Virtio Devices High-Level Design

The ACRN hypervisor follows the Virtual I/O Device (virtio) specification to realize I/O virtualization for many performance-critical devices supported in the ACRN project. Adopting the virtio specification lets us reuse many frontend virtio drivers already available in a Linux-based User VM, drastically reducing potential development effort for frontend virtio drivers. To further reduce the development effort of backend virtio drivers, the hypervisor provides the virtio backend service (VBS) APIs, that make it very straightforward to implement a virtio device in the hypervisor.

The virtio APIs can be divided into 3 groups: DM APIs, virtio backend service (VBS) APIs, and virtqueue (VQ) APIs, as shown in Figure 189.

../../_images/virtio-hld-image0.png

Figure 189 ACRN Virtio Backend Service Interface

  • DM APIs are exported by the DM, and are mainly used during the device initialization phase and runtime. The DM APIs also include PCIe emulation APIs because each virtio device is a PCIe device in the Service VM and User VM.

  • VBS APIs are mainly exported by the VBS and related modules. Generally they are callbacks to be registered into the DM.

  • VQ APIs are used by a virtio backend device to access and parse information from the shared memory between the frontend and backend device drivers.

Virtio framework is the para-virtualization specification that ACRN follows to implement I/O virtualization of performance-critical devices such as audio, eAVB/TSN, IPU, and CSMU devices. This section gives an overview about virtio history, motivation, and advantages, and then highlights virtio key concepts. Second, this section will describe ACRN’s virtio architectures and elaborate on ACRN virtio APIs. Finally this section will introduce all the virtio devices supported by ACRN.

Virtio Introduction

Virtio is an abstraction layer over devices in a para-virtualized hypervisor. Virtio was developed by Rusty Russell when he worked at IBM research to support his lguest hypervisor in 2007, and it quickly became the de facto standard for KVM’s para-virtualized I/O devices.

Virtio is very popular for virtual I/O devices because it provides a straightforward, efficient, standard, and extensible mechanism, and eliminates the need for boutique, per-environment, or per-OS mechanisms. For example, rather than having a variety of device emulation mechanisms, virtio provides a common frontend driver framework that standardizes device interfaces, and increases code reuse across different virtualization platforms.

Given the advantages of virtio, ACRN also follows the virtio specification.

Key Concepts

To better understand virtio, especially its usage in ACRN, we’ll highlight several key virtio concepts important to ACRN:

Frontend virtio driver (FE)

Virtio adopts a frontend-backend architecture that enables a simple but flexible framework for both frontend and backend virtio drivers. The FE driver merely needs to offer services that configure the interface, pass messages, produce requests, and kick the backend virtio driver. As a result, the FE driver is easy to implement and the performance overhead of emulating a device is eliminated.

Backend virtio driver (BE)

Similar to the FE driver, the BE driver, running either in userland or kernel-land of the host OS, consumes requests from the FE driver and sends them to the host native device driver. Once the requests are done by the host native device driver, the BE driver notifies the FE driver that the request is complete.

Note: To distinguish the BE driver from the host native device driver, the host native device driver is called “native driver” in this document.

Straightforward: virtio devices as standard devices on existing buses

Instead of creating new device buses from scratch, virtio devices are built on existing buses. This gives a straightforward way for both FE and BE drivers to interact with each other. For example, the FE driver could read/write registers of the device, and the virtual device could interrupt the FE driver, on behalf of the BE driver, in case something of interest is happening.

The virtio supports PCI/PCIe bus and MMIO bus. In ACRN, only PCI/PCIe bus is supported, and all the virtio devices share the same vendor ID 0x1AF4.

Note: For MMIO, the “bus” is an overstatement since basically it is a few descriptors describing the devices.

Efficient: batching operation is encouraged

Batching operation and deferred notification are important to achieve high-performance I/O, since notification between the FE driver and BE driver usually involves an expensive exit of the guest. Therefore batching operating and notification suppression are highly encouraged if possible. This will give an efficient implementation for performance-critical devices.

