mirror of https://gitee.com/openkylin/qemu.git
hw/arm/virt: explain device-to-transport mapping in create_virtio_devices()
Signed-off-by: Laszlo Ersek <lersek@redhat.com> Message-id: 1422592273-4432-1-git-send-email-lersek@redhat.com [PMM: added note recommending UUIDs] Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
This commit is contained in:
parent
45140a5767
commit
587078f0ed
|
@ -441,10 +441,32 @@ static void create_virtio_devices(const VirtBoardInfo *vbi, qemu_irq *pic)
|
|||
int i;
|
||||
hwaddr size = vbi->memmap[VIRT_MMIO].size;
|
||||
|
||||
/* Note that we have to create the transports in forwards order
|
||||
* so that command line devices are inserted lowest address first,
|
||||
* and then add dtb nodes in reverse order so that they appear in
|
||||
* the finished device tree lowest address first.
|
||||
/* We create the transports in forwards order. Since qbus_realize()
|
||||
* prepends (not appends) new child buses, the incrementing loop below will
|
||||
* create a list of virtio-mmio buses with decreasing base addresses.
|
||||
*
|
||||
* When a -device option is processed from the command line,
|
||||
* qbus_find_recursive() picks the next free virtio-mmio bus in forwards
|
||||
* order. The upshot is that -device options in increasing command line
|
||||
* order are mapped to virtio-mmio buses with decreasing base addresses.
|
||||
*
|
||||
* When this code was originally written, that arrangement ensured that the
|
||||
* guest Linux kernel would give the lowest "name" (/dev/vda, eth0, etc) to
|
||||
* the first -device on the command line. (The end-to-end order is a
|
||||
* function of this loop, qbus_realize(), qbus_find_recursive(), and the
|
||||
* guest kernel's name-to-address assignment strategy.)
|
||||
*
|
||||
* Meanwhile, the kernel's traversal seems to have been reversed; see eg.
|
||||
* the message, if not necessarily the code, of commit 70161ff336.
|
||||
* Therefore the loop now establishes the inverse of the original intent.
|
||||
*
|
||||
* Unfortunately, we can't counteract the kernel change by reversing the
|
||||
* loop; it would break existing command lines.
|
||||
*
|
||||
* In any case, the kernel makes no guarantee about the stability of
|
||||
* enumeration order of virtio devices (as demonstrated by it changing
|
||||
* between kernel versions). For reliable and stable identification
|
||||
* of disks users must use UUIDs or similar mechanisms.
|
||||
*/
|
||||
for (i = 0; i < NUM_VIRTIO_TRANSPORTS; i++) {
|
||||
int irq = vbi->irqmap[VIRT_MMIO] + i;
|
||||
|
@ -453,6 +475,13 @@ static void create_virtio_devices(const VirtBoardInfo *vbi, qemu_irq *pic)
|
|||
sysbus_create_simple("virtio-mmio", base, pic[irq]);
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
/* We add dtb nodes in reverse order so that they appear in the finished
|
||||
* device tree lowest address first.
|
||||
*
|
||||
* Note that this mapping is independent of the loop above. The previous
|
||||
* loop influences virtio device to virtio transport assignment, whereas
|
||||
* this loop controls how virtio transports are laid out in the dtb.
|
||||
*/
|
||||
for (i = NUM_VIRTIO_TRANSPORTS - 1; i >= 0; i--) {
|
||||
char *nodename;
|
||||
int irq = vbi->irqmap[VIRT_MMIO] + i;
|
||||
|
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue