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[Xen-devel] [RFC Design Doc v2] Add vNVDIMM support for Xen



Hi,

Following is version 2 of the design doc for supporting vNVDIMM in
Xen. It's basically the summary of discussion on previous v1 design
(https://lists.xenproject.org/archives/html/xen-devel/2016-02/msg00006.html).
Any comments are welcome. The corresponding patches are WIP.

Thanks,
Haozhong



vNVDIMM Design v2

Changes in v2:
 - Rewrite the the design details based on previous discussion [7].
 - Add Section 3 Usage Example of vNVDIMM in Xen.
 - Remove content about pcommit instruction which has been deprecated [8].

Content
=======
1. Background
 1.1 Access Mechanisms: Persistent Memory and Block Window
 1.2 ACPI Support
  1.2.1 NFIT
  1.2.2 _DSM and _FIT
 1.3 Namespace
 1.4 clwb/clflushopt
2. NVDIMM/vNVDIMM Support in Linux Kernel/KVM/QEMU
 2.1 NVDIMM Driver in Linux Kernel
 2.2 vNVDIMM Implementation in KVM/QEMU
3. Usage Example of vNVDIMM in Xen
4. Design of vNVDIMM in Xen
 4.1 Guest clwb/clflushopt Enabling
 4.2 pmem Address Management
  4.2.1 Reserve Storage for Management Structures
  4.2.2 Detection of Host pmem Devices
  4.2.3 Get Host Machine Address (SPA) of Host pmem Files
  4.2.4 Map Host pmem to Guests
  4.2.5 Misc 1: RAS
  4.2.6 Misc 2: hotplug
 4.3 Guest ACPI Emulation
  4.3.1 Building Guest ACPI Tables
  4.3.2 Emulating Guest _DSM
References


Non-Volatile DIMM or NVDIMM is a type of RAM device that provides
persistent storage and retains data across reboot and even power
failures. This document describes the design to provide virtual NVDIMM
devices or vNVDIMM in Xen.

The rest of this document is organized as below.
 - Section 1 introduces the background knowledge of NVDIMM hardware,
   which is used by other parts of this document.

 - Section 2 briefly introduces the current/future NVDIMM/vNVDIMM
   support in Linux kernel/KVM/QEMU. They will affect the vNVDIMM
   design in Xen.

 - Section 3 shows the basic usage example of vNVDIMM in Xen.

 - Section 4 proposes design details of vNVDIMM in Xen.



1. Background

1.1 Access Mechanisms: Persistent Memory and Block Window

 NVDIMM provides two access mechanisms: byte-addressable persistent
 memory (pmem) and block window (pblk). An NVDIMM can contain multiple
 ranges and each range can be accessed through either pmem or pblk
 (but not both).

 Byte-addressable persistent memory mechanism (pmem) maps NVDIMM or
 ranges of NVDIMM into the system physical address (SPA) space, so
 that software can access NVDIMM via normal memory loads and
 stores. If the virtual address is used, then MMU will translate it to
 the physical address.

 In the virtualization circumstance, we can pass through a pmem range
 or partial of it to a guest by mapping it in EPT (i.e. mapping guest
 vNVDIMM physical address to host NVDIMM physical address), so that
 guest accesses are applied directly to the host NVDIMM device without
 hypervisor's interceptions.

 Block window mechanism (pblk) provides one or multiple block windows
 (BW).  Each BW is composed of a command register, a status register
 and a 8 Kbytes aperture register. Software fills the direction of the
 transfer (read/write), the start address (LBA) and size on NVDIMM it
 is going to transfer. If nothing goes wrong, the transferred data can
 be read/write via the aperture register. The status and errors of the
 transfer can be got from the status register. Other vendor-specific
 commands and status can be implemented for BW as well. Details of the
 block window access mechanism can be found in [3].

 In the virtualization circumstance, different pblk regions on a
 single NVDIMM device may be accessed by different guests, so the
 hypervisor needs to emulate BW, which would introduce a high overhead
 for I/O intensive workload.

 Therefore, we are going to only implement pmem for vNVDIMM. The rest
 of this document will mostly concentrate on pmem.


1.2 ACPI Support

 ACPI provides two factors of support for NVDIMM. First, NVDIMM
 devices are described by firmware (BIOS/EFI) to OS via ACPI-defined
 NVDIMM Firmware Interface Table (NFIT). Second, several functions of
 NVDIMM, including operations on namespace labels, S.M.A.R.T and
 hotplug, are provided by ACPI methods (_DSM and _FIT).

