[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] Xen's Linux kernel config options
On Thu, Feb 19, 2015 at 3:43 PM, Luis R. Rodriguez <mcgrof@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Fri, Dec 12, 2014 at 9:29 AM, David Vrabel <david.vrabel@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> On 12/12/14 13:17, Juergen Gross wrote: >>> XEN_PVHVM >> >> Move XEN_PVHVM under XEN and have it select PARAVIRT and PARAVIRT_CLOCK. > > FWIW, although it seems we do not want to let users just build > XEN_PVHVM hypervisors I have the changes required now to at least get > this to build so I do know what it takes. > >>> XEN_FRONTEND XEN_PV || >>> XEN_PVH || >>> XEN_PVHVM >> >> This enables all the basic infrastructure for frontends: event channels, >> grant tables and Xenbus. >> >> Don't make XEN_FRONTEND depend on any XEN_* variant. It should be >> possible to have frontend drivers without support for any of the >> PV/PVHVM/PVH guest types. > > David, can you elaborate on the type of Xen guest it would be on x86 > its not PV, PVHVM, or PVH? I'm particularly curious about the > xen_domain_type and how it would end up to selected. As it is we tie > in XEN_PVHVM at build time with XEN_PVH, in order to have XEN_PVHVM > completely removed from XEN_PVH we need quite a bit of code changes > which at least as code exercise I have completed already. If we want > at the very least xen_domain_type set when XEN_PV, XEN_PVHVM, and > XEN_PVH are not available we need a bit more work. OK I think I see the issue. We have nothing quite like xen_guest_init() on x86 enlighten.c, we do have this for ARM and I think I can that close the gap I'm observing. >> Frontends only need event channels, grant >> table and xenbus. > > Well xenbus_probe_initcall() will check for xen_domain() and that > won't be set on x86 right now unless we have XEN_PV, XEN_PVHVM or > XEN_PVH set -- to start off with. Then > drivers/xen/xenbus/xenbus_client.c will check xen_feature in quite a > bit of places as well, that won't be set unless xen_setup_features() > is called which right now is only done on x86 arch/x86/xen/enlighten.c > which as Juergen pointed out, is not needed if you don't have XEN_PV > or XEN_PVH. As it turns out this is incorrect though, its needed for > XEN_PVHVM as well and my split exercise in code addresses this. Now, > at least in my code if you don't have XEN_PV, XEN_PVHVM, or XEN_PVH we > don't call xen_setup_features() and its unclear to me where or how > that should happen in other cases. Yeah I think having an x86 equivalent of xen_guest_init() would solve this, Stefano, thoughts? >> Perhaps have XEN_FRONTEND select XEN instead? > > Right now if you enable CONFIG_XEN xen-head.S brings in and assumes a > big tamale of guest support on x86, there are quite a bit of other > code that also relies on CONFIG_XEN for similar purposes, and trying > to remove out XEN_FRONTEND dependency from XEN_PV, XEN_PVHVM, XEN_PVH > requires quite a bit work, most of which I think I've done, the only > puzzle remaining to me at least is what we want to do for the setup > for non XEN_PV, XEN_PVHVM, XEN_PVH Linux systems. And with a xen_guest_init() this should still need to be resolved, and I think I have this mostly addressed already in my dev branch, just have to clean it up. Luis _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xen.org/xen-devel
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