linux_dsm_epyc7002/Documentation/virtual/virtio-spec.txt
Rusty Russell 33950c6e22 virtio: update documentation to v0.9.5 of spec
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
2012-05-22 12:16:09 +09:30

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[Generated file: see http://ozlabs.org/~rusty/virtio-spec/]
Virtio PCI Card Specification
v0.9.5 DRAFT
-
Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au> IBM Corporation (Editor)
2012 May 7.
Purpose and Description
This document describes the specifications of the “virtio” family
of PCI[LaTeX Command: nomenclature] devices. These are devices
are found in virtual environments[LaTeX Command: nomenclature],
yet by design they are not all that different from physical PCI
devices, and this document treats them as such. This allows the
guest to use standard PCI drivers and discovery mechanisms.
The purpose of virtio and this specification is that virtual
environments and guests should have a straightforward, efficient,
standard and extensible mechanism for virtual devices, rather
than boutique per-environment or per-OS mechanisms.
Straightforward: Virtio PCI devices use normal PCI mechanisms
of interrupts and DMA which should be familiar to any device
driver author. There is no exotic page-flipping or COW
mechanism: it's just a PCI device.[footnote:
This lack of page-sharing implies that the implementation of the
device (e.g. the hypervisor or host) needs full access to the
guest memory. Communication with untrusted parties (i.e.
inter-guest communication) requires copying.
]
Efficient: Virtio PCI devices consist of rings of descriptors
for input and output, which are neatly separated to avoid cache
effects from both guest and device writing to the same cache
lines.
Standard: Virtio PCI makes no assumptions about the environment
in which it operates, beyond supporting PCI. In fact the virtio
devices specified in the appendices do not require PCI at all:
they have been implemented on non-PCI buses.[footnote:
The Linux implementation further separates the PCI virtio code
from the specific virtio drivers: these drivers are shared with
the non-PCI implementations (currently lguest and S/390).
]
Extensible: Virtio PCI devices contain feature bits which are
acknowledged by the guest operating system during device setup.
This allows forwards and backwards compatibility: the device
offers all the features it knows about, and the driver
acknowledges those it understands and wishes to use.
Virtqueues
The mechanism for bulk data transport on virtio PCI devices is
pretentiously called a virtqueue. Each device can have zero or
more virtqueues: for example, the network device has one for
transmit and one for receive.
Each virtqueue occupies two or more physically-contiguous pages
(defined, for the purposes of this specification, as 4096 bytes),
and consists of three parts:
+-------------------+-----------------------------------+-----------+
| Descriptor Table | Available Ring (padding) | Used Ring |
+-------------------+-----------------------------------+-----------+
When the driver wants to send a buffer to the device, it fills in
a slot in the descriptor table (or chains several together), and
writes the descriptor index into the available ring. It then
notifies the device. When the device has finished a buffer, it
writes the descriptor into the used ring, and sends an interrupt.
Specification
PCI Discovery
Any PCI device with Vendor ID 0x1AF4, and Device ID 0x1000
through 0x103F inclusive is a virtio device[footnote:
The actual value within this range is ignored
]. The device must also have a Revision ID of 0 to match this
specification.
The Subsystem Device ID indicates which virtio device is
supported by the device. The Subsystem Vendor ID should reflect
the PCI Vendor ID of the environment (it's currently only used
for informational purposes by the guest).
+----------------------+--------------------+---------------+
| Subsystem Device ID | Virtio Device | Specification |
+----------------------+--------------------+---------------+
+----------------------+--------------------+---------------+
| 1 | network card | Appendix C |
+----------------------+--------------------+---------------+
| 2 | block device | Appendix D |
+----------------------+--------------------+---------------+
| 3 | console | Appendix E |
+----------------------+--------------------+---------------+
| 4 | entropy source | Appendix F |
+----------------------+--------------------+---------------+
| 5 | memory ballooning | Appendix G |
+----------------------+--------------------+---------------+
| 6 | ioMemory | - |
+----------------------+--------------------+---------------+
| 7 | rpmsg | Appendix H |
+----------------------+--------------------+---------------+
| 8 | SCSI host | Appendix I |
+----------------------+--------------------+---------------+
| 9 | 9P transport | - |
+----------------------+--------------------+---------------+
| 10 | mac80211 wlan | - |
+----------------------+--------------------+---------------+
Device Configuration
To configure the device, we use the first I/O region of the PCI
device. This contains a virtio header followed by a
device-specific region.
There may be different widths of accesses to the I/O region; the “
natural” access method for each field in the virtio header must
be used (i.e. 32-bit accesses for 32-bit fields, etc), but the
device-specific region can be accessed using any width accesses,
and should obtain the same results.
Note that this is possible because while the virtio header is PCI
(i.e. little) endian, the device-specific region is encoded in
the native endian of the guest (where such distinction is
applicable).
Device Initialization Sequence<sub:Device-Initialization-Sequence>
We start with an overview of device initialization, then expand
on the details of the device and how each step is preformed.
Reset the device. This is not required on initial start up.
The ACKNOWLEDGE status bit is set: we have noticed the device.
The DRIVER status bit is set: we know how to drive the device.
Device-specific setup, including reading the Device Feature
Bits, discovery of virtqueues for the device, optional MSI-X
setup, and reading and possibly writing the virtio
configuration space.
The subset of Device Feature Bits understood by the driver is
written to the device.
The DRIVER_OK status bit is set.
The device can now be used (ie. buffers added to the
virtqueues)[footnote:
Historically, drivers have used the device before steps 5 and 6.
This is only allowed if the driver does not use any features
which would alter this early use of the device.
]
If any of these steps go irrecoverably wrong, the guest should
set the FAILED status bit to indicate that it has given up on the
device (it can reset the device later to restart if desired).
We now cover the fields required for general setup in detail.
Virtio Header
The virtio header looks as follows:
+------------++---------------------+---------------------+----------+--------+---------+---------+---------+--------+
| Bits || 32 | 32 | 32 | 16 | 16 | 16 | 8 | 8 |
+------------++---------------------+---------------------+----------+--------+---------+---------+---------+--------+
| Read/Write || R | R+W | R+W | R | R+W | R+W | R+W | R |
+------------++---------------------+---------------------+----------+--------+---------+---------+---------+--------+
| Purpose || Device | Guest | Queue | Queue | Queue | Queue | Device | ISR |
| || Features bits 0:31 | Features bits 0:31 | Address | Size | Select | Notify | Status | Status |
+------------++---------------------+---------------------+----------+--------+---------+---------+---------+--------+
If MSI-X is enabled for the device, two additional fields
immediately follow this header:[footnote:
ie. once you enable MSI-X on the device, the other fields move.
If you turn it off again, they move back!
]
+------------++----------------+--------+
| Bits || 16 | 16 |
+----------------+--------+
+------------++----------------+--------+
| Read/Write || R+W | R+W |
+------------++----------------+--------+
| Purpose || Configuration | Queue |
| (MSI-X) || Vector | Vector |
+------------++----------------+--------+
Immediately following these general headers, there may be
device-specific headers:
+------------++--------------------+
| Bits || Device Specific |
+--------------------+
+------------++--------------------+
| Read/Write || Device Specific |
+------------++--------------------+
| Purpose || Device Specific... |
| || |
+------------++--------------------+
Device Status
The Device Status field is updated by the guest to indicate its
progress. This provides a simple low-level diagnostic: it's most
useful to imagine them hooked up to traffic lights on the console
indicating the status of each device.
The device can be reset by writing a 0 to this field, otherwise
at least one bit should be set:
ACKNOWLEDGE (1) Indicates that the guest OS has found the
device and recognized it as a valid virtio device.
DRIVER (2) Indicates that the guest OS knows how to drive the
device. Under Linux, drivers can be loadable modules so there
may be a significant (or infinite) delay before setting this
bit.
DRIVER_OK (4) Indicates that the driver is set up and ready to
drive the device.
FAILED (128) Indicates that something went wrong in the guest,
and it has given up on the device. This could be an internal
error, or the driver didn't like the device for some reason, or
even a fatal error during device operation. The device must be
reset before attempting to re-initialize.
Feature Bits<sub:Feature-Bits>
Thefirst configuration field indicates the features that the
device supports. The bits are allocated as follows:
0 to 23 Feature bits for the specific device type
24 to 32 Feature bits reserved for extensions to the queue and
feature negotiation mechanisms
For example, feature bit 0 for a network device (i.e. Subsystem
Device ID 1) indicates that the device supports checksumming of
packets.
The feature bits are negotiated: the device lists all the
features it understands in the Device Features field, and the
guest writes the subset that it understands into the Guest
Features field. The only way to renegotiate is to reset the
device.
In particular, new fields in the device configuration header are
indicated by offering a feature bit, so the guest can check
before accessing that part of the configuration space.
This allows for forwards and backwards compatibility: if the
device is enhanced with a new feature bit, older guests will not
write that feature bit back to the Guest Features field and it
can go into backwards compatibility mode. Similarly, if a guest
is enhanced with a feature that the device doesn't support, it
will not see that feature bit in the Device Features field and
can go into backwards compatibility mode (or, for poor
implementations, set the FAILED Device Status bit).
Configuration/Queue Vectors
When MSI-X capability is present and enabled in the device
(through standard PCI configuration space) 4 bytes at byte offset
20 are used to map configuration change and queue interrupts to
MSI-X vectors. In this case, the ISR Status field is unused, and
device specific configuration starts at byte offset 24 in virtio
header structure. When MSI-X capability is not enabled, device
specific configuration starts at byte offset 20 in virtio header.
Writing a valid MSI-X Table entry number, 0 to 0x7FF, to one of
Configuration/Queue Vector registers, maps interrupts triggered
by the configuration change/selected queue events respectively to
the corresponding MSI-X vector. To disable interrupts for a
specific event type, unmap it by writing a special NO_VECTOR
value:
/* Vector value used to disable MSI for queue */
#define VIRTIO_MSI_NO_VECTOR 0xffff
Reading these registers returns vector mapped to a given event,
or NO_VECTOR if unmapped. All queue and configuration change
events are unmapped by default.
Note that mapping an event to vector might require allocating
internal device resources, and might fail. Devices report such
failures by returning the NO_VECTOR value when the relevant
Vector field is read. After mapping an event to vector, the
driver must verify success by reading the Vector field value: on
success, the previously written value is returned, and on
failure, NO_VECTOR is returned. If a mapping failure is detected,
the driver can retry mapping with fewervectors, or disable MSI-X.
Virtqueue Configuration<sec:Virtqueue-Configuration>
As a device can have zero or more virtqueues for bulk data
transport (for example, the network driver has two), the driver
needs to configure them as part of the device-specific
configuration.
This is done as follows, for each virtqueue a device has:
Write the virtqueue index (first queue is 0) to the Queue
Select field.
Read the virtqueue size from the Queue Size field, which is
always a power of 2. This controls how big the virtqueue is
(see below). If this field is 0, the virtqueue does not exist.
