[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH v4 06/15] domctl: Add XEN_DOMCTL_acpi_access
>>> On 12.12.16 at 17:19, <boris.ostrovsky@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 12/12/2016 09:02 AM, Jan Beulich wrote: >>>>> On 12.12.16 at 14:08, <boris.ostrovsky@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>> On 12/02/2016 02:48 AM, Jan Beulich wrote: >>>>>>> On 01.12.16 at 17:43, <boris.ostrovsky@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>>> On 12/01/2016 11:06 AM, Jan Beulich wrote: >>>>>>> +++ b/xen/include/public/domctl.h >>>>>>> @@ -1144,6 +1144,29 @@ struct xen_domctl_psr_cat_op { >>>>>>> typedef struct xen_domctl_psr_cat_op xen_domctl_psr_cat_op_t; >>>>>>> DEFINE_XEN_GUEST_HANDLE(xen_domctl_psr_cat_op_t); >>>>>>> >>>>>>> +/* ACPI Generic Address Structure */ >>>>>>> +typedef struct gas { >>>>>> xen_acpi_gas >>>>>> >>>>>>> +#define XEN_ACPI_SYSTEM_MEMORY 0 >>>>>>> +#define XEN_ACPI_SYSTEM_IO 1 >>>>>>> + uint8_t space_id; /* Address space */ >>>>>>> + uint8_t bit_width; /* Size in bits of given register */ >>>>>>> + uint8_t bit_offset; /* Bit offset within the register */ >>>>>>> + uint8_t access_width; /* Minimum Access size (ACPI 3.0) */ >>>>>>> + uint64_t address; /* 64-bit address of register */ >>>>>> uint64_aligned_t with explicit padding added ahead of it. >>>>>> >>>>>> And then there's the question of what uses of this will look like: >>>>>> I'm not convinced we need to stick to the exact ACPI layout >>>>>> here, unless you expect (or could imagine) for the tool stack to >>>>>> hold GAS structures coming from elsewhere in its hands. If we >>>>>> don't follow the layout as strictly, we could namely widen >>>>>> bit_width (and maybe bit_offset) to allow for larger transfers >>>>>> in one go. And in such a relaxed model I don't think we'd need >>>>>> access_width at all as a field. >>>>> There is indeed no current need to use actual ACPI GAS layout but then >>>>> it's not GAS, really, and should be named something else. >>>> Which of course is fine by me; I had referred to that structure only >>>> for the underlying principle of specifying how to access the data. >>> Are there any registers that are not byte-aligned or not whole number of >>> bytes? >>> >>> I am thinking about dropping bit_offset (along with access_width) and >>> making bit_width (byte_)width. And keeping the latter as uint8_t will >>> also implicitly limit register size to 256 bytes which I think is a >>> reasonable size limit. >> Since we're doing the emulation (and hence defining the registers) >> we could require no such unusual registers. This would be something >> we can't simplify only if we foresee ever needing to hand through a >> hardware register without interposing any emulation. >> >> Whether limiting to 256 bytes is reasonable I'm not so sure, otoh. > > When would we ever need to access anything larger? I'd think that the > common case is a few (1-4) bytes. The one instance when this is not true > is the VCPU map and 256 bytes allow for 16K VCPUs, which I suspect we > won't reach in a while. > > But I can increase the length to uint16_t if you feel it's would be better. It's domctl, so we can change it later anyway. As said - I'm not really sure here. Jan _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.xen.org/xen-devel
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