Il 22/06/2014 10:25, Chen, Tiejun ha scritto:
In qemu-upstream, as you commented we can't create this as a ISA class
type explicitly.
Note I didn't say that QEMU doesn't like having two ISA bridges.
I commented that the firmware will see two ISA bridges and will try to
initialize both of them. It currently doesn't just because it only
knows of two southbridge PCI IDs, and both of them are old or relatively
old (PIIX3/4 and ICH9).
But what would happen if you did graphics passthrough on a machine with
an ICH9 southbridge? Your code will create the PIIX4 ISA bridge, and
will create an ICH9 southbridge just to please the i915 driver. The
BIOS will recognize the ICH9's vendor/device ids and try to initialize
it. It will write to the configuration space to set up PCI PIRQ[A-H]
routing, for example, which makes no sense since your ICH9 is just a
dummy device.
Second problem. Your IGD passthrough code currently works with QEMU's
PIIX4-based machine. But what happens if you try to extend it, so that
it works with QEMU's ICH9-based machine? That's a more modern machine
that has a PCIe chipset and hence has its ISA bridge at 00:1f.0. Now
you have a conflict.
In other words, if you want IGD passthrough in QEMU, you need a solution
that is future-proof.
So we compromise by faking this ISA bridge without ISA
class type setting (as I recall you already said this way is slightly
better).
It is only slightly better, but the right solution is to fix the driver.
There is absolutely zero reason why a graphics driver should know
about the vendor/device ids of the PCH.
The right way could be to make QEMU add a vendor-specific capability to
the video device. The driver can probe for that capability before
looking at the PCI bus. QEMU can add the capability to the list, it is
easy because all accesses to the video device's configuration space trap
to QEMU. Then you do not need to add fake devices to the machine.
In fact, it would be nice if Intel added such a capability on the next
generation of integrated graphics, too. On real hardware, ACPI or some
other kind of firmware can probe the PCH at 00:1f.0 and initialize that--
vendor-specific capability. QEMU would just forward the value from the
host, so that virtualized guests never depend on the PCH at 00:1f.0.
Paolo
Maybe we will figure better way in the future. But anyway, this
is always registered as 00:15.0, right? So I think the i915 driver can
go back to probe the devfn like the native environment.