Allocate and zero virtqueue in contiguous physical memory, on a
4096 byte alignment. Write the physical address, divided by
4096 to the Queue Address field.[footnote:
The 4096 is based on the x86 page size, but it's also large
enough to ensure that the separate parts of the virtqueue are on
separate cache lines.
]
Optionally, if MSI-X capability is present and enabled on the
device, select a vector to use to request interrupts triggered
by virtqueue events. Write the MSI-X Table entry number
corresponding to this vector in Queue Vector field. Read the
Queue Vector field: on success, previously written value is
returned; on failure, NO_VECTOR value is returned.
The Queue Size field controls the total number of bytes required
for the virtqueue according to the following formula:
#define ALIGN(x) (((x) + 4095) & ~4095)
static inline unsigned vring_size(unsigned int qsz)
{
return ALIGN(sizeof(struct vring_desc)*qsz + sizeof(u16)*(2
+ qsz))
+ ALIGN(sizeof(struct vring_used_elem)*qsz);
}
This currently wastes some space with padding, but also allows
future extensions. The virtqueue layout structure looks like this
(qsz is the Queue Size field, which is a variable, so this code
won't compile):
struct vring {
/* The actual descriptors (16 bytes each) */
struct vring_desc desc[qsz];
/* A ring of available descriptor heads with free-running
index. */
struct vring_avail avail;
// Padding to the next 4096 boundary.
char pad[];
// A ring of used descriptor heads with free-running index.
struct vring_used used;
};
A Note on Virtqueue Endianness
Note that the endian of these fields and everything else in the
virtqueue is the native endian of the guest, not little-endian as
PCI normally is. This makes for simpler guest code, and it is
assumed that the host already has to be deeply aware of the guest
endian so such an “endian-aware” device is not a significant
issue.
Descriptor Table
The descriptor table refers to the buffers the guest is using for
the device. The addresses are physical addresses, and the buffers
can be chained via the next field. Each descriptor describes a
buffer which is read-only or write-only, but a chain of
descriptors can contain both read-only and write-only buffers.
No descriptor chain may be more than 2^32 bytes long in total.struct vring_desc {
/* Address (guest-physical). */
u64 addr;
/* Length. */
u32 len;
/* This marks a buffer as continuing via the next field. */
#define VRING_DESC_F_NEXT 1
/* This marks a buffer as write-only (otherwise read-only). */
#define VRING_DESC_F_WRITE 2
/* This means the buffer contains a list of buffer descriptors.
*/
#define VRING_DESC_F_INDIRECT 4
/* The flags as indicated above. */
u16 flags;
/* Next field if flags & NEXT */
u16 next;
};
The number of descriptors in the table is specified by the Queue
Size field for this virtqueue.
<sub:Indirect-Descriptors>Indirect Descriptors
Some devices benefit by concurrently dispatching a large number
of large requests. The VIRTIO_RING_F_INDIRECT_DESC feature can be
used to allow this (see [cha:Reserved-Feature-Bits]). To increase
ring capacity it is possible to store a table of indirect
descriptors anywhere in memory, and insert a descriptor in main
virtqueue (with flags&INDIRECT on) that refers to memory buffer
containing this indirect descriptor table; fields addr and len
refer to the indirect table address and length in bytes,
respectively. The indirect table layout structure looks like this
(len is the length of the descriptor that refers to this table,
which is a variable, so this code won't compile):
struct indirect_descriptor_table {
/* The actual descriptors (16 bytes each) */
struct vring_desc desc[len / 16];
};
The first indirect descriptor is located at start of the indirect
descriptor table (index 0), additional indirect descriptors are
chained by next field. An indirect descriptor without next field
(with flags&NEXT off) signals the end of the indirect descriptor
table, and transfers control back to the main virtqueue. An
indirect descriptor can not refer to another indirect descriptor
table (flags&INDIRECT must be off). A single indirect descriptor
table can include both read-only and write-only descriptors;
write-only flag (flags&WRITE) in the descriptor that refers to it
is ignored.
Available Ring
The available ring refers to what descriptors we are offering the
device: it refers to the head of a descriptor chain. The “flags”
field is currently 0 or 1: 1 indicating that we do not need an
interrupt when the device consumes a descriptor from the
available ring. Alternatively, the guest can ask the device to
delay interrupts until an entry with an index specified by the “
used_event” field is written in the used ring (equivalently,
until the idx field in the used ring will reach the value
used_event + 1). The method employed by the device is controlled
by the VIRTIO_RING_F_EVENT_IDX feature bit (see [cha:Reserved-Feature-Bits]
). This interrupt suppression is merely an optimization; it may
not suppress interrupts entirely.
The “idx” field indicates where we would put the next descriptor
entry (modulo the ring size). This starts at 0, and increases.
struct vring_avail {
#define VRING_AVAIL_F_NO_INTERRUPT 1
u16 flags;
u16 idx;
u16 ring[qsz]; /* qsz is the Queue Size field read from device
*/
u16 used_event;
};
Used Ring
The used ring is where the device returns buffers once it is done
with them. The flags field can be used by the device to hint that
no notification is necessary when the guest adds to the available
ring. Alternatively, the “avail_event” field can be used by the
device to hint that no notification is necessary until an entry
with an index specified by the “avail_event” is written in the
available ring (equivalently, until the idx field in the
available ring will reach the value avail_event + 1). The method
employed by the device is controlled by the guest through the
VIRTIO_RING_F_EVENT_IDX feature bit (see [cha:Reserved-Feature-Bits]
). [footnote:
These fields are kept here because this is the only part of the
virtqueue written by the device
].
Each entry in the ring is a pair: the head entry of the
descriptor chain describing the buffer (this matches an entry
placed in the available ring by the guest earlier), and the total
of bytes written into the buffer. The latter is extremely useful
for guests using untrusted buffers: if you do not know exactly
how much has been written by the device, you usually have to zero
the buffer to ensure no data leakage occurs.
/* u32 is used here for ids for padding reasons. */
struct vring_used_elem {
/* Index of start of used descriptor chain. */
u32 id;
/* Total length of the descriptor chain which was used
(written to) */
u32 len;
};
struct vring_used {
#define VRING_USED_F_NO_NOTIFY 1
u16 flags;
u16 idx;
struct vring_used_elem ring[qsz];
u16 avail_event;
};
Helpers for Managing Virtqueues
The Linux Kernel Source code contains the definitions above and
helper routines in a more usable form, in
include/linux/virtio_ring.h. This was explicitly licensed by IBM
and Red Hat under the (3-clause) BSD license so that it can be
freely used by all other projects, and is reproduced (with slight
variation to remove Linux assumptions) in Appendix A.
Device Operation<sec:Device-Operation>
There are two parts to device operation: supplying new buffers to
the device, and processing used buffers from the device. As an
example, the virtio network device has two virtqueues: the
transmit virtqueue and the receive virtqueue. The driver adds
outgoing (read-only) packets to the transmit virtqueue, and then
frees them after they are used. Similarly, incoming (write-only)
buffers are added to the receive virtqueue, and processed after
they are used.
Supplying Buffers to The Device
Actual transfer of buffers from the guest OS to the device
operates as follows:
Place the buffer(s) into free descriptor(s).
If there are no free descriptors, the guest may choose to
notify the device even if notifications are suppressed (to
reduce latency).[footnote:
The Linux drivers do this only for read-only buffers: for
write-only buffers, it is assumed that the driver is merely
trying to keep the receive buffer ring full, and no notification
of this expected condition is necessary.
]
Place the id of the buffer in the next ring entry of the
available ring.
The steps (1) and (2) may be performed repeatedly if batching
is possible.
A memory barrier should be executed to ensure the device sees
the updated descriptor table and available ring before the next
step.
The available “idx” field should be increased by the number of
entries added to the available ring.
A memory barrier should be executed to ensure that we update
the idx field before checking for notification suppression.
If notifications are not suppressed, the device should be
notified of the new buffers.
Note that the above code does not take precautions against the
available ring buffer wrapping around: this is not possible since
the ring buffer is the same size as the descriptor table, so step
(1) will prevent such a condition.
In addition, the maximum queue size is 32768 (it must be a power
of 2 which fits in 16 bits), so the 16-bit “idx” value can always
distinguish between a full and empty buffer.
Here is a description of each stage in more detail.
Placing Buffers Into The Descriptor Table
A buffer consists of zero or more read-only physically-contiguous
elements followed by zero or more physically-contiguous
write-only elements (it must have at least one element). This
algorithm maps it into the descriptor table:
for each buffer element, b:
Get the next free descriptor table entry, d
Set d.addr to the physical address of the start of b
Set d.len to the length of b.
If b is write-only, set d.flags to VRING_DESC_F_WRITE,
otherwise 0.
If there is a buffer element after this:
Set d.next to the index of the next free descriptor element.
Set the VRING_DESC_F_NEXT bit in d.flags.
In practice, the d.next fields are usually used to chain free
descriptors, and a separate count kept to check there are enough
free descriptors before beginning the mappings.
Updating The Available Ring
The head of the buffer we mapped is the first d in the algorithm
above. A naive implementation would do the following:
avail->ring[avail->idx % qsz] = head;
However, in general we can add many descriptors before we update
the “idx” field (at which point they become visible to the
device), so we keep a counter of how many we've added:
avail->ring[(avail->idx + added++) % qsz] = head;
Updating The Index Field
Once the idx field of the virtqueue is updated, the device will
be able to access the descriptor entries we've created and the
memory they refer to. This is why a memory barrier is generally
used before the idx update, to ensure it sees the most up-to-date
copy.
The idx field always increments, and we let it wrap naturally at
65536:
avail->idx += added;
<sub:Notifying-The-Device>Notifying The Device
Device notification occurs by writing the 16-bit virtqueue index
of this virtqueue to the Queue Notify field of the virtio header
in the first I/O region of the PCI device. This can be expensive,
however, so the device can suppress such notifications if it
doesn't need them. We have to be careful to expose the new idx
value before checking the suppression flag: it's OK to notify
gratuitously, but not to omit a required notification. So again,
we use a memory barrier here before reading the flags or the
avail_event field.
If the VIRTIO_F_RING_EVENT_IDX feature is not negotiated, and if
the VRING_USED_F_NOTIFY flag is not set, we go ahead and write to
the PCI configuration space.
If the VIRTIO_F_RING_EVENT_IDX feature is negotiated, we read the
avail_event field in the available ring structure. If the
available index crossed_the avail_event field value since the
last notification, we go ahead and write to the PCI configuration
space. The avail_event field wraps naturally at 65536 as well:
(u16)(new_idx - avail_event - 1) < (u16)(new_idx - old_idx)
<sub:Receiving-Used-Buffers>Receiving Used Buffers From The
Device
Once the device has used a buffer (read from or written to it, or
parts of both, depending on the nature of the virtqueue and the
device), it sends an interrupt, following an algorithm very
similar to the algorithm used for the driver to send the device a
buffer:
Write the head descriptor number to the next field in the used
ring.