1.2.1 NFIT

 NFIT is a new system description table added in ACPI v6 with
 signature "NFIT". It contains a set of structures.

 - System Physical Address Range Structure
   (SPA Range Structure)

   SPA range structure describes system physical address ranges
   occupied by NVDIMMs and types of regions.

   If Address Range Type GUID field of a SPA range structure is "Byte
   Addressable Persistent Memory (PM) Region", then the structure
   describes a NVDIMM region that is accessed via pmem. The System
   Physical Address Range Base and Length fields describe the start
   system physical address and the length that is occupied by that
   NVDIMM region.

   A SPA range structure is identified by a non-zero SPA range
   structure index.

   Note: [1] reserves E820 type 7: OSPM must comprehend this memory as
         having non-volatile attributes and handle distinct from
         conventional volatile memory (in Table 15-312 of [1]). The
         memory region supports byte-addressable non-volatility. E820
         type 12 (OEM defined) may be also used for legacy NVDIMM
         prior to ACPI v6.

   Note: Besides OS, EFI firmware may also parse NFIT for booting
         drives (Section 9.3.6.9 of [5]).

 - Memory Device to System Physical Address Range Mapping Structure
   (Range Mapping Structure)

   An NVDIMM region described by a SPA range structure can be
   interleaved across multiple NVDIMM devices. A range mapping
   structure is used to describe the single mapping on each NVDIMM
   device. It describes the size and the offset in a SPA range that an
   NVDIMM device occupies. It may refer to an Interleave Structure
   that contains details of the entire interleave set. Those
   information is used in pblk by the NVDIMM driver for address
   translation.

   The NVDIMM device described by the range mapping structure is
   identified by an unique NFIT Device Handle.

 Details of NFIT and other structures can be found in Section 5.25 in [1].

1.2.2 _DSM and _FIT

 The ACPI namespace device uses _HID of ACPI0012 to identify the root
 NVDIMM interface device. An ACPI namespace device is also present
 under the root device For each NVDIMM device. Above ACPI namespace
 devices are defined in SSDT.

 _DSM methods are present under the root device and each NVDIMM
 device. _DSM methods are used by drivers to access the label storage
 area, get health information, perform vendor-specific commands,
 etc. Details of all _DSM methods can be found in [4].

 _FIT method is under the root device and evaluated by OSPM to get
 NFIT of hotplugged NVDIMM. The hotplugged NVDIMM is indicated to OS
 using ACPI Namespace device with PNPID of PNP0C80 and the device
 object notification value is 0x80. Details of NVDIMM hotplug can be
 found in Section 9.20 of [1].


1.3 Namespace

 [2] describes a mechanism to sub-divide NVDIMMs into namespaces,
 which are logic units of storage similar to SCSI LUNs and NVM Express
 namespaces.

 The namespace information is describes by namespace labels stored in
 the persistent label storage area on each NVDIMM device. The label
 storage area is excluded from the the range mapped by the SPA range
 structure and can only be accessed via _DSM methods.

 There are two types of namespaces defined in [2]: the persistent
 memory namespace and the block namespaces. Persistent memory
 namespaces is built for only pmem NVDIMM regions, while block
 namespaces only for pblk. Only one persistent memory namespace is
 allowed for a pmem NVDIMM region.

 Besides being accessed via _DSM, namespaces are managed and
 interpreted by software. OS vendors may decide to not follow [2] and
 store other types of information in the label storage area.


1.4 clwb/clflushopt

 Writes to NVDIMM may be cached by caches, so certain flushing
 operations should be performed to make them persistent on
 NVDIMM. clwb is used in favor of clflushopt and clflush to flush
 writes from caches to memory.

 Details of clwb/clflushopt can be found in Chapter 10 of [6].



2. NVDIMM/vNVDIMM Support in Linux Kernel/KVM/QEMU

2.1 NVDIMM Driver in Linux Kernel

 Linux kernel since 4.2 has added support for ACPI-defined NVDIMM
 devices.

