, req_event; \
+ RING_IDX rsp_prod, rsp_event; \
+ uint8_t pad[48]; \
+ union __name##_sring_entry ring[1]; /* variable-length */ \
+}; \
+ \
+/* "Front" end's private variables */ \
+struct __name##_front_ring { \
+ RING_IDX req_prod_pvt; \
+ RING_IDX rsp_cons; \
+ unsigned int nr_ents; \
+ struct __name##_sring *sring; \
+}; \
+ \
+/* "Back" end's private variables */ \
+struct __name##_back_ring { \
+ RING_IDX rsp_prod_pvt; \
+ RING_IDX req_cons; \
+ unsigned int nr_ents; \
+ struct __name##_sring *sring; \
+};
+
+/*
+ * Macros for manipulating rings.
+ *
+ * FRONT_RING_whatever works on the "front end" of a ring: here
+ * requests are pushed on to the ring and responses taken off it.
+ *
+ * BACK_RING_whatever works on the "back end" of a ring: here
+ * requests are taken off the ring and responses put on.
+ *
+ * N.B. these macros do NO INTERLOCKS OR FLOW CONTROL.
+ * This is OK in 1-for-1 request-response situations where the
+ * requestor (front end) never has more than RING_SIZE()-1
+ * outstanding requests.
+ */
+
+/* Initialising empty rings */
+#define SHARED_RING_INIT(_s) do { \
+ (_s)->req_prod = (_s)->rsp_prod = 0; \
+ (_s)->req_event = (_s)->rsp_event = 1; \
+ memset((_s)->pad, 0, sizeof((_s)->pad)); \
+} while(0)
+
+#define FRONT_RING_INIT(_r, _s, __size) do { \
+ (_r)->req_prod_pvt = 0; \
+ (_r)->rsp_cons = 0; \
+ (_r)->nr_ents = __RING_SIZE(_s, __size); \
+ (_r)->sring = (_s); \
+} while (0)
+
+#define BACK_RING_INIT(_r, _s, __size) do { \
+ (_r)->rsp_prod_pvt = 0; \
+ (_r)->req_cons = 0; \
+ (_r)->nr_ents = __RING_SIZE(_s, __size); \
+ (_r)->sring = (_s); \
+} while (0)
+
+/* Initialize to existing shared indexes -- for recovery */
+#define FRONT_RING_ATTACH(_r, _s, __size) do { \
+ (_r)->sring = (_s); \
+ (_r)->req_prod_pvt = (_s)->req_prod; \
+ (_r)->rsp_cons = (_s)->rsp_prod; \
+ (_r)->nr_ents = __RING_SIZE(_s, __size); \
+} while (0)
+
+#define BACK_RING_ATTACH(_r, _s, __size) do { \
+ (_r)->sring = (_s); \
+ (_r)->rsp_prod_pvt = (_s)->rsp_prod; \
+ (_r)->req_cons = (_s)->req_prod; \
+ (_r)->nr_ents = __RING_SIZE(_s, __size); \
+} while (0)
+
+/* How big is this ring? */
+#define RING_SIZE(_r) \
+ ((_r)->nr_ents)
+
+/* Test if there is an empty slot available on the front ring.
+ * (This is only meaningful from the front. )
+ */
+#define RING_FULL(_r) \
+ (((_r)->req_prod_pvt - (_r)->rsp_cons) == RING_SIZE(_r))
+
+/* Test if there are outstanding messages to be processed on a ring. */
+#define RING_HAS_UNCONSUMED_RESPONSES(_r) \
+ ((_r)->rsp_cons != (_r)->sring->rsp_prod)
+
+#define RING_HAS_UNCONSUMED_REQUESTS(_r) \
+ (((_r)->req_cons != (_r)->sring->req_prod) && \
+ (((_r)->req_cons - (_r)->rsp_prod_pvt) != RING_SIZE(_r)))
+
+/* Direct access to individual ring elements, by index. */
+#define RING_GET_REQUEST(_r, _idx) \
+ (&((_r)->sring->ring[((_idx) & (RING_SIZE(_r) - 1))].req))
+
+#define RING_GET_RESPONSE(_r, _idx) \
+ (&((_r)->sring->ring[((_idx) & (RING_SIZE(_r) - 1))].rsp))
+
+/* Loop termination condition: Would the specified index overflow the ring? */
+#define RING_REQUEST_CONS_OVERFLOW(_r, _cons) \
+ (((_cons) - (_r)->rsp_prod_pvt) >= RING_SIZE(_r))
+
+#define RING_PUSH_REQUESTS(_r) do { \
+ wmb(); /* back sees requests /before/ updated producer index */ \
+ (_r)->sring->req_prod = (_r)->req_prod_pvt; \
+} while (0)
+
+#define RING_PUSH_RESPONSES(_r) do { \
+ wmb(); /* front sees responses /before/ updated producer index */ \
+ (_r)->sring->rsp_prod = (_r)->rsp_prod_pvt; \
+} while (0)
+
+/*
+ * Notification hold-off (req_event and rsp_event):
+ *
+ * When queueing requests or responses on a shared ring, it may not always be
+ * necessary to notify the remote end. For example, if requests are in flight
+ * in a backend, the front may be able to queue further requests without
+ * notifying the back (if the back checks for new requests when it queues
+ * responses).
+ *
+ * When enqueuing requests or responses:
+ *
+ * Use RING_PUSH_{REQUESTS,RESPONSES}_AND_CHECK_NOTIFY(). The second argument
+ * is a boolean return value. True indicates that the receiver requires an
+ * asynchronous notification.
+ *
+ * After dequeuing requests or responses (before sleeping the connection):
+ *
+ * Use RING_FINAL_CHECK_FOR_REQUESTS() or RING_FINAL_CHECK_FOR_RESPONSES().
+ * The second argument is a boolean return value. True indicates that there
+ * are pending messages on the ring (i.e., the connection should not be put
+ * to sleep).
+ *
+ * These macros will set the req_event/rsp_event field to trigger a
+ * notification on the very next message that is enqueued. If you want to
+ * create batches of work (i.e., only receive a notification after several
+ * messages have been enqueued) then you will need to create a customised
+ * version of the FINAL_CHECK macro in your own code, which sets the event
+ * field appropriately.
+ */
+
+#define RING_PUSH_REQUESTS_AND_CHECK_NOTIFY(_r, _notify) do { \
+ RING_IDX __old = (_r)->sring->req_prod; \
+ RING_IDX __new = (_r)->req_prod_pvt; \
+ wmb(); /* back sees requests /before/ updated producer index */ \
+ (_r)->sring->req_prod = __new; \
+ mb(); /* back sees new requests /before/ we check req_event */ \
+ (_notify) = ((RING_IDX)(__new - (_r)->sring->req_event) < \
+ (RING_IDX)(__new - __old)); \
+} while (0)
+
+#define RING_PUSH_RESPONSES_AND_CHECK_NOTIFY(_r, _notify) do { \
+ RING_IDX __old = (_r)->sring->rsp_prod; \
+ RING_IDX __new = (_r)->rsp_prod_pvt; \
+ wmb(); /* front sees responses /before/ updated producer index */ \
+ (_r)->sring->rsp_prod = __new; \
+ mb(); /* front sees new responses /before/ we check rsp_event */ \
+ (_notify) = ((RING_IDX)(__new - (_r)->sring->rsp_event) < \
+ (RING_IDX)(__new - __old)); \
+} while (0)
+
+#define RING_FINAL_CHECK_FOR_REQUESTS(_r, _work_to_do) do { \
+ (_work_to_do) = RING_HAS_UNCONSUMED_REQUESTS(_r); \
+ if (_work_to_do) break; \
+ (_r)->sring->req_event = (_r)->req_cons + 1; \
+ mb(); \
+ (_work_to_do) = RING_HAS_UNCONSUMED_REQUESTS(_r); \
+} while (0)
+
+#define RING_FINAL_CHECK_FOR_RESPONSES(_r, _work_to_do) do { \
+ (_work_to_do) = RING_HAS_UNCONSUMED_RESPONSES(_r); \
+ if (_work_to_do) break; \
+ (_r)->sring->rsp_event = (_r)->rsp_cons + 1; \
+ mb(); \
+ (_work_to_do) = RING_HAS_UNCONSUMED_RESPONSES(_r); \
+} while (0)
+
+#endif /* __XEN_PUBLIC_IO_RING_H__ */
+
+/*
+ * Local variables:
+ * mode: C
+ * c-set-style: "BSD"
+ * c-basic-offset: 4
+ * tab-width: 4
+ * indent-tabs-mode: nil
+ * End:
+ */
--- /dev/null
+++ linus-2.6/include/xen/interface/io/xenbus.h
@@ -0,0 +1,42 @@
+/*****************************************************************************
+ * xenbus.h
+ *
+ * Xenbus protocol details.
