]> git.ipfire.org Git - thirdparty/kernel/stable.git/blame - Documentation/virtual/kvm/api.txt
KVM: x86: hyperv: declare KVM_CAP_HYPERV_TLBFLUSH capability
[thirdparty/kernel/stable.git] / Documentation / virtual / kvm / api.txt
CommitLineData
9c1b96e3
AK
1The Definitive KVM (Kernel-based Virtual Machine) API Documentation
2===================================================================
3
41. General description
414fa985 5----------------------
9c1b96e3
AK
6
7The kvm API is a set of ioctls that are issued to control various aspects
8of a virtual machine. The ioctls belong to three classes
9
10 - System ioctls: These query and set global attributes which affect the
11 whole kvm subsystem. In addition a system ioctl is used to create
12 virtual machines
13
14 - VM ioctls: These query and set attributes that affect an entire virtual
15 machine, for example memory layout. In addition a VM ioctl is used to
16 create virtual cpus (vcpus).
17
18 Only run VM ioctls from the same process (address space) that was used
19 to create the VM.
20
21 - vcpu ioctls: These query and set attributes that control the operation
22 of a single virtual cpu.
23
24 Only run vcpu ioctls from the same thread that was used to create the
25 vcpu.
26
414fa985 27
2044892d 282. File descriptors
414fa985 29-------------------
9c1b96e3
AK
30
31The kvm API is centered around file descriptors. An initial
32open("/dev/kvm") obtains a handle to the kvm subsystem; this handle
33can be used to issue system ioctls. A KVM_CREATE_VM ioctl on this
2044892d 34handle will create a VM file descriptor which can be used to issue VM
9c1b96e3
AK
35ioctls. A KVM_CREATE_VCPU ioctl on a VM fd will create a virtual cpu
36and return a file descriptor pointing to it. Finally, ioctls on a vcpu
37fd can be used to control the vcpu, including the important task of
38actually running guest code.
39
40In general file descriptors can be migrated among processes by means
41of fork() and the SCM_RIGHTS facility of unix domain socket. These
42kinds of tricks are explicitly not supported by kvm. While they will
43not cause harm to the host, their actual behavior is not guaranteed by
44the API. The only supported use is one virtual machine per process,
45and one vcpu per thread.
46
414fa985 47
9c1b96e3 483. Extensions
414fa985 49-------------
9c1b96e3
AK
50
51As of Linux 2.6.22, the KVM ABI has been stabilized: no backward
52incompatible change are allowed. However, there is an extension
53facility that allows backward-compatible extensions to the API to be
54queried and used.
55
c9f3f2d8 56The extension mechanism is not based on the Linux version number.
9c1b96e3
AK
57Instead, kvm defines extension identifiers and a facility to query
58whether a particular extension identifier is available. If it is, a
59set of ioctls is available for application use.
60
414fa985 61
9c1b96e3 624. API description
414fa985 63------------------
9c1b96e3
AK
64
65This section describes ioctls that can be used to control kvm guests.
66For each ioctl, the following information is provided along with a
67description:
68
69 Capability: which KVM extension provides this ioctl. Can be 'basic',
70 which means that is will be provided by any kernel that supports
7f05db6a 71 API version 12 (see section 4.1), a KVM_CAP_xyz constant, which
9c1b96e3 72 means availability needs to be checked with KVM_CHECK_EXTENSION
7f05db6a
MT
73 (see section 4.4), or 'none' which means that while not all kernels
74 support this ioctl, there's no capability bit to check its
75 availability: for kernels that don't support the ioctl,
76 the ioctl returns -ENOTTY.
9c1b96e3
AK
77
78 Architectures: which instruction set architectures provide this ioctl.
79 x86 includes both i386 and x86_64.
80
81 Type: system, vm, or vcpu.
82
83 Parameters: what parameters are accepted by the ioctl.
84
85 Returns: the return value. General error numbers (EBADF, ENOMEM, EINVAL)
86 are not detailed, but errors with specific meanings are.
87
414fa985 88
9c1b96e3
AK
894.1 KVM_GET_API_VERSION
90
91Capability: basic
92Architectures: all
93Type: system ioctl
94Parameters: none
95Returns: the constant KVM_API_VERSION (=12)
96
97This identifies the API version as the stable kvm API. It is not
98expected that this number will change. However, Linux 2.6.20 and
992.6.21 report earlier versions; these are not documented and not
100supported. Applications should refuse to run if KVM_GET_API_VERSION
101returns a value other than 12. If this check passes, all ioctls
102described as 'basic' will be available.
103
414fa985 104
9c1b96e3
AK
1054.2 KVM_CREATE_VM
106
107Capability: basic
108Architectures: all
109Type: system ioctl
e08b9637 110Parameters: machine type identifier (KVM_VM_*)
9c1b96e3
AK
111Returns: a VM fd that can be used to control the new virtual machine.
112
bcb85c88 113The new VM has no virtual cpus and no memory.
a8a3c426 114You probably want to use 0 as machine type.
e08b9637
CO
115
116In order to create user controlled virtual machines on S390, check
117KVM_CAP_S390_UCONTROL and use the flag KVM_VM_S390_UCONTROL as
118privileged user (CAP_SYS_ADMIN).
9c1b96e3 119
a8a3c426
JH
120To use hardware assisted virtualization on MIPS (VZ ASE) rather than
121the default trap & emulate implementation (which changes the virtual
122memory layout to fit in user mode), check KVM_CAP_MIPS_VZ and use the
123flag KVM_VM_MIPS_VZ.
124
414fa985 125
801e459a 1264.3 KVM_GET_MSR_INDEX_LIST, KVM_GET_MSR_FEATURE_INDEX_LIST
9c1b96e3 127
801e459a 128Capability: basic, KVM_CAP_GET_MSR_FEATURES for KVM_GET_MSR_FEATURE_INDEX_LIST
9c1b96e3 129Architectures: x86
801e459a 130Type: system ioctl
9c1b96e3
AK
131Parameters: struct kvm_msr_list (in/out)
132Returns: 0 on success; -1 on error
133Errors:
801e459a 134 EFAULT: the msr index list cannot be read from or written to
9c1b96e3
AK
135 E2BIG: the msr index list is to be to fit in the array specified by
136 the user.
137
138struct kvm_msr_list {
139 __u32 nmsrs; /* number of msrs in entries */
140 __u32 indices[0];
141};
142
801e459a
TL
143The user fills in the size of the indices array in nmsrs, and in return
144kvm adjusts nmsrs to reflect the actual number of msrs and fills in the
145indices array with their numbers.
146
147KVM_GET_MSR_INDEX_LIST returns the guest msrs that are supported. The list
148varies by kvm version and host processor, but does not change otherwise.
9c1b96e3 149
2e2602ca
AK
150Note: if kvm indicates supports MCE (KVM_CAP_MCE), then the MCE bank MSRs are
151not returned in the MSR list, as different vcpus can have a different number
152of banks, as set via the KVM_X86_SETUP_MCE ioctl.
153
801e459a
TL
154KVM_GET_MSR_FEATURE_INDEX_LIST returns the list of MSRs that can be passed
155to the KVM_GET_MSRS system ioctl. This lets userspace probe host capabilities
156and processor features that are exposed via MSRs (e.g., VMX capabilities).
157This list also varies by kvm version and host processor, but does not change
158otherwise.
159
414fa985 160
9c1b96e3
AK
1614.4 KVM_CHECK_EXTENSION
162
92b591a4 163Capability: basic, KVM_CAP_CHECK_EXTENSION_VM for vm ioctl
9c1b96e3 164Architectures: all
92b591a4 165Type: system ioctl, vm ioctl
9c1b96e3
AK
166Parameters: extension identifier (KVM_CAP_*)
167Returns: 0 if unsupported; 1 (or some other positive integer) if supported
168
169The API allows the application to query about extensions to the core
170kvm API. Userspace passes an extension identifier (an integer) and
171receives an integer that describes the extension availability.
172Generally 0 means no and 1 means yes, but some extensions may report
173additional information in the integer return value.
174
92b591a4
AG
175Based on their initialization different VMs may have different capabilities.
176It is thus encouraged to use the vm ioctl to query for capabilities (available
177with KVM_CAP_CHECK_EXTENSION_VM on the vm fd)
414fa985 178
9c1b96e3
AK
1794.5 KVM_GET_VCPU_MMAP_SIZE
180
181Capability: basic
182Architectures: all
183Type: system ioctl
184Parameters: none
185Returns: size of vcpu mmap area, in bytes
186
187The KVM_RUN ioctl (cf.) communicates with userspace via a shared
188memory region. This ioctl returns the size of that region. See the
189KVM_RUN documentation for details.
190
414fa985 191
9c1b96e3
AK
1924.6 KVM_SET_MEMORY_REGION
193
194Capability: basic
195Architectures: all
196Type: vm ioctl
197Parameters: struct kvm_memory_region (in)
198Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
199
b74a07be 200This ioctl is obsolete and has been removed.
9c1b96e3 201
414fa985 202
68ba6974 2034.7 KVM_CREATE_VCPU
9c1b96e3
AK
204
205Capability: basic
206Architectures: all
207Type: vm ioctl
208Parameters: vcpu id (apic id on x86)
209Returns: vcpu fd on success, -1 on error
210
0b1b1dfd
GK
211This API adds a vcpu to a virtual machine. No more than max_vcpus may be added.
212The vcpu id is an integer in the range [0, max_vcpu_id).
8c3ba334
SL
213
214The recommended max_vcpus value can be retrieved using the KVM_CAP_NR_VCPUS of
215the KVM_CHECK_EXTENSION ioctl() at run-time.
216The maximum possible value for max_vcpus can be retrieved using the
217KVM_CAP_MAX_VCPUS of the KVM_CHECK_EXTENSION ioctl() at run-time.
218
76d25402
PE
219If the KVM_CAP_NR_VCPUS does not exist, you should assume that max_vcpus is 4
220cpus max.
8c3ba334
SL
221If the KVM_CAP_MAX_VCPUS does not exist, you should assume that max_vcpus is
222same as the value returned from KVM_CAP_NR_VCPUS.
9c1b96e3 223
0b1b1dfd
GK
224The maximum possible value for max_vcpu_id can be retrieved using the
225KVM_CAP_MAX_VCPU_ID of the KVM_CHECK_EXTENSION ioctl() at run-time.
226
227If the KVM_CAP_MAX_VCPU_ID does not exist, you should assume that max_vcpu_id
228is the same as the value returned from KVM_CAP_MAX_VCPUS.
229
371fefd6
PM
230On powerpc using book3s_hv mode, the vcpus are mapped onto virtual
231threads in one or more virtual CPU cores. (This is because the
232hardware requires all the hardware threads in a CPU core to be in the
233same partition.) The KVM_CAP_PPC_SMT capability indicates the number
36442687
AK
234of vcpus per virtual core (vcore). The vcore id is obtained by
235dividing the vcpu id by the number of vcpus per vcore. The vcpus in a
236given vcore will always be in the same physical core as each other
237(though that might be a different physical core from time to time).
238Userspace can control the threading (SMT) mode of the guest by its
239allocation of vcpu ids. For example, if userspace wants
240single-threaded guest vcpus, it should make all vcpu ids be a multiple
241of the number of vcpus per vcore.
242
5b1c1493
CO
243For virtual cpus that have been created with S390 user controlled virtual
244machines, the resulting vcpu fd can be memory mapped at page offset
245KVM_S390_SIE_PAGE_OFFSET in order to obtain a memory map of the virtual
246cpu's hardware control block.
247
414fa985 248
68ba6974 2494.8 KVM_GET_DIRTY_LOG (vm ioctl)
9c1b96e3
AK
250
251Capability: basic
252Architectures: x86
253Type: vm ioctl
254Parameters: struct kvm_dirty_log (in/out)
255Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
256
257/* for KVM_GET_DIRTY_LOG */
258struct kvm_dirty_log {
259 __u32 slot;
260 __u32 padding;
261 union {
262 void __user *dirty_bitmap; /* one bit per page */
263 __u64 padding;
264 };
265};
266
267Given a memory slot, return a bitmap containing any pages dirtied
268since the last call to this ioctl. Bit 0 is the first page in the
269memory slot. Ensure the entire structure is cleared to avoid padding
270issues.
271
f481b069
PB
272If KVM_CAP_MULTI_ADDRESS_SPACE is available, bits 16-31 specifies
273the address space for which you want to return the dirty bitmap.
274They must be less than the value that KVM_CHECK_EXTENSION returns for
275the KVM_CAP_MULTI_ADDRESS_SPACE capability.
276
414fa985 277
68ba6974 2784.9 KVM_SET_MEMORY_ALIAS
9c1b96e3
AK
279
280Capability: basic
281Architectures: x86
282Type: vm ioctl
283Parameters: struct kvm_memory_alias (in)
284Returns: 0 (success), -1 (error)
285
a1f4d395 286This ioctl is obsolete and has been removed.
9c1b96e3 287
414fa985 288
68ba6974 2894.10 KVM_RUN
9c1b96e3
AK
290
291Capability: basic
292Architectures: all
293Type: vcpu ioctl
294Parameters: none
295Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
296Errors:
297 EINTR: an unmasked signal is pending
298
299This ioctl is used to run a guest virtual cpu. While there are no
300explicit parameters, there is an implicit parameter block that can be
301obtained by mmap()ing the vcpu fd at offset 0, with the size given by
302KVM_GET_VCPU_MMAP_SIZE. The parameter block is formatted as a 'struct
303kvm_run' (see below).
