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Re: [Xen-devel] Xen on Arm guest memory mapping



On 7 May 2013 17:39, Ian Campbell <Ian.Campbell@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> On Tue, 2013-05-07 at 15:25 +0100, Sander Bogaert wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> I went over xen/arch/arm/domain_build.c (especially set_memory_reg(..)
>> ) trying to figure out how Xen maps memory to guest and assigns the
>> virtual addresses. I couldn't find documentation on this, might have
>> been looking in the wrong place?
>>
>> I understand the x86 start_page isn't used and everything is passed
>> using a device tree. This tree is in the linux kernel repo and
>> attached to the zImage. Xen reads the dtb and adapts it. The guest
>> then parses the dtb to get info about the assigned memory.
>
> Xen currently only does this read+adapt for dom0.
>
> For domU the appended dtb is currently just passed on. Eventually the
> Xen tools will generate the dtb themselves from first principals to
> reflect the configuration of the guest. This is (very briefly) mentioned
> at
> http://wiki.xen.org/wiki/Xen_ARM_TODO#Autogenerate_DomU.27s_device_trees
>
>> * What if there is no dtb attached? My guest ( ELF, not zImage ) seems
>> to boot anyway but the domain_build code seems to always use a
>> devicetree. where does it get one?
>
> Device Tree is just a way to describe a hardware platform to a kernel.
> You could equally well (FSV of well) hardcode all the relevant details
> into the kernel, since your ELF guest likely doesn't know anything about
> DT you must be (effectively) hardcoding things.
>
> If you are hardcoding instead of parsing DT then your guest cfg file and
> your guest kernel need to agree some of the dynamic stuff, such as the
> amount of RAM the guest is going to have and its location in the
> physical address map.
>
> In the absence of the dtb generation code mentioned above the Xen guest
> domain builder places the RAM at 0x80000000 up to whatever size you give
> in your guest configuration.
>
>> * From what I understand of the set_memory_reg() function mentioned
>
> Note that this function is only called when building domain 0.
> xen/arch/arm/domain_build.c is the initial domain builder only,
> subsequent guests are built by the userspace stuff in tools/libxc.
>
>> before it does the following ( as long as there is unassigned memory &
>> banks left ):
>>     1. read the value from the dt
>>     2. if there is more room then unassigned memory only use the
>> amount unassigned
>>     3. write out to the dt again
>>     4. actually allocate it using p2m_populate_ram
>>
>>  => This seems to indicate the xen doesn't adapt the dt if it fits and
>> just allocates those addresses.
>
> For dom0 Xen effectively trucates the underlying platform's memory to
> only be as large as the specified dom0_mem.
>
>>  This doesn't seem to be true since
>> they are set at 0x8000000 (xenvm-4.2.dts) and that's a machine
>
> NB xenvm-4.2.dts is a domU dts not a dom0 one. For dom0 you would use
> the DTS for your actual platform.
>
>> address. The guest needs to receive/work with virtual ones does it
>> not?
>
> No, the guest gets physical addresses here.
>
>>  Is the dt adapted before this call, I couldn't find where?
>>
>> * How does Xen pick the virtual addresses?
>
> It doesn't. On ARM the guest is in complete control of its own virtual
> address space. Guests are started with paging disabled. For the most
> part Xen doesn't care about the guest's virtual address mappings.
>
> Ian.
>
>

Thanks a lot for these answers, they are very useful! So if I
understand this correctly in order to have multiple guests in Xen on
Arm one has to adapt the dts files so they all have a different part
of the memory.

Sander

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