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author | Leonardo Garcia <lagarcia@br.ibm.com> | 2021-12-17 17:57:13 +0100 |
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committer | Cédric Le Goater <clg@kaod.org> | 2021-12-17 17:57:13 +0100 |
commit | 88581cc43b90f3e3ebf5b2a8d08916c0f2889a17 (patch) | |
tree | a9d1d7e9662d604476644367711892eae7688dd7 /docs | |
parent | bbfbbff5fc0fb4cee42ed22c4430cc5d68bacc27 (diff) | |
download | qemu-88581cc43b90f3e3ebf5b2a8d08916c0f2889a17.zip |
docs: Introducing pseries documentation.
The purpose of this document is to substitute the content currently
available in the QEMU wiki at [0]. This initial version does contain
some additional content as well. Whenever this documentation gets
upstream and is reflected in [1], the QEMU wiki will be edited to point
to this documentation, so that we only need to keep it updated in one
place.
0. https://wiki.qemu.org/Documentation/Platforms/POWER
1. https://qemu.readthedocs.io/en/latest/system/ppc/pseries.html
Signed-off-by: Leonardo Garcia <lagarcia@br.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au>
Message-Id: <66b6fdde52062fdf4f4b4dc35a9f06a899c88293.1638981899.git.lagarcia@br.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Cédric Le Goater <clg@kaod.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'docs')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/system/ppc/pseries.rst | 226 |
1 files changed, 226 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/docs/system/ppc/pseries.rst b/docs/system/ppc/pseries.rst index 932d4dd17d..0d2e4af94e 100644 --- a/docs/system/ppc/pseries.rst +++ b/docs/system/ppc/pseries.rst @@ -1,12 +1,238 @@ pSeries family boards (``pseries``) =================================== +The Power machine para-virtualized environment described by the `Linux on Power +Architecture Reference document (LoPAR) +<https://openpowerfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/LoPAR-20200812.pdf>`_ +is called pSeries. This environment is also known as sPAPR, System p guests, or +simply Power Linux guests (although it is capable of running other operating +systems, such as AIX). + +Even though pSeries is designed to behave as a guest environment, it is also +capable of acting as a hypervisor OS, providing, on that role, nested +virtualization capabilities. + Supported devices ----------------- + * Multi processor support for many Power processors generations: POWER7, + POWER7+, POWER8, POWER8NVL, POWER9, and Power10. Support for POWER5+ exists, + but its state is unknown. + * Interrupt Controller, XICS (POWER8) and XIVE (POWER9 and Power10) + * vPHB PCIe Host bridge. + * vscsi and vnet devices, compatible with the same devices available on a + PowerVM hypervisor with VIOS managing LPARs. + * Virtio based devices. + * PCIe device pass through. + Missing devices --------------- + * SPICE support. Firmware -------- + +`SLOF <https://github.com/aik/SLOF>`_ (Slimline Open Firmware) is an +implementation of the `IEEE 1275-1994, Standard for Boot (Initialization +Configuration) Firmware: Core Requirements and Practices +<https://standards.ieee.org/standard/1275-1994.html>`_. + +QEMU includes a prebuilt image of SLOF which is updated when a more recent +version is required. + +Build directions +---------------- + +.. code-block:: bash + + ./configure --target-list=ppc64-softmmu && make + +Running instructions +-------------------- + +Someone can select the pSeries machine type by running QEMU with the following +options: + +.. code-block:: bash + + qemu-system-ppc64 -M pseries <other QEMU arguments> + +sPAPR devices +------------- + +The sPAPR specification defines a set of para-virtualized devices, which are +also supported by the pSeries machine in QEMU and can be instantiated with the +``-device`` option: + +* ``spapr-vlan`` : a virtual network interface. +* ``spapr-vscsi`` : a virtual SCSI disk interface. +* ``spapr-rng`` : a pseudo-device for passing random number generator data to the + guest (see the `H_RANDOM hypercall feature + <https://wiki.qemu.org/Features/HRandomHypercall>`_ for details). +* ``spapr-vty``: a virtual teletype. +* ``spapr-pci-host-bridge``: a PCI host bridge. +* ``tpm-spapr``: a Trusted Platform Module (TPM). +* ``spapr-tpm-proxy``: a TPM proxy. + +These are compatible with the devices historically available for use when +running the IBM PowerVM hypervisor with LPARs. + +However, since these devices have originally been specified with another +hypervisor and non-Linux guests in mind, you should use the virtio counterparts +(virtio-net, virtio-blk/scsi and virtio-rng for instance) if possible instead, +since they will most probably give you better performance with Linux guests in a +QEMU environment. + +The pSeries machine in QEMU is always instantiated with the following devices: + +* A NVRAM device (``spapr-nvram``). +* A virtual teletype (``spapr-vty``). +* A PCI host bridge (``spapr-pci-host-bridge``). + +Hence, it is not needed to add them manually, unless you use the ``-nodefaults`` +command line option in QEMU. + +In the case of the default ``spapr-nvram`` device, if someone wants to make the +contents of the NVRAM device persistent, they will need to specify a PFLASH +device when starting QEMU, i.e. either use +``-drive if=pflash,file=<filename>,format=raw`` to set the default PFLASH +device, or specify one with an ID +(``-drive if=none,file=<filename>,format=raw,id=pfid``) and pass that ID to the +NVRAM device with ``-global spapr-nvram.drive=pfid``. + +sPAPR specification +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +The main source of documentation on the sPAPR standard is the `Linux on Power +Architecture Reference document (LoPAR) +<https://openpowerfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/LoPAR-20200812.pdf>`_. +However, documentation specific to QEMU's implementation of the specification +can also be found in QEMU documentation: + +.. toctree:: + :maxdepth: 1 + + ../../specs/ppc-spapr-numa.rst + ../../specs/ppc-spapr-xive.rst + +Other documentation available in QEMU docs directory: + +* Hypervisor calls (a.k.a. hcalls) (``docs/specs/ppc-spapr-hcalls.txt``). +* Hot plug (``/docs/specs/ppc-spapr-hotplug.txt``). +* Hypervisor calls needed by the Ultravisor + (``/docs/specs/ppc-spapr-uv-hcalls.txt``). + +Switching between the KVM-PR and KVM-HV kernel module +----------------------------------------------------- + +Currently, there are two implementations of KVM on Power, ``kvm_hv.ko`` and +``kvm_pr.ko``. + + +If a host supports both KVM modes, and both KVM kernel modules are loaded, it is +possible to switch between the two modes with the ``kvm-type`` parameter: + +* Use ``qemu-system-ppc64 -M pseries,accel=kvm,kvm-type=PR`` to use the + ``kvm_pr.ko`` kernel module. +* Use ``qemu-system-ppc64 -M pseries,accel=kvm,kvm-type=HV`` to use ``kvm_hv.ko`` + instead. + +KVM-PR +^^^^^^ + +KVM-PR uses the so-called **PR**\ oblem state of the PPC CPUs to run the guests, +i.e. the virtual machine is run in user mode and all privileged instructions +trap and have to be emulated by the host. That means you can run KVM-PR inside +a pSeries guest (or a PowerVM LPAR for that matter), and that is where it has +originated, as historically (prior to POWER7) it was not possible to run Linux +on hypervisor mode on a Power processor (this function was restricted to +PowerVM, the IBM proprietary hypervisor). + +Because all privileged instructions are trapped, guests that use a lot of +privileged instructions run quite slow with KVM-PR. On the other hand, because +of that, this kernel module can run on pretty much every PPC hardware, and is +able to emulate a lot of guests CPUs. This module can even be used to run other +PowerPC guests like an emulated PowerMac. + +As KVM-PR can be run inside a pSeries guest, it can also provide nested +virtualization capabilities (i.e. running a guest from within a guest). + +It is important to notice that, as KVM-HV provides a much better execution +performance, maintenance work has been much more focused on it in the past +years. Maintenance for KVM-PR has been minimal. + +In order to run KVM-PR guests with POWER9 processors, someone will need to start +QEMU with ``kernel_irqchip=off`` command line option. + +KVM-HV +^^^^^^ + +KVM-HV uses the hypervisor mode of more recent Power processors, that allow +access to the bare metal hardware directly. Although POWER7 had this capability, +it was only starting with POWER8 that this was officially supported by IBM. + +Originally, KVM-HV was only available when running on a PowerNV platform (a.k.a. +Power bare metal). Although it runs on a PowerNV platform, it can only be used +to start pSeries guests. As the pSeries guest doesn't have access to the +hypervisor mode of the Power CPU, it wasn't possible to run KVM-HV on a guest. +This limitation has been lifted, and now it is possible to run KVM-HV inside +pSeries guests as well, making nested virtualization possible with KVM-HV. + +As KVM-HV has access to privileged instructions, guests that use a lot of these +can run much faster than with KVM-PR. On the other hand, the guest CPU has to be +of the same type as the host CPU this way, e.g. it is not possible to specify an +embedded PPC CPU for the guest with KVM-HV. However, there is at least the +possibility to run the guest in a backward-compatibility mode of the previous +CPUs generations, e.g. you can run a POWER7 guest on a POWER8 host by using +``-cpu POWER8,compat=power7`` as parameter to QEMU. + +Modules support +--------------- + +As noticed in the sections above, each module can run in a different +environment. The following table shows with which environment each module can +run. As long as you are in a supported environment, you can run KVM-PR or KVM-HV +nested. Combinations not shown in the table are not available. + ++--------------+------------+------+-------------------+----------+--------+ +| Platform | Host type | Bits | Page table format | KVM-HV | KVM-PR | ++==============+============+======+===================+==========+========+ +| PowerNV | bare metal | 32 | hash | no | yes | +| | | +-------------------+----------+--------+ +| | | | radix | N/A | N/A | +| | +------+-------------------+----------+--------+ +| | | 64 | hash | yes | yes | +| | | +-------------------+----------+--------+ +| | | | radix | yes | no | ++--------------+------------+------+-------------------+----------+--------+ +| pSeries [1]_ | PowerNV | 32 | hash | no | yes | +| | | +-------------------+----------+--------+ +| | | | radix | N/A | N/A | +| | +------+-------------------+----------+--------+ +| | | 64 | hash | no | yes | +| | | +-------------------+----------+--------+ +| | | | radix | yes [2]_ | no | +| +------------+------+-------------------+----------+--------+ +| | PowerVM | 32 | hash | no | yes | +| | | +-------------------+----------+--------+ +| | | | radix | N/A | N/A | +| | +------+-------------------+----------+--------+ +| | | 64 | hash | no | yes | +| | | +-------------------+----------+--------+ +| | | | radix [3]_ | no | yes | ++--------------+------------+------+-------------------+----------+--------+ + +.. [1] On POWER9 DD2.1 processors, the page table format on the host and guest + must be the same. + +.. [2] KVM-HV cannot run nested on POWER8 machines. + +.. [3] Introduced on Power10 machines. + +Maintainer contact information +------------------------------ + +Cédric Le Goater <clg@kaod.org> + +Daniel Henrique Barboza <danielhb413@gmail.com> |