304
414fa985 305
68ba6974 3064.11 KVM_GET_REGS
9c1b96e3
AK
307
308Capability: basic
379e04c7 309Architectures: all except ARM, arm64
9c1b96e3
AK
310Type: vcpu ioctl
311Parameters: struct kvm_regs (out)
312Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
313
314Reads the general purpose registers from the vcpu.
315
316/* x86 */
317struct kvm_regs {
318 /* out (KVM_GET_REGS) / in (KVM_SET_REGS) */
319 __u64 rax, rbx, rcx, rdx;
320 __u64 rsi, rdi, rsp, rbp;
321 __u64 r8, r9, r10, r11;
322 __u64 r12, r13, r14, r15;
323 __u64 rip, rflags;
324};
325
c2d2c21b
JH
326/* mips */
327struct kvm_regs {
328 /* out (KVM_GET_REGS) / in (KVM_SET_REGS) */
329 __u64 gpr[32];
330 __u64 hi;
331 __u64 lo;
332 __u64 pc;
333};
334
414fa985 335
68ba6974 3364.12 KVM_SET_REGS
9c1b96e3
AK
337
338Capability: basic
379e04c7 339Architectures: all except ARM, arm64
9c1b96e3
AK
340Type: vcpu ioctl
341Parameters: struct kvm_regs (in)
342Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
343
344Writes the general purpose registers into the vcpu.
345
346See KVM_GET_REGS for the data structure.
347
414fa985 348
68ba6974 3494.13 KVM_GET_SREGS
9c1b96e3
AK
350
351Capability: basic
5ce941ee 352Architectures: x86, ppc
9c1b96e3
AK
353Type: vcpu ioctl
354Parameters: struct kvm_sregs (out)
355Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
356
357Reads special registers from the vcpu.
358
359/* x86 */
360struct kvm_sregs {
361 struct kvm_segment cs, ds, es, fs, gs, ss;
362 struct kvm_segment tr, ldt;
363 struct kvm_dtable gdt, idt;
364 __u64 cr0, cr2, cr3, cr4, cr8;
365 __u64 efer;
366 __u64 apic_base;
367 __u64 interrupt_bitmap[(KVM_NR_INTERRUPTS + 63) / 64];
368};
369
68e2ffed 370/* ppc -- see arch/powerpc/include/uapi/asm/kvm.h */
5ce941ee 371
9c1b96e3
AK
372interrupt_bitmap is a bitmap of pending external interrupts. At most
373one bit may be set. This interrupt has been acknowledged by the APIC
374but not yet injected into the cpu core.
375
414fa985 376
68ba6974 3774.14 KVM_SET_SREGS
9c1b96e3
AK
378
379Capability: basic
5ce941ee 380Architectures: x86, ppc
9c1b96e3
AK
381Type: vcpu ioctl
382Parameters: struct kvm_sregs (in)
383Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
384
385Writes special registers into the vcpu. See KVM_GET_SREGS for the
386data structures.
387
414fa985 388
68ba6974 3894.15 KVM_TRANSLATE
9c1b96e3
AK
390
391Capability: basic
392Architectures: x86
393Type: vcpu ioctl
394Parameters: struct kvm_translation (in/out)
395Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
396
397Translates a virtual address according to the vcpu's current address
398translation mode.
399
400struct kvm_translation {
401 /* in */
402 __u64 linear_address;
403
404 /* out */
405 __u64 physical_address;
406 __u8 valid;
407 __u8 writeable;
408 __u8 usermode;
409 __u8 pad[5];
410};
411
414fa985 412
68ba6974 4134.16 KVM_INTERRUPT
9c1b96e3
AK
414
415Capability: basic
c2d2c21b 416Architectures: x86, ppc, mips
9c1b96e3
AK
417Type: vcpu ioctl
418Parameters: struct kvm_interrupt (in)
1c1a9ce9 419Returns: 0 on success, negative on failure.
9c1b96e3 420
1c1a9ce9 421Queues a hardware interrupt vector to be injected.
9c1b96e3
AK
422
423/* for KVM_INTERRUPT */
424struct kvm_interrupt {
425 /* in */
426 __u32 irq;
427};
428
6f7a2bd4
AG
429X86:
430
1c1a9ce9
SR
431Returns: 0 on success,
432 -EEXIST if an interrupt is already enqueued
433 -EINVAL the the irq number is invalid
434 -ENXIO if the PIC is in the kernel
435 -EFAULT if the pointer is invalid
436
437Note 'irq' is an interrupt vector, not an interrupt pin or line. This
438ioctl is useful if the in-kernel PIC is not used.
9c1b96e3 439
6f7a2bd4
AG
440PPC:
441
442Queues an external interrupt to be injected. This ioctl is overleaded
443with 3 different irq values:
444
445a) KVM_INTERRUPT_SET
446
447 This injects an edge type external interrupt into the guest once it's ready
448 to receive interrupts. When injected, the interrupt is done.
449
450b) KVM_INTERRUPT_UNSET
451
452 This unsets any pending interrupt.
453
454 Only available with KVM_CAP_PPC_UNSET_IRQ.
455
456c) KVM_INTERRUPT_SET_LEVEL
457
458 This injects a level type external interrupt into the guest context. The
459 interrupt stays pending until a specific ioctl with KVM_INTERRUPT_UNSET
460 is triggered.
461
462 Only available with KVM_CAP_PPC_IRQ_LEVEL.
463
464Note that any value for 'irq' other than the ones stated above is invalid
465and incurs unexpected behavior.
466
c2d2c21b
JH
467MIPS:
468
469Queues an external interrupt to be injected into the virtual CPU. A negative
470interrupt number dequeues the interrupt.
471
414fa985 472
68ba6974 4734.17 KVM_DEBUG_GUEST
9c1b96e3
AK
474
475Capability: basic
476Architectures: none
477Type: vcpu ioctl
478Parameters: none)
479Returns: -1 on error
480
481Support for this has been removed. Use KVM_SET_GUEST_DEBUG instead.
482
414fa985 483
68ba6974 4844.18 KVM_GET_MSRS
9c1b96e3 485
801e459a 486Capability: basic (vcpu), KVM_CAP_GET_MSR_FEATURES (system)
9c1b96e3 487Architectures: x86
801e459a 488Type: system ioctl, vcpu ioctl
9c1b96e3 489Parameters: struct kvm_msrs (in/out)
801e459a
TL
490Returns: number of msrs successfully returned;
491 -1 on error
492
493When used as a system ioctl:
494Reads the values of MSR-based features that are available for the VM. This
495is similar to KVM_GET_SUPPORTED_CPUID, but it returns MSR indices and values.
496The list of msr-based features can be obtained using KVM_GET_MSR_FEATURE_INDEX_LIST
497in a system ioctl.
9c1b96e3 498
801e459a 499When used as a vcpu ioctl:
9c1b96e3 500Reads model-specific registers from the vcpu. Supported msr indices can
801e459a 501be obtained using KVM_GET_MSR_INDEX_LIST in a system ioctl.
9c1b96e3
AK
502
503struct kvm_msrs {
504 __u32 nmsrs; /* number of msrs in entries */
505 __u32 pad;
506
507 struct kvm_msr_entry entries[0];
508};
509
510struct kvm_msr_entry {
511 __u32 index;
512 __u32 reserved;
513 __u64 data;
514};
515
516Application code should set the 'nmsrs' member (which indicates the
517size of the entries array) and the 'index' member of each array entry.
518kvm will fill in the 'data' member.
519
414fa985 520
68ba6974 5214.19 KVM_SET_MSRS
9c1b96e3
AK
522
523Capability: basic
524Architectures: x86
525Type: vcpu ioctl
526Parameters: struct kvm_msrs (in)
527Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
528
529Writes model-specific registers to the vcpu. See KVM_GET_MSRS for the
530data structures.
531
532Application code should set the 'nmsrs' member (which indicates the
533size of the entries array), and the 'index' and 'data' members of each
534array entry.
535
414fa985 536
68ba6974 5374.20 KVM_SET_CPUID
9c1b96e3
AK
538
539Capability: basic
540Architectures: x86
541Type: vcpu ioctl
542Parameters: struct kvm_cpuid (in)
543Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
544
545Defines the vcpu responses to the cpuid instruction. Applications
546should use the KVM_SET_CPUID2 ioctl if available.
547
548
549struct kvm_cpuid_entry {
550 __u32 function;
551 __u32 eax;
552 __u32 ebx;
553 __u32 ecx;
554 __u32 edx;
555 __u32 padding;
556};
557
558/* for KVM_SET_CPUID */
559struct kvm_cpuid {
560 __u32 nent;
561 __u32 padding;
562 struct kvm_cpuid_entry entries[0];
563};
564
414fa985 565
68ba6974 5664.21 KVM_SET_SIGNAL_MASK
9c1b96e3
AK
567
568Capability: basic
572e0929 569Architectures: all
9c1b96e3
AK
570Type: vcpu ioctl
571Parameters: struct kvm_signal_mask (in)
572Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
573
574Defines which signals are blocked during execution of KVM_RUN. This
575signal mask temporarily overrides the threads signal mask. Any
576unblocked signal received (except SIGKILL and SIGSTOP, which retain
577their traditional behaviour) will cause KVM_RUN to return with -EINTR.
578
579Note the signal will only be delivered if not blocked by the original
580signal mask.
581
582/* for KVM_SET_SIGNAL_MASK */
583struct kvm_signal_mask {
584 __u32 len;
585 __u8 sigset[0];
586};
587
414fa985 588
68ba6974 5894.22 KVM_GET_FPU
9c1b96e3
AK
590
591Capability: basic
592Architectures: x86
593Type: vcpu ioctl
594Parameters: struct kvm_fpu (out)
595Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
596
597Reads the floating point state from the vcpu.
598
599/* for KVM_GET_FPU and KVM_SET_FPU */
600struct kvm_fpu {
601 __u8 fpr[8][16];
602 __u16 fcw;
603 __u16 fsw;
604 __u8 ftwx; /* in fxsave format */
605 __u8 pad1;
606 __u16 last_opcode;
607 __u64 last_ip;
608 __u64 last_dp;
609 __u8 xmm[16][16];
610 __u32 mxcsr;
611 __u32 pad2;
612};
613
414fa985 614
68ba6974 6154.23 KVM_SET_FPU
9c1b96e3
AK
616
617Capability: basic
618Architectures: x86
619Type: vcpu ioctl
620Parameters: struct kvm_fpu (in)
621Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
622
623Writes the floating point state to the vcpu.
624
625/* for KVM_GET_FPU and KVM_SET_FPU */
626struct kvm_fpu {
627 __u8 fpr[8][16];
628 __u16 fcw;
629 __u16 fsw;
630 __u8 ftwx; /* in fxsave format */
631 __u8 pad1;
632 __u16 last_opcode;
633 __u64 last_ip;
634 __u64 last_dp;
635 __u8 xmm[16][16];
636 __u32 mxcsr;
637 __u32 pad2;
638};
639
414fa985 640
68ba6974 6414.24 KVM_CREATE_IRQCHIP
5dadbfd6 642
84223598 643Capability: KVM_CAP_IRQCHIP, KVM_CAP_S390_IRQCHIP (s390)
c32a4272 644Architectures: x86, ARM, arm64, s390
5dadbfd6
AK
645Type: vm ioctl
646Parameters: none
647Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
648
ac3d3735
AP
649Creates an interrupt controller model in the kernel.
650On x86, creates a virtual ioapic, a virtual PIC (two PICs, nested), and sets up
651future vcpus to have a local APIC. IRQ routing for GSIs 0-15 is set to both
652PIC and IOAPIC; GSI 16-23 only go to the IOAPIC.
653On ARM/arm64, a GICv2 is created. Any other GIC versions require the usage of
654KVM_CREATE_DEVICE, which also supports creating a GICv2. Using
655KVM_CREATE_DEVICE is preferred over KVM_CREATE_IRQCHIP for GICv2.
656On s390, a dummy irq routing table is created.
84223598
CH
657
658Note that on s390 the KVM_CAP_S390_IRQCHIP vm capability needs to be enabled
659before KVM_CREATE_IRQCHIP can be used.
5dadbfd6 660
414fa985 661
68ba6974 6624.25 KVM_IRQ_LINE
5dadbfd6
AK
663
664Capability: KVM_CAP_IRQCHIP
c32a4272 665Architectures: x86, arm, arm64
5dadbfd6
AK
666Type: vm ioctl
667Parameters: struct kvm_irq_level
668Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
669
670Sets the level of a GSI input to the interrupt controller model in the kernel.
86ce8535
CD
671On some architectures it is required that an interrupt controller model has
672been previously created with KVM_CREATE_IRQCHIP. Note that edge-triggered
673interrupts require the level to be set to 1 and then back to 0.
674
100943c5
GS
675On real hardware, interrupt pins can be active-low or active-high. This
676does not matter for the level field of struct kvm_irq_level: 1 always
677means active (asserted), 0 means inactive (deasserted).
678
679x86 allows the operating system to program the interrupt polarity
680(active-low/active-high) for level-triggered interrupts, and KVM used
681to consider the polarity. However, due to bitrot in the handling of
682active-low interrupts, the above convention is now valid on x86 too.
683This is signaled by KVM_CAP_X86_IOAPIC_POLARITY_IGNORED. Userspace
684should not present interrupts to the guest as active-low unless this
685capability is present (or unless it is not using the in-kernel irqchip,
686of course).