Update the used ring idx.
Determine whether an interrupt is necessary:
If the VIRTIO_F_RING_EVENT_IDX feature is not negotiated: check
if f the VRING_AVAIL_F_NO_INTERRUPT flag is not set in avail-
>flags
If the VIRTIO_F_RING_EVENT_IDX feature is negotiated: check
whether the used index crossed the used_event field value
since the last update. The used_event field wraps naturally
at 65536 as well:(u16)(new_idx - used_event - 1) < (u16)(new_idx - old_idx)
If an interrupt is necessary:
If MSI-X capability is disabled:
Set the lower bit of the ISR Status field for the device.
Send the appropriate PCI interrupt for the device.
If MSI-X capability is enabled:
Request the appropriate MSI-X interrupt message for the
device, Queue Vector field sets the MSI-X Table entry
number.
If Queue Vector field value is NO_VECTOR, no interrupt
message is requested for this event.
The guest interrupt handler should:
If MSI-X capability is disabled: read the ISR Status field,
which will reset it to zero. If the lower bit is zero, the
interrupt was not for this device. Otherwise, the guest driver
should look through the used rings of each virtqueue for the
device, to see if any progress has been made by the device
which requires servicing.
If MSI-X capability is enabled: look through the used rings of
each virtqueue mapped to the specific MSI-X vector for the
device, to see if any progress has been made by the device
which requires servicing.
For each ring, guest should then disable interrupts by writing
VRING_AVAIL_F_NO_INTERRUPT flag in avail structure, if required.
It can then process used ring entries finally enabling interrupts
by clearing the VRING_AVAIL_F_NO_INTERRUPT flag or updating the
EVENT_IDX field in the available structure, Guest should then
execute a memory barrier, and then recheck the ring empty
condition. This is necessary to handle the case where, after the
last check and before enabling interrupts, an interrupt has been
suppressed by the device:
vring_disable_interrupts(vq);
for (;;) {
if (vq->last_seen_used != vring->used.idx) {
vring_enable_interrupts(vq);
mb();
if (vq->last_seen_used != vring->used.idx)
break;
}
struct vring_used_elem *e =
vring.used->ring[vq->last_seen_used%vsz];
process_buffer(e);
vq->last_seen_used++;
}
Dealing With Configuration Changes<sub:Dealing-With-Configuration>
Some virtio PCI devices can change the device configuration
state, as reflected in the virtio header in the PCI configuration
space. In this case:
If MSI-X capability is disabled: an interrupt is delivered and
the second highest bit is set in the ISR Status field to
indicate that the driver should re-examine the configuration
space.Note that a single interrupt can indicate both that one
or more virtqueue has been used and that the configuration
space has changed: even if the config bit is set, virtqueues
must be scanned.
If MSI-X capability is enabled: an interrupt message is
requested. The Configuration Vector field sets the MSI-X Table
entry number to use. If Configuration Vector field value is
NO_VECTOR, no interrupt message is requested for this event.
Creating New Device Types
Various considerations are necessary when creating a new device
type:
How Many Virtqueues?
It is possible that a very simple device will operate entirely
through its configuration space, but most will need at least one
virtqueue in which it will place requests. A device with both
input and output (eg. console and network devices described here)
need two queues: one which the driver fills with buffers to
receive input, and one which the driver places buffers to
transmit output.
What Configuration Space Layout?
Configuration space is generally used for rarely-changing or
initialization-time parameters. But it is a limited resource, so
it might be better to use a virtqueue to update configuration
information (the network device does this for filtering,
otherwise the table in the config space could potentially be very
large).
Note that this space is generally the guest's native endian,
rather than PCI's little-endian.
What Device Number?
Currently device numbers are assigned quite freely: a simple
request mail to the author of this document or the Linux
virtualization mailing list[footnote:
https://lists.linux-foundation.org/mailman/listinfo/virtualization
] will be sufficient to secure a unique one.
Meanwhile for experimental drivers, use 65535 and work backwards.
How many MSI-X vectors?
Using the optional MSI-X capability devices can speed up
interrupt processing by removing the need to read ISR Status
register by guest driver (which might be an expensive operation),
reducing interrupt sharing between devices and queues within the
device, and handling interrupts from multiple CPUs. However, some
systems impose a limit (which might be as low as 256) on the
total number of MSI-X vectors that can be allocated to all
devices. Devices and/or device drivers should take this into
account, limiting the number of vectors used unless the device is
expected to cause a high volume of interrupts. Devices can
control the number of vectors used by limiting the MSI-X Table
Size or not presenting MSI-X capability in PCI configuration
space. Drivers can control this by mapping events to as small
number of vectors as possible, or disabling MSI-X capability
altogether.
Message Framing
The descriptors used for a buffer should not effect the semantics
of the message, except for the total length of the buffer. For
example, a network buffer consists of a 10 byte header followed
by the network packet. Whether this is presented in the ring
descriptor chain as (say) a 10 byte buffer and a 1514 byte
buffer, or a single 1524 byte buffer, or even three buffers,
should have no effect.
In particular, no implementation should use the descriptor
boundaries to determine the size of any header in a request.[footnote:
The current qemu device implementations mistakenly insist that
the first descriptor cover the header in these cases exactly, so
a cautious driver should arrange it so.
]
Device Improvements
Any change to configuration space, or new virtqueues, or
behavioural changes, should be indicated by negotiation of a new
feature bit. This establishes clarity[footnote:
Even if it does mean documenting design or implementation
mistakes!
] and avoids future expansion problems.
Clusters of functionality which are always implemented together
can use a single bit, but if one feature makes sense without the
others they should not be gratuitously grouped together to
conserve feature bits. We can always extend the spec when the
first person needs more than 24 feature bits for their device.
[LaTeX Command: printnomenclature]
Appendix A: virtio_ring.h
#ifndef VIRTIO_RING_H
#define VIRTIO_RING_H
/* An interface for efficient virtio implementation.
*
* This header is BSD licensed so anyone can use the definitions
* to implement compatible drivers/servers.
*
* Copyright 2007, 2009, IBM Corporation
* Copyright 2011, Red Hat, Inc
* All rights reserved.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or
without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following
conditions
* are met:
* 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above
copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following
disclaimer.
* 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above
copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following
disclaimer in the
* documentation and/or other materials provided with the
distribution.
* 3. Neither the name of IBM nor the names of its contributors
* may be used to endorse or promote products derived from
this software
* without specific prior written permission.
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND
CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
* ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED
TO, THE
* IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A
PARTICULAR PURPOSE
* ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL IBM OR CONTRIBUTORS BE
LIABLE
* FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR
CONSEQUENTIAL
* DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF
SUBSTITUTE GOODS
* OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS
INTERRUPTION)
* HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN
CONTRACT, STRICT
* LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING
IN ANY WAY
* OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE
POSSIBILITY OF
* SUCH DAMAGE.
*/
/* This marks a buffer as continuing via the next field. */
#define VRING_DESC_F_NEXT 1
/* This marks a buffer as write-only (otherwise read-only). */
#define VRING_DESC_F_WRITE 2
/* The Host uses this in used->flags to advise the Guest: don't
kick me
* when you add a buffer. It's unreliable, so it's simply an
* optimization. Guest will still kick if it's out of buffers.
*/
#define VRING_USED_F_NO_NOTIFY 1
/* The Guest uses this in avail->flags to advise the Host: don't
* interrupt me when you consume a buffer. It's unreliable, so
it's
* simply an optimization. */
#define VRING_AVAIL_F_NO_INTERRUPT 1
/* Virtio ring descriptors: 16 bytes.
* These can chain together via "next". */
struct vring_desc {
/* Address (guest-physical). */
uint64_t addr;
/* Length. */
uint32_t len;
/* The flags as indicated above. */
uint16_t flags;
/* We chain unused descriptors via this, too */
uint16_t next;
};
struct vring_avail {
uint16_t flags;
uint16_t idx;
uint16_t ring[];
uint16_t used_event;
};
/* u32 is used here for ids for padding reasons. */
struct vring_used_elem {
/* Index of start of used descriptor chain. */
uint32_t id;
/* Total length of the descriptor chain which was written
to. */
uint32_t len;
};
struct vring_used {
uint16_t flags;
uint16_t idx;
struct vring_used_elem ring[];
uint16_t avail_event;
};
struct vring {
unsigned int num;
struct vring_desc *desc;
struct vring_avail *avail;
struct vring_used *used;
};
/* The standard layout for the ring is a continuous chunk of
memory which
* looks like this. We assume num is a power of 2.
*
* struct vring {
* // The actual descriptors (16 bytes each)
* struct vring_desc desc[num];
*
* // A ring of available descriptor heads with free-running
index.
* __u16 avail_flags;
* __u16 avail_idx;
* __u16 available[num];
*
* // Padding to the next align boundary.
* char pad[];
*
* // A ring of used descriptor heads with free-running
index.
* __u16 used_flags;
* __u16 EVENT_IDX;
* struct vring_used_elem used[num];
* };
* Note: for virtio PCI, align is 4096.
*/
static inline void vring_init(struct vring *vr, unsigned int num,
void *p,
unsigned long align)
{
vr->num = num;
vr->desc = p;
vr->avail = p + num*sizeof(struct vring_desc);
vr->used = (void *)(((unsigned long)&vr->avail->ring[num]
+ align-1)
& ~(align - 1));
}
static inline unsigned vring_size(unsigned int num, unsigned long
align)
{
return ((sizeof(struct vring_desc)*num +
sizeof(uint16_t)*(2+num)
+ align - 1) & ~(align - 1))
+ sizeof(uint16_t)*3 + sizeof(struct
vring_used_elem)*num;
}
static inline int vring_need_event(uint16_t event_idx, uint16_t
new_idx, uint16_t old_idx)
{
return (uint16_t)(new_idx - event_idx - 1) <
(uint16_t)(new_idx - old_idx);
}
#endif /* VIRTIO_RING_H */
<cha:Reserved-Feature-Bits>Appendix B: Reserved Feature Bits
Currently there are five device-independent feature bits defined:
VIRTIO_F_NOTIFY_ON_EMPTY (24) Negotiating this feature
indicates that the driver wants an interrupt if the device runs
out of available descriptors on a virtqueue, even though
interrupts are suppressed using the VRING_AVAIL_F_NO_INTERRUPT
flag or the used_event field. An example of this is the
networking driver: it doesn't need to know every time a packet
is transmitted, but it does need to free the transmitted
packets a finite time after they are transmitted. It can avoid
using a timer if the device interrupts it when all the packets
are transmitted.
VIRTIO_F_RING_INDIRECT_DESC (28) Negotiating this feature
indicates that the driver can use descriptors with the
VRING_DESC_F_INDIRECT flag set, as described in [sub:Indirect-Descriptors]
.
