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author | Jason J. Herne <jjherne@linux.ibm.com> | 2019-04-04 10:34:34 -0400 |
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committer | Thomas Huth <thuth@redhat.com> | 2019-04-12 12:40:35 +0200 |
commit | efa47d36da89f4b23c315a7cc085fab0d15eb47c (patch) | |
tree | 69bee6340357bcd7b5684970a232bb786032e94f /docs | |
parent | 69333c36dc85b84b021766747cffc2b53df93ae8 (diff) | |
download | qemu-efa47d36da89f4b23c315a7cc085fab0d15eb47c.zip |
s390-bios: Support booting from real dasd device
Allows guest to boot from a vfio configured real dasd device.
Signed-off-by: Jason J. Herne <jjherne@linux.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Cornelia Huck <cohuck@redhat.com>
Message-Id: <1554388475-18329-16-git-send-email-jjherne@linux.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Huth <thuth@redhat.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'docs')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/devel/s390-dasd-ipl.txt | 133 |
1 files changed, 133 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/docs/devel/s390-dasd-ipl.txt b/docs/devel/s390-dasd-ipl.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..9107e048e4 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/devel/s390-dasd-ipl.txt @@ -0,0 +1,133 @@ +***************************** +***** s390 hardware IPL ***** +***************************** + +The s390 hardware IPL process consists of the following steps. + +1. A READ IPL ccw is constructed in memory location 0x0. + This ccw, by definition, reads the IPL1 record which is located on the disk + at cylinder 0 track 0 record 1. Note that the chain flag is on in this ccw + so when it is complete another ccw will be fetched and executed from memory + location 0x08. + +2. Execute the Read IPL ccw at 0x00, thereby reading IPL1 data into 0x00. + IPL1 data is 24 bytes in length and consists of the following pieces of + information: [psw][read ccw][tic ccw]. When the machine executes the Read + IPL ccw it read the 24-bytes of IPL1 to be read into memory starting at + location 0x0. Then the ccw program at 0x08 which consists of a read + ccw and a tic ccw is automatically executed because of the chain flag from + the original READ IPL ccw. The read ccw will read the IPL2 data into memory + and the TIC (Transfer In Channel) will transfer control to the channel + program contained in the IPL2 data. The TIC channel command is the + equivalent of a branch/jump/goto instruction for channel programs. + NOTE: The ccws in IPL1 are defined by the architecture to be format 0. + +3. Execute IPL2. + The TIC ccw instruction at the end of the IPL1 channel program will begin + the execution of the IPL2 channel program. IPL2 is stage-2 of the boot + process and will contain a larger channel program than IPL1. The point of + IPL2 is to find and load either the operating system or a small program that + loads the operating system from disk. At the end of this step all or some of + the real operating system is loaded into memory and we are ready to hand + control over to the guest operating system. At this point the guest + operating system is entirely responsible for loading any more data it might + need to function. NOTE: The IPL2 channel program might read data into memory + location 0 thereby overwriting the IPL1 psw and channel program. This is ok + as long as the data placed in location 0 contains a psw whose instruction + address points to the guest operating system code to execute at the end of + the IPL/boot process. + NOTE: The ccws in IPL2 are defined by the architecture to be format 0. + +4. Start executing the guest operating system. + The psw that was loaded into memory location 0 as part of the ipl process + should contain the needed flags for the operating system we have loaded. The + psw's instruction address will point to the location in memory where we want + to start executing the operating system. This psw is loaded (via LPSW + instruction) causing control to be passed to the operating system code. + +In a non-virtualized environment this process, handled entirely by the hardware, +is kicked off by the user initiating a "Load" procedure from the hardware +management console. This "Load" procedure crafts a special "Read IPL" ccw in +memory location 0x0 that reads IPL1. It then executes this ccw thereby kicking +off the reading of IPL1 data. Since the channel program from IPL1 will be +written immediately after the special "Read IPL" ccw, the IPL1 channel program +will be executed immediately (the special read ccw has the chaining bit turned +on). The TIC at the end of the IPL1 channel program will cause the IPL2 channel +program to be executed automatically. After this sequence completes the "Load" +procedure then loads the psw from 0x0. + +********************************************************** +***** How this all pertains to QEMU (and the kernel) ***** +********************************************************** + +In theory we should merely have to do the following to IPL/boot a guest +operating system from a DASD device: + +1. Place a "Read IPL" ccw into memory location 0x0 with chaining bit on. +2. Execute channel program at 0x0. +3. LPSW 0x0. + +However, our emulation of the machine's channel program logic within the kernel +is missing one key feature that is required for this process to work: +non-prefetch of ccw data. + +When we start a channel program we pass the channel subsystem parameters via an +ORB (Operation Request Block). One of those parameters is a prefetch bit. If the +bit is on then the vfio-ccw kernel driver is allowed to read the entire channel +program from guest memory before it starts executing it. This means that any +channel commands that read additional channel commands will not work as expected +because the newly read commands will only exist in guest memory and NOT within +the kernel's channel subsystem memory. The kernel vfio-ccw driver currently +requires this bit to be on for all channel programs. This is a problem because +the IPL process consists of transferring control from the "Read IPL" ccw +immediately to the IPL1 channel program that was read by "Read IPL". + +Not being able to turn off prefetch will also prevent the TIC at the end of the +IPL1 channel program from transferring control to the IPL2 channel program. + +Lastly, in some cases (the zipl bootloader for example) the IPL2 program also +transfers control to another channel program segment immediately after reading +it from the disk. So we need to be able to handle this case. + +************************** +***** What QEMU does ***** +************************** + +Since we are forced to live with prefetch we cannot use the very simple IPL +procedure we defined in the preceding section. So we compensate by doing the +following. + +1. Place "Read IPL" ccw into memory location 0x0, but turn off chaining bit. +2. Execute "Read IPL" at 0x0. + + So now IPL1's psw is at 0x0 and IPL1's channel program is at 0x08. + +4. Write a custom channel program that will seek to the IPL2 record and then + execute the READ and TIC ccws from IPL1. Normally the seek is not required + because after reading the IPL1 record the disk is automatically positioned + to read the very next record which will be IPL2. But since we are not reading + both IPL1 and IPL2 as part of the same channel program we must manually set + the position. + +5. Grab the target address of the TIC instruction from the IPL1 channel program. + This address is where the IPL2 channel program starts. + + Now IPL2 is loaded into memory somewhere, and we know the address. + +6. Execute the IPL2 channel program at the address obtained in step #5. + + Because this channel program can be dynamic, we must use a special algorithm + that detects a READ immediately followed by a TIC and breaks the ccw chain + by turning off the chain bit in the READ ccw. When control is returned from + the kernel/hardware to the QEMU bios code we immediately issue another start + subchannel to execute the remaining TIC instruction. This causes the entire + channel program (starting from the TIC) and all needed data to be refetched + thereby stepping around the limitation that would otherwise prevent this + channel program from executing properly. + + Now the operating system code is loaded somewhere in guest memory and the psw + in memory location 0x0 will point to entry code for the guest operating + system. + +7. LPSW 0x0. + LPSW transfers control to the guest operating system and we're done. |