687
688
379e04c7
MZ
689ARM/arm64 can signal an interrupt either at the CPU level, or at the
690in-kernel irqchip (GIC), and for in-kernel irqchip can tell the GIC to
691use PPIs designated for specific cpus. The irq field is interpreted
692like this:
86ce8535
CD
693
694  bits: | 31 ... 24 | 23 ... 16 | 15 ... 0 |
695 field: | irq_type | vcpu_index | irq_id |
696
697The irq_type field has the following values:
698- irq_type[0]: out-of-kernel GIC: irq_id 0 is IRQ, irq_id 1 is FIQ
699- irq_type[1]: in-kernel GIC: SPI, irq_id between 32 and 1019 (incl.)
700 (the vcpu_index field is ignored)
701- irq_type[2]: in-kernel GIC: PPI, irq_id between 16 and 31 (incl.)
702
703(The irq_id field thus corresponds nicely to the IRQ ID in the ARM GIC specs)
704
100943c5 705In both cases, level is used to assert/deassert the line.
5dadbfd6
AK
706
707struct kvm_irq_level {
708 union {
709 __u32 irq; /* GSI */
710 __s32 status; /* not used for KVM_IRQ_LEVEL */
711 };
712 __u32 level; /* 0 or 1 */
713};
714
414fa985 715
68ba6974 7164.26 KVM_GET_IRQCHIP
5dadbfd6
AK
717
718Capability: KVM_CAP_IRQCHIP
c32a4272 719Architectures: x86
5dadbfd6
AK
720Type: vm ioctl
721Parameters: struct kvm_irqchip (in/out)
722Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
723
724Reads the state of a kernel interrupt controller created with
725KVM_CREATE_IRQCHIP into a buffer provided by the caller.
726
727struct kvm_irqchip {
728 __u32 chip_id; /* 0 = PIC1, 1 = PIC2, 2 = IOAPIC */
729 __u32 pad;
730 union {
731 char dummy[512]; /* reserving space */
732 struct kvm_pic_state pic;
733 struct kvm_ioapic_state ioapic;
734 } chip;
735};
736
414fa985 737
68ba6974 7384.27 KVM_SET_IRQCHIP
5dadbfd6
AK
739
740Capability: KVM_CAP_IRQCHIP
c32a4272 741Architectures: x86
5dadbfd6
AK
742Type: vm ioctl
743Parameters: struct kvm_irqchip (in)
744Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
745
746Sets the state of a kernel interrupt controller created with
747KVM_CREATE_IRQCHIP from a buffer provided by the caller.
748
749struct kvm_irqchip {
750 __u32 chip_id; /* 0 = PIC1, 1 = PIC2, 2 = IOAPIC */
751 __u32 pad;
752 union {
753 char dummy[512]; /* reserving space */
754 struct kvm_pic_state pic;
755 struct kvm_ioapic_state ioapic;
756 } chip;
757};
758
414fa985 759
68ba6974 7604.28 KVM_XEN_HVM_CONFIG
ffde22ac
ES
761
762Capability: KVM_CAP_XEN_HVM
763Architectures: x86
764Type: vm ioctl
765Parameters: struct kvm_xen_hvm_config (in)
766Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
767
768Sets the MSR that the Xen HVM guest uses to initialize its hypercall
769page, and provides the starting address and size of the hypercall
770blobs in userspace. When the guest writes the MSR, kvm copies one
771page of a blob (32- or 64-bit, depending on the vcpu mode) to guest
772memory.
773
774struct kvm_xen_hvm_config {
775 __u32 flags;
776 __u32 msr;
777 __u64 blob_addr_32;
778 __u64 blob_addr_64;
779 __u8 blob_size_32;
780 __u8 blob_size_64;
781 __u8 pad2[30];
782};
783
414fa985 784
68ba6974 7854.29 KVM_GET_CLOCK
afbcf7ab
GC
786
787Capability: KVM_CAP_ADJUST_CLOCK
788Architectures: x86
789Type: vm ioctl
790Parameters: struct kvm_clock_data (out)
791Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
792
793Gets the current timestamp of kvmclock as seen by the current guest. In
794conjunction with KVM_SET_CLOCK, it is used to ensure monotonicity on scenarios
795such as migration.
796
e3fd9a93
PB
797When KVM_CAP_ADJUST_CLOCK is passed to KVM_CHECK_EXTENSION, it returns the
798set of bits that KVM can return in struct kvm_clock_data's flag member.
799
800The only flag defined now is KVM_CLOCK_TSC_STABLE. If set, the returned
801value is the exact kvmclock value seen by all VCPUs at the instant
802when KVM_GET_CLOCK was called. If clear, the returned value is simply
803CLOCK_MONOTONIC plus a constant offset; the offset can be modified
804with KVM_SET_CLOCK. KVM will try to make all VCPUs follow this clock,
805but the exact value read by each VCPU could differ, because the host
806TSC is not stable.
807
afbcf7ab
GC
808struct kvm_clock_data {
809 __u64 clock; /* kvmclock current value */
810 __u32 flags;
811 __u32 pad[9];
812};
813
414fa985 814
68ba6974 8154.30 KVM_SET_CLOCK
afbcf7ab
GC
816
817Capability: KVM_CAP_ADJUST_CLOCK
818Architectures: x86
819Type: vm ioctl
820Parameters: struct kvm_clock_data (in)
821Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
822
2044892d 823Sets the current timestamp of kvmclock to the value specified in its parameter.
afbcf7ab
GC
824In conjunction with KVM_GET_CLOCK, it is used to ensure monotonicity on scenarios
825such as migration.
826
827struct kvm_clock_data {
828 __u64 clock; /* kvmclock current value */
829 __u32 flags;
830 __u32 pad[9];
831};
832
414fa985 833
68ba6974 8344.31 KVM_GET_VCPU_EVENTS
3cfc3092
JK
835
836Capability: KVM_CAP_VCPU_EVENTS
48005f64 837Extended by: KVM_CAP_INTR_SHADOW
3cfc3092
JK
838Architectures: x86
839Type: vm ioctl
840Parameters: struct kvm_vcpu_event (out)
841Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
842
843Gets currently pending exceptions, interrupts, and NMIs as well as related
844states of the vcpu.
845
846struct kvm_vcpu_events {
847 struct {
848 __u8 injected;
849 __u8 nr;
850 __u8 has_error_code;
851 __u8 pad;
852 __u32 error_code;
853 } exception;
854 struct {
855 __u8 injected;
856 __u8 nr;
857 __u8 soft;
48005f64 858 __u8 shadow;
3cfc3092
JK
859 } interrupt;
860 struct {
861 __u8 injected;
862 __u8 pending;
863 __u8 masked;
864 __u8 pad;
865 } nmi;
866 __u32 sipi_vector;
dab4b911 867 __u32 flags;
f077825a
PB
868 struct {
869 __u8 smm;
870 __u8 pending;
871 __u8 smm_inside_nmi;
872 __u8 latched_init;
873 } smi;
3cfc3092
JK
874};
875
f077825a
PB
876Only two fields are defined in the flags field:
877
878- KVM_VCPUEVENT_VALID_SHADOW may be set in the flags field to signal that
879 interrupt.shadow contains a valid state.
48005f64 880
f077825a
PB
881- KVM_VCPUEVENT_VALID_SMM may be set in the flags field to signal that
882 smi contains a valid state.
414fa985 883
68ba6974 8844.32 KVM_SET_VCPU_EVENTS
3cfc3092
JK
885
886Capability: KVM_CAP_VCPU_EVENTS
48005f64 887Extended by: KVM_CAP_INTR_SHADOW
3cfc3092
JK
888Architectures: x86
889Type: vm ioctl
890Parameters: struct kvm_vcpu_event (in)
891Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
892
893Set pending exceptions, interrupts, and NMIs as well as related states of the
894vcpu.
895
896See KVM_GET_VCPU_EVENTS for the data structure.
897
dab4b911 898Fields that may be modified asynchronously by running VCPUs can be excluded
f077825a
PB
899from the update. These fields are nmi.pending, sipi_vector, smi.smm,
900smi.pending. Keep the corresponding bits in the flags field cleared to
901suppress overwriting the current in-kernel state. The bits are:
dab4b911
JK
902
903KVM_VCPUEVENT_VALID_NMI_PENDING - transfer nmi.pending to the kernel
904KVM_VCPUEVENT_VALID_SIPI_VECTOR - transfer sipi_vector
f077825a 905KVM_VCPUEVENT_VALID_SMM - transfer the smi sub-struct.
dab4b911 906
48005f64
JK
907If KVM_CAP_INTR_SHADOW is available, KVM_VCPUEVENT_VALID_SHADOW can be set in
908the flags field to signal that interrupt.shadow contains a valid state and
909shall be written into the VCPU.
910
f077825a
PB
911KVM_VCPUEVENT_VALID_SMM can only be set if KVM_CAP_X86_SMM is available.
912
414fa985 913
68ba6974 9144.33 KVM_GET_DEBUGREGS
a1efbe77
JK
915
916Capability: KVM_CAP_DEBUGREGS
917Architectures: x86
918Type: vm ioctl
919Parameters: struct kvm_debugregs (out)
920Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
921
922Reads debug registers from the vcpu.
923
924struct kvm_debugregs {
925 __u64 db[4];
926 __u64 dr6;
927 __u64 dr7;
928 __u64 flags;
929 __u64 reserved[9];
930};
931
414fa985 932
68ba6974 9334.34 KVM_SET_DEBUGREGS
a1efbe77
JK
934
935Capability: KVM_CAP_DEBUGREGS
936Architectures: x86
937Type: vm ioctl
938Parameters: struct kvm_debugregs (in)
939Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
940
941Writes debug registers into the vcpu.
942
943See KVM_GET_DEBUGREGS for the data structure. The flags field is unused
944yet and must be cleared on entry.
945
414fa985 946
68ba6974 9474.35 KVM_SET_USER_MEMORY_REGION
0f2d8f4d
AK
948
949Capability: KVM_CAP_USER_MEM
950Architectures: all
951Type: vm ioctl
952Parameters: struct kvm_userspace_memory_region (in)
953Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
954
955struct kvm_userspace_memory_region {
956 __u32 slot;
957 __u32 flags;
958 __u64 guest_phys_addr;
959 __u64 memory_size; /* bytes */
960 __u64 userspace_addr; /* start of the userspace allocated memory */
961};
962
963/* for kvm_memory_region::flags */
4d8b81ab
XG
964#define KVM_MEM_LOG_DIRTY_PAGES (1UL << 0)
965#define KVM_MEM_READONLY (1UL << 1)
0f2d8f4d
AK
966
967This ioctl allows the user to create or modify a guest physical memory
968slot. When changing an existing slot, it may be moved in the guest
969physical memory space, or its flags may be modified. It may not be
970resized. Slots may not overlap in guest physical address space.
a677e704
LC
971Bits 0-15 of "slot" specifies the slot id and this value should be
972less than the maximum number of user memory slots supported per VM.
973The maximum allowed slots can be queried using KVM_CAP_NR_MEMSLOTS,
974if this capability is supported by the architecture.
0f2d8f4d 975
f481b069
PB
976If KVM_CAP_MULTI_ADDRESS_SPACE is available, bits 16-31 of "slot"
977specifies the address space which is being modified. They must be
978less than the value that KVM_CHECK_EXTENSION returns for the
979KVM_CAP_MULTI_ADDRESS_SPACE capability. Slots in separate address spaces
980are unrelated; the restriction on overlapping slots only applies within
981each address space.
982
0f2d8f4d
AK
983Memory for the region is taken starting at the address denoted by the
984field userspace_addr, which must point at user addressable memory for
985the entire memory slot size. Any object may back this memory, including
986anonymous memory, ordinary files, and hugetlbfs.
987
988It is recommended that the lower 21 bits of guest_phys_addr and userspace_addr
989be identical. This allows large pages in the guest to be backed by large
990pages in the host.
991
75d61fbc
TY
992The flags field supports two flags: KVM_MEM_LOG_DIRTY_PAGES and
993KVM_MEM_READONLY. The former can be set to instruct KVM to keep track of
994writes to memory within the slot. See KVM_GET_DIRTY_LOG ioctl to know how to
995use it. The latter can be set, if KVM_CAP_READONLY_MEM capability allows it,
996to make a new slot read-only. In this case, writes to this memory will be
997posted to userspace as KVM_EXIT_MMIO exits.
7efd8fa1
JK
998
999When the KVM_CAP_SYNC_MMU capability is available, changes in the backing of
1000the memory region are automatically reflected into the guest. For example, an
1001mmap() that affects the region will be made visible immediately. Another
1002example is madvise(MADV_DROP).
0f2d8f4d
AK
1003
1004It is recommended to use this API instead of the KVM_SET_MEMORY_REGION ioctl.
1005The KVM_SET_MEMORY_REGION does not allow fine grained control over memory
1006allocation and is deprecated.
3cfc3092 1007
414fa985 1008
68ba6974 10094.36 KVM_SET_TSS_ADDR
8a5416db
AK
1010
1011Capability: KVM_CAP_SET_TSS_ADDR
1012Architectures: x86
1013Type: vm ioctl
1014Parameters: unsigned long tss_address (in)
1015Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
1016
1017This ioctl defines the physical address of a three-page region in the guest
1018physical address space. The region must be within the first 4GB of the
1019guest physical address space and must not conflict with any memory slot
1020or any mmio address. The guest may malfunction if it accesses this memory
1021region.
1022
1023This ioctl is required on Intel-based hosts. This is needed on Intel hardware
1024because of a quirk in the virtualization implementation (see the internals
1025documentation when it pops into existence).