+ *
+ * Copyright (C) 2005 XenSource Ltd.
+ */
+
+#ifndef _XEN_PUBLIC_IO_XENBUS_H
+#define _XEN_PUBLIC_IO_XENBUS_H
+
+/* The state of either end of the Xenbus, i.e. the current communication
+ status of initialisation across the bus. States here imply nothing about
+ the state of the connection between the driver and the kernel's device
+ layers. */
+typedef enum
+{
+ XenbusStateUnknown = 0,
+ XenbusStateInitialising = 1,
+ XenbusStateInitWait = 2, /* Finished early initialisation, but waiting
+ for information from the peer or hotplug
+ scripts. */
+ XenbusStateInitialised = 3, /* Initialised and waiting for a connection
+ from the peer. */
+ XenbusStateConnected = 4,
+ XenbusStateClosing = 5, /* The device is being closed due to an error
+ or an unplug event. */
+ XenbusStateClosed = 6
+
+} XenbusState;
+
+#endif /* _XEN_PUBLIC_IO_XENBUS_H */
+
+/*
+ * Local variables:
+ * c-file-style: "linux"
+ * indent-tabs-mode: t
+ * c-indent-level: 8
+ * c-basic-offset: 8
+ * tab-width: 8
+ * End:
+ */
--- /dev/null
+++ linus-2.6/include/xen/interface/io/xs_wire.h
@@ -0,0 +1,97 @@
+/*
+ * Details of the "wire" protocol between Xen Store Daemon and client
+ * library or guest kernel.
+ * Copyright (C) 2005 Rusty Russell IBM Corporation
+ */
+
+#ifndef _XS_WIRE_H
+#define _XS_WIRE_H
+
+enum xsd_sockmsg_type
+{
+ XS_DEBUG,
+ XS_DIRECTORY,
+ XS_READ,
+ XS_GET_PERMS,
+ XS_WATCH,
+ XS_UNWATCH,
+ XS_TRANSACTION_START,
+ XS_TRANSACTION_END,
+ XS_INTRODUCE,
+ XS_RELEASE,
+ XS_GET_DOMAIN_PATH,
+ XS_WRITE,
+ XS_MKDIR,
+ XS_RM,
+ XS_SET_PERMS,
+ XS_WATCH_EVENT,
+ XS_ERROR,
+ XS_IS_DOMAIN_INTRODUCED
+};
+
+#define XS_WRITE_NONE "NONE"
+#define XS_WRITE_CREATE "CREATE"
+#define XS_WRITE_CREATE_EXCL "CREATE|EXCL"
+
+/* We hand errors as strings, for portability. */
+struct xsd_errors
+{
+ int errnum;
+ const char *errstring;
+};
+#define XSD_ERROR(x) { x, #x }
+static struct xsd_errors xsd_errors[] __attribute__((unused)) = {
+ XSD_ERROR(EINVAL),
+ XSD_ERROR(EACCES),
+ XSD_ERROR(EEXIST),
+ XSD_ERROR(EISDIR),
+ XSD_ERROR(ENOENT),
+ XSD_ERROR(ENOMEM),
+ XSD_ERROR(ENOSPC),
+ XSD_ERROR(EIO),
+ XSD_ERROR(ENOTEMPTY),
+ XSD_ERROR(ENOSYS),
+ XSD_ERROR(EROFS),
+ XSD_ERROR(EBUSY),
+ XSD_ERROR(EAGAIN),
+ XSD_ERROR(EISCONN)
+};
+
+struct xsd_sockmsg
+{
+ uint32_t type; /* XS_??? */
+ uint32_t req_id;/* Request identifier, echoed in daemon's response. */
+ uint32_t tx_id; /* Transaction id (0 if not related to a transaction). */
+ uint32_t len; /* Length of data following this. */
+
+ /* Generally followed by nul-terminated string(s). */
+};
+
+enum xs_watch_type
+{
+ XS_WATCH_PATH = 0,
+ XS_WATCH_TOKEN
+};
+
+/* Inter-domain shared memory communications. */
+#define XENSTORE_RING_SIZE 1024
+typedef uint32_t XENSTORE_RING_IDX;
+#define MASK_XENSTORE_IDX(idx) ((idx) & (XENSTORE_RING_SIZE-1))
+struct xenstore_domain_interface {
+ char req[XENSTORE_RING_SIZE]; /* Requests to xenstore daemon. */
+ char rsp[XENSTORE_RING_SIZE]; /* Replies and async watch events. */
+ XENSTORE_RING_IDX req_cons, req_prod;
+ XENSTORE_RING_IDX rsp_cons, rsp_prod;
+};
+
+#endif /* _XS_WIRE_H */
+
+/*
+ * Local variables:
+ * mode: C
+ * c-set-style: "BSD"
+ * c-basic-offset: 4
+ * tab-width: 4
+ * indent-tabs-mode: nil
+ * End:
+ */
--- /dev/null
+++ linus-2.6/include/xen/interface/memory.h
@@ -0,0 +1,155 @@
+/******************************************************************************
+ * memory.h
+ *
+ * Memory reservation and information.
+ *
+ * Copyright (c) 2005, Keir Fraser <[email protected]>
+ */
+
+#ifndef __XEN_PUBLIC_MEMORY_H__
+#define __XEN_PUBLIC_MEMORY_H__
+
+/*
+ * Increase or decrease the specified domain's memory reservation. Returns a
+ * -ve errcode on failure, or the # extents successfully allocated or freed.
+ * arg == addr of struct xen_memory_reservation.
+ */
+#define XENMEM_increase_reservation 0
+#define XENMEM_decrease_reservation 1
+#define XENMEM_populate_physmap 6
+struct xen_memory_reservation {
+
+ /*
+ * XENMEM_increase_reservation:
+ * OUT: MFN (*not* GMFN) bases of extents that were allocated
+ * XENMEM_decrease_reservation:
+ * IN: GMFN bases of extents to free
+ * XENMEM_populate_physmap:
+ * IN: GPFN bases of extents to populate with memory
+ * OUT: GMFN bases of extents that were allocated
+ * (NB. This command also updates the mach_to_phys translation table)
+ */
+ GUEST_HANDLE(ulong) extent_start;
+
+ /* Number of extents, and size/alignment of each (2^extent_order pages). */
+ unsigned long nr_extents;
+ unsigned int extent_order;
+
+ /*
+ * Maximum # bits addressable by the user of the allocated region (e.g.,
+ * I/O devices often have a 32-bit limitation even in 64-bit systems). If
+ * zero then the user has no addressing restriction.