Standard: virtqueue

All virtio devices share a standard ring buffer and descriptor mechanism, called a virtqueue, shown in Figure 190. A virtqueue is a queue of scatter-gather buffers. There are three important methods on virtqueues:

  • add_buf is for adding a request/response buffer in a virtqueue,

  • get_buf is for getting a response/request in a virtqueue, and

  • kick is for notifying the other side for a virtqueue to consume buffers.

The virtqueues are created in guest physical memory by the FE drivers. BE drivers only need to parse the virtqueue structures to obtain the requests and process them. The virtqueue organization is specific to the Guest OS. In the Linux implementation of virtio, the virtqueue is implemented as a ring buffer structure called vring`.

In ACRN, the virtqueue APIs can be leveraged directly so that users don’t need to worry about the details of the virtqueue. (Refer to guest OS for more details about the virtqueue implementation.)

../../_images/virtio-hld-image2.png

Figure 190 Virtqueue

Extensible: feature bits

A simple extensible feature negotiation mechanism exists for each virtual device and its driver. Each virtual device could claim its device specific features while the corresponding driver could respond to the device with the subset of features the driver understands. The feature mechanism enables forward and backward compatibility for the virtual device and driver.

Virtio Device Modes

The virtio specification defines three modes of virtio devices: a legacy mode device, a transitional mode device, and a modern mode device. A legacy mode device is compliant to virtio specification version 0.95, a transitional mode device is compliant to both 0.95 and 1.0 spec versions, and a modern mode device is only compatible to the version 1.0 specification.

In ACRN, all the virtio devices are transitional devices, meaning that they should be compatible with both the 0.95 and 1.0 versions of the virtio specification.

Virtio Device Discovery

Virtio devices are commonly implemented as PCI/PCIe devices. A virtio device using virtio over a PCI/PCIe bus must expose an interface to the Guest OS that meets the PCI/PCIe specifications.

Conventionally, any PCI device with Vendor ID 0x1AF4, PCI_VENDOR_ID_REDHAT_QUMRANET, and Device ID 0x1000 through 0x107F inclusive is a virtio device. Among the Device IDs, the legacy/transitional mode virtio devices occupy the first 64 IDs ranging from 0x1000 to 0x103F, while the range 0x1040-0x107F belongs to virtio modern devices. In addition, the Subsystem Vendor ID should reflect the PCI/PCIe vendor ID of the environment, and the Subsystem Device ID indicates which virtio device is supported by the device.

Virtio Frameworks

This section describes the overall architecture of virtio, and introduces the ACRN-specific implementations of the virtio framework.

Architecture

Virtio adopts a frontend-backend architecture, as shown in Figure 191. Basically the FE driver and BE driver communicate with each other through shared memory, via the virtqueues. The FE driver talks to the BE driver in the same way it would talk to a real PCIe device. The BE driver handles requests from the FE driver, and notifies the FE driver if the request has been processed.

../../_images/virtio-hld-image1.png

Figure 191 Virtio Architecture

In addition to virtio’s frontend-backend architecture, both FE and BE drivers follow a layered architecture, as shown in Figure 192. Each side has three layers: transports, core models, and device types. All virtio devices share the same virtio infrastructure, including virtqueues, feature mechanisms, configuration space, and buses.

../../_images/virtio-hld-image4.png

Figure 192 Virtio Frontend/Backend Layered Architecture

Userland Virtio Framework

The architecture of ACRN userland virtio framework (VBS-U) is shown in Figure 193.

The FE driver talks to the BE driver as if it were talking with a PCIe device. This means for “control plane”, the FE driver could poke device registers through PIO or MMIO, and the device will interrupt the FE driver when something happens. For “data plane”, the communication between the FE driver and BE driver is through shared memory, in the form of virtqueues.

On the Service VM side where the BE driver is located, there are several key components in ACRN, including Device Model (DM), Hypervisor service module (HSM), VBS-U, and user-level vring service API helpers.

DM bridges the FE driver and BE driver since each VBS-U module emulates a PCIe virtio device. HSM bridges DM and the hypervisor by providing remote memory map APIs and notification APIs. VBS-U accesses the virtqueue through the user-level vring service API helpers.