1026
414fa985 1027
68ba6974 10284.37 KVM_ENABLE_CAP
71fbfd5f 1029
d938dc55 1030Capability: KVM_CAP_ENABLE_CAP, KVM_CAP_ENABLE_CAP_VM
90de4a18
NA
1031Architectures: x86 (only KVM_CAP_ENABLE_CAP_VM),
1032 mips (only KVM_CAP_ENABLE_CAP), ppc, s390
d938dc55 1033Type: vcpu ioctl, vm ioctl (with KVM_CAP_ENABLE_CAP_VM)
71fbfd5f
AG
1034Parameters: struct kvm_enable_cap (in)
1035Returns: 0 on success; -1 on error
1036
1037+Not all extensions are enabled by default. Using this ioctl the application
1038can enable an extension, making it available to the guest.
1039
1040On systems that do not support this ioctl, it always fails. On systems that
1041do support it, it only works for extensions that are supported for enablement.
1042
1043To check if a capability can be enabled, the KVM_CHECK_EXTENSION ioctl should
1044be used.
1045
1046struct kvm_enable_cap {
1047 /* in */
1048 __u32 cap;
1049
1050The capability that is supposed to get enabled.
1051
1052 __u32 flags;
1053
1054A bitfield indicating future enhancements. Has to be 0 for now.
1055
1056 __u64 args[4];
1057
1058Arguments for enabling a feature. If a feature needs initial values to
1059function properly, this is the place to put them.
1060
1061 __u8 pad[64];
1062};
1063
d938dc55
CH
1064The vcpu ioctl should be used for vcpu-specific capabilities, the vm ioctl
1065for vm-wide capabilities.
414fa985 1066
68ba6974 10674.38 KVM_GET_MP_STATE
b843f065
AK
1068
1069Capability: KVM_CAP_MP_STATE
ecccf0cc 1070Architectures: x86, s390, arm, arm64
b843f065
AK
1071Type: vcpu ioctl
1072Parameters: struct kvm_mp_state (out)
1073Returns: 0 on success; -1 on error
1074
1075struct kvm_mp_state {
1076 __u32 mp_state;
1077};
1078
1079Returns the vcpu's current "multiprocessing state" (though also valid on
1080uniprocessor guests).
1081
1082Possible values are:
1083
ecccf0cc 1084 - KVM_MP_STATE_RUNNABLE: the vcpu is currently running [x86,arm/arm64]
b843f065 1085 - KVM_MP_STATE_UNINITIALIZED: the vcpu is an application processor (AP)
c32a4272 1086 which has not yet received an INIT signal [x86]
b843f065 1087 - KVM_MP_STATE_INIT_RECEIVED: the vcpu has received an INIT signal, and is
c32a4272 1088 now ready for a SIPI [x86]
b843f065 1089 - KVM_MP_STATE_HALTED: the vcpu has executed a HLT instruction and
c32a4272 1090 is waiting for an interrupt [x86]
b843f065 1091 - KVM_MP_STATE_SIPI_RECEIVED: the vcpu has just received a SIPI (vector
c32a4272 1092 accessible via KVM_GET_VCPU_EVENTS) [x86]
ecccf0cc 1093 - KVM_MP_STATE_STOPPED: the vcpu is stopped [s390,arm/arm64]
6352e4d2
DH
1094 - KVM_MP_STATE_CHECK_STOP: the vcpu is in a special error state [s390]
1095 - KVM_MP_STATE_OPERATING: the vcpu is operating (running or halted)
1096 [s390]
1097 - KVM_MP_STATE_LOAD: the vcpu is in a special load/startup state
1098 [s390]
b843f065 1099
c32a4272 1100On x86, this ioctl is only useful after KVM_CREATE_IRQCHIP. Without an
0b4820d6
DH
1101in-kernel irqchip, the multiprocessing state must be maintained by userspace on
1102these architectures.
b843f065 1103
ecccf0cc
AB
1104For arm/arm64:
1105
1106The only states that are valid are KVM_MP_STATE_STOPPED and
1107KVM_MP_STATE_RUNNABLE which reflect if the vcpu is paused or not.
414fa985 1108
68ba6974 11094.39 KVM_SET_MP_STATE
b843f065
AK
1110
1111Capability: KVM_CAP_MP_STATE
ecccf0cc 1112Architectures: x86, s390, arm, arm64
b843f065
AK
1113Type: vcpu ioctl
1114Parameters: struct kvm_mp_state (in)
1115Returns: 0 on success; -1 on error
1116
1117Sets the vcpu's current "multiprocessing state"; see KVM_GET_MP_STATE for
1118arguments.
1119
c32a4272 1120On x86, this ioctl is only useful after KVM_CREATE_IRQCHIP. Without an
0b4820d6
DH
1121in-kernel irqchip, the multiprocessing state must be maintained by userspace on
1122these architectures.
b843f065 1123
ecccf0cc
AB
1124For arm/arm64:
1125
1126The only states that are valid are KVM_MP_STATE_STOPPED and
1127KVM_MP_STATE_RUNNABLE which reflect if the vcpu should be paused or not.
414fa985 1128
68ba6974 11294.40 KVM_SET_IDENTITY_MAP_ADDR
47dbb84f
AK
1130
1131Capability: KVM_CAP_SET_IDENTITY_MAP_ADDR
1132Architectures: x86
1133Type: vm ioctl
1134Parameters: unsigned long identity (in)
1135Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
1136
1137This ioctl defines the physical address of a one-page region in the guest
1138physical address space. The region must be within the first 4GB of the
1139guest physical address space and must not conflict with any memory slot
1140or any mmio address. The guest may malfunction if it accesses this memory
1141region.
1142
726b99c4
DH
1143Setting the address to 0 will result in resetting the address to its default
1144(0xfffbc000).
1145
47dbb84f
AK
1146This ioctl is required on Intel-based hosts. This is needed on Intel hardware
1147because of a quirk in the virtualization implementation (see the internals
1148documentation when it pops into existence).
1149
1af1ac91 1150Fails if any VCPU has already been created.
414fa985 1151
68ba6974 11524.41 KVM_SET_BOOT_CPU_ID
57bc24cf
AK
1153
1154Capability: KVM_CAP_SET_BOOT_CPU_ID
c32a4272 1155Architectures: x86
57bc24cf
AK
1156Type: vm ioctl
1157Parameters: unsigned long vcpu_id
1158Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
1159
1160Define which vcpu is the Bootstrap Processor (BSP). Values are the same
1161as the vcpu id in KVM_CREATE_VCPU. If this ioctl is not called, the default
1162is vcpu 0.
1163
414fa985 1164
68ba6974 11654.42 KVM_GET_XSAVE
2d5b5a66
SY
1166
1167Capability: KVM_CAP_XSAVE
1168Architectures: x86
1169Type: vcpu ioctl
1170Parameters: struct kvm_xsave (out)
1171Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
1172
1173struct kvm_xsave {
1174 __u32 region[1024];
1175};
1176
1177This ioctl would copy current vcpu's xsave struct to the userspace.
1178
414fa985 1179
68ba6974 11804.43 KVM_SET_XSAVE
2d5b5a66
SY
1181
1182Capability: KVM_CAP_XSAVE
1183Architectures: x86
1184Type: vcpu ioctl
1185Parameters: struct kvm_xsave (in)
1186Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
1187
1188struct kvm_xsave {
1189 __u32 region[1024];
1190};
1191
1192This ioctl would copy userspace's xsave struct to the kernel.
1193
414fa985 1194
68ba6974 11954.44 KVM_GET_XCRS
2d5b5a66
SY
1196
1197Capability: KVM_CAP_XCRS
1198Architectures: x86
1199Type: vcpu ioctl
1200Parameters: struct kvm_xcrs (out)
1201Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
1202
1203struct kvm_xcr {
1204 __u32 xcr;
1205 __u32 reserved;
1206 __u64 value;
1207};
1208
1209struct kvm_xcrs {
1210 __u32 nr_xcrs;
1211 __u32 flags;
1212 struct kvm_xcr xcrs[KVM_MAX_XCRS];
1213 __u64 padding[16];
1214};
1215
1216This ioctl would copy current vcpu's xcrs to the userspace.
1217
414fa985 1218
68ba6974 12194.45 KVM_SET_XCRS
2d5b5a66
SY
1220
1221Capability: KVM_CAP_XCRS
1222Architectures: x86
1223Type: vcpu ioctl
1224Parameters: struct kvm_xcrs (in)
1225Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
1226
1227struct kvm_xcr {
1228 __u32 xcr;
1229 __u32 reserved;
1230 __u64 value;
1231};
1232
1233struct kvm_xcrs {
1234 __u32 nr_xcrs;
1235 __u32 flags;
1236 struct kvm_xcr xcrs[KVM_MAX_XCRS];
1237 __u64 padding[16];
1238};
1239
1240This ioctl would set vcpu's xcr to the value userspace specified.
1241
414fa985 1242
68ba6974 12434.46 KVM_GET_SUPPORTED_CPUID
d153513d
AK
1244
1245Capability: KVM_CAP_EXT_CPUID
1246Architectures: x86
1247Type: system ioctl
1248Parameters: struct kvm_cpuid2 (in/out)
1249Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
1250
1251struct kvm_cpuid2 {
1252 __u32 nent;
1253 __u32 padding;
1254 struct kvm_cpuid_entry2 entries[0];
1255};
1256
9c15bb1d
BP
1257#define KVM_CPUID_FLAG_SIGNIFCANT_INDEX BIT(0)
1258#define KVM_CPUID_FLAG_STATEFUL_FUNC BIT(1)
1259#define KVM_CPUID_FLAG_STATE_READ_NEXT BIT(2)
d153513d
AK
1260
1261struct kvm_cpuid_entry2 {
1262 __u32 function;
1263 __u32 index;
1264 __u32 flags;
1265 __u32 eax;
1266 __u32 ebx;
1267 __u32 ecx;
1268 __u32 edx;
1269 __u32 padding[3];
1270};
1271
1272This ioctl returns x86 cpuid features which are supported by both the hardware
1273and kvm. Userspace can use the information returned by this ioctl to
1274construct cpuid information (for KVM_SET_CPUID2) that is consistent with
1275hardware, kernel, and userspace capabilities, and with user requirements (for
1276example, the user may wish to constrain cpuid to emulate older hardware,
1277or for feature consistency across a cluster).
1278
1279Userspace invokes KVM_GET_SUPPORTED_CPUID by passing a kvm_cpuid2 structure
1280with the 'nent' field indicating the number of entries in the variable-size
1281array 'entries'. If the number of entries is too low to describe the cpu
1282capabilities, an error (E2BIG) is returned. If the number is too high,
1283the 'nent' field is adjusted and an error (ENOMEM) is returned. If the
1284number is just right, the 'nent' field is adjusted to the number of valid
1285entries in the 'entries' array, which is then filled.
1286
1287The entries returned are the host cpuid as returned by the cpuid instruction,
c39cbd2a
AK
1288with unknown or unsupported features masked out. Some features (for example,
1289x2apic), may not be present in the host cpu, but are exposed by kvm if it can
1290emulate them efficiently. The fields in each entry are defined as follows:
d153513d
AK
1291
1292 function: the eax value used to obtain the entry
1293 index: the ecx value used to obtain the entry (for entries that are
1294 affected by ecx)
1295 flags: an OR of zero or more of the following:
1296 KVM_CPUID_FLAG_SIGNIFCANT_INDEX:
1297 if the index field is valid
1298 KVM_CPUID_FLAG_STATEFUL_FUNC:
1299 if cpuid for this function returns different values for successive
1300 invocations; there will be several entries with the same function,
1301 all with this flag set
1302 KVM_CPUID_FLAG_STATE_READ_NEXT:
1303 for KVM_CPUID_FLAG_STATEFUL_FUNC entries, set if this entry is
1304 the first entry to be read by a cpu
1305 eax, ebx, ecx, edx: the values returned by the cpuid instruction for
1306 this function/index combination
1307
4d25a066
JK
1308The TSC deadline timer feature (CPUID leaf 1, ecx[24]) is always returned
1309as false, since the feature depends on KVM_CREATE_IRQCHIP for local APIC
1310support. Instead it is reported via
1311
1312 ioctl(KVM_CHECK_EXTENSION, KVM_CAP_TSC_DEADLINE_TIMER)
1313
1314if that returns true and you use KVM_CREATE_IRQCHIP, or if you emulate the
1315feature in userspace, then you can enable the feature for KVM_SET_CPUID2.
1316
414fa985 1317
68ba6974 13184.47 KVM_PPC_GET_PVINFO
15711e9c
AG
1319
1320Capability: KVM_CAP_PPC_GET_PVINFO
1321Architectures: ppc
1322Type: vm ioctl
1323Parameters: struct kvm_ppc_pvinfo (out)
1324Returns: 0 on success, !0 on error
1325
1326struct kvm_ppc_pvinfo {
1327 __u32 flags;
1328 __u32 hcall[4];
1329 __u8 pad[108];
1330};
1331
1332This ioctl fetches PV specific information that need to be passed to the guest
1333using the device tree or other means from vm context.
1334
9202e076 1335The hcall array defines 4 instructions that make up a hypercall.
15711e9c
AG
1336
1337If any additional field gets added to this structure later on, a bit for that
1338additional piece of information will be set in the flags bitmap.
