Re: [PATCH v9 0/7] KVM: x86: Allow Qemu/KVM to use PVH entry point

From: Maran Wilson
Date: Tue Dec 11 2018 - 14:30:30 EST


On 12/11/2018 5:18 AM, Borislav Petkov wrote:
On Mon, Dec 10, 2018 at 11:05:34AM -0800, Maran Wilson wrote:
For certain applications it is desirable to rapidly boot a KVM virtual
machine. In cases where legacy hardware and software support within the
guest is not needed, Qemu should be able to boot directly into the
uncompressed Linux kernel binary without the need to run firmware.

There already exists an ABI to allow this for Xen PVH guests and the ABI
is supported by Linux and FreeBSD:

https://xenbits.xen.org/docs/unstable/misc/pvh.html

This patch series would enable Qemu to use that same entry point for
booting KVM guests.
How would I do that, practically?

Looking at those here:

* Qemu and qboot RFC patches have been posted to show one example of how
this functionality can be used. Some preliminary numbers are available
in those cover letters showing the KVM guest boot time improvement.
Qemu:
http://lists.nongnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2018-12/msg00957.html
qboot:
http://lists.nongnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2018-12/msg00953.html
I might still need to do some dancing to get stuff going.

Is your question about what options you need to provide to Qemu? Or is your question about the SW implementation choices?

Assuming the former... once you have compiled all 3 new binaries (kernel, Qemu, and qboot) then you simply invoke qemu the same way you normally invoke qemu with qboot + kernel binary, except you provide the vmlinux (uncompressed) kernel binary when specifying the "-kernel" parameter. Qemu/qboot will automatically detect that you have provided an ELF binary, find the PVH ELF note to locate the entry point, and proceed to boot the kernel via that method. On the other hand, if you leave all the Qemu options as-is, but simply provide the bzImage (compressed) kernel binary from the same build, Qemu/qboot will boot the way it has always done and not look for PVH.

To make it more concrete, here's an example of how I had been invoking PVH boot recently:

ÂÂ x86_64-softmmu/qemu-system-x86_64 \
ÂÂÂÂ -name testvm01 \
ÂÂÂÂ -machine q35,accel=kvm,nvdimm \
ÂÂÂÂ -cpu host \
ÂÂÂÂ -m 1024,maxmem=20G,slots=2 \
ÂÂÂÂ -smp 1 \
ÂÂÂÂ -nodefaults \
ÂÂÂÂ -kernel binaries/vmlinux \
ÂÂÂÂ -object memory-backend-file,id=mem0,share,mem-path=binaries/containers.img,size=235929600 \
ÂÂÂÂ -device nvdimm,memdev=mem0,id=nv0 \
ÂÂÂÂ -append 'console=ttyS0,115200,8n1 root=/dev/pmem0p1 panic=1 rw init=/usr/lib/systemd/systemd rootfstype=ext4' \
ÂÂÂÂ -bios binaries/bios.bin \
ÂÂÂÂ -serial mon:stdio

Thanks,
-Maran



Thx.