../../_images/virtio-hld-image3.png

Figure 193 ACRN Userland Virtio Framework

Kernel-Land Virtio Framework

ACRN supports one kernel-land virtio frameworks:

  • Vhost, compatible with Linux Vhost

Vhost Framework

Vhost is a common solution upstreamed in the Linux kernel, with several kernel mediators based on it.

Architecture

Vhost/virtio is a semi-virtualized device abstraction interface specification that has been widely applied in various virtualization solutions. Vhost is a specific kind of virtio where the data plane is put into host kernel space to reduce the context switch while processing the IO request. It is usually called “virtio” when used as a frontend driver in a guest operating system or “vhost” when used as a backend driver in a host. Compared with a pure virtio solution on a host, vhost uses the same frontend driver as the virtio solution and can achieve better performance. Figure 194 shows the vhost architecture on ACRN.

../../_images/virtio-hld-image71.png

Figure 194 Vhost Architecture on ACRN

Compared with a userspace virtio solution, vhost decomposes data plane from user space to kernel space. The vhost general data plane workflow can be described as:

  1. The vhost proxy creates two eventfds per virtqueue, one is for kick (an ioeventfd), the other is for call (an irqfd).

  2. The vhost proxy registers the two eventfds to HSM through HSM character device:

    1. Ioeventfd is bound with a PIO/MMIO range. If it is a PIO, it is registered with (fd, port, len, value). If it is an MMIO, it is registered with (fd, addr, len).

    2. Irqfd is registered with MSI vector.

  3. The vhost proxy sets the two fds to vhost kernel through ioctl of vhost device.

  4. The vhost starts polling the kick fd and wakes up when the guest kicks a virtqueue, which results in an event_signal on the kick fd by the HSM ioeventfd.

  5. The vhost device in the kernel signals on the irqfd to notify the guest.

Ioeventfd Implementation

Ioeventfd module is implemented in HSM, and can enhance a registered eventfd to listen to IO requests (PIO/MMIO) from the HSM ioreq module and signal the eventfd when needed. Figure 195 shows the general workflow of ioeventfd.

../../_images/virtio-hld-image58.png

Figure 195 Ioeventfd General Workflow

The workflow can be summarized as:

  1. The vhost device initializes. The vhost proxy creates two eventfds for ioeventfd and irqfd.

  2. The vhost proxy passes the ioeventfd to the vhost kernel driver.

  3. The vhost proxy passes the ioeventfd to the HSM driver.

  4. The User VM FE driver triggers an ioreq, which is forwarded through the hypervisor to the Service VM.

  5. The HSM driver dispatches the ioreq to the related HSM client.

  6. The ioeventfd HSM client traverses the io_range list and finds the corresponding eventfd.

  7. The ioeventfd HSM client triggers the signal to the related eventfd.

Irqfd Implementation

The irqfd module is implemented in HSM, and can enhance a registered eventfd to inject an interrupt to a guest OS when the eventfd gets signaled. Figure 196 shows the general flow for irqfd.

../../_images/virtio-hld-image60.png

Figure 196 Irqfd General Flow

The workflow can be summarized as:

  1. The vhost device initializes. The vhost proxy creates two eventfds for ioeventfd and irqfd.

  2. The vhost proxy passes the irqfd to the vhost kernel driver.

  3. The vhost proxy passes the irqfd to the HSM driver.

  4. The vhost device driver triggers an IRQ eventfd signal once the related native transfer is completed.

  5. The irqfd related logic traverses the irqfd list to retrieve related irq information.

  6. The irqfd related logic injects an interrupt through the HSM interrupt API.

  7. The interrupt is delivered to the User VM FE driver through the hypervisor.

Virtio APIs

This section provides details on the ACRN virtio APIs. As outlined previously, the ACRN virtio APIs can be divided into three groups: DM_APIs, VBS_APIs, and VQ_APIs. The following sections will elaborate on these APIs.

VBS-U Key Data Structures

The key data structures for VBS-U are listed as follows, and their relationships are shown in Figure 197.

struct pci_virtio_blk

An example virtio device, such as virtio-blk.

struct virtio_common

A common component to any virtio device.

struct virtio_ops

Virtio specific operation functions for this type of virtio device.

struct pci_vdev

Instance of a virtual PCIe device, and any virtio device is a virtual PCIe device.

struct pci_vdev_ops

PCIe device’s operation functions for this type of device.

struct vqueue_info

Instance of a virtqueue.

