[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH RESEND v5 2/6] xen/arm: Implement get_maximum_gpfn hypercall for arm
On Tue, 2013-11-19 at 16:35 +0400, Eugene Fedotov wrote: > 15.11.2013 11:04, Eugene Fedotov wrote: > > 13.11.2013 14:58, Ian Campbell wrote: > >> On Wed, 2013-11-13 at 12:28 +0400, Eugene Fedotov wrote: > >>>>> diff --git a/xen/arch/arm/mm.c b/xen/arch/arm/mm.c > >>>>> index 123280e..3801f07 100644 > >>>>> --- a/xen/arch/arm/mm.c > >>>>> +++ b/xen/arch/arm/mm.c > >>>>> @@ -927,7 +927,11 @@ int page_is_ram_type(unsigned long mfn, > >>>>> unsigned long mem_type) > >>>>> unsigned long domain_get_maximum_gpfn(struct domain *d) > >>>> s/unsigned long/xen_pfn_t/ I think. > >>>> > >>>> Urk, which will break the ABI for this hypercall. That's something > >>>> of a > >>>> conundrum :-/ > >>>> > >>>> It is a domctl so we are at liberty to change it, probably to taking a > >>>> xen_pfn_t * to fill in instead of returning the value. > >>>> > >>>> I'm in two minds about whether we should do so now or postpone it > >>>> (which > >>>> risks forgetting and having an obscure bug somewhere down the line). > >>> OK, this way, or other solution is to purge this hypercall yet in > >>> migration and use max_memkb field in DOMCTL_getdomaininfo to obtain the > >>> maximum PFN. > >> Is there an interface to retrieve that? I don't see it :-( > No, it is another hypercall XEN_DOMCTL_getdomaininfo. max_memkb field in > xc_dominfo_t structure is a second way to retrieve maximum memory size > and calculate PFN. Do we need domain_get_maximum_gpfn ? I think not yet. > In addition to this question I need to ask why we need xen_pfn_t (that > is always 64 bit on Xen-arm) for physical memory PFN. Currently the > following libxc proxies for DOMCTL: > xc_domain_setmaxmem and max_memkb field in xc_domain_getinfo() are > working with unsigned long max_mem_kb parameter (that is 32 bit for ARM32) The intention is that the hypercall interface be identical across 32- and 64-bit hypervisors to avoid the need for any argument translation when running 32-bit guests on a 64-bit hypervisor etc. Hence MFNs and PFNs are always 64-bits. > > In case if 64 bit PFN is needed, xen_pfn_t returning hypercall looks > like better then xc_domain_getinfo() . > > Best regards, > Evgeny. > _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xen.org/xen-devel
|
Lists.xenproject.org is hosted with RackSpace, monitoring our |