[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] [Xen-users] Re: Xen breaks aacraid
Hello again, I tried with iommu=0 on the Xen command line, and everything boots up just fine. I was / am hoping to use VT-d. Can anybody shed any light as to whether this is a problem with, e.g., my RAID card, or something more fundamental relating to storage controllers? VT-d works on this system without the RAID card (despite the strange messages in Xen's output). I have successfully assigned a Broadcom NetXtreme NIC to an HVM Windows guest. Thanks! -Jon On Tue, Apr 13, 2010 at 11:13 AM, Jonathan McCune <jonmccune@xxxxxxx> wrote: > Hello, > > I'm using Xen 4.0.0 compiled from source with the 2.6.31.13 kernel > that it pulls down on its own. I added support for the aacraid driver > to the kernel using 'make menuconfig' from the > build-linux-2.6-pvops_x86_64 subdirectory, and then built and > installed the whole thing using 'make install' from the xen-4.0.0 > directory. I compiled this support natively, so I am not using an > initrd. I'm fairly confident that I've compiled the kernel correctly > because it boots without Xen. With Xen, I am unable to boot fully > because the linux kernel gets stuck because it has no root filesystem. > This I surmise is because the aacraid driver is not initializing > correctly. > > I logged the linux kernel messages via the serial port both with and > without Xen, and narrowed down the first disk-related difference > between them. > > WORKING, NON-XEN: > > [ 3.141977] Adaptec aacraid driver 1.1-5[2461]-ms > [ 3.146768] aacraid 0000:02:0e.0: PCI INT A -> GSI 18 (level, low) -> IRQ > 18 > [ 3.155385] IRQ 18/aacraid: IRQF_DISABLED is not guaranteed on shared IRQs > [ 3.352307] AAC0: kernel 5.2-0[15323] Sep 21 2007 > [ 3.357084] AAC0: monitor 5.2-0[15323] > [ 3.360905] AAC0: bios 5.2-0[15323] > [ 3.364466] AAC0: serial 7C3110F43BB > [ 3.368113] AAC0: Non-DASD support enabled. > [ 3.372366] AAC0: 64bit support enabled. > [ 3.376360] AAC0: 64 Bit DAC enabled > [ 3.387168] scsi0 : aacraid > [ 3.390319] scsi 0:0:1:0: Direct-Access Adaptec ArraySAS > V1.0 PQ: 0 ANSI: 2 > [ 3.404997] scsi 0:1:0:0: Direct-Access FUJITSU MAX3147RC > 0104 PQ: 0 ANSI: 3 > > > BROKEN, WITH-XEN: > > [ 3.424099] Adaptec aacraid driver 1.1-5[2461]-ms > [ 3.428901] xen_set_ioapic_routing: irq 18 gsi 18 vector 18 ioapic > 0 pin 18 triggering 1 polarity 1 > [ 3.438085] aacraid 0000:02:0e.0: PCI INT A -> GSI 18 (level, low) -> IRQ > 18 > [ 3.447573] IRQ 18/aacraid: IRQF_DISABLED is not guaranteed on shared IRQs > [ 3.644349] AAC0: kernel 5.2-0[15323] Sep 21 2007 > [ 3.649161] AAC0: monitor 5.2-0[15323] > [ 3.653013] AAC0: bios 5.2-0[15323] > [ 3.656602] AAC0: serial 7C3110F43BB > [ 3.660277] AAC0: Non-DASD support enabled. > [ 3.664560] AAC0: 64bit support enabled. > [ 3.668557] AAC0: 64 Bit DAC enabled > [ 3.679626] scsi0 : aacraid > [ 3.683518] scsi 0:0:1:0: Direct-Access Adaptec ArraySAS > V1.0 PQ: 0 ANSI: 2 > [ 3.700562] scsi scan: INQUIRY result too short (5), using 36 > [ 3.706381] scsi 0:1:0:0: Direct-Access > PQ: 0 ANSI: 0 > > For some reason if I enable serial output for the Xen kernel then it > prevents the linux kernel's serial messages from appearing. Thus, > these Xen bootup messages are from a different boot (not sure why it > would matter), but the failure mode is identical: > > __ __ _ _ ___ ___ > \ \/ /___ _ __ | || | / _ \ / _ \ > \ // _ \ '_ \ | || |_| | | | | | | > / \ __/ | | | |__ _| |_| | |_| | > /_/\_\___|_| |_| |_|(_)___(_)___/ > > (XEN) Xen version 4.0.0 (root@) (gcc version 4.3.2 (Debian 4.3.2-1.1) > ) Tue Apr 13 09:08:06 EDT 2010 > (XEN) Latest ChangeSet: unavailable > (XEN) Command line: iommu=1 com1=115200,8n1 console=com1,vga > (XEN) Video information: > (XEN) VGA is text mode 80x25, font 8x16 > (XEN) VBE/DDC methods: V2; EDID transfer time: 1 seconds > (XEN) Disc information: > (XEN) Found 1 MBR signatures > (XEN) Found 1 EDD information