 NVDIMM driver in Linux probes NVDIMM devices through ACPI (i.e. NFIT
 and _FIT). It is also responsible to parse the namsepace labels on
 each NVDIMM devices, recover namespace after power failure (as
 described in [2]) and handle NVDIMM hotplug. There are also some
 vendor drivers to perform vendor-specific operations on NVDIMMs
 (e.g. via _DSM).

 Compared to the ordinary ram, NVDIMM is used more like a persistent
 storage drive for its persistent aspect. For each persistent memory
 namespace, or a label-less pmem NVDIMM range, NVDIMM driver
 implements a block device interface (/dev/pmemX) for it.

 Userspace applications can mmap(2) the whole pmem into its own
 virtual address space. Linux kernel maps the system physical address
 space range occupied by pmem into the virtual address space, so that every
 normal memory loads/writes with proper flushing instructions are
 applied to the underlying pmem NVDIMM regions.

 Alternatively, a DAX file system can be made on /dev/pmemX. Files on
 that file system can be used in the same way as above. As Linux
 kernel maps the system address space range occupied by those files on
 NVDIMM to the virtual address space, reads/writes on those files are
 applied to the underlying NVDIMM regions as well.

2.2 vNVDIMM Implementation in KVM/QEMU

 An overview of vNVDIMM implementation in KVM (Linux kernel v4.2) / QEMU (commit
 70d1fb9 and patches in-review/future) is showed by the following figure.


                                       +---------------------------------+
 Guest                             GPA |                    | /dev/pmem0 |
                                       +---------------------------------+
           parse        evaluate                            ^            ^
            ACPI          _DSM                              |            |
              |            |                                |            |
 -------------|------------|--------------------------------|------------|----
              V            V                                |            |
          +-------+    +-------+                            |            |
 QEMU     | vACPI |    | v_DSM |                            |            |
          +-------+    +-------+                            |            |
                           ^                                |            |
                           | Read/Write                     |            |
                           V                                |            |
          +...+--------------------+...+-----------+        |            |
    VA    |   | Label Storage Area |   |    buf    |  
KVM_SET_USER_MEMORY_REGION(buf)
          +...+--------------------+...+-----------+        |            |
                                       ^  mmap(2)  ^        |            |
 --------------------------------------|-----------|--------|------------|----
                                       |           +--------~------------+
                                       |                    |            |
 Linux/KVM                             +--------------------+            |
                                                            |            |
                                                       +....+------------+
                                                SPA    |    | /dev/pmem0 |
                                                       +....+------------+
                                                                   ^
                                                                   |
                                                            Host NVDIMM Driver
-------------------------------------------------------------------|---------
                                                                   |
 HW                                                          +------------+
                                                             |   NVDIMM   |
                                                             +------------+


 A part not put in above figure is enabling guest clwb/clflushopt
 which exposes those instructions to guest via guest cpuid.

 Besides instruction enabling, there are two primary parts of vNVDIMM
 implementation in KVM/QEMU.

 (1) Address Mapping

  As described before, the host Linux NVDIMM driver provides a block
  device interface (/dev/pmem0 at the bottom) for a pmem NVDIMM
  region. QEMU can than mmap(2) that device into its virtual address
  space (buf). QEMU is responsible to find a proper guest physical
  address space range that is large enough to hold /dev/pmem0. Then
  QEMU passes the virtual address of mmapped buf to a KVM API
  KVM_SET_USER_MEMORY_REGION that maps in EPT the host physical
  address range of buf to the guest physical address space range where
  the virtual pmem device will be.

  In this way, all guest writes/reads on the virtual pmem device is
  applied directly to the host one.

  Besides, above implementation also allows to back a virtual pmem
  device by a mmapped regular file or a piece of ordinary ram.

 (2) Guest ACPI Emulation

  As guest system physical address and the size of the virtual pmem
  device are determined by QEMU, QEMU is responsible to emulate the
  guest NFIT and SSDT. Basically, it builds the guest NFIT and its
  sub-structures that describes the virtual NVDIMM topology, and a
  guest SSDT that defines ACPI namespace devices of virtual NVDIMM in
  guest SSDT.

  As a portion of host pmem device or a regular file/ordinary file can
  be used to back the guest pmem device, the label storage area on
  host pmem cannot always be passed through to guest. Therefore, the
  guest reads/writes on the label storage area is emulated by QEMU. As
  described before, _DSM method is utilized by OSPM to access the
  label storage area, and therefore it is emulated by QEMU. The _DSM
  buffer is registered as MMIO, and its guest physical address and
  size are described in the guest ACPI. Every command/status
  read/write from guest is trapped and emulated by QEMU.