1339
9202e076
LYB
1340The flags bitmap is defined as:
1341
1342 /* the host supports the ePAPR idle hcall
1343 #define KVM_PPC_PVINFO_FLAGS_EV_IDLE (1<<0)
414fa985 1344
68ba6974 13454.52 KVM_SET_GSI_ROUTING
49f48172
JK
1346
1347Capability: KVM_CAP_IRQ_ROUTING
180ae7b1 1348Architectures: x86 s390 arm arm64
49f48172
JK
1349Type: vm ioctl
1350Parameters: struct kvm_irq_routing (in)
1351Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
1352
1353Sets the GSI routing table entries, overwriting any previously set entries.
1354
180ae7b1
EA
1355On arm/arm64, GSI routing has the following limitation:
1356- GSI routing does not apply to KVM_IRQ_LINE but only to KVM_IRQFD.
1357
49f48172
JK
1358struct kvm_irq_routing {
1359 __u32 nr;
1360 __u32 flags;
1361 struct kvm_irq_routing_entry entries[0];
1362};
1363
1364No flags are specified so far, the corresponding field must be set to zero.
1365
1366struct kvm_irq_routing_entry {
1367 __u32 gsi;
1368 __u32 type;
1369 __u32 flags;
1370 __u32 pad;
1371 union {
1372 struct kvm_irq_routing_irqchip irqchip;
1373 struct kvm_irq_routing_msi msi;
84223598 1374 struct kvm_irq_routing_s390_adapter adapter;
5c919412 1375 struct kvm_irq_routing_hv_sint hv_sint;
49f48172
JK
1376 __u32 pad[8];
1377 } u;
1378};
1379
1380/* gsi routing entry types */
1381#define KVM_IRQ_ROUTING_IRQCHIP 1
1382#define KVM_IRQ_ROUTING_MSI 2
84223598 1383#define KVM_IRQ_ROUTING_S390_ADAPTER 3
5c919412 1384#define KVM_IRQ_ROUTING_HV_SINT 4
49f48172 1385
76a10b86 1386flags:
6f49b2f3
PB
1387- KVM_MSI_VALID_DEVID: used along with KVM_IRQ_ROUTING_MSI routing entry
1388 type, specifies that the devid field contains a valid value. The per-VM
1389 KVM_CAP_MSI_DEVID capability advertises the requirement to provide
1390 the device ID. If this capability is not available, userspace should
1391 never set the KVM_MSI_VALID_DEVID flag as the ioctl might fail.
76a10b86 1392- zero otherwise
49f48172
JK
1393
1394struct kvm_irq_routing_irqchip {
1395 __u32 irqchip;
1396 __u32 pin;
1397};
1398
1399struct kvm_irq_routing_msi {
1400 __u32 address_lo;
1401 __u32 address_hi;
1402 __u32 data;
76a10b86
EA
1403 union {
1404 __u32 pad;
1405 __u32 devid;
1406 };
49f48172
JK
1407};
1408
6f49b2f3
PB
1409If KVM_MSI_VALID_DEVID is set, devid contains a unique device identifier
1410for the device that wrote the MSI message. For PCI, this is usually a
1411BFD identifier in the lower 16 bits.
76a10b86 1412
37131313
RK
1413On x86, address_hi is ignored unless the KVM_X2APIC_API_USE_32BIT_IDS
1414feature of KVM_CAP_X2APIC_API capability is enabled. If it is enabled,
1415address_hi bits 31-8 provide bits 31-8 of the destination id. Bits 7-0 of
1416address_hi must be zero.
1417
84223598
CH
1418struct kvm_irq_routing_s390_adapter {
1419 __u64 ind_addr;
1420 __u64 summary_addr;
1421 __u64 ind_offset;
1422 __u32 summary_offset;
1423 __u32 adapter_id;
1424};
1425
5c919412
AS
1426struct kvm_irq_routing_hv_sint {
1427 __u32 vcpu;
1428 __u32 sint;
1429};
414fa985 1430
414fa985
JK
1431
14324.55 KVM_SET_TSC_KHZ
92a1f12d
JR
1433
1434Capability: KVM_CAP_TSC_CONTROL
1435Architectures: x86
1436Type: vcpu ioctl
1437Parameters: virtual tsc_khz
1438Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
1439
1440Specifies the tsc frequency for the virtual machine. The unit of the
1441frequency is KHz.
1442
414fa985
JK
1443
14444.56 KVM_GET_TSC_KHZ
92a1f12d
JR
1445
1446Capability: KVM_CAP_GET_TSC_KHZ
1447Architectures: x86
1448Type: vcpu ioctl
1449Parameters: none
1450Returns: virtual tsc-khz on success, negative value on error
1451
1452Returns the tsc frequency of the guest. The unit of the return value is
1453KHz. If the host has unstable tsc this ioctl returns -EIO instead as an
1454error.
1455
414fa985
JK
1456
14574.57 KVM_GET_LAPIC
e7677933
AK
1458
1459Capability: KVM_CAP_IRQCHIP
1460Architectures: x86
1461Type: vcpu ioctl
1462Parameters: struct kvm_lapic_state (out)
1463Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
1464
1465#define KVM_APIC_REG_SIZE 0x400
1466struct kvm_lapic_state {
1467 char regs[KVM_APIC_REG_SIZE];
1468};
1469
1470Reads the Local APIC registers and copies them into the input argument. The
1471data format and layout are the same as documented in the architecture manual.
1472
37131313
RK
1473If KVM_X2APIC_API_USE_32BIT_IDS feature of KVM_CAP_X2APIC_API is
1474enabled, then the format of APIC_ID register depends on the APIC mode
1475(reported by MSR_IA32_APICBASE) of its VCPU. x2APIC stores APIC ID in
1476the APIC_ID register (bytes 32-35). xAPIC only allows an 8-bit APIC ID
1477which is stored in bits 31-24 of the APIC register, or equivalently in
1478byte 35 of struct kvm_lapic_state's regs field. KVM_GET_LAPIC must then
1479be called after MSR_IA32_APICBASE has been set with KVM_SET_MSR.
1480
1481If KVM_X2APIC_API_USE_32BIT_IDS feature is disabled, struct kvm_lapic_state
1482always uses xAPIC format.
1483
414fa985
JK
1484
14854.58 KVM_SET_LAPIC
e7677933
AK
1486
1487Capability: KVM_CAP_IRQCHIP
1488Architectures: x86
1489Type: vcpu ioctl
1490Parameters: struct kvm_lapic_state (in)
1491Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
1492
1493#define KVM_APIC_REG_SIZE 0x400
1494struct kvm_lapic_state {
1495 char regs[KVM_APIC_REG_SIZE];
1496};
1497
df5cbb27 1498Copies the input argument into the Local APIC registers. The data format
e7677933
AK
1499and layout are the same as documented in the architecture manual.
1500
37131313
RK
1501The format of the APIC ID register (bytes 32-35 of struct kvm_lapic_state's
1502regs field) depends on the state of the KVM_CAP_X2APIC_API capability.
1503See the note in KVM_GET_LAPIC.
1504
414fa985
JK
1505
15064.59 KVM_IOEVENTFD
55399a02
SL
1507
1508Capability: KVM_CAP_IOEVENTFD
1509Architectures: all
1510Type: vm ioctl
1511Parameters: struct kvm_ioeventfd (in)
1512Returns: 0 on success, !0 on error
1513
1514This ioctl attaches or detaches an ioeventfd to a legal pio/mmio address
1515within the guest. A guest write in the registered address will signal the
1516provided event instead of triggering an exit.
1517
1518struct kvm_ioeventfd {
1519 __u64 datamatch;
1520 __u64 addr; /* legal pio/mmio address */
e9ea5069 1521 __u32 len; /* 0, 1, 2, 4, or 8 bytes */
55399a02
SL
1522 __s32 fd;
1523 __u32 flags;
1524 __u8 pad[36];
1525};
1526
2b83451b
CH
1527For the special case of virtio-ccw devices on s390, the ioevent is matched
1528to a subchannel/virtqueue tuple instead.
1529
55399a02
SL
1530The following flags are defined:
1531
1532#define KVM_IOEVENTFD_FLAG_DATAMATCH (1 << kvm_ioeventfd_flag_nr_datamatch)
1533#define KVM_IOEVENTFD_FLAG_PIO (1 << kvm_ioeventfd_flag_nr_pio)
1534#define KVM_IOEVENTFD_FLAG_DEASSIGN (1 << kvm_ioeventfd_flag_nr_deassign)
2b83451b
CH
1535#define KVM_IOEVENTFD_FLAG_VIRTIO_CCW_NOTIFY \
1536 (1 << kvm_ioeventfd_flag_nr_virtio_ccw_notify)
55399a02
SL
1537
1538If datamatch flag is set, the event will be signaled only if the written value
1539to the registered address is equal to datamatch in struct kvm_ioeventfd.
1540
2b83451b
CH
1541For virtio-ccw devices, addr contains the subchannel id and datamatch the
1542virtqueue index.
1543
e9ea5069
JW
1544With KVM_CAP_IOEVENTFD_ANY_LENGTH, a zero length ioeventfd is allowed, and
1545the kernel will ignore the length of guest write and may get a faster vmexit.
1546The speedup may only apply to specific architectures, but the ioeventfd will
1547work anyway.
414fa985
JK
1548
15494.60 KVM_DIRTY_TLB
dc83b8bc
SW
1550
1551Capability: KVM_CAP_SW_TLB
1552Architectures: ppc
1553Type: vcpu ioctl
1554Parameters: struct kvm_dirty_tlb (in)
1555Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
1556
1557struct kvm_dirty_tlb {
1558 __u64 bitmap;
1559 __u32 num_dirty;
1560};
1561
1562This must be called whenever userspace has changed an entry in the shared
1563TLB, prior to calling KVM_RUN on the associated vcpu.
1564
1565The "bitmap" field is the userspace address of an array. This array
1566consists of a number of bits, equal to the total number of TLB entries as
1567determined by the last successful call to KVM_CONFIG_TLB, rounded up to the
1568nearest multiple of 64.
1569
1570Each bit corresponds to one TLB entry, ordered the same as in the shared TLB
1571array.
1572
1573The array is little-endian: the bit 0 is the least significant bit of the
1574first byte, bit 8 is the least significant bit of the second byte, etc.
1575This avoids any complications with differing word sizes.
1576
1577The "num_dirty" field is a performance hint for KVM to determine whether it
1578should skip processing the bitmap and just invalidate everything. It must
1579be set to the number of set bits in the bitmap.
1580
414fa985 1581
54738c09
DG
15824.62 KVM_CREATE_SPAPR_TCE
1583
1584Capability: KVM_CAP_SPAPR_TCE
1585Architectures: powerpc
1586Type: vm ioctl
1587Parameters: struct kvm_create_spapr_tce (in)
1588Returns: file descriptor for manipulating the created TCE table
1589
1590This creates a virtual TCE (translation control entry) table, which
1591is an IOMMU for PAPR-style virtual I/O. It is used to translate
1592logical addresses used in virtual I/O into guest physical addresses,
1593and provides a scatter/gather capability for PAPR virtual I/O.
1594
1595/* for KVM_CAP_SPAPR_TCE */
1596struct kvm_create_spapr_tce {
1597 __u64 liobn;
1598 __u32 window_size;
1599};
1600
1601The liobn field gives the logical IO bus number for which to create a
1602TCE table. The window_size field specifies the size of the DMA window
1603which this TCE table will translate - the table will contain one 64
1604bit TCE entry for every 4kiB of the DMA window.
1605
1606When the guest issues an H_PUT_TCE hcall on a liobn for which a TCE
1607table has been created using this ioctl(), the kernel will handle it
1608in real mode, updating the TCE table. H_PUT_TCE calls for other
1609liobns will cause a vm exit and must be handled by userspace.
1610
1611The return value is a file descriptor which can be passed to mmap(2)
1612to map the created TCE table into userspace. This lets userspace read
1613the entries written by kernel-handled H_PUT_TCE calls, and also lets
1614userspace update the TCE table directly which is useful in some
1615circumstances.
1616
414fa985 1617
aa04b4cc
PM
16184.63 KVM_ALLOCATE_RMA
1619
1620Capability: KVM_CAP_PPC_RMA
1621Architectures: powerpc
1622Type: vm ioctl
1623Parameters: struct kvm_allocate_rma (out)
1624Returns: file descriptor for mapping the allocated RMA
1625
1626This allocates a Real Mode Area (RMA) from the pool allocated at boot
1627time by the kernel. An RMA is a physically-contiguous, aligned region
1628of memory used on older POWER processors to provide the memory which
1629will be accessed by real-mode (MMU off) accesses in a KVM guest.
1630POWER processors support a set of sizes for the RMA that usually
1631includes 64MB, 128MB, 256MB and some larger powers of two.
1632
1633/* for KVM_ALLOCATE_RMA */
1634struct kvm_allocate_rma {
1635 __u64 rma_size;
1636};
1637
1638The return value is a file descriptor which can be passed to mmap(2)
1639to map the allocated RMA into userspace. The mapped area can then be
1640passed to the KVM_SET_USER_MEMORY_REGION ioctl to establish it as the
1641RMA for a virtual machine. The size of the RMA in bytes (which is
1642fixed at host kernel boot time) is returned in the rma_size field of
1643the argument structure.
1644
1645The KVM_CAP_PPC_RMA capability is 1 or 2 if the KVM_ALLOCATE_RMA ioctl
1646is supported; 2 if the processor requires all virtual machines to have
1647an RMA, or 1 if the processor can use an RMA but doesn't require it,
1648because it supports the Virtual RMA (VRMA) facility.