+ * This field is not used by XENMEM_decrease_reservation.
+ */
+ unsigned int address_bits;
+
+ /*
+ * Domain whose reservation is being changed.
+ * Unprivileged domains can specify only DOMID_SELF.
+ */
+ domid_t domid;
+
+};
+DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE_STRUCT(xen_memory_reservation);
+
+/*
+ * Returns the maximum machine frame number of mapped RAM in this system.
+ * This command always succeeds (it never returns an error code).
+ * arg == NULL.
+ */
+#define XENMEM_maximum_ram_page 2
+
+/*
+ * Returns the current or maximum memory reservation, in pages, of the
+ * specified domain (may be DOMID_SELF). Returns -ve errcode on failure.
+ * arg == addr of domid_t.
+ */
+#define XENMEM_current_reservation 3
+#define XENMEM_maximum_reservation 4
+
+/*
+ * Returns a list of MFN bases of 2MB extents comprising the machine_to_phys
+ * mapping table. Architectures which do not have a m2p table do not implement
+ * this command.
+ * arg == addr of xen_machphys_mfn_list_t.
+ */
+#define XENMEM_machphys_mfn_list 5
+struct xen_machphys_mfn_list {
+ /*
+ * Size of the 'extent_start' array. Fewer entries will be filled if the
+ * machphys table is smaller than max_extents * 2MB.
+ */
+ unsigned int max_extents;
+
+ /*
+ * Pointer to buffer to fill with list of extent starts. If there are
+ * any large discontiguities in the machine address space, 2MB gaps in
+ * the machphys table will be represented by an MFN base of zero.
+ */
+ GUEST_HANDLE(ulong) extent_start;
+
+ /*
+ * Number of extents written to the above array. This will be smaller
+ * than 'max_extents' if the machphys table is smaller than max_e * 2MB.
+ */
+ unsigned int nr_extents;
+};
+DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE_STRUCT(xen_machphys_mfn_list);
+
+/*
+ * Sets the GPFN at which a particular page appears in the specified guest's
+ * pseudophysical address space.
+ * arg == addr of xen_add_to_physmap_t.
+ */
+#define XENMEM_add_to_physmap 7
+struct xen_add_to_physmap {
+ /* Which domain to change the mapping for. */
+ domid_t domid;
+
+ /* Source mapping space. */
+#define XENMAPSPACE_shared_info 0 /* shared info page */
+#define XENMAPSPACE_grant_table 1 /* grant table page */
+ unsigned int space;
+
+ /* Index into source mapping space. */
+ unsigned long idx;
+
+ /* GPFN where the source mapping page should appear. */
+ unsigned long gpfn;
+};
+DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE_STRUCT(xen_add_to_physmap);
+
+/*
+ * Translates a list of domain-specific GPFNs into MFNs. Returns a -ve error
+ * code on failure. This call only works for auto-translated guests.
+ */
+#define XENMEM_translate_gpfn_list 8
+struct xen_translate_gpfn_list {
+ /* Which domain to translate for? */
+ domid_t domid;
+
+ /* Length of list. */
+ unsigned long nr_gpfns;
+
+ /* List of GPFNs to translate. */
+ GUEST_HANDLE(ulong) gpfn_list;
+
+ /*
+ * Output list to contain MFN translations. May be the same as the input
+ * list (in which case each input GPFN is overwritten with the output MFN).
+ */
+ GUEST_HANDLE(ulong) mfn_list;
+};
+DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE_STRUCT(xen_translate_gpfn_list);
+
+#endif /* __XEN_PUBLIC_MEMORY_H__ */
+
+/*
+ * Local variables:
+ * mode: C
+ * c-set-style: "BSD"
+ * c-basic-offset: 4
+ * tab-width: 4
+ * indent-tabs-mode: nil
+ * End:
+ */
--- /dev/null
+++ linus-2.6/include/xen/interface/physdev.h
@@ -0,0 +1,71 @@
+
+#ifndef __XEN_PUBLIC_PHYSDEV_H__
+#define __XEN_PUBLIC_PHYSDEV_H__
+
+/* Commands to HYPERVISOR_physdev_op() */
+#define PHYSDEVOP_IRQ_UNMASK_NOTIFY 4
+#define PHYSDEVOP_IRQ_STATUS_QUERY 5
+#define PHYSDEVOP_SET_IOPL 6
+#define PHYSDEVOP_SET_IOBITMAP 7
+#define PHYSDEVOP_APIC_READ 8
+#define PHYSDEVOP_APIC_WRITE 9
+#define PHYSDEVOP_ASSIGN_VECTOR 10
+
+struct physdevop_irq_status_query {
+ /* IN */
+ uint32_t irq;
+ /* OUT */
+/* Need to call PHYSDEVOP_IRQ_UNMASK_NOTIFY when the IRQ has been serviced? */
+#define PHYSDEVOP_IRQ_NEEDS_UNMASK_NOTIFY (1<<0)
+ uint32_t flags;
+};
+
+struct physdevop_set_iopl {
+ /* IN */
+ uint32_t iopl;
+};
+
+struct physdevop_set_iobitmap {
+ /* IN */
+ uint8_t *bitmap;
+ uint32_t nr_ports;
+};
+
+struct physdevop_apic {
+ /* IN */
+ unsigned long apic_physbase;
+ uint32_t reg;
+ /* IN or OUT */
+ uint32_t value;
+};
+
+struct physdevop_irq {
+ /* IN */
+ uint32_t irq;
+ /* OUT */
+ uint32_t vector;
+};
+
+struct physdev_op {
+ uint32_t cmd;
+ union {
+ struct physdevop_irq_status_query irq_status_query;
+ struct physdevop_set_iopl set_iopl;
+ struct physdevop_set_iobitmap set_iobitmap;
+ struct physdevop_apic apic_op;
+ struct physdevop_irq irq_op;
+ } u;
+};
+DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE_STRUCT(physdev_op);
+
+#endif /* __XEN_PUBLIC_PHYSDEV_H__ */
+
+/*
+ * Local variables:
+ * mode: C
+ * c-set-style: "BSD"
+ * c-basic-offset: 4
+ * tab-width: 4
+ * indent-tabs-mode: nil
+ * End:
+ */
--- /dev/null
+++ linus-2.6/include/xen/interface/sched.h
@@ -0,0 +1,87 @@
+/******************************************************************************
+ * sched.h
+ *
+ * Scheduler state interactions
+ *
+ * Copyright (c) 2005, Keir Fraser <[email protected]>
+ */
+
+#ifndef __XEN_PUBLIC_SCHED_H__
+#define __XEN_PUBLIC_SCHED_H__
+
+#include "event_channel.h"
+
+/*
+ * The prototype for this hypercall is:
+ * long sched_op_new(int cmd, void *arg)
+ * @cmd == SCHEDOP_??? (scheduler operation).
+ * @arg == Operation-specific extra argument(s), as described below.
+ *
+ * **NOTE**:
+ * Versions of Xen prior to 3.0.2 provide only the following legacy version
+ * of this hypercall, supporting only the commands yield, block and shutdown:
+ * long sched_op(int cmd, unsigned long arg)
+ * @cmd == SCHEDOP_??? (scheduler operation).
+ * @arg == 0 (SCHEDOP_yield and SCHEDOP_block)
+ * == SHUTDOWN_* code (SCHEDOP_shutdown)
+ */
+
+/*
+ * Voluntarily yield the CPU.
+ * @arg == NULL.
+ */
+#define SCHEDOP_yield 0
+
+/*
+ * Block execution of this VCPU until an event is received for processing.
+ * If called with event upcalls masked, this operation will atomically
+ * reenable event delivery and check for pending events before blocking the
+ * VCPU. This avoids a "wakeup waiting" race.