VIRTIO_F_RING_EVENT_IDX(29) This feature enables the used_event
and the avail_event fields. If set, it indicates that the
device should ignore the flags field in the available ring
structure. Instead, the used_event field in this structure is
used by guest to suppress device interrupts. Further, the
driver should ignore the flags field in the used ring
structure. Instead, the avail_event field in this structure is
used by the device to suppress notifications. If unset, the
driver should ignore the used_event field; the device should
ignore the avail_event field; the flags field is used
Appendix C: Network Device
The virtio network device is a virtual ethernet card, and is the
most complex of the devices supported so far by virtio. It has
enhanced rapidly and demonstrates clearly how support for new
features should be added to an existing device. Empty buffers are
placed in one virtqueue for receiving packets, and outgoing
packets are enqueued into another for transmission in that order.
A third command queue is used to control advanced filtering
features.
Configuration
Subsystem Device ID 1
Virtqueues 0:receiveq. 1:transmitq. 2:controlq[footnote:
Only if VIRTIO_NET_F_CTRL_VQ set
]
Feature bits
VIRTIO_NET_F_CSUM (0) Device handles packets with partial
checksum
VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_CSUM (1) Guest handles packets with partial
checksum
VIRTIO_NET_F_MAC (5) Device has given MAC address.
VIRTIO_NET_F_GSO (6) (Deprecated) device handles packets with
any GSO type.[footnote:
It was supposed to indicate segmentation offload support, but
upon further investigation it became clear that multiple bits
were required.
]
VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_TSO4 (7) Guest can receive TSOv4.
VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_TSO6 (8) Guest can receive TSOv6.
VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_ECN (9) Guest can receive TSO with ECN.
VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_UFO (10) Guest can receive UFO.
VIRTIO_NET_F_HOST_TSO4 (11) Device can receive TSOv4.
VIRTIO_NET_F_HOST_TSO6 (12) Device can receive TSOv6.
VIRTIO_NET_F_HOST_ECN (13) Device can receive TSO with ECN.
VIRTIO_NET_F_HOST_UFO (14) Device can receive UFO.
VIRTIO_NET_F_MRG_RXBUF (15) Guest can merge receive buffers.
VIRTIO_NET_F_STATUS (16) Configuration status field is
available.
VIRTIO_NET_F_CTRL_VQ (17) Control channel is available.
VIRTIO_NET_F_CTRL_RX (18) Control channel RX mode support.
VIRTIO_NET_F_CTRL_VLAN (19) Control channel VLAN filtering.
VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_ANNOUNCE(21) Guest can send gratuitous
packets.
Device configuration layout Two configuration fields are
currently defined. The mac address field always exists (though
is only valid if VIRTIO_NET_F_MAC is set), and the status field
only exists if VIRTIO_NET_F_STATUS is set. Two read-only bits
are currently defined for the status field:
VIRTIO_NET_S_LINK_UP and VIRTIO_NET_S_ANNOUNCE. #define VIRTIO_NET_S_LINK_UP 1
#define VIRTIO_NET_S_ANNOUNCE 2
struct virtio_net_config {
u8 mac[6];
u16 status;
};
Device Initialization
The initialization routine should identify the receive and
transmission virtqueues.
If the VIRTIO_NET_F_MAC feature bit is set, the configuration
space “mac” entry indicates the “physical” address of the the
network card, otherwise a private MAC address should be
assigned. All guests are expected to negotiate this feature if
it is set.
If the VIRTIO_NET_F_CTRL_VQ feature bit is negotiated, identify
the control virtqueue.
If the VIRTIO_NET_F_STATUS feature bit is negotiated, the link
status can be read from the bottom bit of the “status” config
field. Otherwise, the link should be assumed active.
The receive virtqueue should be filled with receive buffers.
This is described in detail below in “Setting Up Receive
Buffers”.
A driver can indicate that it will generate checksumless
packets by negotating the VIRTIO_NET_F_CSUM feature. This “
checksum offload” is a common feature on modern network cards.
If that feature is negotiated[footnote:
ie. VIRTIO_NET_F_HOST_TSO* and VIRTIO_NET_F_HOST_UFO are
dependent on VIRTIO_NET_F_CSUM; a dvice which offers the offload
features must offer the checksum feature, and a driver which
accepts the offload features must accept the checksum feature.
Similar logic applies to the VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_TSO4 features
depending on VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_CSUM.
], a driver can use TCP or UDP segmentation offload by
negotiating the VIRTIO_NET_F_HOST_TSO4 (IPv4 TCP),
VIRTIO_NET_F_HOST_TSO6 (IPv6 TCP) and VIRTIO_NET_F_HOST_UFO
(UDP fragmentation) features. It should not send TCP packets
requiring segmentation offload which have the Explicit
Congestion Notification bit set, unless the
VIRTIO_NET_F_HOST_ECN feature is negotiated.[footnote:
This is a common restriction in real, older network cards.
]
The converse features are also available: a driver can save the
virtual device some work by negotiating these features.[footnote:
For example, a network packet transported between two guests on
the same system may not require checksumming at all, nor
segmentation, if both guests are amenable.
] The VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_CSUM feature indicates that partially
checksummed packets can be received, and if it can do that then
the VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_TSO4, VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_TSO6,
VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_UFO and VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_ECN are the input
equivalents of the features described above. See “Receiving
Packets” below.
Device Operation
Packets are transmitted by placing them in the transmitq, and
buffers for incoming packets are placed in the receiveq. In each
case, the packet itself is preceeded by a header:
struct virtio_net_hdr {
#define VIRTIO_NET_HDR_F_NEEDS_CSUM 1
u8 flags;
#define VIRTIO_NET_HDR_GSO_NONE 0
#define VIRTIO_NET_HDR_GSO_TCPV4 1
#define VIRTIO_NET_HDR_GSO_UDP 3
#define VIRTIO_NET_HDR_GSO_TCPV6 4
#define VIRTIO_NET_HDR_GSO_ECN 0x80
u8 gso_type;
u16 hdr_len;
u16 gso_size;
u16 csum_start;
u16 csum_offset;
/* Only if VIRTIO_NET_F_MRG_RXBUF: */
u16 num_buffers
};
The controlq is used to control device features such as
filtering.
Packet Transmission
Transmitting a single packet is simple, but varies depending on
the different features the driver negotiated.
If the driver negotiated VIRTIO_NET_F_CSUM, and the packet has
not been fully checksummed, then the virtio_net_hdr's fields
are set as follows. Otherwise, the packet must be fully
checksummed, and flags is zero.
flags has the VIRTIO_NET_HDR_F_NEEDS_CSUM set,
<ite:csum_start-is-set>csum_start is set to the offset within
the packet to begin checksumming, and
csum_offset indicates how many bytes after the csum_start the
new (16 bit ones' complement) checksum should be placed.[footnote:
For example, consider a partially checksummed TCP (IPv4) packet.
It will have a 14 byte ethernet header and 20 byte IP header
followed by the TCP header (with the TCP checksum field 16 bytes
into that header). csum_start will be 14+20 = 34 (the TCP
checksum includes the header), and csum_offset will be 16. The
value in the TCP checksum field should be initialized to the sum
of the TCP pseudo header, so that replacing it by the ones'
complement checksum of the TCP header and body will give the
correct result.
]
<enu:If-the-driver>If the driver negotiated
VIRTIO_NET_F_HOST_TSO4, TSO6 or UFO, and the packet requires
TCP segmentation or UDP fragmentation, then the “gso_type”
field is set to VIRTIO_NET_HDR_GSO_TCPV4, TCPV6 or UDP.
(Otherwise, it is set to VIRTIO_NET_HDR_GSO_NONE). In this
case, packets larger than 1514 bytes can be transmitted: the
metadata indicates how to replicate the packet header to cut it
into smaller packets. The other gso fields are set:
hdr_len is a hint to the device as to how much of the header
needs to be kept to copy into each packet, usually set to the
length of the headers, including the transport header.[footnote:
Due to various bugs in implementations, this field is not useful
as a guarantee of the transport header size.
]
gso_size is the maximum size of each packet beyond that header
(ie. MSS).
If the driver negotiated the VIRTIO_NET_F_HOST_ECN feature, the
VIRTIO_NET_HDR_GSO_ECN bit may be set in “gso_type” as well,
indicating that the TCP packet has the ECN bit set.[footnote:
This case is not handled by some older hardware, so is called out
specifically in the protocol.
]
If the driver negotiated the VIRTIO_NET_F_MRG_RXBUF feature,
the num_buffers field is set to zero.
The header and packet are added as one output buffer to the
transmitq, and the device is notified of the new entry (see [sub:Notifying-The-Device]
).[footnote:
Note that the header will be two bytes longer for the
VIRTIO_NET_F_MRG_RXBUF case.
]
Packet Transmission Interrupt
Often a driver will suppress transmission interrupts using the
VRING_AVAIL_F_NO_INTERRUPT flag (see [sub:Receiving-Used-Buffers]
) and check for used packets in the transmit path of following
packets. However, it will still receive interrupts if the
VIRTIO_F_NOTIFY_ON_EMPTY feature is negotiated, indicating that
the transmission queue is completely emptied.
The normal behavior in this interrupt handler is to retrieve and
new descriptors from the used ring and free the corresponding
headers and packets.
Setting Up Receive Buffers
It is generally a good idea to keep the receive virtqueue as
fully populated as possible: if it runs out, network performance
will suffer.
If the VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_TSO4, VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_TSO6 or
VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_UFO features are used, the Guest will need to
accept packets of up to 65550 bytes long (the maximum size of a
TCP or UDP packet, plus the 14 byte ethernet header), otherwise
1514 bytes. So unless VIRTIO_NET_F_MRG_RXBUF is negotiated, every
buffer in the receive queue needs to be at least this length [footnote:
Obviously each one can be split across multiple descriptor
elements.
].
If VIRTIO_NET_F_MRG_RXBUF is negotiated, each buffer must be at
least the size of the struct virtio_net_hdr.
Packet Receive Interrupt
When a packet is copied into a buffer in the receiveq, the
optimal path is to disable further interrupts for the receiveq
(see [sub:Receiving-Used-Buffers]) and process packets until no
more are found, then re-enable them.
Processing packet involves:
If the driver negotiated the VIRTIO_NET_F_MRG_RXBUF feature,
then the “num_buffers” field indicates how many descriptors
this packet is spread over (including this one). This allows
receipt of large packets without having to allocate large
buffers. In this case, there will be at least “num_buffers” in
the used ring, and they should be chained together to form a
single packet. The other buffers will not begin with a struct
virtio_net_hdr.
If the VIRTIO_NET_F_MRG_RXBUF feature was not negotiated, or
the “num_buffers” field is one, then the entire packet will be
contained within this buffer, immediately following the struct
virtio_net_hdr.
If the VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_CSUM feature was negotiated, the
VIRTIO_NET_HDR_F_NEEDS_CSUM bit in the “flags” field may be
set: if so, the checksum on the packet is incomplete and the “
csum_start” and “csum_offset” fields indicate how to calculate
it (see [ite:csum_start-is-set]).
