[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH v2 1/3] Add vmware_hw to xl.cfg
On 09/10/14 05:30, Ian Campbell wrote: On Tue, 2014-09-09 at 13:02 -0400, Don Slutz wrote:On 09/09/14 05:39, Ian Campbell wrote:Just updating the description to give users some clue as to what number they should use would be enough.How does the following look: vmware_hw numbers come from VMware config files. In a .vmx it is virtualHW.version In a .ovf it is part of the value of vssd:VirtualSystemType for vssd:VirtualSystemType == vmx-07, vmware_hw = 7 Should I refer them to the vmware web site?Probably. Will the above make sense to a normal vmware user? Since it is essentially Greek to me. The includes how to dig into a .vmx or .ovf to find these values. e..g are they plain text files? Are specific tools needed? Yes, I would expect a normal vmware user to understand this. Both files are "text". .vmx is a list of "key = value" lines. .ovf is a xml file. Any text editor is enough (or more or less). -Don Slutz Other than parroting this value back to the guest in a cpuid leaf does this value control anything else? If so then we may want to consider something like an enum to allow us to advertise more precisely which versions of vmware we are prepared to ape, but at the least we need to range check this input somewhere along the way.See above, mostly just QEMU.What does qemu do with a number which it doesn't understand, perhaps corresponding to a newer vmware version which it hasn't learnt about yet?My version currently checks for various ranges. Like != 0, >= 4, >= 4 && < 7, >= 7. I do not expect that I can upstream it with this, but it should be similar.This sort of issue is why I was proposing an enum, or at least some sort of range checking.Since most of the use is in QEMU, I see no need for an enum in xen. All xen uses I know of are == 0 or != 0. I can add some range checking but think a warning might be better so that a newer QEMU with support for a given value could be used with an older xen without change to xen.Will qemu error out in an obvious way if an unsupported number is used? My version does not. However, that is the kind of change I expect to make when I get there. Since this is not yet done, not sure it matters. Today the valid values are 0,3-4,6-11. When I first coded this it was 0,3-4,6-7. At that time all my testing showed only 0, 4 and 7 as the key points. 6 was the same as 4. VMware does have differences between 6 and 4 but they were all around things like 4 does not support device pvscsi, 6 and 7 do. Trying and embedding this knowledge in Xen to me is not the right way to go. I would expect some one using this to know the "right" value, or to just use 3. -Don Slutz _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xen.org/xen-devel
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