+ * @arg == NULL.
+ */
+#define SCHEDOP_block 1
+
+/*
+ * Halt execution of this domain (all VCPUs) and notify the system controller.
+ * @arg == pointer to sched_shutdown structure.
+ */
+#define SCHEDOP_shutdown 2
+struct sched_shutdown {
+ unsigned int reason; /* SHUTDOWN_* */
+};
+DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE_STRUCT(sched_shutdown);
+
+/*
+ * Poll a set of event-channel ports. Return when one or more are pending. An
+ * optional timeout may be specified.
+ * @arg == pointer to sched_poll structure.
+ */
+#define SCHEDOP_poll 3
+struct sched_poll {
+ GUEST_HANDLE(evtchn_port_t) ports;
+ unsigned int nr_ports;
+ uint64_t timeout;
+};
+DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE_STRUCT(sched_poll);
+
+/*
+ * Reason codes for SCHEDOP_shutdown. These may be interpreted by control
+ * software to determine the appropriate action. For the most part, Xen does
+ * not care about the shutdown code.
+ */
+#define SHUTDOWN_poweroff 0 /* Domain exited normally. Clean up and kill. */
+#define SHUTDOWN_reboot 1 /* Clean up, kill, and then restart. */
+#define SHUTDOWN_suspend 2 /* Clean up, save suspend info, kill. */
+#define SHUTDOWN_crash 3 /* Tell controller we've crashed. */
+
+#endif /* __XEN_PUBLIC_SCHED_H__ */
+
+/*
+ * Local variables:
+ * mode: C
+ * c-set-style: "BSD"
+ * c-basic-offset: 4
+ * tab-width: 4
+ * indent-tabs-mode: nil
+ * End:
+ */
--- /dev/null
+++ linus-2.6/include/xen/interface/vcpu.h
@@ -0,0 +1,119 @@
+/******************************************************************************
+ * vcpu.h
+ *
+ * VCPU initialisation, query, and hotplug.
+ *
+ * Copyright (c) 2005, Keir Fraser <[email protected]>
+ */
+
+#ifndef __XEN_PUBLIC_VCPU_H__
+#define __XEN_PUBLIC_VCPU_H__
+
+/*
+ * Prototype for this hypercall is:
+ * int vcpu_op(int cmd, int vcpuid, void *extra_args)
+ * @cmd == VCPUOP_??? (VCPU operation).
+ * @vcpuid == VCPU to operate on.
+ * @extra_args == Operation-specific extra arguments (NULL if none).
+ */
+
+/*
+ * Initialise a VCPU. Each VCPU can be initialised only once. A
+ * newly-initialised VCPU will not run until it is brought up by VCPUOP_up.
+ *
+ * @extra_arg == pointer to vcpu_guest_context structure containing initial
+ * state for the VCPU.
+ */
+#define VCPUOP_initialise 0
+
+/*
+ * Bring up a VCPU. This makes the VCPU runnable. This operation will fail
+ * if the VCPU has not been initialised (VCPUOP_initialise).
+ */
+#define VCPUOP_up 1
+
+/*
+ * Bring down a VCPU (i.e., make it non-runnable).
+ * There are a few caveats that callers should observe:
+ * 1. This operation may return, and VCPU_is_up may return false, before the
+ * VCPU stops running (i.e., the command is asynchronous). It is a good
+ * idea to ensure that the VCPU has entered a non-critical loop before
+ * bringing it down. Alternatively, this operation is guaranteed
+ * synchronous if invoked by the VCPU itself.
+ * 2. After a VCPU is initialised, there is currently no way to drop all its
+ * references to domain memory. Even a VCPU that is down still holds
+ * memory references via its pagetable base pointer and GDT. It is good
+ * practise to move a VCPU onto an 'idle' or default page table, LDT and
+ * GDT before bringing it down.
+ */
+#define VCPUOP_down 2
+
+/* Returns 1 if the given VCPU is up. */
+#define VCPUOP_is_up 3
+
+/*
+ * Return information about the state and running time of a VCPU.
+ * @extra_arg == pointer to vcpu_runstate_info structure.
+ */
+#define VCPUOP_get_runstate_info 4
+struct vcpu_runstate_info {
+ /* VCPU's current state (RUNSTATE_*). */
+ int state;
+ /* When was current state entered (system time, ns)? */
+ uint64_t state_entry_time;
+ /*
+ * Time spent in each RUNSTATE_* (ns). The sum of these times is
+ * guaranteed not to drift from system time.
+ */
+ uint64_t time[4];
+};
+
+/* VCPU is currently running on a physical CPU. */
+#define RUNSTATE_running 0
+
+/* VCPU is runnable, but not currently scheduled on any physical CPU. */
+#define RUNSTATE_runnable 1
+
+/* VCPU is blocked (a.k.a. idle). It is therefore not runnable. */
+#define RUNSTATE_blocked 2
+
+/*
+ * VCPU is not runnable, but it is not blocked.
+ * This is a 'catch all' state for things like hotplug and pauses by the
+ * system administrator (or for critical sections in the hypervisor).
+ * RUNSTATE_blocked dominates this state (it is the preferred state).
+ */
+#define RUNSTATE_offline 3
+
+/*
+ * Register a shared memory area from which the guest may obtain its own
+ * runstate information without needing to execute a hypercall.
+ * Notes:
+ * 1. The registered address may be virtual or physical, depending on the
+ * platform. The virtual address should be registered on x86 systems.
+ * 2. Only one shared area may be registered per VCPU. The shared area is
+ * updated by the hypervisor each time the VCPU is scheduled. Thus
+ * runstate.state will always be RUNSTATE_running and
+ * runstate.state_entry_time will indicate the system time at which the
+ * VCPU was last scheduled to run.
+ * @extra_arg == pointer to vcpu_register_runstate_memory_area structure.
+ */
+#define VCPUOP_register_runstate_memory_area 5
+struct vcpu_register_runstate_memory_area {
+ union {
+ struct vcpu_runstate_info *v;
+ uint64_t p;
+ } addr;
+};
+
+#endif /* __XEN_PUBLIC_VCPU_H__ */
+
+/*
+ * Local variables:
+ * mode: C
+ * c-set-style: "BSD"
+ * c-basic-offset: 4
+ * tab-width: 4
+ * indent-tabs-mode: nil
+ * End:
+ */
--- /dev/null
+++ linus-2.6/include/xen/interface/version.h
@@ -0,0 +1,70 @@
+/******************************************************************************
+ * version.h
+ *
+ * Xen version, type, and compile information.
+ *
+ * Copyright (c) 2005, Nguyen Anh Quynh <[email protected]>
+ * Copyright (c) 2005, Keir Fraser <[email protected]>
+ */
+
+#ifndef __XEN_PUBLIC_VERSION_H__
+#define __XEN_PUBLIC_VERSION_H__
+
+/* NB. All ops return zero on success, except XENVER_version. */
+
+/* arg == NULL; returns major:minor (16:16). */
+#define XENVER_version 0
+
+/* arg == xen_extraversion_t. */
+#define XENVER_extraversion 1
+struct xen_extraversion {
+ char extraversion[16];
+};
+#define XEN_EXTRAVERSION_LEN (sizeof(struct xen_extraversion))
+
+/* arg == xen_compile_info_t. */
+#define XENVER_compile_info 2
+struct xen_compile_info {
+ char compiler[64];
+ char compile_by[16];
+ char compile_domain[32];
+ char compile_date[32];
+};
+
+#define XENVER_capabilities 3
+struct xen_capabilities_info {
+ char info[1024];
+};
+#define XEN_CAPABILITIES_INFO_LEN (sizeof(struct xen_capabilities_info))
+
+#define XENVER_changeset 4
+struct xen_changeset_info {
+ char info[64];
+};
+#define XEN_CHANGESET_INFO_LEN (sizeof(struct xen_changeset_info))
+
+#define XENVER_platform_parameters 5
+struct xen_platform_parameters {
+ unsigned long virt_start;
+};
+
+#define XENVER_get_features 6
+struct xen_feature_info {
+ unsigned int submap_idx; /* IN: which 32-bit submap to return */
+ uint32_t submap; /* OUT: 32-bit submap */
+};
+
+/* Declares the features reported by XENVER_get_features. */
+#include "features.h"
+
+#endif /* __XEN_PUBLIC_VERSION_H__ */
+
+/*
+ * Local variables:
+ * mode: C
+ * c-set-style: "BSD"
+ * c-basic-offset: 4
+ * tab-width: 4
+ * indent-tabs-mode: nil
+ * End:
+ */
--- /dev/null
+++ linus-2.6/include/xen/interface/xen.h
@@ -0,0 +1,441 @@
+/******************************************************************************
+ * xen.h
+ *
+ * Guest OS interface to Xen.