  Guest _FIT method will be implemented similarly in the future.



3. Usage Example of vNVDIMM in Xen

 Our design is to provide virtual pmem devices to HVM domains. The
 virtual pmem devices are backed by host pmem devices.

 Dom0 Linux kernel can detect the host pmem devices and create
 /dev/pmemXX for each detected devices. Users in Dom0 can then create
 DAX file system on /dev/pmemXX and create several pre-allocate files
 in the DAX file system.

 After setup the file system on the host pmem, users can add the
 following lines in the xl configuration files to assign the host pmem
 regions to domains:
     vnvdimm = [ 'file=/dev/pmem0' ]
 or
     vnvdimm = [ 'file=/mnt/dax/pre_allocated_file' ]

  The first type of configuration assigns the entire pmem device
  (/dev/pmem0) to the domain, while the second assigns the space
  allocated to /mnt/dax/pre_allocated_file on the host pmem device to
  the domain.

  When the domain starts, guest can detect the (virtual) pmem devices
  via ACPI and guest read/write on the virtual pmem devices are
  directly applied on their host backends.



4. Design of vNVDIMM in Xen

 As KVM/QEMU, our design currently only provides pmem vNVDIMM.

 Similarly to that in KVM/QEMU, enabling vNVDIMM in Xen is composed of
 three parts:
 (1) Guest clwb/clflushopt enabling,
 (2) pmem address management, and
 (3) Guest ACPI emulation.

 The rest of this section present the design of each part
 respectively. The basic design principle to reuse existing code in
 Linux NVDIMM driver, QEMU and Xen as much as possible.


4.1 Guest clwb/clflushopt Enabling

 The instruction enabling is simple and we do the same work as in KVM/QEMU:
 - clwb/clflushopt are exposed to guest via guest cpuid.


4.2 pmem Address Management

 pmem address management is primarily composed of three parts:
 (1) detection of pmem devices and their address ranges, which is
     accomplished by Dom0 Linux pmem driver and Xen hypervisor;
 (2) get SPA ranges of an pmem area that will be mapped to domain,
     which is accomplished by xl;
 (3) map the pmem area to a domain, which is accomplished by qemu and
     Xen hypervisor.

 Our design intends to reuse the current memory management for normal
 RAM in Xen to manage the mapping of pmem. Then we will come across a
 problem: where we store the memory management data structs for pmem.

 The rest of this section addresses above aspects respectively.

4.2.1 Reserve Storage for Management Structures

 A core data struct in Xen memory management is 'struct page_info'.
 For normal ram, Xen creates a page_info struct for each page. For
 pmem, we are going to do the same. However, for large capacity pmem
 devices (e.g. several terabytes or even larger), a large amount of
 page_info structs will occupy too much storage space that cannot
 fit in the normal ram.

 Our solution, as used by Linux kernel, is to reserve an area on pmem
 and place pmem's page_info structs in that reserved area. Therefore,
 we can always ensure there is enough space for pmem page_info
 structs, though the access to them is slower than directly from the
 normal ram.

 Such a pmem namespace can be created via a userspace tool ndctl and
 then recognized by Linux NVDIMM driver. However, they currently only
 reserve space for Linux kernel's page structs. Therefore, our design
 need to extend both Linux NVDIMM driver and ndctl to reserve
 arbitrary size.

4.2.2 Detection of Host pmem Devices

 The detection and initialize host pmem devices require a non-trivial
 driver to interact with the corresponding ACPI namespace devices,
 parse namespace labels and make necessary recovery actions. Instead
 of duplicating the comprehensive Linux pmem driver in Xen hypervisor,
 our designs leaves it to Dom0 Linux and let Dom0 Linux report
 detected host pmem devices to Xen hypervisor.

 Our design takes following steps to detect host pmem devices when Xen
 boots.
 (1) As booting on bare metal, host pmem devices are detected by Dom0
     Linux NVDIMM driver.

 (2) Our design extends Linux NVDIMM driver to reports SPA's and sizes
     of the pmem devices and reserved areas to Xen hypervisor via a
     new hypercall.