../../_images/virtio-hld-image5.png

Figure 197 VBS-U Key Data Structures

Each virtio device is a PCIe device. In addition, each virtio device could have none or multiple virtqueues, depending on the device type. The struct virtio_common is a key data structure to be manipulated by DM, and DM finds other key data structures through it. The struct virtio_ops abstracts a series of virtio callbacks to be provided by the device owner.

VHOST Key Data Structures

The key data structures for vhost are listed as follows.

struct vhost_dev
struct vhost_vq

DM APIs

The DM APIs are exported by DM, and they should be used when implementing BE device drivers on ACRN.

void *paddr_guest2host(struct vmctx *ctx, uintptr_t gaddr, size_t len)

Convert guest physical address to host virtual address.

Parameters
  • ctx – Pointer to to struct vmctx representing VM context.

  • gaddr – Guest physical address base.

  • len – Guest physical address length.

Returns

NULL on convert failed and host virtual address on successful.

static inline void pci_set_cfgdata8(struct pci_vdev *dev, int offset, uint8_t val)

Set virtual PCI device’s configuration space in 1 byte width.

Parameters
  • dev – Pointer to struct pci_vdev representing virtual PCI device.

  • offset – Offset in configuration space.

  • val – Value in 1 byte.

Returns

None

static inline void pci_set_cfgdata16(struct pci_vdev *dev, int offset, uint16_t val)

Set virtual PCI device’s configuration space in 2 bytes width.

Parameters
  • dev – Pointer to struct pci_vdev representing virtual PCI device.

  • offset – Offset in configuration space.

  • val – Value in 2 bytes.

Returns

None

static inline void pci_set_cfgdata32(struct pci_vdev *dev, int offset, uint32_t val)

Set virtual PCI device’s configuration space in 4 bytes width.

Parameters
  • dev – Pointer to struct pci_vdev representing virtual PCI device.

  • offset – Offset in configuration space.

  • val – Value in 4 bytes.

Returns

None

static inline uint8_t pci_get_cfgdata8(struct pci_vdev *dev, int offset)

Get virtual PCI device’s configuration space in 1 byte width.

Parameters
  • dev – Pointer to struct pci_vdev representing virtual PCI device.

  • offset – Offset in configuration space.

Returns

The configuration value in 1 byte.

static inline uint16_t pci_get_cfgdata16(struct pci_vdev *dev, int offset)

Get virtual PCI device’s configuration space in 2 byte width.

Parameters
  • dev – Pointer to struct pci_vdev representing virtual PCI device.

  • offset – Offset in configuration space.

Returns

The configuration value in 2 bytes.

static inline uint32_t pci_get_cfgdata32(struct pci_vdev *dev, int offset)

Get virtual PCI device’s configuration space in 4 byte width.

Parameters
  • dev – Pointer to struct pci_vdev representing virtual PCI device.

  • offset – Offset in configuration space.

Returns

The configuration value in 4 bytes.

void pci_lintr_assert(struct pci_vdev *dev)

Assert INTx pin of virtual PCI device.

Parameters
  • dev – Pointer to struct pci_vdev representing virtual PCI device.

Returns

None

void pci_lintr_deassert(struct pci_vdev *dev)

Deassert INTx pin of virtual PCI device.

Parameters
  • dev – Pointer to struct pci_vdev representing virtual PCI device.

Returns

None

void pci_generate_msi(struct pci_vdev *dev, int index)

Generate a MSI interrupt to guest.

Parameters
  • dev – Pointer to struct pci_vdev representing virtual PCI device.

  • index – Message data index.

Returns

None

void pci_generate_msix(struct pci_vdev *dev, int index)

Generate a MSI-X interrupt to guest.

Parameters
  • dev – Pointer to struct pci_vdev representing virtual PCI device.

  • index – MSIs table entry index.

Returns

None

VBS APIs

The VBS APIs are exported by VBS related modules, including VBS, DM, and Service VM kernel modules.