If the VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_TSO4, TSO6 or UFO options were
negotiated, then the “gso_type” may be something other than
VIRTIO_NET_HDR_GSO_NONE, and the “gso_size” field indicates the
desired MSS (see [enu:If-the-driver]).
Control Virtqueue
The driver uses the control virtqueue (if VIRTIO_NET_F_VTRL_VQ is
negotiated) to send commands to manipulate various features of
the device which would not easily map into the configuration
space.
All commands are of the following form:
struct virtio_net_ctrl {
u8 class;
u8 command;
u8 command-specific-data[];
u8 ack;
};
/* ack values */
#define VIRTIO_NET_OK 0
#define VIRTIO_NET_ERR 1
The class, command and command-specific-data are set by the
driver, and the device sets the ack byte. There is little it can
do except issue a diagnostic if the ack byte is not
VIRTIO_NET_OK.
Packet Receive Filtering
If the VIRTIO_NET_F_CTRL_RX feature is negotiated, the driver can
send control commands for promiscuous mode, multicast receiving,
and filtering of MAC addresses.
Note that in general, these commands are best-effort: unwanted
packets may still arrive.
Setting Promiscuous Mode
#define VIRTIO_NET_CTRL_RX 0
#define VIRTIO_NET_CTRL_RX_PROMISC 0
#define VIRTIO_NET_CTRL_RX_ALLMULTI 1
The class VIRTIO_NET_CTRL_RX has two commands:
VIRTIO_NET_CTRL_RX_PROMISC turns promiscuous mode on and off, and
VIRTIO_NET_CTRL_RX_ALLMULTI turns all-multicast receive on and
off. The command-specific-data is one byte containing 0 (off) or
1 (on).
Setting MAC Address Filtering
struct virtio_net_ctrl_mac {
u32 entries;
u8 macs[entries][ETH_ALEN];
};
#define VIRTIO_NET_CTRL_MAC 1
#define VIRTIO_NET_CTRL_MAC_TABLE_SET 0
The device can filter incoming packets by any number of
destination MAC addresses.[footnote:
Since there are no guarentees, it can use a hash filter
orsilently switch to allmulti or promiscuous mode if it is given
too many addresses.
] This table is set using the class VIRTIO_NET_CTRL_MAC and the
command VIRTIO_NET_CTRL_MAC_TABLE_SET. The command-specific-data
is two variable length tables of 6-byte MAC addresses. The first
table contains unicast addresses, and the second contains
multicast addresses.
VLAN Filtering
If the driver negotiates the VIRTION_NET_F_CTRL_VLAN feature, it
can control a VLAN filter table in the device.
#define VIRTIO_NET_CTRL_VLAN 2
#define VIRTIO_NET_CTRL_VLAN_ADD 0
#define VIRTIO_NET_CTRL_VLAN_DEL 1
Both the VIRTIO_NET_CTRL_VLAN_ADD and VIRTIO_NET_CTRL_VLAN_DEL
command take a 16-bit VLAN id as the command-specific-data.
Gratuitous Packet Sending
If the driver negotiates the VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_ANNOUNCE (depends
on VIRTIO_NET_F_CTRL_VQ), it can ask the guest to send gratuitous
packets; this is usually done after the guest has been physically
migrated, and needs to announce its presence on the new network
links. (As hypervisor does not have the knowledge of guest
network configuration (eg. tagged vlan) it is simplest to prod
the guest in this way).
#define VIRTIO_NET_CTRL_ANNOUNCE 3
#define VIRTIO_NET_CTRL_ANNOUNCE_ACK 0
The Guest needs to check VIRTIO_NET_S_ANNOUNCE bit in status
field when it notices the changes of device configuration. The
command VIRTIO_NET_CTRL_ANNOUNCE_ACK is used to indicate that
driver has recevied the notification and device would clear the
VIRTIO_NET_S_ANNOUNCE bit in the status filed after it received
this command.
Processing this notification involves:
Sending the gratuitous packets or marking there are pending
gratuitous packets to be sent and letting deferred routine to
send them.
Sending VIRTIO_NET_CTRL_ANNOUNCE_ACK command through control
vq.
.
Appendix D: Block Device
The virtio block device is a simple virtual block device (ie.
disk). Read and write requests (and other exotic requests) are
placed in the queue, and serviced (probably out of order) by the
device except where noted.
Configuration
Subsystem Device ID 2
Virtqueues 0:requestq.
Feature bits
VIRTIO_BLK_F_BARRIER (0) Host supports request barriers.
VIRTIO_BLK_F_SIZE_MAX (1) Maximum size of any single segment is
in “size_max”.
VIRTIO_BLK_F_SEG_MAX (2) Maximum number of segments in a
request is in “seg_max”.
VIRTIO_BLK_F_GEOMETRY (4) Disk-style geometry specified in “
geometry”.
VIRTIO_BLK_F_RO (5) Device is read-only.
VIRTIO_BLK_F_BLK_SIZE (6) Block size of disk is in “blk_size”.
VIRTIO_BLK_F_SCSI (7) Device supports scsi packet commands.
VIRTIO_BLK_F_FLUSH (9) Cache flush command support.
Device configuration layout The capacity of the device
(expressed in 512-byte sectors) is always present. The
availability of the others all depend on various feature bits
as indicated above. struct virtio_blk_config {
u64 capacity;
u32 size_max;
u32 seg_max;
struct virtio_blk_geometry {
u16 cylinders;
u8 heads;
u8 sectors;
} geometry;
u32 blk_size;
};
Device Initialization
The device size should be read from the “capacity”
configuration field. No requests should be submitted which goes
beyond this limit.
If the VIRTIO_BLK_F_BLK_SIZE feature is negotiated, the
blk_size field can be read to determine the optimal sector size
for the driver to use. This does not effect the units used in
the protocol (always 512 bytes), but awareness of the correct
value can effect performance.
If the VIRTIO_BLK_F_RO feature is set by the device, any write
requests will fail.
Device Operation
The driver queues requests to the virtqueue, and they are used by
the device (not necessarily in order). Each request is of form:
struct virtio_blk_req {
u32 type;
u32 ioprio;
u64 sector;
char data[][512];
u8 status;
};
If the device has VIRTIO_BLK_F_SCSI feature, it can also support
scsi packet command requests, each of these requests is of form:struct virtio_scsi_pc_req {
u32 type;
u32 ioprio;
u64 sector;
char cmd[];
char data[][512];
#define SCSI_SENSE_BUFFERSIZE 96
u8 sense[SCSI_SENSE_BUFFERSIZE];
u32 errors;
u32 data_len;
u32 sense_len;
u32 residual;
u8 status;
};
The type of the request is either a read (VIRTIO_BLK_T_IN), a
write (VIRTIO_BLK_T_OUT), a scsi packet command
(VIRTIO_BLK_T_SCSI_CMD or VIRTIO_BLK_T_SCSI_CMD_OUT[footnote:
the SCSI_CMD and SCSI_CMD_OUT types are equivalent, the device
does not distinguish between them
]) or a flush (VIRTIO_BLK_T_FLUSH or VIRTIO_BLK_T_FLUSH_OUT[footnote:
the FLUSH and FLUSH_OUT types are equivalent, the device does not
distinguish between them
]). If the device has VIRTIO_BLK_F_BARRIER feature the high bit
(VIRTIO_BLK_T_BARRIER) indicates that this request acts as a
barrier and that all preceeding requests must be complete before
this one, and all following requests must not be started until
this is complete. Note that a barrier does not flush caches in
the underlying backend device in host, and thus does not serve as
data consistency guarantee. Driver must use FLUSH request to
flush the host cache.
#define VIRTIO_BLK_T_IN 0
#define VIRTIO_BLK_T_OUT 1
#define VIRTIO_BLK_T_SCSI_CMD 2
#define VIRTIO_BLK_T_SCSI_CMD_OUT 3
#define VIRTIO_BLK_T_FLUSH 4
#define VIRTIO_BLK_T_FLUSH_OUT 5
#define VIRTIO_BLK_T_BARRIER 0x80000000
The ioprio field is a hint about the relative priorities of
requests to the device: higher numbers indicate more important
requests.
The sector number indicates the offset (multiplied by 512) where
the read or write is to occur. This field is unused and set to 0
for scsi packet commands and for flush commands.
The cmd field is only present for scsi packet command requests,
and indicates the command to perform. This field must reside in a
single, separate read-only buffer; command length can be derived
from the length of this buffer.
Note that these first three (four for scsi packet commands)
fields are always read-only: the data field is either read-only
or write-only, depending on the request. The size of the read or
write can be derived from the total size of the request buffers.
The sense field is only present for scsi packet command requests,
and indicates the buffer for scsi sense data.
The data_len field is only present for scsi packet command
requests, this field is deprecated, and should be ignored by the
driver. Historically, devices copied data length there.
The sense_len field is only present for scsi packet command
requests and indicates the number of bytes actually written to
the sense buffer.
The residual field is only present for scsi packet command
requests and indicates the residual size, calculated as data
length - number of bytes actually transferred.
The final status byte is written by the device: either
VIRTIO_BLK_S_OK for success, VIRTIO_BLK_S_IOERR for host or guest
error or VIRTIO_BLK_S_UNSUPP for a request unsupported by host:#define VIRTIO_BLK_S_OK 0
#define VIRTIO_BLK_S_IOERR 1
#define VIRTIO_BLK_S_UNSUPP 2
Historically, devices assumed that the fields type, ioprio and
sector reside in a single, separate read-only buffer; the fields
errors, data_len, sense_len and residual reside in a single,
separate write-only buffer; the sense field in a separate
write-only buffer of size 96 bytes, by itself; the fields errors,
data_len, sense_len and residual in a single write-only buffer;
and the status field is a separate read-only buffer of size 1
byte, by itself.
Appendix E: Console Device
The virtio console device is a simple device for data input and
output. A device may have one or more ports. Each port has a pair
of input and output virtqueues. Moreover, a device has a pair of
control IO virtqueues. The control virtqueues are used to
communicate information between the device and the driver about
ports being opened and closed on either side of the connection,
indication from the host about whether a particular port is a
console port, adding new ports, port hot-plug/unplug, etc., and
indication from the guest about whether a port or a device was
successfully added, port open/close, etc.. For data IO, one or
more empty buffers are placed in the receive queue for incoming
data and outgoing characters are placed in the transmit queue.
Configuration
Subsystem Device ID 3
Virtqueues 0:receiveq(port0). 1:transmitq(port0), 2:control
receiveq[footnote:
Ports 2 onwards only if VIRTIO_CONSOLE_F_MULTIPORT is set
], 3:control transmitq, 4:receiveq(port1), 5:transmitq(port1),
...
Feature bits
VIRTIO_CONSOLE_F_SIZE (0) Configuration cols and rows fields
are valid.