1649
414fa985 1650
3f745f1e
AK
16514.64 KVM_NMI
1652
1653Capability: KVM_CAP_USER_NMI
1654Architectures: x86
1655Type: vcpu ioctl
1656Parameters: none
1657Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
1658
1659Queues an NMI on the thread's vcpu. Note this is well defined only
1660when KVM_CREATE_IRQCHIP has not been called, since this is an interface
1661between the virtual cpu core and virtual local APIC. After KVM_CREATE_IRQCHIP
1662has been called, this interface is completely emulated within the kernel.
1663
1664To use this to emulate the LINT1 input with KVM_CREATE_IRQCHIP, use the
1665following algorithm:
1666
5d4f6f3d 1667 - pause the vcpu
3f745f1e
AK
1668 - read the local APIC's state (KVM_GET_LAPIC)
1669 - check whether changing LINT1 will queue an NMI (see the LVT entry for LINT1)
1670 - if so, issue KVM_NMI
1671 - resume the vcpu
1672
1673Some guests configure the LINT1 NMI input to cause a panic, aiding in
1674debugging.
1675
414fa985 1676
e24ed81f 16774.65 KVM_S390_UCAS_MAP
27e0393f
CO
1678
1679Capability: KVM_CAP_S390_UCONTROL
1680Architectures: s390
1681Type: vcpu ioctl
1682Parameters: struct kvm_s390_ucas_mapping (in)
1683Returns: 0 in case of success
1684
1685The parameter is defined like this:
1686 struct kvm_s390_ucas_mapping {
1687 __u64 user_addr;
1688 __u64 vcpu_addr;
1689 __u64 length;
1690 };
1691
1692This ioctl maps the memory at "user_addr" with the length "length" to
1693the vcpu's address space starting at "vcpu_addr". All parameters need to
f884ab15 1694be aligned by 1 megabyte.
27e0393f 1695
414fa985 1696
e24ed81f 16974.66 KVM_S390_UCAS_UNMAP
27e0393f
CO
1698
1699Capability: KVM_CAP_S390_UCONTROL
1700Architectures: s390
1701Type: vcpu ioctl
1702Parameters: struct kvm_s390_ucas_mapping (in)
1703Returns: 0 in case of success
1704
1705The parameter is defined like this:
1706 struct kvm_s390_ucas_mapping {
1707 __u64 user_addr;
1708 __u64 vcpu_addr;
1709 __u64 length;
1710 };
1711
1712This ioctl unmaps the memory in the vcpu's address space starting at
1713"vcpu_addr" with the length "length". The field "user_addr" is ignored.
f884ab15 1714All parameters need to be aligned by 1 megabyte.
27e0393f 1715
414fa985 1716
e24ed81f 17174.67 KVM_S390_VCPU_FAULT
ccc7910f
CO
1718
1719Capability: KVM_CAP_S390_UCONTROL
1720Architectures: s390
1721Type: vcpu ioctl
1722Parameters: vcpu absolute address (in)
1723Returns: 0 in case of success
1724
1725This call creates a page table entry on the virtual cpu's address space
1726(for user controlled virtual machines) or the virtual machine's address
1727space (for regular virtual machines). This only works for minor faults,
1728thus it's recommended to access subject memory page via the user page
1729table upfront. This is useful to handle validity intercepts for user
1730controlled virtual machines to fault in the virtual cpu's lowcore pages
1731prior to calling the KVM_RUN ioctl.
1732
414fa985 1733
e24ed81f
AG
17344.68 KVM_SET_ONE_REG
1735
1736Capability: KVM_CAP_ONE_REG
1737Architectures: all
1738Type: vcpu ioctl
1739Parameters: struct kvm_one_reg (in)
1740Returns: 0 on success, negative value on failure
1741
1742struct kvm_one_reg {
1743 __u64 id;
1744 __u64 addr;
1745};
1746
1747Using this ioctl, a single vcpu register can be set to a specific value
1748defined by user space with the passed in struct kvm_one_reg, where id
1749refers to the register identifier as described below and addr is a pointer
1750to a variable with the respective size. There can be architecture agnostic
1751and architecture specific registers. Each have their own range of operation
1752and their own constants and width. To keep track of the implemented
1753registers, find a list below:
1754
bf5590f3
JH
1755 Arch | Register | Width (bits)
1756 | |
1757 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_HIOR | 64
1758 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_IAC1 | 64
1759 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_IAC2 | 64
1760 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_IAC3 | 64
1761 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_IAC4 | 64
1762 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_DAC1 | 64
1763 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_DAC2 | 64
1764 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_DABR | 64
1765 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_DSCR | 64
1766 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_PURR | 64
1767 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_SPURR | 64
1768 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_DAR | 64
1769 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_DSISR | 32
1770 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_AMR | 64
1771 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_UAMOR | 64
1772 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_MMCR0 | 64
1773 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_MMCR1 | 64
1774 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_MMCRA | 64
1775 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_MMCR2 | 64
1776 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_MMCRS | 64
1777 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_SIAR | 64
1778 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_SDAR | 64
1779 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_SIER | 64
1780 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_PMC1 | 32
1781 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_PMC2 | 32
1782 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_PMC3 | 32
1783 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_PMC4 | 32
1784 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_PMC5 | 32
1785 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_PMC6 | 32
1786 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_PMC7 | 32
1787 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_PMC8 | 32
1788 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_FPR0 | 64
a8bd19ef 1789 ...
bf5590f3
JH
1790 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_FPR31 | 64
1791 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_VR0 | 128
a8bd19ef 1792 ...
bf5590f3
JH
1793 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_VR31 | 128
1794 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_VSR0 | 128
a8bd19ef 1795 ...
bf5590f3
JH
1796 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_VSR31 | 128
1797 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_FPSCR | 64
1798 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_VSCR | 32
1799 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_VPA_ADDR | 64
1800 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_VPA_SLB | 128
1801 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_VPA_DTL | 128
1802 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_EPCR | 32
1803 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_EPR | 32
1804 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_TCR | 32
1805 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_TSR | 32
1806 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_OR_TSR | 32
1807 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_CLEAR_TSR | 32
1808 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_MAS0 | 32
1809 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_MAS1 | 32
1810 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_MAS2 | 64
1811 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_MAS7_3 | 64
1812 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_MAS4 | 32
1813 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_MAS6 | 32
1814 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_MMUCFG | 32
1815 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_TLB0CFG | 32
1816 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_TLB1CFG | 32
1817 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_TLB2CFG | 32
1818 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_TLB3CFG | 32
1819 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_TLB0PS | 32
1820 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_TLB1PS | 32
1821 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_TLB2PS | 32
1822 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_TLB3PS | 32
1823 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_EPTCFG | 32
1824 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_ICP_STATE | 64
1825 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_TB_OFFSET | 64
1826 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_SPMC1 | 32
1827 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_SPMC2 | 32
1828 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_IAMR | 64
1829 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_TFHAR | 64
1830 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_TFIAR | 64
1831 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_TEXASR | 64
1832 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_FSCR | 64
1833 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_PSPB | 32
1834 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_EBBHR | 64
1835 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_EBBRR | 64
1836 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_BESCR | 64
1837 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_TAR | 64
1838 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_DPDES | 64
1839 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_DAWR | 64
1840 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_DAWRX | 64
1841 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_CIABR | 64
1842 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_IC | 64
1843 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_VTB | 64
1844 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_CSIGR | 64
1845 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_TACR | 64
1846 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_TCSCR | 64
1847 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_PID | 64
1848 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_ACOP | 64
1849 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_VRSAVE | 32
cc568ead
PB
1850 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_LPCR | 32
1851 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_LPCR_64 | 64
bf5590f3
JH
1852 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_PPR | 64
1853 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_ARCH_COMPAT | 32
1854 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_DABRX | 32
1855 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_WORT | 64
bc8a4e5c
BB
1856 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_SPRG9 | 64
1857 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_DBSR | 32
e9cf1e08
PM
1858 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_TIDR | 64
1859 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_PSSCR | 64
5855564c 1860 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_DEC_EXPIRY | 64
bf5590f3 1861 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_TM_GPR0 | 64
3b783474 1862 ...
bf5590f3
JH
1863 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_TM_GPR31 | 64
1864 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_TM_VSR0 | 128
3b783474 1865 ...
bf5590f3
JH
1866 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_TM_VSR63 | 128
1867 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_TM_CR | 64
1868 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_TM_LR | 64
1869 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_TM_CTR | 64
1870 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_TM_FPSCR | 64
1871 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_TM_AMR | 64
1872 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_TM_PPR | 64
1873 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_TM_VRSAVE | 64
1874 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_TM_VSCR | 32
1875 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_TM_DSCR | 64
1876 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_TM_TAR | 64
0d808df0 1877 PPC | KVM_REG_PPC_TM_XER | 64
c2d2c21b
JH
1878 | |
1879 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_R0 | 64
1880 ...
1881 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_R31 | 64
1882 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_HI | 64
1883 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_LO | 64
1884 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_PC | 64
1885 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_INDEX | 32
013044cc
JH
1886 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_ENTRYLO0 | 64
1887 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_ENTRYLO1 | 64
c2d2c21b 1888 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_CONTEXT | 64
dffe042f 1889 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_CONTEXTCONFIG| 32
c2d2c21b 1890 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_USERLOCAL | 64
dffe042f 1891 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_XCONTEXTCONFIG| 64
c2d2c21b 1892 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_PAGEMASK | 32
c992a4f6 1893 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_PAGEGRAIN | 32
4b7de028
JH
1894 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_SEGCTL0 | 64
1895 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_SEGCTL1 | 64
1896 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_SEGCTL2 | 64
5a2f352f
JH
1897 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_PWBASE | 64
1898 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_PWFIELD | 64
1899 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_PWSIZE | 64
c2d2c21b 1900 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_WIRED | 32
5a2f352f 1901 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_PWCTL | 32
c2d2c21b
JH
1902 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_HWRENA | 32
1903 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_BADVADDR | 64
edc89260
JH
1904 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_BADINSTR | 32
1905 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_BADINSTRP | 32
c2d2c21b
JH
1906 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_COUNT | 32
1907 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_ENTRYHI | 64
1908 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_COMPARE | 32
1909 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_STATUS | 32
ad58d4d4 1910 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_INTCTL | 32
c2d2c21b
JH
1911 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_CAUSE | 32
1912 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_EPC | 64
1068eaaf 1913 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_PRID | 32
7801bbe1 1914 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_EBASE | 64
c2d2c21b
JH
1915 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_CONFIG | 32
1916 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_CONFIG1 | 32
1917 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_CONFIG2 | 32
1918 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_CONFIG3 | 32
c771607a
JH
1919 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_CONFIG4 | 32
1920 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_CONFIG5 | 32
c2d2c21b 1921 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_CONFIG7 | 32
c992a4f6 1922 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_XCONTEXT | 64
c2d2c21b 1923 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_ERROREPC | 64
05108709
JH
1924 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_KSCRATCH1 | 64
1925 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_KSCRATCH2 | 64
1926 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_KSCRATCH3 | 64
1927 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_KSCRATCH4 | 64
1928 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_KSCRATCH5 | 64
1929 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_KSCRATCH6 | 64
d42a008f 1930 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_MAAR(0..63) | 64
c2d2c21b
JH
1931 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_COUNT_CTL | 64
1932 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_COUNT_RESUME | 64
1933 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_COUNT_HZ | 64
379245cd
JH
1934 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_FPR_32(0..31) | 32
1935 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_FPR_64(0..31) | 64
ab86bd60 1936 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_VEC_128(0..31) | 128
379245cd
JH
1937 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_FCR_IR | 32
1938 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_FCR_CSR | 32
ab86bd60
JH
1939 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_MSA_IR | 32
1940 MIPS | KVM_REG_MIPS_MSA_CSR | 32
414fa985 1941
749cf76c
CD
1942ARM registers are mapped using the lower 32 bits. The upper 16 of that
1943is the register group type, or coprocessor number:
1944
1945ARM core registers have the following id bit patterns:
aa404ddf 1946 0x4020 0000 0010 <index into the kvm_regs struct:16>
749cf76c 1947
1138245c 1948ARM 32-bit CP15 registers have the following id bit patterns:
aa404ddf 1949 0x4020 0000 000F <zero:1> <crn:4> <crm:4> <opc1:4> <opc2:3>
1138245c
CD
1950
1951ARM 64-bit CP15 registers have the following id bit patterns:
aa404ddf 1952 0x4030 0000 000F <zero:1> <zero:4> <crm:4> <opc1:4> <zero:3>
749cf76c 1953
c27581ed 1954ARM CCSIDR registers are demultiplexed by CSSELR value:
aa404ddf 1955 0x4020 0000 0011 00 <csselr:8>
749cf76c 1956
4fe21e4c 1957ARM 32-bit VFP control registers have the following id bit patterns:
aa404ddf 1958 0x4020 0000 0012 1 <regno:12>
4fe21e4c
RR
1959
1960ARM 64-bit FP registers have the following id bit patterns:
aa404ddf 1961 0x4030 0000 0012 0 <regno:12>
4fe21e4c 1962
85bd0ba1
MZ
1963ARM firmware pseudo-registers have the following bit pattern:
1964 0x4030 0000 0014 <regno:16>
1965
379e04c7
MZ
1966
1967arm64 registers are mapped using the lower 32 bits. The upper 16 of
1968that is the register group type, or coprocessor number:
1969
1970arm64 core/FP-SIMD registers have the following id bit patterns. Note
1971that the size of the access is variable, as the kvm_regs structure
1972contains elements ranging from 32 to 128 bits. The index is a 32bit
1973value in the kvm_regs structure seen as a 32bit array.
