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author | Anthony Liguori <aliguori@us.ibm.com> | 2013-04-22 08:05:05 -0500 |
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committer | Anthony Liguori <aliguori@us.ibm.com> | 2013-04-22 08:05:05 -0500 |
commit | 6165daa4c8431d9d60382352864b46f34dd61ab4 (patch) | |
tree | 9d49f1cb3dca5ce3da719738550ca10c8c248b0c /docs | |
parent | d639498852773a6019cf1b970dd8dc2f3791c45b (diff) | |
parent | d6e51919a7e3250bbfb4bb0ad0f208ab6fd688a4 (diff) | |
download | qemu-6165daa4c8431d9d60382352864b46f34dd61ab4.zip qemu-6165daa4c8431d9d60382352864b46f34dd61ab4.tar.gz qemu-6165daa4c8431d9d60382352864b46f34dd61ab4.tar.bz2 |
Merge remote-tracking branch 'bonzini/scsi-next' into staging
# By Paolo Bonzini (5) and others
# Via Paolo Bonzini
* bonzini/scsi-next:
vhost-scsi-s390: new device supporting the tcm_vhost Linux kernel module
vhost-scsi-ccw: new device supporting the tcm_vhost Linux kernel module
vhost-scsi-pci: new device supporting the tcm_vhost Linux kernel module
vhost-scsi: new device supporting the tcm_vhost Linux kernel module
virtio: simplify Makefile conditionals
virtio-scsi: create VirtIOSCSICommon
vhost: Add vhost_commit callback for SeaBIOS ROM region re-mapping
scsi: VMWare PVSCSI paravirtual device implementation
scsi: avoid assertion failure on VERIFY command
Message-id: 1366381460-6041-1-git-send-email-pbonzini@redhat.com
Signed-off-by: Anthony Liguori <aliguori@us.ibm.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'docs')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/specs/vmw_pvscsi-spec.txt | 92 |
1 files changed, 92 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/docs/specs/vmw_pvscsi-spec.txt b/docs/specs/vmw_pvscsi-spec.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..49affb2 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/specs/vmw_pvscsi-spec.txt @@ -0,0 +1,92 @@ +General Description +=================== + +This document describes VMWare PVSCSI device interface specification. +Created by Dmitry Fleytman (dmitry@daynix.com), Daynix Computing LTD. +Based on source code of PVSCSI Linux driver from kernel 3.0.4 + +PVSCSI Device Interface Overview +================================ + +The interface is based on memory area shared between hypervisor and VM. +Memory area is obtained by driver as device IO memory resource of +PVSCSI_MEM_SPACE_SIZE length. +The shared memory consists of registers area and rings area. +The registers area is used to raise hypervisor interrupts and issue device +commands. The rings area is used to transfer data descriptors and SCSI +commands from VM to hypervisor and to transfer messages produced by +hypervisor to VM. Data itself is transferred via virtual scatter-gather DMA. + +PVSCSI Device Registers +======================= + +The length of the registers area is 1 page (PVSCSI_MEM_SPACE_COMMAND_NUM_PAGES). +The structure of the registers area is described by the PVSCSIRegOffset enum. +There are registers to issue device command (with optional short data), +issue device interrupt, control interrupts masking. + +PVSCSI Device Rings +=================== + +There are three rings in shared memory: + + 1. Request ring (struct PVSCSIRingReqDesc *req_ring) + - ring for OS to device requests + 2. Completion ring (struct PVSCSIRingCmpDesc *cmp_ring) + - ring for device request completions + 3. Message ring (struct PVSCSIRingMsgDesc *msg_ring) + - ring for messages from device. + This ring is optional and the guest might not configure it. +There is a control area (struct PVSCSIRingsState *rings_state) used to control +rings operation. + +PVSCSI Device to Host Interrupts +================================ +There are following interrupt types supported by PVSCSI device: + 1. Completion interrupts (completion ring notifications): + PVSCSI_INTR_CMPL_0 + PVSCSI_INTR_CMPL_1 + 2. Message interrupts (message ring notifications): + PVSCSI_INTR_MSG_0 + PVSCSI_INTR_MSG_1 + +Interrupts are controlled via PVSCSI_REG_OFFSET_INTR_MASK register +Bit set means interrupt enabled, bit cleared - disabled + +Interrupt modes supported are legacy, MSI and MSI-X +In case of legacy interrupts, register PVSCSI_REG_OFFSET_INTR_STATUS +is used to check which interrupt has arrived. Interrupts are +acknowledged when the corresponding bit is written to the interrupt +status register. + +PVSCSI Device Operation Sequences +================================= + +1. Startup sequence: + a. Issue PVSCSI_CMD_ADAPTER_RESET command; + aa. Windows driver reads interrupt status register here; + b. Issue PVSCSI_CMD_SETUP_MSG_RING command with no additional data, + check status and disable device messages if error returned; + (Omitted if device messages disabled by driver configuration) + c. Issue PVSCSI_CMD_SETUP_RINGS command, provide rings configuration + as struct PVSCSICmdDescSetupRings; + d. Issue PVSCSI_CMD_SETUP_MSG_RING command again, provide + rings configuration as struct PVSCSICmdDescSetupMsgRing; + e. Unmask completion and message (if device messages enabled) interrupts. + +2. Shutdown sequences + a. Mask interrupts; + b. Flush request ring using PVSCSI_REG_OFFSET_KICK_NON_RW_IO; + c. Issue PVSCSI_CMD_ADAPTER_RESET command. + +3. Send request + a. Fill next free request ring descriptor; + b. Issue PVSCSI_REG_OFFSET_KICK_RW_IO for R/W operations; + or PVSCSI_REG_OFFSET_KICK_NON_RW_IO for other operations. + +4. Abort command + a. Issue PVSCSI_CMD_ABORT_CMD command; + +5. Request completion processing + a. Upon completion interrupt arrival process completion + and message (if enabled) rings. |