VIRTIO_CONSOLE_F_MULTIPORT(1) Device has support for multiple
ports; configuration fields nr_ports and max_nr_ports are
valid and control virtqueues will be used.
Device configuration layout The size of the console is supplied
in the configuration space if the VIRTIO_CONSOLE_F_SIZE feature
is set. Furthermore, if the VIRTIO_CONSOLE_F_MULTIPORT feature
is set, the maximum number of ports supported by the device can
be fetched.struct virtio_console_config {
u16 cols;
u16 rows;
u32 max_nr_ports;
};
Device Initialization
If the VIRTIO_CONSOLE_F_SIZE feature is negotiated, the driver
can read the console dimensions from the configuration fields.
If the VIRTIO_CONSOLE_F_MULTIPORT feature is negotiated, the
driver can spawn multiple ports, not all of which may be
attached to a console. Some could be generic ports. In this
case, the control virtqueues are enabled and according to the
max_nr_ports configuration-space value, the appropriate number
of virtqueues are created. A control message indicating the
driver is ready is sent to the host. The host can then send
control messages for adding new ports to the device. After
creating and initializing each port, a
VIRTIO_CONSOLE_PORT_READY control message is sent to the host
for that port so the host can let us know of any additional
configuration options set for that port.
The receiveq for each port is populated with one or more
receive buffers.
Device Operation
For output, a buffer containing the characters is placed in the
port's transmitq.[footnote:
Because this is high importance and low bandwidth, the current
Linux implementation polls for the buffer to be used, rather than
waiting for an interrupt, simplifying the implementation
significantly. However, for generic serial ports with the
O_NONBLOCK flag set, the polling limitation is relaxed and the
consumed buffers are freed upon the next write or poll call or
when a port is closed or hot-unplugged.
]
When a buffer is used in the receiveq (signalled by an
interrupt), the contents is the input to the port associated
with the virtqueue for which the notification was received.
If the driver negotiated the VIRTIO_CONSOLE_F_SIZE feature, a
configuration change interrupt may occur. The updated size can
be read from the configuration fields.
If the driver negotiated the VIRTIO_CONSOLE_F_MULTIPORT
feature, active ports are announced by the host using the
VIRTIO_CONSOLE_PORT_ADD control message. The same message is
used for port hot-plug as well.
If the host specified a port `name', a sysfs attribute is
created with the name filled in, so that udev rules can be
written that can create a symlink from the port's name to the
char device for port discovery by applications in the guest.
Changes to ports' state are effected by control messages.
Appropriate action is taken on the port indicated in the
control message. The layout of the structure of the control
buffer and the events associated are:struct virtio_console_control {
uint32_t id; /* Port number */
uint16_t event; /* The kind of control event */
uint16_t value; /* Extra information for the event */
};
/* Some events for the internal messages (control packets) */
#define VIRTIO_CONSOLE_DEVICE_READY 0
#define VIRTIO_CONSOLE_PORT_ADD 1
#define VIRTIO_CONSOLE_PORT_REMOVE 2
#define VIRTIO_CONSOLE_PORT_READY 3
#define VIRTIO_CONSOLE_CONSOLE_PORT 4
#define VIRTIO_CONSOLE_RESIZE 5
#define VIRTIO_CONSOLE_PORT_OPEN 6
#define VIRTIO_CONSOLE_PORT_NAME 7
Appendix F: Entropy Device
The virtio entropy device supplies high-quality randomness for
guest use.
Configuration
Subsystem Device ID 4
Virtqueues 0:requestq.
Feature bits None currently defined
Device configuration layout None currently defined.
Device Initialization
The virtqueue is initialized
Device Operation
When the driver requires random bytes, it places the descriptor
of one or more buffers in the queue. It will be completely filled
by random data by the device.
Appendix G: Memory Balloon Device
The virtio memory balloon device is a primitive device for
managing guest memory: the device asks for a certain amount of
memory, and the guest supplies it (or withdraws it, if the device
has more than it asks for). This allows the guest to adapt to
changes in allowance of underlying physical memory. If the
feature is negotiated, the device can also be used to communicate
guest memory statistics to the host.
Configuration
Subsystem Device ID 5
Virtqueues 0:inflateq. 1:deflateq. 2:statsq.[footnote:
Only if VIRTIO_BALLON_F_STATS_VQ set
]
Feature bits
VIRTIO_BALLOON_F_MUST_TELL_HOST (0) Host must be told before
pages from the balloon are used.
VIRTIO_BALLOON_F_STATS_VQ (1) A virtqueue for reporting guest
memory statistics is present.
Device configuration layout Both fields of this configuration
are always available. Note that they are little endian, despite
convention that device fields are guest endian:struct virtio_balloon_config {
u32 num_pages;
u32 actual;
};
Device Initialization
The inflate and deflate virtqueues are identified.
If the VIRTIO_BALLOON_F_STATS_VQ feature bit is negotiated:
Identify the stats virtqueue.
Add one empty buffer to the stats virtqueue and notify the
host.
Device operation begins immediately.
Device Operation
Memory Ballooning The device is driven by the receipt of a
configuration change interrupt.
The “num_pages” configuration field is examined. If this is
greater than the “actual” number of pages, memory must be given
to the balloon. If it is less than the “actual” number of
pages, memory may be taken back from the balloon for general
use.
To supply memory to the balloon (aka. inflate):
The driver constructs an array of addresses of unused memory
pages. These addresses are divided by 4096[footnote:
This is historical, and independent of the guest page size
] and the descriptor describing the resulting 32-bit array is
added to the inflateq.
To remove memory from the balloon (aka. deflate):
The driver constructs an array of addresses of memory pages it
has previously given to the balloon, as described above. This
descriptor is added to the deflateq.
If the VIRTIO_BALLOON_F_MUST_TELL_HOST feature is set, the
guest may not use these requested pages until that descriptor
in the deflateq has been used by the device.
Otherwise, the guest may begin to re-use pages previously given
to the balloon before the device has acknowledged their
withdrawl. [footnote:
In this case, deflation advice is merely a courtesy
]
In either case, once the device has completed the inflation or
deflation, the “actual” field of the configuration should be
updated to reflect the new number of pages in the balloon.[footnote:
As updates to configuration space are not atomic, this field
isn't particularly reliable, but can be used to diagnose buggy
guests.
]
Memory Statistics
The stats virtqueue is atypical because communication is driven
by the device (not the driver). The channel becomes active at
driver initialization time when the driver adds an empty buffer
and notifies the device. A request for memory statistics proceeds
as follows:
The device pushes the buffer onto the used ring and sends an
interrupt.
The driver pops the used buffer and discards it.
The driver collects memory statistics and writes them into a
new buffer.
The driver adds the buffer to the virtqueue and notifies the
device.
The device pops the buffer (retaining it to initiate a
subsequent request) and consumes the statistics.
Memory Statistics Format Each statistic consists of a 16 bit
tag and a 64 bit value. Both quantities are represented in the
native endian of the guest. All statistics are optional and the
driver may choose which ones to supply. To guarantee backwards
compatibility, unsupported statistics should be omitted.
struct virtio_balloon_stat {
#define VIRTIO_BALLOON_S_SWAP_IN 0
#define VIRTIO_BALLOON_S_SWAP_OUT 1
#define VIRTIO_BALLOON_S_MAJFLT 2
#define VIRTIO_BALLOON_S_MINFLT 3
#define VIRTIO_BALLOON_S_MEMFREE 4
#define VIRTIO_BALLOON_S_MEMTOT 5
u16 tag;
u64 val;
} __attribute__((packed));
Tags
VIRTIO_BALLOON_S_SWAP_IN The amount of memory that has been
swapped in (in bytes).
VIRTIO_BALLOON_S_SWAP_OUT The amount of memory that has been
swapped out to disk (in bytes).
VIRTIO_BALLOON_S_MAJFLT The number of major page faults that
have occurred.
VIRTIO_BALLOON_S_MINFLT The number of minor page faults that
have occurred.
VIRTIO_BALLOON_S_MEMFREE The amount of memory not being used
for any purpose (in bytes).
VIRTIO_BALLOON_S_MEMTOT The total amount of memory available
(in bytes).
Appendix H: Rpmsg: Remote Processor Messaging
Virtio rpmsg devices represent remote processors on the system
which run in asymmetric multi-processing (AMP) configuration, and
which are usually used to offload cpu-intensive tasks from the
main application processor (a typical SoC methodology).
Virtio is being used to communicate with those remote processors;
empty buffers are placed in one virtqueue for receiving messages,
and non-empty buffers, containing outbound messages, are enqueued
in a second virtqueue for transmission.
Numerous communication channels can be multiplexed over those two
virtqueues, so different entities, running on the application and
remote processor, can directly communicate in a point-to-point
fashion.
Configuration
Subsystem Device ID 7
Virtqueues 0:receiveq. 1:transmitq.
Feature bits
VIRTIO_RPMSG_F_NS (0) Device sends (and capable of receiving)
name service messages announcing the creation (or
destruction) of a channel:/**
* struct rpmsg_ns_msg - dynamic name service announcement
message
* @name: name of remote service that is published
* @addr: address of remote service that is published
* @flags: indicates whether service is created or destroyed
*
* This message is sent across to publish a new service (or
announce
* about its removal). When we receives these messages, an
appropriate
* rpmsg channel (i.e device) is created/destroyed.
*/
struct rpmsg_ns_msgoon_config {
char name[RPMSG_NAME_SIZE];
u32 addr;
u32 flags;
} __packed;
/**
* enum rpmsg_ns_flags - dynamic name service announcement flags
*
* @RPMSG_NS_CREATE: a new remote service was just created
* @RPMSG_NS_DESTROY: a remote service was just destroyed
*/
enum rpmsg_ns_flags {
RPMSG_NS_CREATE = 0,
RPMSG_NS_DESTROY = 1,
};
Device configuration layout
At his point none currently defined.
Device Initialization
The initialization routine should identify the receive and
transmission virtqueues.
The receive virtqueue should be filled with receive buffers.
Device Operation
Messages are transmitted by placing them in the transmitq, and
buffers for inbound messages are placed in the receiveq. In any
case, messages are always preceded by the following header: /**
* struct rpmsg_hdr - common header for all rpmsg messages
* @src: source address
* @dst: destination address
* @reserved: reserved for future use
* @len: length of payload (in bytes)
* @flags: message flags
* @data: @len bytes of message payload data
*
* Every message sent(/received) on the rpmsg bus begins with
this header.
*/
struct rpmsg_hdr {
u32 src;
u32 dst;
u32 reserved;
u16 len;
u16 flags;
u8 data[0];
} __packed;
Appendix I: SCSI Host Device
The virtio SCSI host device groups together one or more virtual
logical units (such as disks), and allows communicating to them
using the SCSI protocol. An instance of the device represents a
SCSI host to which many targets and LUNs are attached.
The virtio SCSI device services two kinds of requests:
command requests for a logical unit;
task management functions related to a logical unit, target or
command.