1974 0x60x0 0000 0010 <index into the kvm_regs struct:16>
1975
1976arm64 CCSIDR registers are demultiplexed by CSSELR value:
1977 0x6020 0000 0011 00 <csselr:8>
1978
1979arm64 system registers have the following id bit patterns:
1980 0x6030 0000 0013 <op0:2> <op1:3> <crn:4> <crm:4> <op2:3>
1981
85bd0ba1
MZ
1982arm64 firmware pseudo-registers have the following bit pattern:
1983 0x6030 0000 0014 <regno:16>
1984
c2d2c21b
JH
1985
1986MIPS registers are mapped using the lower 32 bits. The upper 16 of that is
1987the register group type:
1988
1989MIPS core registers (see above) have the following id bit patterns:
1990 0x7030 0000 0000 <reg:16>
1991
1992MIPS CP0 registers (see KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_* above) have the following id bit
1993patterns depending on whether they're 32-bit or 64-bit registers:
1994 0x7020 0000 0001 00 <reg:5> <sel:3> (32-bit)
1995 0x7030 0000 0001 00 <reg:5> <sel:3> (64-bit)
1996
013044cc
JH
1997Note: KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_ENTRYLO0 and KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_ENTRYLO1 are the MIPS64
1998versions of the EntryLo registers regardless of the word size of the host
1999hardware, host kernel, guest, and whether XPA is present in the guest, i.e.
2000with the RI and XI bits (if they exist) in bits 63 and 62 respectively, and
2001the PFNX field starting at bit 30.
2002
d42a008f
JH
2003MIPS MAARs (see KVM_REG_MIPS_CP0_MAAR(*) above) have the following id bit
2004patterns:
2005 0x7030 0000 0001 01 <reg:8>
2006
c2d2c21b
JH
2007MIPS KVM control registers (see above) have the following id bit patterns:
2008 0x7030 0000 0002 <reg:16>
2009
379245cd
JH
2010MIPS FPU registers (see KVM_REG_MIPS_FPR_{32,64}() above) have the following
2011id bit patterns depending on the size of the register being accessed. They are
2012always accessed according to the current guest FPU mode (Status.FR and
2013Config5.FRE), i.e. as the guest would see them, and they become unpredictable
ab86bd60
JH
2014if the guest FPU mode is changed. MIPS SIMD Architecture (MSA) vector
2015registers (see KVM_REG_MIPS_VEC_128() above) have similar patterns as they
2016overlap the FPU registers:
379245cd
JH
2017 0x7020 0000 0003 00 <0:3> <reg:5> (32-bit FPU registers)
2018 0x7030 0000 0003 00 <0:3> <reg:5> (64-bit FPU registers)
ab86bd60 2019 0x7040 0000 0003 00 <0:3> <reg:5> (128-bit MSA vector registers)
379245cd
JH
2020
2021MIPS FPU control registers (see KVM_REG_MIPS_FCR_{IR,CSR} above) have the
2022following id bit patterns:
2023 0x7020 0000 0003 01 <0:3> <reg:5>
2024
ab86bd60
JH
2025MIPS MSA control registers (see KVM_REG_MIPS_MSA_{IR,CSR} above) have the
2026following id bit patterns:
2027 0x7020 0000 0003 02 <0:3> <reg:5>
2028
c2d2c21b 2029
e24ed81f
AG
20304.69 KVM_GET_ONE_REG
2031
2032Capability: KVM_CAP_ONE_REG
2033Architectures: all
2034Type: vcpu ioctl
2035Parameters: struct kvm_one_reg (in and out)
2036Returns: 0 on success, negative value on failure
2037
2038This ioctl allows to receive the value of a single register implemented
2039in a vcpu. The register to read is indicated by the "id" field of the
2040kvm_one_reg struct passed in. On success, the register value can be found
2041at the memory location pointed to by "addr".
2042
2043The list of registers accessible using this interface is identical to the
2e232702 2044list in 4.68.
e24ed81f 2045
414fa985 2046
1c0b28c2
EM
20474.70 KVM_KVMCLOCK_CTRL
2048
2049Capability: KVM_CAP_KVMCLOCK_CTRL
2050Architectures: Any that implement pvclocks (currently x86 only)
2051Type: vcpu ioctl
2052Parameters: None
2053Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
2054
2055This signals to the host kernel that the specified guest is being paused by
2056userspace. The host will set a flag in the pvclock structure that is checked
2057from the soft lockup watchdog. The flag is part of the pvclock structure that
2058is shared between guest and host, specifically the second bit of the flags
2059field of the pvclock_vcpu_time_info structure. It will be set exclusively by
2060the host and read/cleared exclusively by the guest. The guest operation of
2061checking and clearing the flag must an atomic operation so
2062load-link/store-conditional, or equivalent must be used. There are two cases
2063where the guest will clear the flag: when the soft lockup watchdog timer resets
2064itself or when a soft lockup is detected. This ioctl can be called any time
2065after pausing the vcpu, but before it is resumed.
2066
414fa985 2067
07975ad3
JK
20684.71 KVM_SIGNAL_MSI
2069
2070Capability: KVM_CAP_SIGNAL_MSI
2988509d 2071Architectures: x86 arm arm64
07975ad3
JK
2072Type: vm ioctl
2073Parameters: struct kvm_msi (in)
2074Returns: >0 on delivery, 0 if guest blocked the MSI, and -1 on error
2075
2076Directly inject a MSI message. Only valid with in-kernel irqchip that handles
2077MSI messages.
2078
2079struct kvm_msi {
2080 __u32 address_lo;
2081 __u32 address_hi;
2082 __u32 data;
2083 __u32 flags;
2b8ddd93
AP
2084 __u32 devid;
2085 __u8 pad[12];
07975ad3
JK
2086};
2087
6f49b2f3
PB
2088flags: KVM_MSI_VALID_DEVID: devid contains a valid value. The per-VM
2089 KVM_CAP_MSI_DEVID capability advertises the requirement to provide
2090 the device ID. If this capability is not available, userspace
2091 should never set the KVM_MSI_VALID_DEVID flag as the ioctl might fail.
2b8ddd93 2092
6f49b2f3
PB
2093If KVM_MSI_VALID_DEVID is set, devid contains a unique device identifier
2094for the device that wrote the MSI message. For PCI, this is usually a
2095BFD identifier in the lower 16 bits.
07975ad3 2096
055b6ae9
PB
2097On x86, address_hi is ignored unless the KVM_X2APIC_API_USE_32BIT_IDS
2098feature of KVM_CAP_X2APIC_API capability is enabled. If it is enabled,
2099address_hi bits 31-8 provide bits 31-8 of the destination id. Bits 7-0 of
2100address_hi must be zero.
37131313 2101
414fa985 2102
0589ff6c
JK
21034.71 KVM_CREATE_PIT2
2104
2105Capability: KVM_CAP_PIT2
2106Architectures: x86
2107Type: vm ioctl
2108Parameters: struct kvm_pit_config (in)
2109Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
2110
2111Creates an in-kernel device model for the i8254 PIT. This call is only valid
2112after enabling in-kernel irqchip support via KVM_CREATE_IRQCHIP. The following
2113parameters have to be passed:
2114
2115struct kvm_pit_config {
2116 __u32 flags;
2117 __u32 pad[15];
2118};
2119
2120Valid flags are:
2121
2122#define KVM_PIT_SPEAKER_DUMMY 1 /* emulate speaker port stub */
2123
b6ddf05f
JK
2124PIT timer interrupts may use a per-VM kernel thread for injection. If it
2125exists, this thread will have a name of the following pattern:
2126
2127kvm-pit/<owner-process-pid>
2128
2129When running a guest with elevated priorities, the scheduling parameters of
2130this thread may have to be adjusted accordingly.
2131
0589ff6c
JK
2132This IOCTL replaces the obsolete KVM_CREATE_PIT.
2133
2134
21354.72 KVM_GET_PIT2
2136
2137Capability: KVM_CAP_PIT_STATE2
2138Architectures: x86
2139Type: vm ioctl
2140Parameters: struct kvm_pit_state2 (out)
2141Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
2142
2143Retrieves the state of the in-kernel PIT model. Only valid after
2144KVM_CREATE_PIT2. The state is returned in the following structure:
2145
2146struct kvm_pit_state2 {
2147 struct kvm_pit_channel_state channels[3];
2148 __u32 flags;
2149 __u32 reserved[9];
2150};
2151
2152Valid flags are:
2153
2154/* disable PIT in HPET legacy mode */
2155#define KVM_PIT_FLAGS_HPET_LEGACY 0x00000001
2156
2157This IOCTL replaces the obsolete KVM_GET_PIT.
2158
2159
21604.73 KVM_SET_PIT2
2161
2162Capability: KVM_CAP_PIT_STATE2
2163Architectures: x86
2164Type: vm ioctl
2165Parameters: struct kvm_pit_state2 (in)
2166Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
2167
2168Sets the state of the in-kernel PIT model. Only valid after KVM_CREATE_PIT2.
2169See KVM_GET_PIT2 for details on struct kvm_pit_state2.
2170
2171This IOCTL replaces the obsolete KVM_SET_PIT.
2172
2173
5b74716e
BH
21744.74 KVM_PPC_GET_SMMU_INFO
2175
2176Capability: KVM_CAP_PPC_GET_SMMU_INFO
2177Architectures: powerpc
2178Type: vm ioctl
2179Parameters: None
2180Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
2181
2182This populates and returns a structure describing the features of
2183the "Server" class MMU emulation supported by KVM.
cc22c354 2184This can in turn be used by userspace to generate the appropriate
5b74716e
BH
2185device-tree properties for the guest operating system.
2186
c98be0c9 2187The structure contains some global information, followed by an
5b74716e
BH
2188array of supported segment page sizes:
2189
2190 struct kvm_ppc_smmu_info {
2191 __u64 flags;
2192 __u32 slb_size;
2193 __u32 pad;
2194 struct kvm_ppc_one_seg_page_size sps[KVM_PPC_PAGE_SIZES_MAX_SZ];
2195 };
2196
2197The supported flags are:
2198
2199 - KVM_PPC_PAGE_SIZES_REAL:
2200 When that flag is set, guest page sizes must "fit" the backing
2201 store page sizes. When not set, any page size in the list can
2202 be used regardless of how they are backed by userspace.
2203
2204 - KVM_PPC_1T_SEGMENTS
2205 The emulated MMU supports 1T segments in addition to the
2206 standard 256M ones.
2207
2208The "slb_size" field indicates how many SLB entries are supported
2209
2210The "sps" array contains 8 entries indicating the supported base
2211page sizes for a segment in increasing order. Each entry is defined
2212as follow:
2213
2214 struct kvm_ppc_one_seg_page_size {
2215 __u32 page_shift; /* Base page shift of segment (or 0) */
2216 __u32 slb_enc; /* SLB encoding for BookS */
2217 struct kvm_ppc_one_page_size enc[KVM_PPC_PAGE_SIZES_MAX_SZ];
2218 };
2219
2220An entry with a "page_shift" of 0 is unused. Because the array is
2221organized in increasing order, a lookup can stop when encoutering
2222such an entry.
2223
2224The "slb_enc" field provides the encoding to use in the SLB for the
2225page size. The bits are in positions such as the value can directly
2226be OR'ed into the "vsid" argument of the slbmte instruction.
2227
2228The "enc" array is a list which for each of those segment base page
2229size provides the list of supported actual page sizes (which can be
2230only larger or equal to the base page size), along with the
f884ab15 2231corresponding encoding in the hash PTE. Similarly, the array is
5b74716e
BH
22328 entries sorted by increasing sizes and an entry with a "0" shift
2233is an empty entry and a terminator:
2234
2235 struct kvm_ppc_one_page_size {
2236 __u32 page_shift; /* Page shift (or 0) */
2237 __u32 pte_enc; /* Encoding in the HPTE (>>12) */
2238 };
2239
2240The "pte_enc" field provides a value that can OR'ed into the hash
2241PTE's RPN field (ie, it needs to be shifted left by 12 to OR it
2242into the hash PTE second double word).
2243
f36992e3
AW
22444.75 KVM_IRQFD
2245
2246Capability: KVM_CAP_IRQFD
174178fe 2247Architectures: x86 s390 arm arm64
f36992e3
AW
2248Type: vm ioctl
2249Parameters: struct kvm_irqfd (in)
2250Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
2251
2252Allows setting an eventfd to directly trigger a guest interrupt.
2253kvm_irqfd.fd specifies the file descriptor to use as the eventfd and
2254kvm_irqfd.gsi specifies the irqchip pin toggled by this event. When
17180032 2255an event is triggered on the eventfd, an interrupt is injected into
f36992e3
AW
2256the guest using the specified gsi pin. The irqfd is removed using
2257the KVM_IRQFD_FLAG_DEASSIGN flag, specifying both kvm_irqfd.fd
2258and kvm_irqfd.gsi.
2259
7a84428a
AW
2260With KVM_CAP_IRQFD_RESAMPLE, KVM_IRQFD supports a de-assert and notify
2261mechanism allowing emulation of level-triggered, irqfd-based
2262interrupts. When KVM_IRQFD_FLAG_RESAMPLE is set the user must pass an
2263additional eventfd in the kvm_irqfd.resamplefd field. When operating
2264in resample mode, posting of an interrupt through kvm_irq.fd asserts
2265the specified gsi in the irqchip. When the irqchip is resampled, such
17180032 2266as from an EOI, the gsi is de-asserted and the user is notified via
7a84428a
AW
2267kvm_irqfd.resamplefd. It is the user's responsibility to re-queue
2268the interrupt if the device making use of it still requires service.