+ *
+ * Copyright (c) 2004, K A Fraser
+ */
+
+#ifndef __XEN_PUBLIC_XEN_H__
+#define __XEN_PUBLIC_XEN_H__
+
+#include "arch-x86_32.h"
+
+/*
+ * XEN "SYSTEM CALLS" (a.k.a. HYPERCALLS).
+ */
+
+/*
+ * x86_32: EAX = vector; EBX, ECX, EDX, ESI, EDI = args 1, 2, 3, 4, 5.
+ * EAX = return value
+ * (argument registers may be clobbered on return)
+ * x86_64: RAX = vector; RDI, RSI, RDX, R10, R8, R9 = args 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6.
+ * RAX = return value
+ * (argument registers not clobbered on return; RCX, R11 are)
+ */
+#define __HYPERVISOR_set_trap_table 0
+#define __HYPERVISOR_mmu_update 1
+#define __HYPERVISOR_set_gdt 2
+#define __HYPERVISOR_stack_switch 3
+#define __HYPERVISOR_set_callbacks 4
+#define __HYPERVISOR_fpu_taskswitch 5
+#define __HYPERVISOR_sched_op 6
+#define __HYPERVISOR_dom0_op 7
+#define __HYPERVISOR_set_debugreg 8
+#define __HYPERVISOR_get_debugreg 9
+#define __HYPERVISOR_update_descriptor 10
+#define __HYPERVISOR_memory_op 12
+#define __HYPERVISOR_multicall 13
+#define __HYPERVISOR_update_va_mapping 14
+#define __HYPERVISOR_set_timer_op 15
+#define __HYPERVISOR_event_channel_op 16
+#define __HYPERVISOR_xen_version 17
+#define __HYPERVISOR_console_io 18
+#define __HYPERVISOR_physdev_op 19
+#define __HYPERVISOR_grant_table_op 20
+#define __HYPERVISOR_vm_assist 21
+#define __HYPERVISOR_update_va_mapping_otherdomain 22
+#define __HYPERVISOR_iret 23 /* x86 only */
+#define __HYPERVISOR_vcpu_op 24
+#define __HYPERVISOR_set_segment_base 25 /* x86/64 only */
+#define __HYPERVISOR_mmuext_op 26
+#define __HYPERVISOR_acm_op 27
+#define __HYPERVISOR_nmi_op 28
+#define __HYPERVISOR_sched_op_new 29
+
+/*
+ * VIRTUAL INTERRUPTS
+ *
+ * Virtual interrupts that a guest OS may receive from Xen.
+ */
+#define VIRQ_TIMER 0 /* Timebase update, and/or requested timeout. */
+#define VIRQ_DEBUG 1 /* Request guest to dump debug info. */
+#define VIRQ_CONSOLE 2 /* (DOM0) Bytes received on emergency console. */
+#define VIRQ_DOM_EXC 3 /* (DOM0) Exceptional event for some domain. */
+#define VIRQ_DEBUGGER 6 /* (DOM0) A domain has paused for debugging. */
+#define NR_VIRQS 8
+
+/*
+ * MMU-UPDATE REQUESTS
+ *
+ * HYPERVISOR_mmu_update() accepts a list of (ptr, val) pairs.
+ * A foreigndom (FD) can be specified (or DOMID_SELF for none).
+ * Where the FD has some effect, it is described below.
+ * ptr[1:0] specifies the appropriate MMU_* command.
+ *
+ * ptr[1:0] == MMU_NORMAL_PT_UPDATE:
+ * Updates an entry in a page table. If updating an L1 table, and the new
+ * table entry is valid/present, the mapped frame must belong to the FD, if
+ * an FD has been specified. If attempting to map an I/O page then the
+ * caller assumes the privilege of the FD.
+ * FD == DOMID_IO: Permit /only/ I/O mappings, at the priv level of the caller.
+ * FD == DOMID_XEN: Map restricted areas of Xen's heap space.
+ * ptr[:2] -- Machine address of the page-table entry to modify.
+ * val -- Value to write.
+ *
+ * ptr[1:0] == MMU_MACHPHYS_UPDATE:
+ * Updates an entry in the machine->pseudo-physical mapping table.
+ * ptr[:2] -- Machine address within the frame whose mapping to modify.
+ * The frame must belong to the FD, if one is specified.
+ * val -- Value to write into the mapping entry.
+ */
+#define MMU_NORMAL_PT_UPDATE 0 /* checked '*ptr = val'. ptr is MA. */
+#define MMU_MACHPHYS_UPDATE 1 /* ptr = MA of frame to modify entry for */
+
+/*
+ * MMU EXTENDED OPERATIONS
+ *
+ * HYPERVISOR_mmuext_op() accepts a list of mmuext_op structures.
+ * A foreigndom (FD) can be specified (or DOMID_SELF for none).
+ * Where the FD has some effect, it is described below.
+ *
+ * cmd: MMUEXT_(UN)PIN_*_TABLE
+ * mfn: Machine frame number to be (un)pinned as a p.t. page.
+ * The frame must belong to the FD, if one is specified.
+ *
+ * cmd: MMUEXT_NEW_BASEPTR
+ * mfn: Machine frame number of new page-table base to install in MMU.
+ *
+ * cmd: MMUEXT_NEW_USER_BASEPTR [x86/64 only]
+ * mfn: Machine frame number of new page-table base to install in MMU
+ * when in user space.
+ *
+ * cmd: MMUEXT_TLB_FLUSH_LOCAL
+ * No additional arguments. Flushes local TLB.
+ *
+ * cmd: MMUEXT_INVLPG_LOCAL
+ * linear_addr: Linear address to be flushed from the local TLB.
+ *
+ * cmd: MMUEXT_TLB_FLUSH_MULTI
+ * vcpumask: Pointer to bitmap of VCPUs to be flushed.
+ *
+ * cmd: MMUEXT_INVLPG_MULTI
+ * linear_addr: Linear address to be flushed.
+ * vcpumask: Pointer to bitmap of VCPUs to be flushed.
+ *
+ * cmd: MMUEXT_TLB_FLUSH_ALL
+ * No additional arguments. Flushes all VCPUs' TLBs.
+ *
+ * cmd: MMUEXT_INVLPG_ALL
+ * linear_addr: Linear address to be flushed from all VCPUs' TLBs.
+ *
+ * cmd: MMUEXT_FLUSH_CACHE
+ * No additional arguments. Writes back and flushes cache contents.
+ *
+ * cmd: MMUEXT_SET_LDT
+ * linear_addr: Linear address of LDT base (NB. must be page-aligned).
+ * nr_ents: Number of entries in LDT.