The device is also able to send out notifications about added and
removed logical units. Together, these capabilities provide a
SCSI transport protocol that uses virtqueues as the transfer
medium. In the transport protocol, the virtio driver acts as the
initiator, while the virtio SCSI host provides one or more
targets that receive and process the requests.
Configuration
Subsystem Device ID 8
Virtqueues 0:controlq; 1:eventq; 2..n:request queues.
Feature bits
VIRTIO_SCSI_F_INOUT (0) A single request can include both
read-only and write-only data buffers.
VIRTIO_SCSI_F_HOTPLUG (1) The host should enable
hot-plug/hot-unplug of new LUNs and targets on the SCSI bus.
Device configuration layout All fields of this configuration
are always available. sense_size and cdb_size are writable by
the guest.struct virtio_scsi_config {
u32 num_queues;
u32 seg_max;
u32 max_sectors;
u32 cmd_per_lun;
u32 event_info_size;
u32 sense_size;
u32 cdb_size;
u16 max_channel;
u16 max_target;
u32 max_lun;
};
num_queues is the total number of request virtqueues exposed by
the device. The driver is free to use only one request queue,
or it can use more to achieve better performance.
seg_max is the maximum number of segments that can be in a
command. A bidirectional command can include seg_max input
segments and seg_max output segments.
max_sectors is a hint to the guest about the maximum transfer
size it should use.
cmd_per_lun is a hint to the guest about the maximum number of
linked commands it should send to one LUN. The actual value
to be used is the minimum of cmd_per_lun and the virtqueue
size.
event_info_size is the maximum size that the device will fill
for buffers that the driver places in the eventq. The driver
should always put buffers at least of this size. It is
written by the device depending on the set of negotated
features.
sense_size is the maximum size of the sense data that the
device will write. The default value is written by the device
and will always be 96, but the driver can modify it. It is
restored to the default when the device is reset.
cdb_size is the maximum size of the CDB that the driver will
write. The default value is written by the device and will
always be 32, but the driver can likewise modify it. It is
restored to the default when the device is reset.
max_channel, max_target and max_lun can be used by the driver
as hints to constrain scanning the logical units on the
host.h
Device Initialization
The initialization routine should first of all discover the
device's virtqueues.
If the driver uses the eventq, it should then place at least a
buffer in the eventq.
The driver can immediately issue requests (for example, INQUIRY
or REPORT LUNS) or task management functions (for example, I_T
RESET).
Device Operation: request queues
The driver queues requests to an arbitrary request queue, and
they are used by the device on that same queue. It is the
responsibility of the driver to ensure strict request ordering
for commands placed on different queues, because they will be
consumed with no order constraints.
Requests have the following format:
struct virtio_scsi_req_cmd {
// Read-only
u8 lun[8];
u64 id;
u8 task_attr;
u8 prio;
u8 crn;
char cdb[cdb_size];
char dataout[];
// Write-only part
u32 sense_len;
u32 residual;
u16 status_qualifier;
u8 status;
u8 response;
u8 sense[sense_size];
char datain[];
};
/* command-specific response values */
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_S_OK 0
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_S_OVERRUN 1
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_S_ABORTED 2
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_S_BAD_TARGET 3
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_S_RESET 4
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_S_BUSY 5
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_S_TRANSPORT_FAILURE 6
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_S_TARGET_FAILURE 7
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_S_NEXUS_FAILURE 8
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_S_FAILURE 9
/* task_attr */
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_S_SIMPLE 0
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_S_ORDERED 1
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_S_HEAD 2
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_S_ACA 3
The lun field addresses a target and logical unit in the
virtio-scsi device's SCSI domain. The only supported format for
the LUN field is: first byte set to 1, second byte set to target,
third and fourth byte representing a single level LUN structure,
followed by four zero bytes. With this representation, a
virtio-scsi device can serve up to 256 targets and 16384 LUNs per
target.
The id field is the command identifier (“tag”).
task_attr, prio and crn should be left to zero. task_attr defines
the task attribute as in the table above, but all task attributes
may be mapped to SIMPLE by the device; crn may also be provided
by clients, but is generally expected to be 0. The maximum CRN
value defined by the protocol is 255, since CRN is stored in an
8-bit integer.
All of these fields are defined in SAM. They are always
read-only, as are the cdb and dataout field. The cdb_size is
taken from the configuration space.
sense and subsequent fields are always write-only. The sense_len
field indicates the number of bytes actually written to the sense
buffer. The residual field indicates the residual size,
calculated as “data_length - number_of_transferred_bytes”, for
read or write operations. For bidirectional commands, the
number_of_transferred_bytes includes both read and written bytes.
A residual field that is less than the size of datain means that
the dataout field was processed entirely. A residual field that
exceeds the size of datain means that the dataout field was
processed partially and the datain field was not processed at
all.
The status byte is written by the device to be the status code as
defined in SAM.
The response byte is written by the device to be one of the
following:
VIRTIO_SCSI_S_OK when the request was completed and the status
byte is filled with a SCSI status code (not necessarily
"GOOD").
VIRTIO_SCSI_S_OVERRUN if the content of the CDB requires
transferring more data than is available in the data buffers.
VIRTIO_SCSI_S_ABORTED if the request was cancelled due to an
ABORT TASK or ABORT TASK SET task management function.
VIRTIO_SCSI_S_BAD_TARGET if the request was never processed
because the target indicated by the lun field does not exist.
VIRTIO_SCSI_S_RESET if the request was cancelled due to a bus
or device reset (including a task management function).
VIRTIO_SCSI_S_TRANSPORT_FAILURE if the request failed due to a
problem in the connection between the host and the target
(severed link).
VIRTIO_SCSI_S_TARGET_FAILURE if the target is suffering a
failure and the guest should not retry on other paths.
VIRTIO_SCSI_S_NEXUS_FAILURE if the nexus is suffering a failure
but retrying on other paths might yield a different result.
VIRTIO_SCSI_S_BUSY if the request failed but retrying on the
same path should work.
VIRTIO_SCSI_S_FAILURE for other host or guest error. In
particular, if neither dataout nor datain is empty, and the
VIRTIO_SCSI_F_INOUT feature has not been negotiated, the
request will be immediately returned with a response equal to
VIRTIO_SCSI_S_FAILURE.
Device Operation: controlq
The controlq is used for other SCSI transport operations.
Requests have the following format:
struct virtio_scsi_ctrl {
u32 type;
...
u8 response;
};
/* response values valid for all commands */
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_S_OK 0
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_S_BAD_TARGET 3
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_S_BUSY 5
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_S_TRANSPORT_FAILURE 6
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_S_TARGET_FAILURE 7
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_S_NEXUS_FAILURE 8
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_S_FAILURE 9
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_S_INCORRECT_LUN 12
The type identifies the remaining fields.
The following commands are defined:
Task management function
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_T_TMF 0
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_T_TMF_ABORT_TASK 0
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_T_TMF_ABORT_TASK_SET 1
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_T_TMF_CLEAR_ACA 2
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_T_TMF_CLEAR_TASK_SET 3
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_T_TMF_I_T_NEXUS_RESET 4
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_T_TMF_LOGICAL_UNIT_RESET 5
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_T_TMF_QUERY_TASK 6
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_T_TMF_QUERY_TASK_SET 7
struct virtio_scsi_ctrl_tmf
{
// Read-only part
u32 type;
u32 subtype;
u8 lun[8];
u64 id;
// Write-only part
u8 response;
}
/* command-specific response values */
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_S_FUNCTION_COMPLETE 0
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_S_FUNCTION_SUCCEEDED 10
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_S_FUNCTION_REJECTED 11
The type is VIRTIO_SCSI_T_TMF; the subtype field defines. All
fields except response are filled by the driver. The subtype
field must always be specified and identifies the requested
task management function.
Other fields may be irrelevant for the requested TMF; if so,
they are ignored but they should still be present. The lun
field is in the same format specified for request queues; the
single level LUN is ignored when the task management function
addresses a whole I_T nexus. When relevant, the value of the id
field is matched against the id values passed on the requestq.
The outcome of the task management function is written by the
device in the response field. The command-specific response
values map 1-to-1 with those defined in SAM.
Asynchronous notification query
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_T_AN_QUERY 1
struct virtio_scsi_ctrl_an {
// Read-only part
u32 type;
u8 lun[8];
u32 event_requested;
// Write-only part
u32 event_actual;
u8 response;
}
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_EVT_ASYNC_OPERATIONAL_CHANGE 2
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_EVT_ASYNC_POWER_MGMT 4
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_EVT_ASYNC_EXTERNAL_REQUEST 8
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_EVT_ASYNC_MEDIA_CHANGE 16
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_EVT_ASYNC_MULTI_HOST 32
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_EVT_ASYNC_DEVICE_BUSY 64
By sending this command, the driver asks the device which
events the given LUN can report, as described in paragraphs 6.6
and A.6 of the SCSI MMC specification. The driver writes the
events it is interested in into the event_requested; the device
responds by writing the events that it supports into
event_actual.
The type is VIRTIO_SCSI_T_AN_QUERY. The lun and event_requested
fields are written by the driver. The event_actual and response
fields are written by the device.
No command-specific values are defined for the response byte.
Asynchronous notification subscription
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_T_AN_SUBSCRIBE 2
struct virtio_scsi_ctrl_an {
// Read-only part
u32 type;
u8 lun[8];
u32 event_requested;
// Write-only part
u32 event_actual;
u8 response;
}
By sending this command, the driver asks the specified LUN to
report events for its physical interface, again as described in
the SCSI MMC specification. The driver writes the events it is
interested in into the event_requested; the device responds by
writing the events that it supports into event_actual.
Event types are the same as for the asynchronous notification
query message.
The type is VIRTIO_SCSI_T_AN_SUBSCRIBE. The lun and
event_requested fields are written by the driver. The
event_actual and response fields are written by the device.
No command-specific values are defined for the response byte.
Device Operation: eventq
The eventq is used by the device to report information on logical
units that are attached to it. The driver should always leave a
few buffers ready in the eventq. In general, the device will not
queue events to cope with an empty eventq, and will end up
dropping events if it finds no buffer ready. However, when
reporting events for many LUNs (e.g. when a whole target
disappears), the device can throttle events to avoid dropping
them. For this reason, placing 10-15 buffers on the event queue
should be enough.
Buffers are placed in the eventq and filled by the device when
interesting events occur. The buffers should be strictly
write-only (device-filled) and the size of the buffers should be
at least the value given in the device's configuration
information.
Buffers returned by the device on the eventq will be referred to
as "events" in the rest of this section. Events have the
following format:
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_T_EVENTS_MISSED 0x80000000
struct virtio_scsi_event {
// Write-only part
u32 event;
...
}
If bit 31 is set in the event field, the device failed to report
an event due to missing buffers. In this case, the driver should
poll the logical units for unit attention conditions, and/or do
whatever form of bus scan is appropriate for the guest operating
system.