VBS-U APIs

These APIs provided by VBS-U are callbacks to be registered to DM, and the virtio framework within DM will invoke them appropriately.

struct virtio_ops

Virtio specific operation functions for this type of virtio device.

uint64_t virtio_pci_read(struct vmctx *ctx, int vcpu, struct pci_vdev *dev, int baridx, uint64_t offset, int size)

Handle PCI configuration space reads.

Handle virtio standard register reads, and dispatch other reads to actual virtio device driver.

Parameters
  • ctx – Pointer to struct vmctx representing VM context.

  • vcpu – VCPU ID.

  • dev – Pointer to struct pci_vdev which emulates a PCI device.

  • baridx – Which BAR[0..5] to use.

  • offset – Register offset in bytes within a BAR region.

  • size – Access range in bytes.

Returns

register value.

void virtio_pci_write(struct vmctx *ctx, int vcpu, struct pci_vdev *dev, int baridx, uint64_t offset, int size, uint64_t value)

Handle PCI configuration space writes.

Handle virtio standard register writes, and dispatch other writes to actual virtio device driver.

Parameters
  • ctx – Pointer to struct vmctx representing VM context.

  • vcpu – VCPU ID.

  • dev – Pointer to struct pci_vdev which emulates a PCI device.

  • baridx – Which BAR[0..5] to use.

  • offset – Register offset in bytes within a BAR region.

  • size – Access range in bytes.

  • value – Data value to be written into register.

Returns

None

int virtio_interrupt_init(struct virtio_base *base, int use_msix)

Initialize MSI-X vector capabilities if we’re to use MSI-X, or MSI capabilities if not.

Wrapper function for virtio_intr_init() for cases we directly use BAR 1 for MSI-X capabilities.

Parameters
  • base – Pointer to struct virtio_base.

  • use_msix – If using MSI-X.

Returns

0 on success and non-zero on fail.

void virtio_linkup(struct virtio_base *base, struct virtio_ops *vops, void *pci_virtio_dev, struct pci_vdev *dev, struct virtio_vq_info *queues, int backend_type)

Link a virtio_base to its constants, the virtio device, and the PCI emulation.

Parameters
  • base – Pointer to struct virtio_base.

  • vops – Pointer to struct virtio_ops.

  • pci_virtio_dev – Pointer to instance of certain virtio device.

  • dev – Pointer to struct pci_vdev which emulates a PCI device.

  • queues – Pointer to struct virtio_vq_info, normally an array.

  • backend_type – can be VBSU, VBSK or VHOST

Returns

None

void virtio_reset_dev(struct virtio_base *base)

Reset device (device-wide).

This erases all queues, i.e., all the queues become invalid. But we don’t wipe out the internal pointers, by just clearing the VQ_ALLOC flag.

It resets negotiated features to “none”. If MSI-X is enabled, this also resets all the vectors to NO_VECTOR.

Parameters
Returns

None

void virtio_set_io_bar(struct virtio_base *base, int barnum)

Set I/O BAR (usually 0) to map PCI config registers.

Parameters
  • base – Pointer to struct virtio_base.

  • barnum – Which BAR[0..5] to use.

Returns

None

int virtio_set_modern_bar(struct virtio_base *base, bool use_notify_pio)

Set modern BAR (usually 4) to map PCI config registers.

Set modern MMIO BAR (usually 4) to map virtio 1.0 capabilities and optional set modern PIO BAR (usually 2) to map notify capability. This interface is only valid for modern virtio.

Parameters
  • base – Pointer to struct virtio_base.

  • use_notify_pio – Whether use pio for notify capability.

Returns

0 on success and non-zero on fail.

static inline void virtio_config_changed(struct virtio_base *vb)

Deliver an config changed interrupt to guest.

MSI-X or a generic MSI interrupt with config changed event.

Parameters
Returns

None

APIs Provided by DM
int vbs_kernel_reset(int fd)

Virtio kernel module reset.

Parameters
  • fd – File descriptor representing virtio backend in kernel module.

Returns

0 on OK and non-zero on error.

int vbs_kernel_start(int fd, struct vbs_dev_info *dev, struct vbs_vqs_info *vqs)

Virtio kernel module start.

