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QEMU Virtual NVDIMM
===================

This document explains the usage of virtual NVDIMM (vNVDIMM) feature
which is available since QEMU v2.6.0.

The current QEMU only implements the persistent memory mode of vNVDIMM
device and not the block window mode.

Basic Usage
-----------

The storage of a vNVDIMM device in QEMU is provided by the memory
backend (i.e. memory-backend-file and memory-backend-ram). A simple
way to create a vNVDIMM device at startup time is done via the
following command line options:

 -machine pc,nvdimm
 -m $RAM_SIZE,slots=$N,maxmem=$MAX_SIZE
 -object memory-backend-file,id=mem1,share=on,mem-path=$PATH,size=$NVDIMM_SIZE
 -device nvdimm,id=nvdimm1,memdev=mem1

Where,

 - the "nvdimm" machine option enables vNVDIMM feature.

 - "slots=$N" should be equal to or larger than the total amount of
   normal RAM devices and vNVDIMM devices, e.g. $N should be >= 2 here.

 - "maxmem=$MAX_SIZE" should be equal to or larger than the total size
   of normal RAM devices and vNVDIMM devices, e.g. $MAX_SIZE should be
   >= $RAM_SIZE + $NVDIMM_SIZE here.

 - "object memory-backend-file,id=mem1,share=on,mem-path=$PATH,size=$NVDIMM_SIZE"
   creates a backend storage of size $NVDIMM_SIZE on a file $PATH. All
   accesses to the virtual NVDIMM device go to the file $PATH.

   "share=on/off" controls the visibility of guest writes. If
   "share=on", then guest writes will be applied to the backend
   file. If another guest uses the same backend file with option
   "share=on", then above writes will be visible to it as well. If
   "share=off", then guest writes won't be applied to the backend
   file and thus will be invisible to other guests.

 - "device nvdimm,id=nvdimm1,memdev=mem1" creates a virtual NVDIMM
   device whose storage is provided by above memory backend device.

Multiple vNVDIMM devices can be created if multiple pairs of "-object"
and "-device" are provided.

For above command line options, if the guest OS has the proper NVDIMM
driver, it should be able to detect a NVDIMM device which is in the
persistent memory mode and whose size is $NVDIMM_SIZE.

Note:

1. Prior to QEMU v2.8.0, if memory-backend-file is used and the actual
   backend file size is not equal to the size given by "size" option,
   QEMU will truncate the backend file by ftruncate(2), which will
   corrupt the existing data in the backend file, especially for the
   shrink case.

   QEMU v2.8.0 and later check the backend file size and the "size"
   option. If they do not match, QEMU will report errors and abort in
   order to avoid the data corruption.

2. QEMU v2.6.0 only puts a basic alignment requirement on the "size"
   option of memory-backend-file, e.g. 4KB alignment on x86.  However,
   QEMU v.2.7.0 puts an additional alignment requirement, which may
   require a larger value than the basic one, e.g. 2MB on x86. This
   change breaks the usage of memory-backend-file that only satisfies
   the basic alignment.

   QEMU v2.8.0 and later remove the additional alignment on non-s390x
   architectures, so the broken memory-backend-file can work again.

Label
-----

QEMU v2.7.0 and later implement the label support for vNVDIMM devices.
To enable label on vNVDIMM devices, users can simply add
"label-size=$SZ" option to "-device nvdimm", e.g.

 -device nvdimm,id=nvdimm1,memdev=mem1,label-size=128K

Note:

1. The minimal label size is 128KB.

2. QEMU v2.7.0 and later store labels at the end of backend storage.
   If a memory backend file, which was previously used as the backend
   of a vNVDIMM device without labels, is now used for a vNVDIMM
   device with label, the data in the label area at the end of file
   will be inaccessible to the guest. If any useful data (e.g. the
   meta-data of the file system) was stored there, the latter usage
   may result guest data corruption (e.g. breakage of guest file
   system).

Hotplug
-------

QEMU v2.8.0 and later implement the hotplug support for vNVDIMM
devices. Similarly to the RAM hotplug, the vNVDIMM hotplug is
accomplished by two monitor commands "object_add" and "device_add".

For example, the following commands add another 4GB vNVDIMM device to
the guest:

 (qemu) object_add memory-backend-file,id=mem2,share=on,mem-path=new_nvdimm.img,size=4G
 (qemu) device_add nvdimm,id=nvdimm2,memdev=mem2

Note:

1. Each hotplugged vNVDIMM device consumes one memory slot. Users
   should always ensure the memory option "-m ...,slots=N" specifies
   enough number of slots, i.e.
     N >= number of RAM devices +
          number of statically plugged vNVDIMM devices +
          number of hotplugged vNVDIMM devices

2. The similar is required for the memory option "-m ...,maxmem=M", i.e.
     M >= size of RAM devices +
          size of statically plugged vNVDIMM devices +
          size of hotplugged vNVDIMM devices

Alignment
---------

QEMU uses mmap(2) to maps vNVDIMM backends and aligns the mapping
address to the page size (getpagesize(2)) by default. However, some
types of backends may require an alignment different than the page
size. In that case, QEMU v2.12.0 and later provide 'align' option to
memory-backend-file to allow users to specify the proper alignment.

For example, device dax require the 2 MB alignment, so we can use
following QEMU command line options to use it (/dev/dax0.0) as the
backend of vNVDIMM:

 -object memory-backend-file,id=mem1,share=on,mem-path=/dev/dax0.0,size=4G,align=2M
 -device nvdimm,id=nvdimm1,memdev=mem1

Guest Data Persistence
----------------------

Though QEMU supports multiple types of vNVDIMM backends on Linux,
currently the only one that can guarantee the guest write persistence
is the device DAX on the real NVDIMM device (e.g., /dev/dax0.0), to
which all guest access do not involve any host-side kernel cache.

When using other types of backends, it's suggested to set 'unarmed'
option of '-device nvdimm' to 'on', which sets the unarmed flag of the
guest NVDIMM region mapping structure.  This unarmed flag indicates
guest software that this vNVDIMM device contains a region that cannot
accept persistent writes. In result, for example, the guest Linux
NVDIMM driver, marks such vNVDIMM device as read-only.

Platform Capabilities
---------------------

ACPI 6.2 Errata A added support for a new Platform Capabilities Structure
which allows the platform to communicate what features it supports related to
NVDIMM data durability.  Users can provide a capabilities value to a guest via
the optional "nvdimm-cap" machine command line option:

    -machine pc,accel=kvm,nvdimm,nvdimm-cap=2

This "nvdimm-cap" field is an integer, and is the combined value of the
various capability bits defined in table 5-137 of the ACPI 6.2 Errata A spec.

Here is a quick summary of the three bits that are defined as of that spec:

Bit[0] - CPU Cache Flush to NVDIMM Durability on Power Loss Capable.
Bit[1] - Memory Controller Flush to NVDIMM Durability on Power Loss Capable.
         Note: If bit 0 is set to 1 then this bit shall be set to 1 as well.
Bit[2] - Byte Addressable Persistent Memory Hardware Mirroring Capable.

So, a "nvdimm-cap" value of 2 would mean that the platform supports Memory
Controller Flush on Power Loss, a value of 3 would mean that the platform
supports CPU Cache Flush and Memory Controller Flush on Power Loss, etc.

For a complete list of the flags available and for more detailed descriptions,
please consult the ACPI spec.