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author | Alex Williamson <alex.williamson@redhat.com> | 2016-05-26 09:43:22 -0600 |
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committer | Alex Williamson <alex.williamson@redhat.com> | 2016-05-26 11:12:05 -0600 |
commit | 0eb734241762bc63bf8308bed3573431f195ddcf (patch) | |
tree | fede47e510b9e2b6f604117be07b7e6221678be8 /docs | |
parent | 6ced0bba70ff557792b781ad35366de03bcd105b (diff) | |
download | qemu-0eb734241762bc63bf8308bed3573431f195ddcf.tar.gz qemu-0eb734241762bc63bf8308bed3573431f195ddcf.tar.bz2 qemu-0eb734241762bc63bf8308bed3573431f195ddcf.zip |
vfio/pci: Add IGD documentation
Document the usage modes, host primary graphics considerations, usage,
and fw_cfg ABI required for IGD assignment with vfio.
Signed-off-by: Alex Williamson <alex.williamson@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Gerd Hoffmann <kraxel@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Gerd Hoffmann <kraxel@redhat.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'docs')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/igd-assign.txt | 133 |
1 files changed, 133 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/docs/igd-assign.txt b/docs/igd-assign.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..e17bb50789 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/igd-assign.txt @@ -0,0 +1,133 @@ +Intel Graphics Device (IGD) assignment with vfio-pci +==================================================== + +IGD has two different modes for assignment using vfio-pci: + +1) Universal Pass-Through (UPT) mode: + + In this mode the IGD device is added as a *secondary* (ie. non-primary) + graphics device in combination with an emulated primary graphics device. + This mode *requires* guest driver support to remove the external + dependencies generally associated with IGD (see below). Those guest + drivers only support this mode for Broadwell and newer IGD, according to + Intel. Additionally, this mode by default, and as officially supported + by Intel, does not support direct video output. The intention is to use + this mode either to provide hardware acceleration to the emulated graphics + or to use this mode in combination with guest-based remote access software, + for example VNC (see below for optional output support). This mode + theoretically has no device specific handling dependencies on vfio-pci or + the VM firmware. + +2) "Legacy" mode: + + In this mode the IGD device is intended to be the primary and exclusive + graphics device in the VM[1], as such QEMU does not facilitate any sort + of remote graphics to the VM in this mode. A connected physical monitor + is the intended output device for IGD. This mode includes several + requirements and restrictions: + + * IGD must be given address 02.0 on the PCI root bus in the VM + * The host kernel must support vfio extensions for IGD (v4.6) + * vfio VGA support very likely needs to be enabled in the host kernel + * The VM firmware must support specific fw_cfg enablers for IGD + * The VM machine type must support a PCI host bridge at 00.0 (standard) + * The VM machine type must provide or allow to be created a special + ISA/LPC bridge device (vfio-pci-igd-lpc-bridge) on the root bus at + PCI address 1f.0. + * The IGD device must have a VGA ROM, either provided via the romfile + option or loaded automatically through vfio (standard). rombar=0 + will disable legacy mode support. + * Hotplug of the IGD device is not supported. + * The IGD device must be a SandyBridge or newer model device. + +For either mode, depending on the host kernel, the i915 driver in the host +may generate faults and errors upon re-binding to an IGD device after it +has been assigned to a VM. It's therefore generally recommended to prevent +such driver binding unless the host driver is known to work well for this. +There are numerous ways to do this, i915 can be blacklisted on the host, +the driver_override option can be used to ensure that only vfio-pci can bind +to the device on the host[2], virsh nodedev-detach can be used to bind the +device to vfio drivers and then managed='no' set in the VM xml to prevent +re-binding to i915, etc. Also note that IGD is also typically the primary +graphics in the host and special options may be required beyond simply +blacklisting i915 or using pci-stub/vfio-pci to take ownership of IGD as a +PCI class device. Lower level drivers exist that may still claim the device. +It may therefore be necessary to use kernel boot options video=vesafb:off or +video=efifb:off (depending on host BIOS/UEFI) or these can be combined to +a catch-all, video=vesafb:off,efifb:off. Error messages such as: + + Failed to mmap 0000:00:02.0 BAR <>. Performance may be slow + +are a good indicator that such a problem exists. The host files /proc/iomem +and /proc/ioports are often useful for identifying drivers consuming ranges +of the device to cause such conflicts. + +Additionally, IGD device are known to generate small numbers of DMAR faults +when initially assigned. It is believed that this is simply the IGD attempting +to access the reserved GTT space after reset, which it no longer has access to +when accessed from userspace. So long as the DMAR faults are small in number +and most importantly, not ongoing, these are not an indication of an error. + +Additionally++, analog VGA output (as opposed to digital outputs like HDMI, +DVI, or DisplayPort) may be unsupported in some use cases. In the author's +experience, even DP to VGA adapters can be troublesome while adapters between +digital formats work well. + +Usage +===== +The intention is for IGD assignment to be transparent for users and thus for +management tools like libvirt. To make use of legacy mode, simply remove all +other graphics options and use "-nographic" and either "-vga none" or +"-nodefaults", along with adding the device using vfio-pci: + + -device vfio-pci,host=00:02.0,id=hostdev0,bus=pci.0,addr=0x2 + +For UPT mode, retain the default emulated graphics and simply add the vfio-pci +device making use of any other bus address other than 02.0. libvirt will +default to assigning the device a UPT compatible address while legacy mode +users will need to manually edit the XML if using a tool like virt-manager +where the VM device address is not expressly specified. + +An experimental vfio-pci option also exists to enable OpRegion, and thus +external monitor support, for UPT mode. This can be enabled by adding +"x-igd-opregion=on" to the vfio-pci device options for the IGD device. As +with legacy mode, this requires the host to support features introduced in +the v4.6 kernel. If Intel chooses to embrace this support, the option may +be made non-experimental in the future, opening it to libvirt support. + +Developer ABI +============= +Legacy mode IGD support imposes two fw_cfg requirements on the VM firmware: + +1) "etc/igd-opregion" + + This fw_cfg file exposes the OpRegion for the IGD device. A reserved + region should be created below 4GB (recommended 4KB alignment), sized + sufficient for the fw_cfg file size, and the content of this file copied + to it. The dword based address of this reserved memory region must also + be written to the ASLS register at offset 0xFC on the IGD device. It is + recommended that firmware should make use of this fw_cfg entry for any + PCI class VGA device with Intel vendor ID. Multiple of such devices + within a VM is undefined. + +2) "etc/igd-bdsm-size" + + This fw_cfg file contains an 8-byte, little endian integer indicating + the size of the reserved memory region required for IGD stolen memory. + Firmware must allocate a reserved memory below 4GB with required 1MB + alignment equal to this size. Additionally the base address of this + reserved region must be written to the dword BDSM register in PCI config + space of the IGD device at offset 0x5C. As this support is related to + running the IGD ROM, which has other dependencies on the device appearing + at guest address 00:02.0, it's expected that this fw_cfg file is only + relevant to a single PCI class VGA device with Intel vendor ID, appearing + at PCI bus address 00:02.0. + +Footnotes +========= +[1] Nothing precludes adding additional emulated or assigned graphics devices + as non-primary, other than the combination typically not working. I only + intend to set user expectations, others are welcome to find working + combinations or fix whatever issues prevent this from working in the common + case. +[2] # echo "vfio-pci" > /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000:00:02.0/driver_override |