Parameters
  • fd – File descriptor representing virtio backend in kernel module.

  • dev – Pointer to struct vbs_dev_info.

  • vqs – Pointer to struct vbs_vqs_info.

Returns

0 on OK and non-zero on error.

int vbs_kernel_stop(int fd)

Virtio kernel module stop.

Parameters
  • fd – File descriptor representing virtio backend in kernel module.

Returns

0 on OK and non-zero on error.

VHOST APIs

APIs Provided by DM

int vhost_dev_init(struct vhost_dev *vdev, struct virtio_base *base, int fd, int vq_idx, uint64_t vhost_features, uint64_t vhost_ext_features, uint32_t busyloop_timeout)

vhost_dev initialization.

This interface is called to initialize the vhost_dev. It must be called before the actual feature negotiation with the guest OS starts.

Parameters
  • vdev – Pointer to struct vhost_dev.

  • base – Pointer to struct virtio_base.

  • fd – fd of the vhost chardev.

  • vq_idx – The first virtqueue which would be used by this vhost dev.

  • vhost_features – Subset of vhost features which would be enabled.

  • vhost_ext_features – Specific vhost internal features to be enabled.

  • busyloop_timeout – Busy loop timeout in us.

Returns

0 on success and -1 on failure.

int vhost_dev_deinit(struct vhost_dev *vdev)

vhost_dev cleanup.

This interface is called to cleanup the vhost_dev.

Parameters
Returns

0 on success and -1 on failure.

int vhost_dev_start(struct vhost_dev *vdev)

start vhost data plane.

This interface is called to start the data plane in vhost.

Parameters
Returns

0 on success and -1 on failure.

int vhost_dev_stop(struct vhost_dev *vdev)

stop vhost data plane.

This interface is called to stop the data plane in vhost.

Parameters
Returns

0 on success and -1 on failure.

Linux Vhost IOCTLs

#define VHOST_GET_FEATURES      _IOR(VHOST_VIRTIO, 0x00, __u64)

This IOCTL is used to get the supported feature flags by vhost kernel driver.

#define VHOST_SET_FEATURES      _IOW(VHOST_VIRTIO, 0x00, __u64)

This IOCTL is used to set the supported feature flags to vhost kernel driver.

#define VHOST_SET_OWNER _IO(VHOST_VIRTIO, 0x01)

This IOCTL is used to set the current process as the exclusive owner of the vhost char device. It must be called before any other vhost commands.

#define VHOST_RESET_OWNER _IO(VHOST_VIRTIO, 0x02)

This IOCTL is used to give up the ownership of the vhost char device.

#define VHOST_SET_MEM_TABLE     _IOW(VHOST_VIRTIO, 0x03, struct vhost_memory)

This IOCTL is used to convey the guest OS memory layout to the vhost kernel driver.

#define VHOST_SET_VRING_NUM _IOW(VHOST_VIRTIO, 0x10, struct vhost_vring_state)

This IOCTL is used to set the number of descriptors in the virtio ring. It cannot be modified while the virtio ring is running.

#define VHOST_SET_VRING_ADDR _IOW(VHOST_VIRTIO, 0x11, struct vhost_vring_addr)

This IOCTL is used to set the address of the virtio ring.

#define VHOST_SET_VRING_BASE _IOW(VHOST_VIRTIO, 0x12, struct vhost_vring_state)

This IOCTL is used to set the base value where virtqueue looks for available descriptors.

#define VHOST_GET_VRING_BASE _IOWR(VHOST_VIRTIO, 0x12, struct vhost_vring_state)

This IOCTL is used to get the base value where virtqueue looks for available descriptors.

#define VHOST_SET_VRING_KICK _IOW(VHOST_VIRTIO, 0x20, struct vhost_vring_file)

This IOCTL is used to set the eventfd on which vhost can poll for guest virtqueue kicks.

#define VHOST_SET_VRING_CALL _IOW(VHOST_VIRTIO, 0x21, struct vhost_vring_file)

This IOCTL is used to set the eventfd that is used by vhost to inject virtual interrupts.

