1 .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 2 3 .. _virtio: 4 5 =============== 6 Virtio on Linux 7 =============== 8 9 Introduction 10 ============ 11 12 Virtio is an open standard that defines a protocol for communication 13 between drivers and devices of different types, see Chapter 5 ("Device 14 Types") of the virtio spec (`[1]`_). Originally developed as a standard 15 for paravirtualized devices implemented by a hypervisor, it can be used 16 to interface any compliant device (real or emulated) with a driver. 17 18 For illustrative purposes, this document will focus on the common case 19 of a Linux kernel running in a virtual machine and using paravirtualized 20 devices provided by the hypervisor, which exposes them as virtio devices 21 via standard mechanisms such as PCI. 22 23 24 Device - Driver communication: virtqueues 25 ========================================= 26 27 Although the virtio devices are really an abstraction layer in the 28 hypervisor, they're exposed to the guest as if they are physical devices 29 using a specific transport method -- PCI, MMIO or CCW -- that is 30 orthogonal to the device itself. The virtio spec defines these transport 31 methods in detail, including device discovery, capabilities and 32 interrupt handling. 33 34 The communication between the driver in the guest OS and the device in 35 the hypervisor is done through shared memory (that's what makes virtio 36 devices so efficient) using specialized data structures called 37 virtqueues, which are actually ring buffers [#f1]_ of buffer descriptors 38 similar to the ones used in a network device: 39 40 .. kernel-doc:: include/uapi/linux/virtio_ring.h 41 :identifiers: struct vring_desc 42 43 All the buffers the descriptors point to are allocated by the guest and 44 used by the host either for reading or for writing but not for both. 45 46 Refer to Chapter 2.5 ("Virtqueues") of the virtio spec (`[1]`_) for the 47 reference definitions of virtqueues and "Virtqueues and virtio ring: How 48 the data travels" blog post (`[2]`_) for an illustrated overview of how 49 the host device and the guest driver communicate. 50 51 The :c:type:`vring_virtqueue` struct models a virtqueue, including the 52 ring buffers and management data. Embedded in this struct is the 53 :c:type:`virtqueue` struct, which is the data structure that's 54 ultimately used by virtio drivers: 55 56 .. kernel-doc:: include/linux/virtio.h 57 :identifiers: struct virtqueue 58 59 The callback function pointed by this struct is triggered when the 60 device has consumed the buffers provided by the driver. More 61 specifically, the trigger will be an interrupt issued by the hypervisor 62 (see vring_interrupt()). Interrupt request handlers are registered for 63 a virtqueue during the virtqueue setup process (transport-specific). 64 65 .. kernel-doc:: drivers/virtio/virtio_ring.c 66 :identifiers: vring_interrupt 67 68 69 Device discovery and probing 70 ============================ 71 72 In the kernel, the virtio core contains the virtio bus driver and 73 transport-specific drivers like `virtio-pci` and `virtio-mmio`. Then 74 there are individual virtio drivers for specific device types that are 75 registered to the virtio bus driver. 76 77 How a virtio device is found and configured by the kernel depends on how 78 the hypervisor defines it. Taking the `QEMU virtio-console 79 <https://gitlab.com/qemu-project/qemu/-/blob/master/hw/char/virtio-console.c>`__ 80 device as an example. When using PCI as a transport method, the device 81 will present itself on the PCI bus with vendor 0x1af4 (Red Hat, Inc.) 82 and device id 0x1003 (virtio console), as defined in the spec, so the 83 kernel will detect it as it would do with any other PCI device. 84 85 During the PCI enumeration process, if a device is found to match the 86 virtio-pci driver (according to the virtio-pci device table, any PCI 87 device with vendor id = 0x1af4):: 88 89 /* Qumranet donated their vendor ID for devices 0x1000 thru 0x10FF. */ 90 static const struct pci_device_id virtio_pci_id_table[] = { 91 { PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_REDHAT_QUMRANET, PCI_ANY_ID) }, 92 { 0 } 93 }; 94 95 then the virtio-pci driver is probed and, if the probing goes well, the 96 device is registered to the virtio bus:: 97 98 static int virtio_pci_probe(struct pci_dev *pci_dev, 99 const struct pci_device_id *id) 100 { 101 ... 102 103 if (force_legacy) { 104 rc = virtio_pci_legacy_probe(vp_dev); 105 /* Also try modern mode if we can't map BAR0 (no IO space). */ 106 if (rc == -ENODEV || rc == -ENOMEM) 107 rc = virtio_pci_modern_probe(vp_dev); 108 if (rc) 109 goto err_probe; 110 } else { 111 rc = virtio_pci_modern_probe(vp_dev); 112 if (rc == -ENODEV) 113 rc = virtio_pci_legacy_probe(vp_dev); 114 if (rc) 115 goto err_probe; 116 } 117 118 ... 119 120 rc = register_virtio_device(&vp_dev->vdev); 121 122 When the device is registered to the virtio bus the kernel will look 123 for a driver in the bus that can handle the device and call that 124 driver's ``probe`` method. 125 126 At this point, the virtqueues will be allocated and configured by 127 calling the appropriate ``virtio_find`` helper function, such as 128 virtio_find_single_vq() or virtio_find_vqs(), which will end up calling 129 a transport-specific ``find_vqs`` method. 130 131 132 References 133 ========== 134 135 _`[1]` Virtio Spec v1.2: 136 https://docs.oasis-open.org/virtio/virtio/v1.2/virtio-v1.2.html 137 138 .. Check for later versions of the spec as well. 139 140 _`[2]` Virtqueues and virtio ring: How the data travels 141 https://www.redhat.com/en/blog/virtqueues-and-virtio-ring-how-data-travels 142 143 .. rubric:: Footnotes 144 145 .. [#f1] that's why they may be also referred to as virtrings.
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