 (3) Xen hypervisor then checks
     - whether SPA and size of the newly reported pmem device is overlap
       with any previously reported pmem devices;
     - whether the reserved area can fit in the pmem device and is
       large enough to hold page_info structs for itself.

     If any checks fail, the reported pmem device will be ignored by
     Xen hypervisor and hence will not be used by any
     guests. Otherwise, Xen hypervisor will recorded the reported
     parameters and create page_info structs in the reserved area.

 (4) Because the reserved area is now used by Xen hypervisor, it
     should not be accessible by Dom0 any more. Therefore, if a host
     pmem device is recorded by Xen hypervisor, Xen will unmap its
     reserved area from Dom0. Our design also needs to extend Linux
     NVDIMM driver to "balloon out" the reserved area after it
     successfully reports a pmem device to Xen hypervisor.

4.2.3 Get Host Machine Address (SPA) of Host pmem Files

 Before a pmem file is assigned to a domain, we need to know the host
 SPA ranges that are allocated to this file. We do this work in xl.

 If a pmem device /dev/pmem0 is given, xl will read
 /sys/block/pmem0/device/{resource,size} respectively for the start
 SPA and size of the pmem device.

 If a pre-allocated file /mnt/dax/file is given,
 (1) xl first finds the host pmem device where /mnt/dax/file is. Then
     it uses the method above to get the start SPA of the host pmem
     device.
 (2) xl then uses fiemap ioctl to get the extend mappings of
     /mnt/dax/file, and adds the corresponding physical offsets and
     lengths in each mapping entries to above start SPA to get the SPA
     ranges pre-allocated for this file.

 The resulting host SPA ranges will be passed to QEMU which allocates
 guest address space for vNVDIMM devices and calls Xen hypervisor to
 map the guest address to the host SPA ranges.

4.2.4 Map Host pmem to Guests

 Our design reuses the existing address mapping in Xen for the normal
 ram to map pmem. We will still initiate the mapping for pmem from
 QEMU, and there is one difference from the mapping of normal ram:
 - For the normal ram, QEMU only needs to provide gpfn, and the actual
   host memory where gpfn is mapped is allocated by Xen hypervisor.
 - For pmem, QEMU provides both gpfn and mfn where gpfn is expected to
   be mapped to. mfn is provided by xl as described in Section 4.2.3.

 Our design introduce a new XENMEM op for the pmem mapping, which
 finally calls guest_physmap_add_page() to add the host pmem page to a
 domain's address space.

4.2.5 Misc 1: RAS

 Machine check can occur from NVDIMM as normal ram, so that we follow
 the current machine check handling in Xen for MC# from NVDIMM.

4.2.6 Misc 2: hotplug

 The hotplugged host NVDIMM devices is detected via _FIT method under
 the root ACPI namespace device for NVDIMM. We rely on Dom0 Linux
 kernel to discover the hotplugged NVDIMM devices and follow steps in
 Section 4.2.2 to report the hotplugged devices to Xen hypervisor.


4.3 Guest ACPI Emulation

 Guest ACPI emulation is composed of two parts: building guest NFIT
 and SSDT that defines ACPI namespace devices for NVDIMM, and
 emulating guest _DSM. As QEMU has already implemented ACPI support
 for vNVDIMM on KVM, our design intends to reuse its implementation.

4.3.1 Building Guest ACPI Tables

 Two tables for vNVDIMM need to be built:
 - NFIT, which defines the basic parameters of vNVDIMM devices and
   does not contain any AML code.
 - SSDT, which defines ACPI namespace devices for vNVDIMM in AML code.

 The contents of both tables are affected by some parameters
 (e.g. address and size of vNVDIMM devices) that cannot be determined
 until a guest configuration is given. However, all AML code in guest
 ACPI are currently generated at compile time fro pre-crafted .asl
 files, which is not feasible for ACPI namespace devices for vNVDIMM.

 We could either introduce an AML builder to generate AML code at
 runtime like what QEMU is currently doing, or pass vNVDIMM ACPI
 tables from QEMU to Xen. In order to reduce the duplicated code (to
 AML builder in QEMU), our design takes the latter approach. Basically,
 our design takes the following steps:
 1) The current QEMU does not build any ACPI stuffs when it runs as
    the Xen device model, so we need to patch it to generate NFIT and
    AML code of ACPI namespace devices for vNVDIMM.