+ */
+#define MMUEXT_PIN_L1_TABLE 0
+#define MMUEXT_PIN_L2_TABLE 1
+#define MMUEXT_PIN_L3_TABLE 2
+#define MMUEXT_PIN_L4_TABLE 3
+#define MMUEXT_UNPIN_TABLE 4
+#define MMUEXT_NEW_BASEPTR 5
+#define MMUEXT_TLB_FLUSH_LOCAL 6
+#define MMUEXT_INVLPG_LOCAL 7
+#define MMUEXT_TLB_FLUSH_MULTI 8
+#define MMUEXT_INVLPG_MULTI 9
+#define MMUEXT_TLB_FLUSH_ALL 10
+#define MMUEXT_INVLPG_ALL 11
+#define MMUEXT_FLUSH_CACHE 12
+#define MMUEXT_SET_LDT 13
+#define MMUEXT_NEW_USER_BASEPTR 15
+
+#ifndef __ASSEMBLY__
+struct mmuext_op {
+ unsigned int cmd;
+ union {
+ /* [UN]PIN_TABLE, NEW_BASEPTR, NEW_USER_BASEPTR */
+ unsigned long mfn;
+ /* INVLPG_LOCAL, INVLPG_ALL, SET_LDT */
+ unsigned long linear_addr;
+ } arg1;
+ union {
+ /* SET_LDT */
+ unsigned int nr_ents;
+ /* TLB_FLUSH_MULTI, INVLPG_MULTI */
+ void *vcpumask;
+ } arg2;
+};
+DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE_STRUCT(mmuext_op);
+#endif
+
+/* These are passed as 'flags' to update_va_mapping. They can be ORed. */
+/* When specifying UVMF_MULTI, also OR in a pointer to a CPU bitmap. */
+/* UVMF_LOCAL is merely UVMF_MULTI with a NULL bitmap pointer. */
+#define UVMF_NONE (0UL<<0) /* No flushing at all. */
+#define UVMF_TLB_FLUSH (1UL<<0) /* Flush entire TLB(s). */
+#define UVMF_INVLPG (2UL<<0) /* Flush only one entry. */
+#define UVMF_FLUSHTYPE_MASK (3UL<<0)
+#define UVMF_MULTI (0UL<<2) /* Flush subset of TLBs. */
+#define UVMF_LOCAL (0UL<<2) /* Flush local TLB. */
+#define UVMF_ALL (1UL<<2) /* Flush all TLBs. */
+
+/*
+ * Commands to HYPERVISOR_console_io().
+ */
+#define CONSOLEIO_write 0
+#define CONSOLEIO_read 1
+
+/*
+ * Commands to HYPERVISOR_vm_assist().
+ */
+#define VMASST_CMD_enable 0
+#define VMASST_CMD_disable 1
+#define VMASST_TYPE_4gb_segments 0
+#define VMASST_TYPE_4gb_segments_notify 1
+#define VMASST_TYPE_writable_pagetables 2
+#define MAX_VMASST_TYPE 2
+
+#ifndef __ASSEMBLY__
+
+typedef uint16_t domid_t;
+
+/* Domain ids >= DOMID_FIRST_RESERVED cannot be used for ordinary domains. */
+#define DOMID_FIRST_RESERVED (0x7FF0U)
+
+/* DOMID_SELF is used in certain contexts to refer to oneself. */
+#define DOMID_SELF (0x7FF0U)
+
+/*
+ * DOMID_IO is used to restrict page-table updates to mapping I/O memory.
+ * Although no Foreign Domain need be specified to map I/O pages, DOMID_IO
+ * is useful to ensure that no mappings to the OS's own heap are accidentally
+ * installed. (e.g., in Linux this could cause havoc as reference counts
+ * aren't adjusted on the I/O-mapping code path).
+ * This only makes sense in MMUEXT_SET_FOREIGNDOM, but in that context can
+ * be specified by any calling domain.
+ */
+#define DOMID_IO (0x7FF1U)
+
+/*
+ * DOMID_XEN is used to allow privileged domains to map restricted parts of
+ * Xen's heap space (e.g., the machine_to_phys table).
+ * This only makes sense in MMUEXT_SET_FOREIGNDOM, and is only permitted if
+ * the caller is privileged.
+ */
+#define DOMID_XEN (0x7FF2U)
+
+/*
+ * Send an array of these to HYPERVISOR_mmu_update().
+ * NB. The fields are natural pointer/address size for this architecture.
+ */
+struct mmu_update {
+ uint64_t ptr; /* Machine address of PTE. */
+ uint64_t val; /* New contents of PTE. */
+};
+DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE_STRUCT(mmu_update);
+
+/*
+ * Send an array of these to HYPERVISOR_multicall().
+ * NB. The fields are natural register size for this architecture.
+ */
+struct multicall_entry {
+ unsigned long op, result;
+ unsigned long args[6];
+};
+DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE_STRUCT(multicall_entry);
+
+/*
+ * Event channel endpoints per domain:
+ * 1024 if a long is 32 bits; 4096 if a long is 64 bits.
+ */
+#define NR_EVENT_CHANNELS (sizeof(unsigned long) * sizeof(unsigned long) * 64)
+
+struct vcpu_time_info {
+ /*
+ * Updates to the following values are preceded and followed by an
+ * increment of 'version'. The guest can therefore detect updates by
+ * looking for changes to 'version'. If the least-significant bit of
+ * the version number is set then an update is in progress and the guest
+ * must wait to read a consistent set of values.
+ * The correct way to interact with the version number is similar to
+ * Linux's seqlock: see the implementations of read_seqbegin/read_seqretry.
+ */
+ uint32_t version;
+ uint32_t pad0;
+ uint64_t tsc_timestamp; /* TSC at last update of time vals. */
+ uint64_t system_time; /* Time, in nanosecs, since boot. */
+ /*
+ * Current system time:
+ * system_time + ((tsc - tsc_timestamp) << tsc_shift) * tsc_to_system_mul
+ * CPU frequency (Hz):
+ * ((10^9 << 32) / tsc_to_system_mul) >> tsc_shift
+ */
+ uint32_t tsc_to_system_mul;
+ int8_t tsc_shift;
+ int8_t pad1[3];
+}; /* 32 bytes */
+
+struct vcpu_info {
+ /*
+ * 'evtchn_upcall_pending' is written non-zero by Xen to indicate
+ * a pending notification for a particular VCPU. It is then cleared
+ * by the guest OS /before/ checking for pending work, thus avoiding
+ * a set-and-check race. Note that the mask is only accessed by Xen
+ * on the CPU that is currently hosting the VCPU. This means that the
+ * pending and mask flags can be updated by the guest without special
+ * synchronisation (i.e., no need for the x86 LOCK prefix).
+ * This may seem suboptimal because if the pending flag is set by
+ * a different CPU then an IPI may be scheduled even when the mask
+ * is set. However, note:
+ * 1. The task of 'interrupt holdoff' is covered by the per-event-
+ * channel mask bits. A 'noisy' event that is continually being
+ * triggered can be masked at source at this very precise
+ * granularity.
+ * 2. The main purpose of the per-VCPU mask is therefore to restrict
+ * reentrant execution: whether for concurrency control, or to
+ * prevent unbounded stack usage. Whatever the purpose, we expect
+ * that the mask will be asserted only for short periods at a time,
+ * and so the likelihood of a 'spurious' IPI is suitably small.
+ * The mask is read before making an event upcall to the guest: a
+ * non-zero mask therefore guarantees that the VCPU will not receive
+ * an upcall activation. The mask is cleared when the VCPU requests
+ * to block: this avoids wakeup-waiting races.
