[RFC PATCH 32/33] irqchip/gic-v4: Add some basic documentation

Marc Zyngier marc.zyngier at arm.com
Tue Jan 17 02:20:53 PST 2017


Do a braindump of the way things are supposed to work.

Signed-off-by: Marc Zyngier <marc.zyngier at arm.com>
---
 drivers/irqchip/irq-gic-v4.c | 59 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 1 file changed, 59 insertions(+)

diff --git a/drivers/irqchip/irq-gic-v4.c b/drivers/irqchip/irq-gic-v4.c
index 36ccaac..8b2d9ee 100644
--- a/drivers/irqchip/irq-gic-v4.c
+++ b/drivers/irqchip/irq-gic-v4.c
@@ -22,6 +22,65 @@
 
 #include <linux/irqchip/arm-gic-v4.h>
 
+/*
+ * WARNING: The blurb below assumes that you understand the
+ * intricacies of GICv3, GICv4, and how a guest's view of a GICv3 gets
+ * translated into GICv4 comands. So it effectively targets at most
+ * two individuals. You know who you are.
+ *
+ * The core GICv4 code is designed to *avoid* exposing too much of the
+ * core GIC code (that would in turn leak into the hypervisor code),
+ * and instead provide a hypervisor agnostic interface to the HW (of
+ * course, the astute reader will quickly realize that hypervisor
+ * agnostic actually means KVM-specific - what were you thinking?).
+ *
+ * In order to achieve a modicum of isolation, we try to hide most of
+ * the GICv4 "stuff" behind normal irqchip operations:
+ *
+ * - Any guest-visible VLPI is backed by a Linux interrupt (and a
+ *   physical LPI which gets deconfigured when the guest maps the
+ *   VLPI). This allows the same DevID/Event pair to be either mapped
+ *   to the LPI (host) or the VLPI (guest).
+ *
+ * - Enabling/disabling a VLPI is done by issuing mask/unmask calls.
+ *
+ * - Guest INT/CLEAR commands are implemented through
+ *   irq_set_irqchip_state().
+ *
+ * - The *bizarre* stuff (mapping/unmapping an interrupt to a VLPI, or
+ *   issuing an INV after changing a priority) gets shoved into the
+ *   irq_set_vcpu_affinity() method. While this is quite horrible
+ *   (let's face it, this is the irqchip version of an ioctl), it
+ *   confines the crap to a single location. And map/unmap really is
+ *   about setting the affinity of a VLPI to a vcpu, so only INV is
+ *   majorly out of place. So there.
+ *
+ * But handling VLPIs is only one side of the job of the GICv4
+ * code. The other (darker) side is to take care of the doorbell
+ * interrupts which are delivered when a VLPI targeting a non-running
+ * vcpu is being made pending.
+ *
+ * The choice made here is that each vcpu (VPE in old northern GICv4
+ * dialect) gets a single doorbell, no matter how many interrupts are
+ * targeting it. This has a nice property, which is that the interrupt
+ * becomes a handle for the VPE, and that the hypervisor code can
+ * manipulate it through the normal interrupt API:
+ *
+ * - VMs (or rather the VM abstraction that matters to the GIC)
+ *   contain an irq domain where each interrupt maps to a VPE. In
+ *   turn, this domain stis on top of the normal LPI allocator, and a
+ *   specially crafted irq_chip implementation.
+ *
+ * - mask/unmask do what is expected on the doorbell interrupt.
+ *
+ * - irq_set_affinity is used to move a VPE from one redistributor to
+ *   another.
+ *
+ * - irq_set_vcpu_affinity once again gets hijacked for the purpose of
+ *   creating a new sub-API, namely scheduling/descheduling a VPE and
+ *   performing INVALL operations.
+ */
+
 static struct irq_domain *its_vpe_domain;
 
 static struct irq_chip its_vcpu_irq_chip = {
-- 
2.1.4




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