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Re: [Qemu-devel] [qemu PATCH] hw/i386/pc_sysfw: support more than one fl
From: |
Markus Armbruster |
Subject: |
Re: [Qemu-devel] [qemu PATCH] hw/i386/pc_sysfw: support more than one flash drive |
Date: |
Tue, 26 Nov 2013 14:11:11 +0100 |
User-agent: |
Gnus/5.13 (Gnus v5.13) Emacs/24.2 (gnu/linux) |
Laszlo Ersek <address@hidden> writes:
> On 11/25/13 16:32, Markus Armbruster wrote:
>> Laszlo Ersek <address@hidden> writes:
>>
>>> This patch allows the user to usefully specify
>>>
>>> -drive file=img_1,if=pflash,format=raw,readonly \
>>> -drive file=img_2,if=pflash,format=raw
>>>
>>> on the command line. The flash images will be mapped under 4G in their
>>> reverse unit order -- that is, with their base addresses progressing
>>> downwards, in increasing unit order.
>>>
>>> (The unit number increases with command line order if not explicitly
>>> specified.)
>>>
>>> This accommodates the following use case: suppose that OVMF is split in
>>> two parts, a writeable host file for non-volatile variable storage, and a
>>> read-only part for bootstrap and decompressible executable code.
>>>
>>> The binary code part would be read-only, centrally managed on the host
>>> system, and passed in as unit 0. The variable store would be writeable,
>>> VM-specific, and passed in as unit 1.
>>>
>>> 00000000ffe00000-00000000ffe1ffff (prio 0, R-): system.flash1
>>> 00000000ffe20000-00000000ffffffff (prio 0, R-): system.flash0
>>>
>>> (If the guest tries to write to the flash range that is backed by the
>>> read-only drive, bdrv_write() in pflash_update() will correctly deny the
>>> write with -EACCES, and pflash_update() won't care, which suits us well.)
>>>
>>> Signed-off-by: Laszlo Ersek <address@hidden>
>>> ---
>>> hw/i386/pc_sysfw.c | 60
>>> ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++--------------
>>> 1 file changed, 45 insertions(+), 15 deletions(-)
>>>
>>> diff --git a/hw/i386/pc_sysfw.c b/hw/i386/pc_sysfw.c
>>> index e917c83..1c3e3d6 100644
>>> --- a/hw/i386/pc_sysfw.c
>>> +++ b/hw/i386/pc_sysfw.c
>>> @@ -72,35 +72,65 @@ static void pc_isa_bios_init(MemoryRegion *rom_memory,
>>> memory_region_set_readonly(isa_bios, true);
>>> }
>>>
>>> +/* This function maps flash drives from 4G downward, in order of their unit
>>> + * numbers. Addressing within one flash drive is of course not reversed.
>>> + *
>>> + * The drive with unit number 0 is mapped at the highest address, and it is
>>> + * passed to pc_isa_bios_init(). Merging severral drives for isa-bios is
>>> not
>>> + * supported.
>>> + *
>>> + * The caller is responsible to pass in the non-NULL @pflash_drv that
>>> + * corresponds to the flash drive with unit number 0.
>>> + */
>>> static void pc_system_flash_init(MemoryRegion *rom_memory,
>>> DriveInfo *pflash_drv)
>>> {
>>> + int unit = 0;
>>> BlockDriverState *bdrv;
>>> int64_t size;
>>> - hwaddr phys_addr;
>>> + hwaddr phys_addr = 0x100000000ULL;
>>> int sector_bits, sector_size;
>>> pflash_t *system_flash;
>>> MemoryRegion *flash_mem;
>>> + char name[64];
>>>
>>> - bdrv = pflash_drv->bdrv;
>>> - size = bdrv_getlength(pflash_drv->bdrv);
>>> sector_bits = 12;
>>> sector_size = 1 << sector_bits;
>>>
>>> - if ((size % sector_size) != 0) {
>>> - fprintf(stderr,
>>> - "qemu: PC system firmware (pflash) must be a multiple of
>>> 0x%x\n",
>>> - sector_size);
>>> - exit(1);
>>> - }
>>> + do {
>>> + bdrv = pflash_drv->bdrv;
>>> + size = bdrv_getlength(bdrv);
>>> + if ((size % sector_size) != 0) {
>>> + fprintf(stderr,
>>> + "qemu: PC system firmware (pflash segment %d) must be
>>> a "
>>> + "multiple of 0x%x\n", unit, sector_size);
>>> + exit(1);
>>> + }
>>> + if (size > phys_addr) {
>>> + fprintf(stderr, "qemu: pflash segments must fit under 4G "
>>> + "cumulatively\n");
You're just following existing bad practice here, but correct use of
error_report() would give you nicer messages. Happy to explain if
you're interested.
>> I suspect things go haywire long before you hit address zero.
>>
>> Note that both pc_piix.c and pc_q35.c leave a hole in RAM just below 4G.
>> The former's hole starts at 0xe0000000, the latter's at 0xb0000000.
>> Should that be the limit?
>
> I wanted to do the bare minimal here, to catch obviously wrong backing
> drives (like a 10G file). This is already more verification than what
> the current code does.
>
> I wouldn't mind more a specific check, but I don't want to suggest (with
> more specific code) that it's actually *safe* to go down to the limit
> that I'd put here.