+ */
+ uint8_t evtchn_upcall_pending;
+ uint8_t evtchn_upcall_mask;
+ unsigned long evtchn_pending_sel;
+ struct arch_vcpu_info arch;
+ struct vcpu_time_info time;
+}; /* 64 bytes (x86) */
+
+/*
+ * Xen/kernel shared data -- pointer provided in start_info.
+ * NB. We expect that this struct is smaller than a page.
+ */
+struct shared_info {
+ struct vcpu_info vcpu_info[MAX_VIRT_CPUS];
+
+ /*
+ * A domain can create "event channels" on which it can send and receive
+ * asynchronous event notifications. There are three classes of event that
+ * are delivered by this mechanism:
+ * 1. Bi-directional inter- and intra-domain connections. Domains must
+ * arrange out-of-band to set up a connection (usually by allocating
+ * an unbound 'listener' port and avertising that via a storage service
+ * such as xenstore).
+ * 2. Physical interrupts. A domain with suitable hardware-access
+ * privileges can bind an event-channel port to a physical interrupt
+ * source.
+ * 3. Virtual interrupts ('events'). A domain can bind an event-channel
+ * port to a virtual interrupt source, such as the virtual-timer
+ * device or the emergency console.
+ *
+ * Event channels are addressed by a "port index". Each channel is
+ * associated with two bits of information:
+ * 1. PENDING -- notifies the domain that there is a pending notification
+ * to be processed. This bit is cleared by the guest.
+ * 2. MASK -- if this bit is clear then a 0->1 transition of PENDING
+ * will cause an asynchronous upcall to be scheduled. This bit is only
+ * updated by the guest. It is read-only within Xen. If a channel
+ * becomes pending while the channel is masked then the 'edge' is lost
+ * (i.e., when the channel is unmasked, the guest must manually handle
+ * pending notifications as no upcall will be scheduled by Xen).
+ *
+ * To expedite scanning of pending notifications, any 0->1 pending
+ * transition on an unmasked channel causes a corresponding bit in a
+ * per-vcpu selector word to be set. Each bit in the selector covers a
+ * 'C long' in the PENDING bitfield array.
+ */
+ unsigned long evtchn_pending[sizeof(unsigned long) * 8];
+ unsigned long evtchn_mask[sizeof(unsigned long) * 8];
+
+ /*
+ * Wallclock time: updated only by control software. Guests should base
+ * their gettimeofday() syscall on this wallclock-base value.
+ */
+ uint32_t wc_version; /* Version counter: see vcpu_time_info_t. */
+ uint32_t wc_sec; /* Secs 00:00:00 UTC, Jan 1, 1970. */
+ uint32_t wc_nsec; /* Nsecs 00:00:00 UTC, Jan 1, 1970. */
+
+ struct arch_shared_info arch;
+
+};
+
+/*
+ * Start-of-day memory layout for the initial domain (DOM0):
+ * 1. The domain is started within contiguous virtual-memory region.
+ * 2. The contiguous region begins and ends on an aligned 4MB boundary.
+ * 3. The region start corresponds to the load address of the OS image.
+ * If the load address is not 4MB aligned then the address is rounded down.
+ * 4. This the order of bootstrap elements in the initial virtual region:
+ * a. relocated kernel image
+ * b. initial ram disk [mod_start, mod_len]
+ * c. list of allocated page frames [mfn_list, nr_pages]
+ * d. start_info_t structure [register ESI (x86)]
+ * e. bootstrap page tables [pt_base, CR3 (x86)]
+ * f. bootstrap stack [register ESP (x86)]
+ * 5. Bootstrap elements are packed together, but each is 4kB-aligned.
+ * 6. The initial ram disk may be omitted.
+ * 7. The list of page frames forms a contiguous 'pseudo-physical' memory
+ * layout for the domain. In particular, the bootstrap virtual-memory
+ * region is a 1:1 mapping to the first section of the pseudo-physical map.
+ * 8. All bootstrap elements are mapped read-writable for the guest OS. The
+ * only exception is the bootstrap page table, which is mapped read-only.
+ * 9. There is guaranteed to be at least 512kB padding after the final
+ * bootstrap element. If necessary, the bootstrap virtual region is
+ * extended by an extra 4MB to ensure this.
+ */
+
+#define MAX_GUEST_CMDLINE 1024
+struct start_info {
+ /* THE FOLLOWING ARE FILLED IN BOTH ON INITIAL BOOT AND ON RESUME. */
+ char magic[32]; /* "xen-<version>-<platform>". */
+ unsigned long nr_pages; /* Total pages allocated to this domain. */
+ unsigned long shared_info; /* MACHINE address of shared info struct. */
+ uint32_t flags; /* SIF_xxx flags. */
+ unsigned long store_mfn; /* MACHINE page number of shared page. */
+ uint32_t store_evtchn; /* Event channel for store communication. */
+ unsigned long console_mfn; /* MACHINE address of console page. */
+ uint32_t console_evtchn; /* Event channel for console messages. */
+ /* THE FOLLOWING ARE ONLY FILLED IN ON INITIAL BOOT (NOT RESUME). */
+ unsigned long pt_base; /* VIRTUAL address of page directory. */
+ unsigned long nr_pt_frames; /* Number of bootstrap p.t. frames. */
+ unsigned long mfn_list; /* VIRTUAL address of page-frame list. */
+ unsigned long mod_start; /* VIRTUAL address of pre-loaded module. */
+ unsigned long mod_len; /* Size (bytes) of pre-loaded module. */
+ int8_t cmd_line[MAX_GUEST_CMDLINE];
+};
+
+/* These flags are passed in the 'flags' field of start_info_t. */
+#define SIF_PRIVILEGED (1<<0) /* Is the domain privileged? */
+#define SIF_INITDOMAIN (1<<1) /* Is this the initial control domain? */
+
+typedef uint64_t cpumap_t;
+
+typedef uint8_t xen_domain_handle_t[16];
+
+/* Turn a plain number into a C unsigned long constant. */
+#define __mk_unsigned_long(x) x ## UL
+#define mk_unsigned_long(x) __mk_unsigned_long(x)
+
+#else /* __ASSEMBLY__ */
+
+/* In assembly code we cannot use C numeric constant suffixes. */
+#define mk_unsigned_long(x) x
+
+#endif /* !__ASSEMBLY__ */
+
+#endif /* __XEN_PUBLIC_XEN_H__ */
+
+/*
+ * Local variables:
+ * mode: C
+ * c-set-style: "BSD"
+ * c-basic-offset: 4
+ * tab-width: 4
+ * indent-tabs-mode: nil
+ * End:
+ */
--
This clearly doesn't belong:
> +/*
> + * Local variables:
> + * mode: C
> + * c-set-style: "BSD"
> + * c-basic-offset: 4
> + * tab-width: 4
> + * indent-tabs-mode: nil
> + * End:
> + */
????
> +/*
> + * Local variables:
> + * mode: C
> + * c-set-style: "BSD"
> + * c-basic-offset: 4
> + * tab-width: 4
> + * indent-tabs-mode: nil
> + * End:
> + */
???
And the rest of them.
> Signed-off-by: Christian Limpach <[email protected]>
> Signed-off-by: Chris Wright <[email protected]>
> ---
> include/xen/interface/arch-x86_32.h | 197 +++++++++++++++
that kind of stuff needs to go to asm/
> include/xen/interface/event_channel.h | 205 +++++++++++++++
instead of interface please use something shorter, we'll see this
all over the includes statements. intf for example.