 2) QEMU then copies above NFIT and ACPI namespace devices to an area
    at the end of guest memory below 4G. The guest physical address
    and size of this area are written to xenstore keys
    (/local/domain/domid/hvmloader/dm-acpi/{address,length}) The
    detailed format of data in this area is explained later.

 3) hvmloader reads above xenstore keys to probe the passed-in ACPI
    tables and ACPI namespace devices, and detects the potential
    collisions as explained later.

 4) If no collisions are found, hvmloader will
    (1) append the passed-in ACPI tables to the end of existing guest
        ACPI tables, like what current construct_passthrough_tables()
        does.
    (2) construct a SSDT for each passed-in ACPI namespace devices and
        append to the end of existing guest ACPI tables.

 Passing arbitrary ACPI tables and AML code from QEMU could
 introduce at least two types of collisions:
 1) a passed-in table and a Xen-built table have the same signature
 2) a passed-in ACPI namespace device and a Xen-built ACPI namespace
    device have the same device name.

 Our design takes the following method to avoid and detect collisions.
 1) The data layout of area where QEMU copies its NFIT and ACPI
    namespace devices is organized as below:

     1 byte 4 bytes  length bytes
    +------+--------+-----------+------+--------+-----------+-----
    | type | length | data blob | type | length | data blob | ...
    +------+--------+-----------+------+--------+-----------+-----

    type: 0 - data blob contains a complete ACPI table
          1 - data blob contains AML code for an ACPI namespace device

    length: the number of bytes of data blob

    data blob: type 0 - a complete ACPI table
               type 1 - composed as below:

                         4 bytes   (length - 4) bytes
                        +---------+------------------+
                        | name[4] | AML code snippet |
                        +---------+------------------+

                        name[4]         : name of ACPI namespace device
                        AML code snippet: AML code inside "Device(name[4])"

               e.g. for an ACPI namespace device defined by
                     Device(NVDR)
                     {
                       Name (_HID, "ACPI0012")
                       ...
                     }
                    QEMU builds a data blob like
                        +--------------------+-----------------------------+
                        | 'N', 'V', 'D', 'R' | Name (_HID, "ACPI0012") ... |
                        +--------------------+-----------------------------+

 2) hvmloader stores signatures of its own guest ACPI tables in an
    array builtin_table_sigs[], and names of its own guest ACPI
    namespace devices in an array builtin_nd_names[]. Because there
    are only a few guest ACPI tables and namespace devices built by
    Xen, we can hardcode their signatures or names in hvmloader.

 3) When hvmloader loads a type 0 entry, it extracts the signature
    from the data blob and search for it in builtin_table_sigs[].  If
    found anyone, hvmloader will report an error and stop. Otherwise,
    it will append it to the end of loaded guest ACPI.

 4) When hvmloader loads a type 1 entry, it extracts the device name
    from the data blob and search for it in builtin_nd_names[]. If
    found anyone, hvmloader will report and error and stop. Otherwise,
    it will wrap the AML code snippet by "Device (name[4]) {...}" and
    include it in a new SSDT which is then appended to the end of
    loaded guest ACPI.

4.3.2 Emulating Guest _DSM

 Our design leaves the emulation of guest _DSM to QEMU. Just as what
 it does with KVM, QEMU registers the _DSM buffer as MMIO region with
 Xen and then all guest evaluations of _DSM are trapped and emulated
 by QEMU.


References:
[1] ACPI Specification v6,
    http://www.uefi.org/sites/default/files/resources/ACPI_6.0.pdf
[2] NVDIMM Namespace Specification,
    http://pmem.io/documents/NVDIMM_Namespace_Spec.pdf
[3] NVDIMM Block Window Driver Writer's Guide,
    http://pmem.io/documents/NVDIMM_Driver_Writers_Guide.pdf
[4] NVDIMM DSM Interface Example,
    http://pmem.io/documents/NVDIMM_DSM_Interface_Example.pdf
[5] UEFI Specification v2.6,
    http://www.uefi.org/sites/default/files/resources/UEFI%20Spec%202_6.pdf
[6] Intel Architecture Instruction Set Extensions Programming Reference,
    https://software.intel.com/sites/default/files/managed/07/b7/319433-023.pdf
[7] https://lists.xenproject.org/archives/html/xen-devel/2016-02/msg00006.html
[8] https://lists.xen.org/archives/html/xen-devel/2016-06/msg00606.html

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