>
> For example, the IO-APIC mmio range is [0xFEE00000..0xFEE01000[, leaving
> free 18MB-4KB just below 4G. (Of which the current OVMF, including
> variable store, takes up 2MB.) Grep IO_APIC_DEFAULT_ADDRESS.
>
> I just don't want to send the message "it's safe to go all the way down
> there". Right now the responsibility is with the user (you can specify a
> single pflash device that's 20MB in size even now), and I'd like to
> stick with that.
>
> I believe that
>
> pflash_cfi01_register()
> sysbus_mmio_map()
> sysbus_mmio_map_common()
> memory_region_add_subregion()
> memory_region_add_subregion_common()
>
> could, in theory, find a conflict at runtime (see the #if 0-surrounded
> collision warning in memory_region_add_subregion_common()). But the
> memory API doesn't consider such collisions hard errors, and no status
> code is propagated to the caller.
>
> So, if a saner / more reliable limit can be identified, I wouldn't mind
> checking against that, but right now I know of no such sane / general
> enough limit.
If the caller knows the true limit, it could pass it.
If the true limit isn't practical to find, then what about a comment
explaining the problem?
>>> + exit(1);
>>> + }
>>>
>>> - phys_addr = 0x100000000ULL - size;
>>> - system_flash = pflash_cfi01_register(phys_addr, NULL,
>>> "system.flash", size,
>>> - bdrv, sector_size, size >> sector_bits,
>>> - 1, 0x0000, 0x0000, 0x0000, 0x0000, 0);
>>> - flash_mem = pflash_cfi01_get_memory(system_flash);
>>> + phys_addr -= size;
>>>
>>> - pc_isa_bios_init(rom_memory, flash_mem, size);
>>> + /* pflash_cfi01_register() creates a deep copy of the name */
>>> + snprintf(name, sizeof name, "system.flash%d", unit);
>>> + system_flash = pflash_cfi01_register(phys_addr, NULL /* qdev */,
>>> name,
>>> + size, bdrv, sector_size,
>>> + size >> sector_bits,
>>> + 1 /* width */,
>>> + 0x0000 /* id0 */,
>>> + 0x0000 /* id1 */,
>>> + 0x0000 /* id2 */,
>>> + 0x0000 /* id3 */,
>>> + 0 /* be */);
>>> + if (unit == 0) {
>>> + flash_mem = pflash_cfi01_get_memory(system_flash);
>>> + pc_isa_bios_init(rom_memory, flash_mem, size);
>>> + }
>>> + pflash_drv = drive_get(IF_PFLASH, 0, ++unit);
>>> + } while (pflash_drv != NULL);
>>> }
>>>
>>> static void old_pc_system_rom_init(MemoryRegion *rom_memory, bool
>>> isapc_ram_fw)
>>
>> The drive with index 0 is passed as parameter pflash_drv. The others
>> the function gets itself. I find that ugly. Have you considered
>> dropping the parameter?
>
> I didn't like drive_get() to begin with. It always starts to scan the
> drive list from the beginning, which makes the new loop in
> pc_system_flash_init() O(n^2).
Yes, it's pretty stupid, but n is small, and the code runs only during
initialization.
> I was missing an interator-style interface for the drives, but I found
> none, and I thought that iterating myself through them in O(n) (and
> checking for the types) would break the current DriveInfo encapsulation.
> So I kinda gave up on "elegance".
Legacy drives and elegance are about as attracted to each other as oil
and water.
> Ideally, what should be dropped is the "unit" local variable in
> pc_system_flash_init(). The function should continue to take
> "pflash_drv", which should however qualify as a pre-initialized
> iterator. Then pc_system_flash_init() should traverse it until it runs out.
Yes, that would work, but requires a bit of new blockdev infrastructure.
> I can of course remove the parameter and start a "while" loop
> (rather than a "do" loop) with drive_get(IF_PFLASH, 0, 0), if you
> consider that an improvement.
I'm partial to for-loops that let me see the complete loop control in
one glance:
for (unit = 0; drv = drive_get(IF_PFLASH, 0, unit); unit++)
- Re: [Qemu-devel] [qemu PATCH] hw/i386/pc_sysfw: support more than one flash drive, (continued)
- Re: [Qemu-devel] [edk2] [qemu PATCH] hw/i386/pc_sysfw: support more than one flash drive, Paolo Bonzini, 2013/11/26
- Re: [Qemu-devel] [edk2] [qemu PATCH] hw/i386/pc_sysfw: support more than one flash drive, Laszlo Ersek, 2013/11/26
- Re: [Qemu-devel] [edk2] [qemu PATCH] hw/i386/pc_sysfw: support more than one flash drive, Paolo Bonzini, 2013/11/26
- Re: [Qemu-devel] [qemu PATCH] hw/i386/pc_sysfw: support more than one flash drive, Markus Armbruster, 2013/11/26
- Re: [Qemu-devel] [qemu PATCH] hw/i386/pc_sysfw: support more than one flash drive, Laszlo Ersek, 2013/11/26
Re: [Qemu-devel] [qemu PATCH] hw/i386/pc_sysfw: support more than one flash drive, Markus Armbruster, 2013/11/25