> +#ifdef __XEN__
> +#define __DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE(name, type) \
> + typedef struct { type *p; } __guest_handle_ ## name
> +#else
> +#define __DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE(name, type) \
> + typedef type * __guest_handle_ ## name
> +#endif
please get rid of all these stupid typedefs
> +#ifndef __ASSEMBLY__
> +/* Guest handles for primitive C types. */
> +__DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE(uchar, unsigned char);
> +__DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE(uint, unsigned int);
> +__DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE(ulong, unsigned long);
don't use uchar/uint/ulong types ever. And in things like
hypervisor/kernel interfaces always use __u* types.
On Tue, 2006-05-09 at 00:00 -0700, Chris Wright wrote:
> plain text document attachment (xen-interface-headers)
> Add Xen interface header files. These are taken fairly directly from
> the Xen tree and hence the style is not entirely in accordance with
> Linux guidelines. There is a tension between fitting with Linux coding
> rules and ease of maintenance.
>
> Signed-off-by: Ian Pratt <[email protected]>
> Signed-off-by: Christian Limpach <[email protected]>
> Signed-off-by: Chris Wright <[email protected]>
> ---
> include/xen/interface/arch-x86_32.h | 197 +++++++++++++++
> include/xen/interface/event_channel.h | 205 +++++++++++++++
> include/xen/interface/features.h | 53 ++++
> include/xen/interface/grant_table.h | 311 +++++++++++++++++++++++
> include/xen/interface/io/blkif.h | 85 ++++++
Shouldn't these be under asm-i386 , or are they used by other
architecture ?
Daniel
On Tue, May 09, 2006 at 09:06:12AM -0700, Daniel Walker wrote:
> On Tue, 2006-05-09 at 00:00 -0700, Chris Wright wrote:
> > plain text document attachment (xen-interface-headers)
> > Add Xen interface header files. These are taken fairly directly from
> > the Xen tree and hence the style is not entirely in accordance with
> > Linux guidelines. There is a tension between fitting with Linux coding
> > rules and ease of maintenance.
> >
> > Signed-off-by: Ian Pratt <[email protected]>
> > Signed-off-by: Christian Limpach <[email protected]>
> > Signed-off-by: Chris Wright <[email protected]>
> > ---
> > include/xen/interface/arch-x86_32.h | 197 +++++++++++++++
> > include/xen/interface/event_channel.h | 205 +++++++++++++++
> > include/xen/interface/features.h | 53 ++++
> > include/xen/interface/grant_table.h | 311 +++++++++++++++++++++++
> > include/xen/interface/io/blkif.h | 85 ++++++
>
> Shouldn't these be under asm-i386 , or are they used by other
> architecture ?
The full set of interface headers supports several architectures.
I think having all the header files in one place is preferable,
but will gladly move them wherever is agreed on to be best ;-)
christian
On Tue, 2006-05-09 at 17:18 +0100, Christian Limpach wrote:
>
> The full set of interface headers supports several architectures.
>
> I think having all the header files in one place is preferable,
> but will gladly move them wherever is agreed on to be best ;-)
I'd say include/linux/xen/ would be a better choice, if it's multi
architecture ..
Daniel
> > include/xen/interface/arch-x86_32.h | 197 +++++++++++++++
> > include/xen/interface/event_channel.h | 205 +++++++++++++++
> > include/xen/interface/features.h | 53 ++++
> > include/xen/interface/grant_table.h | 311
> +++++++++++++++++++++++
> > include/xen/interface/io/blkif.h | 85 ++++++
>
>
> Shouldn't these be under asm-i386 , or are they used by other
> architecture ?
The latter. Xen also runs on ia64 (and soon ppc) and
many Xen header files are arch-independent.
Dan
On Tue, May 09, 2006 at 07:49:49AM -0700, Martin J. Bligh wrote:
> This clearly doesn't belong:
>
> >+/*
> >+ * Local variables:
> >+ * mode: C
> >+ * c-set-style: "BSD"
> >+ * c-basic-offset: 4
> >+ * tab-width: 4
> >+ * indent-tabs-mode: nil
> >+ * End:
> >+ */
>
> ????
Removed. Thanks.
christian
On Tue, 2006-05-09 at 16:15 +0100, Christoph Hellwig wrote:
>
> > +#ifdef __XEN__
> > +#define __DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE(name, type) \
> > + typedef struct { type *p; } __guest_handle_ ## name
> > +#else
> > +#define __DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE(name, type) \
> > + typedef type * __guest_handle_ ## name
> > +#endif
>
> please get rid of all these stupid typedefs
These typedefs are a new hack to work around a basic interface problem:
instead of explicitly-sized types, Xen uses longs and pointers in its
interface. On PowerPC in particular, where we need a 32-bit userland
communicating with a 64-bit hypervisor, those types don't work.
However, the maintainers are reluctant to switch the interface to use
explicitly-sized types because it would break binary compatibility.
These ugly "HANDLE" macros allow PowerPC to do what we need without
affecting binary compatibility on x86.
--
Hollis Blanchard
IBM Linux Technology Center
Hollis Blanchard wrote:
> On Tue, 2006-05-09 at 16:15 +0100, Christoph Hellwig wrote:
>
>>> +#ifdef __XEN__
>>> +#define __DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE(name, type) \
>>> + typedef struct { type *p; } __guest_handle_ ## name
>>> +#else
>>> +#define __DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE(name, type) \
>>> + typedef type * __guest_handle_ ## name
>>> +#endif
>>>
>> please get rid of all these stupid typedefs
>>
>
> These typedefs are a new hack to work around a basic interface problem:
> instead of explicitly-sized types, Xen uses longs and pointers in its
> interface. On PowerPC in particular, where we need a 32-bit userland
> communicating with a 64-bit hypervisor, those types don't work.
>
> However, the maintainers are reluctant to switch the interface to use
> explicitly-sized types because it would break binary compatibility.
> These ugly "HANDLE" macros allow PowerPC to do what we need without
> affecting binary compatibility on x86.
>
Is this strictly true though? The ABI for Power and x86 are not
necessarily dependent on each other. One could just as easily define a
typedef like:
#if defined(__ppc__)
typedef uint64_t guest_handle_t;
#elif defined(__x86__)
typedef unsigned long guest_handle_t;
#endif
I thought the use of GUEST_HANDLE was to maintain type safety. It
certainly helps the issue you point out but it's not strictly necessary.
IMHO, this trick makes the code pretty ugly. I'd rather see it
disappear in favor of something more akin to the above.
Regards,
Anthony Liguori
On Tue, May 09, 2006 at 02:35:09PM -0500, Hollis Blanchard wrote:
> These typedefs are a new hack to work around a basic interface problem:
> instead of explicitly-sized types, Xen uses longs and pointers in its
> interface. On PowerPC in particular, where we need a 32-bit userland
> communicating with a 64-bit hypervisor, those types don't work.
>
> However, the maintainers are reluctant to switch the interface to use
> explicitly-sized types because it would break binary compatibility.
> These ugly "HANDLE" macros allow PowerPC to do what we need without
> affecting binary compatibility on x86.
this stuff needs to be fixed on x86 aswell. if the xen people don't
even fix up their code because of silly abi concerns we should better
not merge it at all.
Hi Christoph,
On Tuesday, 9. May 2006 17:15, Christoph Hellwig wrote:
> > Signed-off-by: Christian Limpach <[email protected]>
> > Signed-off-by: Chris Wright <[email protected]>
> > ---
> > include/xen/interface/arch-x86_32.h | 197 +++++++++++++++
>
> that kind of stuff needs to go to asm/
>
> > include/xen/interface/event_channel.h | 205 +++++++++++++++
>
> instead of interface please use something shorter, we'll see this
> all over the includes statements. intf for example.
I like them and think they are quite clear.
Documentation/CodingStyle Chapter 4: Naming
seem to apply here.
And since you type the include only ONCE per file,
this looks like a good trade, doesn't it?
Regards
Ingo Oeser