HSM Eventfd IOCTLs

struct acrn_ioeventfd
#define IC_EVENT_IOEVENTFD              _IC_ID(IC_ID, IC_ID_EVENT_BASE + 0x00)

This IOCTL is used to register or unregister an ioeventfd with the appropriate address, length, and data value.

struct acrn_irqfd
#define IC_EVENT_IRQFD                  _IC_ID(IC_ID, IC_ID_EVENT_BASE + 0x01)

This IOCTL is used to register or unregister an irqfd with the appropriate MSI information.

VQ APIs

The virtqueue APIs, or VQ APIs, are used by a BE device driver to access the virtqueues shared by the FE driver. The VQ APIs abstract the details of virtqueues so that users don’t need to worry about the data structures within the virtqueues.

static inline void vq_interrupt(struct virtio_base *vb, struct virtio_vq_info *vq)

Deliver an interrupt to guest on the given virtqueue.

The interrupt could be MSI-X or a generic MSI interrupt.

Parameters
Returns

None

int vq_getchain(struct virtio_vq_info *vq, uint16_t *pidx, struct iovec *iov, int n_iov, uint16_t *flags)

Walk through the chain of descriptors involved in a request and put them into a given iov[] array.

Parameters
  • vq – Pointer to struct virtio_vq_info.

  • pidx – Pointer to available ring position.

  • iov – Pointer to iov[] array prepared by caller.

  • n_iov – Size of iov[] array.

  • flags – Pointer to a uint16_t array which will contain flag of each descriptor.

Returns

number of descriptors.

void vq_retchain(struct virtio_vq_info *vq)

Return the currently-first request chain back to the available ring.

Parameters
Returns

None

void vq_relchain(struct virtio_vq_info *vq, uint16_t idx, uint32_t iolen)

Return specified request chain to the guest, setting its I/O length to the provided value.

Parameters
  • vq – Pointer to struct virtio_vq_info.

  • idx – Pointer to available ring position, returned by vq_getchain().

  • iolen – Number of data bytes to be returned to frontend.

Returns

None

void vq_endchains(struct virtio_vq_info *vq, int used_all_avail)

Driver has finished processing “available” chains and calling vq_relchain on each one.

If driver used all the available chains, used_all_avail need to be set to 1.

Parameters
  • vq – Pointer to struct virtio_vq_info.

  • used_all_avail – Flag indicating if driver used all available chains.

Returns

None

Below is an example showing a typical logic of how a BE driver handles requests from a FE driver.

static void BE_callback(struct pci_virtio_xxx *pv, struct vqueue_info *vq ) {
   while (vq_has_descs(vq)) {
      vq_getchain(vq, &idx, &iov, 1, NULL);
             /* handle requests in iov */
             request_handle_proc();
             /* Release this chain and handle more */
             vq_relchain(vq, idx, len);
      }
   /* Generate interrupt if appropriate. 1 means ring empty \*/
   vq_endchains(vq, 1);
}

Supported Virtio Devices

All the BE virtio drivers are implemented using the ACRN virtio APIs, and the FE drivers reuse the standard Linux FE virtio drivers. For the devices with FE drivers available in the Linux kernel, they should use standard virtio Vendor ID/Device ID and Subsystem Vendor ID/Subsystem Device ID. For other devices within ACRN, their temporary IDs are listed in the following table.

Table 4 Virtio Devices without Existing FE Drivers in Linux

virtio device

Vendor ID

Device ID

Subvendor ID

Subdevice ID

RPMB

0x8086

0x8601

0x8086

0xFFFF

HECI

0x8086

0x8602

0x8086

0xFFFE

audio

0x8086

0x8603

0x8086

0xFFFD

IPU

0x8086

0x8604

0x8086

0xFFFC

TSN/AVB

0x8086

0x8605

0x8086

0xFFFB

hyper_dmabuf

0x8086

0x8606

0x8086

0xFFFA

HDCP

0x8086

0x8607

0x8086

0xFFF9

COREU

0x8086

0x8608

0x8086

0xFFF8

I2C

0x8086

0x860a

0x8086

0xFFF6

GPIO

0x8086

0x8609

0x8086

0xFFF7

The following sections introduce the status of virtio devices supported in ACRN.