structures > (XEN) Xen-e820 RAM map: > (XEN) 0000000000000000 - 000000000009c400 (usable) > (XEN) 000000000009c400 - 00000000000a0000 (reserved) > (XEN) 00000000000e8000 - 0000000000100000 (reserved) > (XEN) 0000000000100000 - 00000000db7ad440 (usable) > (XEN) 00000000db7ad440 - 00000000db7af4a0 (ACPI NVS) > (XEN) 00000000db7af4a0 - 00000000e0000000 (reserved) > (XEN) 00000000f4000000 - 00000000f8000000 (reserved) > (XEN) 00000000fe000000 - 00000000fed40000 (reserved) > (XEN) 00000000fed45000 - 0000000100000000 (reserved) > (XEN) 0000000100000000 - 00000001fc000000 (usable) > (XEN) 00000001fc000000 - 0000000200000000 (reserved) > (XEN) 0000000200000000 - 000000021c000000 (usable) > (XEN) ACPI: RSDP 000E5410, 0014 (r0 COMPAQ) > (XEN) ACPI: RSDT DB7D1540, 0044 (r1 HPQOEM SLIC-BPC 20091216 0) > (XEN) ACPI: FACP DB7D15E8, 0074 (r1 COMPAQ IBEXPEAK 1 0) > (XEN) ACPI Warning (tbfadt-0444): Optional field "Pm2ControlBlock" has > zero address or length: 0000000000000050/0 [20070126] > (XEN) ACPI: DSDT DB7D1A4F, A606 (r1 COMPAQ DSDT_PRJ 1 MSFT 100000E) > (XEN) ACPI: FACS DB7D1500, 0040 > (XEN) ACPI: APIC DB7D165C, 00BC (r1 COMPAQ IBEXPEAK 1 0) > (XEN) ACPI: ASF! DB7D1718, 0063 (r32 COMPAQ IBEXPEAK 1 0) > (XEN) ACPI: MCFG DB7D177B, 003C (r1 COMPAQ IBEXPEAK 1 0) > (XEN) ACPI: TCPA DB7D17B7, 0032 (r1 COMPAQ IBEXPEAK 1 0) > (XEN) ACPI: SLIC DB7D17E9, 0176 (r1 HPQOEM SLIC-BPC 1 0) > (XEN) ACPI: HPET DB7D195F, 0038 (r1 COMPAQ IBEXPEAK 1 0) > (XEN) ACPI: DMAR DB7D1997, 00B8 (r1 COMPAQ IBEXPEAK 1 0) > (XEN) System RAM: 7964MB (8156060kB) > (XEN) Domain heap initialised > (XEN) Processor #0 6:5 APIC version 21 > (XEN) Processor #1 6:5 APIC version 21 > (XEN) Processor #4 6:5 APIC version 21 > (XEN) Processor #5 6:5 APIC version 21 > (XEN) IOAPIC[0]: apic_id 1, version 32, address 0xfec00000, GSI 0-23 > (XEN) Enabling APIC mode: Flat. Using 1 I/O APICs > (XEN) Using scheduler: SMP Credit Scheduler (credit) > (XEN) Detected 3457.923 MHz processor. > (XEN) Initing memory sharing. > (XEN) VMX: Supported advanced features: > (XEN) - APIC MMIO access virtualisation > (XEN) - APIC TPR shadow > (XEN) - Extended Page Tables (EPT) > (XEN) - Virtual-Processor Identifiers (VPID) > (XEN) - Virtual NMI > (XEN) - MSR direct-access bitmap > (XEN) - Unrestricted Guest > (XEN) HVM: ASIDs enabled. > (XEN) HVM: VMX enabled > (XEN) HVM: Hardware Assisted Paging detected. > (XEN) Intel VT-d Snoop Control not supported. > (XEN) Intel VT-d DMA Passthrough not supported. > (XEN) Intel VT-d Queued Invalidation not supported. > (XEN) Intel VT-d Interrupt Remapping not supported. > (XEN) I/O virtualisation enabled > (XEN) I/O virtualisation for PV guests disabled > (XEN) Enabled directed EOI with ioapic_ack_old on! > (XEN) Total of 4 processors activated. > (XEN) ENABLING IO-APIC IRQs > (XEN) -> Using old ACK method > (XEN) TSC is reliable, synchronization unnecessary > (XEN) Platform timer is 14.318MHz HPET > ÿ(XEN) Brought up 4 CPUs > (XEN) [VT-D]iommu.c:818: iommu_fault_status: Faul > > > Yes, they stop like that. I don't know what Xen does to the serial > port but it appears to stop working. I can make a video of the screen > and manually harvest some more info if really necessary. > > Do I need to change some setting somewhere to tell the system to give > the RAID card a little more time? > > I am using 'iommu=1' on the Xen command line, but my understanding is > that such support is built into Xen 4.0 by default anyways. Is the > IOMMU breaking things? Seems very odd to me since this kernel works > fine without Xen. > > The RAID card I'm using is a PCIe Adaptec SAS-3405. The machine is an > HP Elite 8100 minitower desktop PC. > > Many thanks for any helpful hints or suggestions! > -Jon > _______________________________________________ Xen-users mailing list Xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xensource.com/xen-users
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