Other data that the device writes to the buffer depends on the
contents of the event field. The following events are defined:
No event
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_T_NO_EVENT 0
This event is fired in the following cases:
When the device detects in the eventq a buffer that is shorter
than what is indicated in the configuration field, it might
use it immediately and put this dummy value in the event
field. A well-written driver will never observe this
situation.
When events are dropped, the device may signal this event as
soon as the drivers makes a buffer available, in order to
request action from the driver. In this case, of course, this
event will be reported with the VIRTIO_SCSI_T_EVENTS_MISSED
flag.
Transport reset
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_T_TRANSPORT_RESET 1
struct virtio_scsi_event_reset {
// Write-only part
u32 event;
u8 lun[8];
u32 reason;
}
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_EVT_RESET_HARD 0
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_EVT_RESET_RESCAN 1
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_EVT_RESET_REMOVED 2
By sending this event, the device signals that a logical unit
on a target has been reset, including the case of a new device
appearing or disappearing on the bus.The device fills in all
fields. The event field is set to
VIRTIO_SCSI_T_TRANSPORT_RESET. The lun field addresses a
logical unit in the SCSI host.
The reason value is one of the three #define values appearing
above:
VIRTIO_SCSI_EVT_RESET_REMOVED (“LUN/target removed”) is used if
the target or logical unit is no longer able to receive
commands.
VIRTIO_SCSI_EVT_RESET_HARD (“LUN hard reset”) is used if the
logical unit has been reset, but is still present.
VIRTIO_SCSI_EVT_RESET_RESCAN (“rescan LUN/target”) is used if a
target or logical unit has just appeared on the device.
The “removed” and “rescan” events, when sent for LUN 0, may
apply to the entire target. After receiving them the driver
should ask the initiator to rescan the target, in order to
detect the case when an entire target has appeared or
disappeared. These two events will never be reported unless the
VIRTIO_SCSI_F_HOTPLUG feature was negotiated between the host
and the guest.
Events will also be reported via sense codes (this obviously
does not apply to newly appeared buses or targets, since the
application has never discovered them):
“LUN/target removed” maps to sense key ILLEGAL REQUEST, asc
0x25, ascq 0x00 (LOGICAL UNIT NOT SUPPORTED)
“LUN hard reset” maps to sense key UNIT ATTENTION, asc 0x29
(POWER ON, RESET OR BUS DEVICE RESET OCCURRED)
“rescan LUN/target” maps to sense key UNIT ATTENTION, asc 0x3f,
ascq 0x0e (REPORTED LUNS DATA HAS CHANGED)
The preferred way to detect transport reset is always to use
events, because sense codes are only seen by the driver when it
sends a SCSI command to the logical unit or target. However, in
case events are dropped, the initiator will still be able to
synchronize with the actual state of the controller if the
driver asks the initiator to rescan of the SCSI bus. During the
rescan, the initiator will be able to observe the above sense
codes, and it will process them as if it the driver had
received the equivalent event.
Asynchronous notification
#define VIRTIO_SCSI_T_ASYNC_NOTIFY 2
struct virtio_scsi_event_an {
// Write-only part
u32 event;
u8 lun[8];
u32 reason;
}
By sending this event, the device signals that an asynchronous
event was fired from a physical interface.
All fields are written by the device. The event field is set to
VIRTIO_SCSI_T_ASYNC_NOTIFY. The lun field addresses a logical
unit in the SCSI host. The reason field is a subset of the
events that the driver has subscribed to via the "Asynchronous
notification subscription" command.
When dropped events are reported, the driver should poll for
asynchronous events manually using SCSI commands.
Appendix X: virtio-mmio
Virtual environments without PCI support (a common situation in
embedded devices models) might use simple memory mapped device (“
virtio-mmio”) instead of the PCI device.
The memory mapped virtio device behaviour is based on the PCI
device specification. Therefore most of operations like device
initialization, queues configuration and buffer transfers are
nearly identical. Existing differences are described in the
following sections.
Device Initialization
Instead of using the PCI IO space for virtio header, the “
virtio-mmio” device provides a set of memory mapped control
registers, all 32 bits wide, followed by device-specific
configuration space. The following list presents their layout:
Offset from the device base address | Direction | Name
Description
0x000 | R | MagicValue
“virt” string.
0x004 | R | Version
Device version number. Currently must be 1.
0x008 | R | DeviceID
Virtio Subsystem Device ID (ie. 1 for network card).
0x00c | R | VendorID
Virtio Subsystem Vendor ID.
0x010 | R | HostFeatures
Flags representing features the device supports.
Reading from this register returns 32 consecutive flag bits,
first bit depending on the last value written to
HostFeaturesSel register. Access to this register returns bits HostFeaturesSel*32
to (HostFeaturesSel*32)+31
, eg. feature bits 0 to 31 if
HostFeaturesSel is set to 0 and features bits 32 to 63 if
HostFeaturesSel is set to 1. Also see [sub:Feature-Bits]
0x014 | W | HostFeaturesSel
Device (Host) features word selection.
Writing to this register selects a set of 32 device feature bits
accessible by reading from HostFeatures register. Device driver
must write a value to the HostFeaturesSel register before
reading from the HostFeatures register.
0x020 | W | GuestFeatures
Flags representing device features understood and activated by
the driver.
Writing to this register sets 32 consecutive flag bits, first
bit depending on the last value written to GuestFeaturesSel
register. Access to this register sets bits GuestFeaturesSel*32
to (GuestFeaturesSel*32)+31
, eg. feature bits 0 to 31 if
GuestFeaturesSel is set to 0 and features bits 32 to 63 if
GuestFeaturesSel is set to 1. Also see [sub:Feature-Bits]
0x024 | W | GuestFeaturesSel
Activated (Guest) features word selection.
Writing to this register selects a set of 32 activated feature
bits accessible by writing to the GuestFeatures register.
Device driver must write a value to the GuestFeaturesSel
register before writing to the GuestFeatures register.
0x028 | W | GuestPageSize
Guest page size.
Device driver must write the guest page size in bytes to the
register during initialization, before any queues are used.
This value must be a power of 2 and is used by the Host to
calculate Guest address of the first queue page (see QueuePFN).
0x030 | W | QueueSel
Virtual queue index (first queue is 0).
Writing to this register selects the virtual queue that the
following operations on QueueNum, QueueAlign and QueuePFN apply
to.
0x034 | R | QueueNumMax
Maximum virtual queue size.
Reading from the register returns the maximum size of the queue
the Host is ready to process or zero (0x0) if the queue is not
available. This applies to the queue selected by writing to
QueueSel and is allowed only when QueuePFN is set to zero
(0x0), so when the queue is not actively used.
0x038 | W | QueueNum
Virtual queue size.
Queue size is a number of elements in the queue, therefore size
of the descriptor table and both available and used rings.
Writing to this register notifies the Host what size of the
queue the Guest will use. This applies to the queue selected by
writing to QueueSel.
0x03c | W | QueueAlign
Used Ring alignment in the virtual queue.
Writing to this register notifies the Host about alignment
boundary of the Used Ring in bytes. This value must be a power
of 2 and applies to the queue selected by writing to QueueSel.
0x040 | RW | QueuePFN
Guest physical page number of the virtual queue.
Writing to this register notifies the host about location of the
virtual queue in the Guest's physical address space. This value
is the index number of a page starting with the queue
Descriptor Table. Value zero (0x0) means physical address zero
(0x00000000) and is illegal. When the Guest stops using the
queue it must write zero (0x0) to this register.
Reading from this register returns the currently used page
number of the queue, therefore a value other than zero (0x0)
means that the queue is in use.
Both read and write accesses apply to the queue selected by
writing to QueueSel.
0x050 | W | QueueNotify
Queue notifier.
Writing a queue index to this register notifies the Host that
there are new buffers to process in the queue.
0x60 | R | InterruptStatus
Interrupt status.
Reading from this register returns a bit mask of interrupts
asserted by the device. An interrupt is asserted if the
corresponding bit is set, ie. equals one (1).
Bit 0 | Used Ring Update
This interrupt is asserted when the Host has updated the Used
Ring in at least one of the active virtual queues.
Bit 1 | Configuration change
This interrupt is asserted when configuration of the device has
changed.
0x064 | W | InterruptACK
Interrupt acknowledge.
Writing to this register notifies the Host that the Guest
finished handling interrupts. Set bits in the value clear the
corresponding bits of the InterruptStatus register.
0x070 | RW | Status
Device status.
Reading from this register returns the current device status
flags.
Writing non-zero values to this register sets the status flags,
indicating the Guest progress. Writing zero (0x0) to this
register triggers a device reset.
Also see [sub:Device-Initialization-Sequence]
0x100+ | RW | Config
Device-specific configuration space starts at an offset 0x100
and is accessed with byte alignment. Its meaning and size
depends on the device and the driver.
Virtual queue size is a number of elements in the queue,
therefore size of the descriptor table and both available and
used rings.
The endianness of the registers follows the native endianness of
the Guest. Writing to registers described as “R” and reading from
registers described as “W” is not permitted and can cause
undefined behavior.
The device initialization is performed as described in [sub:Device-Initialization-Sequence]
with one exception: the Guest must notify the Host about its
page size, writing the size in bytes to GuestPageSize register
before the initialization is finished.
The memory mapped virtio devices generate single interrupt only,
therefore no special configuration is required.
Virtqueue Configuration
The virtual queue configuration is performed in a similar way to
the one described in [sec:Virtqueue-Configuration] with a few
additional operations:
Select the queue writing its index (first queue is 0) to the
QueueSel register.
Check if the queue is not already in use: read QueuePFN
register, returned value should be zero (0x0).
Read maximum queue size (number of elements) from the
QueueNumMax register. If the returned value is zero (0x0) the
queue is not available.
Allocate and zero the queue pages in contiguous virtual memory,
aligning the Used Ring to an optimal boundary (usually page
size). Size of the allocated queue may be smaller than or equal
to the maximum size returned by the Host.
Notify the Host about the queue size by writing the size to
QueueNum register.
Notify the Host about the used alignment by writing its value
in bytes to QueueAlign register.
Write the physical number of the first page of the queue to the
QueuePFN register.
The queue and the device are ready to begin normal operations
now.
Device Operation
The memory mapped virtio device behaves in the same way as
described in [sec:Device-Operation], with the following
exceptions:
The device is notified about new buffers available in a queue
by writing the queue index to register QueueNum instead of the
virtio header in PCI I/O space ([sub:Notifying-The-Device]).
The memory mapped virtio device is using single, dedicated
interrupt signal, which is raised when at least one of the
interrupts described in the InterruptStatus register
description is asserted. After receiving an interrupt, the
driver must read the InterruptStatus register to check what
caused the interrupt (see the register description). After the
interrupt is handled, the driver must acknowledge it by writing
a bit mask corresponding to the serviced interrupt to the
InterruptACK register.