2269Note that closing the resamplefd is not sufficient to disable the
2270irqfd. The KVM_IRQFD_FLAG_RESAMPLE is only necessary on assignment
2271and need not be specified with KVM_IRQFD_FLAG_DEASSIGN.
2272
180ae7b1
EA
2273On arm/arm64, gsi routing being supported, the following can happen:
2274- in case no routing entry is associated to this gsi, injection fails
2275- in case the gsi is associated to an irqchip routing entry,
2276 irqchip.pin + 32 corresponds to the injected SPI ID.
995a0ee9
EA
2277- in case the gsi is associated to an MSI routing entry, the MSI
2278 message and device ID are translated into an LPI (support restricted
2279 to GICv3 ITS in-kernel emulation).
174178fe 2280
5fecc9d8 22814.76 KVM_PPC_ALLOCATE_HTAB
32fad281
PM
2282
2283Capability: KVM_CAP_PPC_ALLOC_HTAB
2284Architectures: powerpc
2285Type: vm ioctl
2286Parameters: Pointer to u32 containing hash table order (in/out)
2287Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
2288
2289This requests the host kernel to allocate an MMU hash table for a
2290guest using the PAPR paravirtualization interface. This only does
2291anything if the kernel is configured to use the Book 3S HV style of
2292virtualization. Otherwise the capability doesn't exist and the ioctl
2293returns an ENOTTY error. The rest of this description assumes Book 3S
2294HV.
2295
2296There must be no vcpus running when this ioctl is called; if there
2297are, it will do nothing and return an EBUSY error.
2298
2299The parameter is a pointer to a 32-bit unsigned integer variable
2300containing the order (log base 2) of the desired size of the hash
2301table, which must be between 18 and 46. On successful return from the
f98a8bf9 2302ioctl, the value will not be changed by the kernel.
32fad281
PM
2303
2304If no hash table has been allocated when any vcpu is asked to run
2305(with the KVM_RUN ioctl), the host kernel will allocate a
2306default-sized hash table (16 MB).
2307
2308If this ioctl is called when a hash table has already been allocated,
f98a8bf9
DG
2309with a different order from the existing hash table, the existing hash
2310table will be freed and a new one allocated. If this is ioctl is
2311called when a hash table has already been allocated of the same order
2312as specified, the kernel will clear out the existing hash table (zero
2313all HPTEs). In either case, if the guest is using the virtualized
2314real-mode area (VRMA) facility, the kernel will re-create the VMRA
2315HPTEs on the next KVM_RUN of any vcpu.
32fad281 2316
416ad65f
CH
23174.77 KVM_S390_INTERRUPT
2318
2319Capability: basic
2320Architectures: s390
2321Type: vm ioctl, vcpu ioctl
2322Parameters: struct kvm_s390_interrupt (in)
2323Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
2324
2325Allows to inject an interrupt to the guest. Interrupts can be floating
2326(vm ioctl) or per cpu (vcpu ioctl), depending on the interrupt type.
2327
2328Interrupt parameters are passed via kvm_s390_interrupt:
2329
2330struct kvm_s390_interrupt {
2331 __u32 type;
2332 __u32 parm;
2333 __u64 parm64;
2334};
2335
2336type can be one of the following:
2337
2822545f 2338KVM_S390_SIGP_STOP (vcpu) - sigp stop; optional flags in parm
416ad65f
CH
2339KVM_S390_PROGRAM_INT (vcpu) - program check; code in parm
2340KVM_S390_SIGP_SET_PREFIX (vcpu) - sigp set prefix; prefix address in parm
2341KVM_S390_RESTART (vcpu) - restart
e029ae5b
TH
2342KVM_S390_INT_CLOCK_COMP (vcpu) - clock comparator interrupt
2343KVM_S390_INT_CPU_TIMER (vcpu) - CPU timer interrupt
416ad65f
CH
2344KVM_S390_INT_VIRTIO (vm) - virtio external interrupt; external interrupt
2345 parameters in parm and parm64
2346KVM_S390_INT_SERVICE (vm) - sclp external interrupt; sclp parameter in parm
2347KVM_S390_INT_EMERGENCY (vcpu) - sigp emergency; source cpu in parm
2348KVM_S390_INT_EXTERNAL_CALL (vcpu) - sigp external call; source cpu in parm
d8346b7d
CH
2349KVM_S390_INT_IO(ai,cssid,ssid,schid) (vm) - compound value to indicate an
2350 I/O interrupt (ai - adapter interrupt; cssid,ssid,schid - subchannel);
2351 I/O interruption parameters in parm (subchannel) and parm64 (intparm,
2352 interruption subclass)
48a3e950
CH
2353KVM_S390_MCHK (vm, vcpu) - machine check interrupt; cr 14 bits in parm,
2354 machine check interrupt code in parm64 (note that
2355 machine checks needing further payload are not
2356 supported by this ioctl)
416ad65f
CH
2357
2358Note that the vcpu ioctl is asynchronous to vcpu execution.
2359
a2932923
PM
23604.78 KVM_PPC_GET_HTAB_FD
2361
2362Capability: KVM_CAP_PPC_HTAB_FD
2363Architectures: powerpc
2364Type: vm ioctl
2365Parameters: Pointer to struct kvm_get_htab_fd (in)
2366Returns: file descriptor number (>= 0) on success, -1 on error
2367
2368This returns a file descriptor that can be used either to read out the
2369entries in the guest's hashed page table (HPT), or to write entries to
2370initialize the HPT. The returned fd can only be written to if the
2371KVM_GET_HTAB_WRITE bit is set in the flags field of the argument, and
2372can only be read if that bit is clear. The argument struct looks like
2373this:
2374
2375/* For KVM_PPC_GET_HTAB_FD */
2376struct kvm_get_htab_fd {
2377 __u64 flags;
2378 __u64 start_index;
2379 __u64 reserved[2];
2380};
2381
2382/* Values for kvm_get_htab_fd.flags */
2383#define KVM_GET_HTAB_BOLTED_ONLY ((__u64)0x1)
2384#define KVM_GET_HTAB_WRITE ((__u64)0x2)
2385
2386The `start_index' field gives the index in the HPT of the entry at
2387which to start reading. It is ignored when writing.
2388
2389Reads on the fd will initially supply information about all
2390"interesting" HPT entries. Interesting entries are those with the
2391bolted bit set, if the KVM_GET_HTAB_BOLTED_ONLY bit is set, otherwise
2392all entries. When the end of the HPT is reached, the read() will
2393return. If read() is called again on the fd, it will start again from
2394the beginning of the HPT, but will only return HPT entries that have
2395changed since they were last read.
2396
2397Data read or written is structured as a header (8 bytes) followed by a
2398series of valid HPT entries (16 bytes) each. The header indicates how
2399many valid HPT entries there are and how many invalid entries follow
2400the valid entries. The invalid entries are not represented explicitly
2401in the stream. The header format is:
2402
2403struct kvm_get_htab_header {
2404 __u32 index;
2405 __u16 n_valid;
2406 __u16 n_invalid;
2407};
2408
2409Writes to the fd create HPT entries starting at the index given in the
2410header; first `n_valid' valid entries with contents from the data
2411written, then `n_invalid' invalid entries, invalidating any previously
2412valid entries found.
2413
852b6d57
SW
24144.79 KVM_CREATE_DEVICE
2415
2416Capability: KVM_CAP_DEVICE_CTRL
2417Type: vm ioctl
2418Parameters: struct kvm_create_device (in/out)
2419Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
2420Errors:
2421 ENODEV: The device type is unknown or unsupported
2422 EEXIST: Device already created, and this type of device may not
2423 be instantiated multiple times
2424
2425 Other error conditions may be defined by individual device types or
2426 have their standard meanings.
2427
2428Creates an emulated device in the kernel. The file descriptor returned
2429in fd can be used with KVM_SET/GET/HAS_DEVICE_ATTR.
2430
2431If the KVM_CREATE_DEVICE_TEST flag is set, only test whether the
2432device type is supported (not necessarily whether it can be created
2433in the current vm).
2434
2435Individual devices should not define flags. Attributes should be used
2436for specifying any behavior that is not implied by the device type
2437number.
2438
2439struct kvm_create_device {
2440 __u32 type; /* in: KVM_DEV_TYPE_xxx */
2441 __u32 fd; /* out: device handle */
2442 __u32 flags; /* in: KVM_CREATE_DEVICE_xxx */
2443};
2444
24454.80 KVM_SET_DEVICE_ATTR/KVM_GET_DEVICE_ATTR
2446
f577f6c2
SZ
2447Capability: KVM_CAP_DEVICE_CTRL, KVM_CAP_VM_ATTRIBUTES for vm device,
2448 KVM_CAP_VCPU_ATTRIBUTES for vcpu device
2449Type: device ioctl, vm ioctl, vcpu ioctl
852b6d57
SW
2450Parameters: struct kvm_device_attr
2451Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
2452Errors:
2453 ENXIO: The group or attribute is unknown/unsupported for this device
f9cbd9b0 2454 or hardware support is missing.
852b6d57
SW
2455 EPERM: The attribute cannot (currently) be accessed this way
2456 (e.g. read-only attribute, or attribute that only makes
2457 sense when the device is in a different state)
2458
2459 Other error conditions may be defined by individual device types.
2460
2461Gets/sets a specified piece of device configuration and/or state. The
2462semantics are device-specific. See individual device documentation in
2463the "devices" directory. As with ONE_REG, the size of the data
2464transferred is defined by the particular attribute.
2465
2466struct kvm_device_attr {
2467 __u32 flags; /* no flags currently defined */
2468 __u32 group; /* device-defined */
2469 __u64 attr; /* group-defined */
2470 __u64 addr; /* userspace address of attr data */
2471};
2472
24734.81 KVM_HAS_DEVICE_ATTR
2474
f577f6c2
SZ
2475Capability: KVM_CAP_DEVICE_CTRL, KVM_CAP_VM_ATTRIBUTES for vm device,
2476 KVM_CAP_VCPU_ATTRIBUTES for vcpu device
2477Type: device ioctl, vm ioctl, vcpu ioctl
852b6d57
SW
2478Parameters: struct kvm_device_attr
2479Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
2480Errors:
2481 ENXIO: The group or attribute is unknown/unsupported for this device
f9cbd9b0 2482 or hardware support is missing.
852b6d57
SW
2483
2484Tests whether a device supports a particular attribute. A successful
2485return indicates the attribute is implemented. It does not necessarily
2486indicate that the attribute can be read or written in the device's
2487current state. "addr" is ignored.
f36992e3 2488
d8968f1f 24894.82 KVM_ARM_VCPU_INIT
749cf76c
CD
2490
2491Capability: basic
379e04c7 2492Architectures: arm, arm64
749cf76c 2493Type: vcpu ioctl
beb11fc7 2494Parameters: struct kvm_vcpu_init (in)
749cf76c
CD
2495Returns: 0 on success; -1 on error
2496Errors:
2497  EINVAL:    the target is unknown, or the combination of features is invalid.
2498  ENOENT:    a features bit specified is unknown.
2499
2500This tells KVM what type of CPU to present to the guest, and what
2501optional features it should have.  This will cause a reset of the cpu
2502registers to their initial values.  If this is not called, KVM_RUN will
2503return ENOEXEC for that vcpu.
2504
2505Note that because some registers reflect machine topology, all vcpus
2506should be created before this ioctl is invoked.
2507
f7fa034d
CD
2508Userspace can call this function multiple times for a given vcpu, including
2509after the vcpu has been run. This will reset the vcpu to its initial
2510state. All calls to this function after the initial call must use the same
2511target and same set of feature flags, otherwise EINVAL will be returned.
2512
aa024c2f
MZ
2513Possible features:
2514 - KVM_ARM_VCPU_POWER_OFF: Starts the CPU in a power-off state.
3ad8b3de
CD
2515 Depends on KVM_CAP_ARM_PSCI. If not set, the CPU will be powered on
2516 and execute guest code when KVM_RUN is called.
379e04c7
MZ
2517 - KVM_ARM_VCPU_EL1_32BIT: Starts the CPU in a 32bit mode.
2518 Depends on KVM_CAP_ARM_EL1_32BIT (arm64 only).
85bd0ba1
MZ
2519 - KVM_ARM_VCPU_PSCI_0_2: Emulate PSCI v0.2 (or a future revision
2520 backward compatible with v0.2) for the CPU.
50bb0c94 2521 Depends on KVM_CAP_ARM_PSCI_0_2.
808e7381
SZ
2522 - KVM_ARM_VCPU_PMU_V3: Emulate PMUv3 for the CPU.
2523 Depends on KVM_CAP_ARM_PMU_V3.
aa024c2f 2524
749cf76c 2525
740edfc0
AP
25264.83 KVM_ARM_PREFERRED_TARGET
2527
2528Capability: basic
2529Architectures: arm, arm64
2530Type: vm ioctl
2531Parameters: struct struct kvm_vcpu_init (out)
2532Returns: 0 on success; -1 on error
2533Errors:
a7265fb1 2534 ENODEV: no preferred target available for the host
740edfc0
AP
2535
2536This queries KVM for preferred CPU target type which can be emulated
2537by KVM on underlying host.
2538
2539The ioctl returns struct kvm_vcpu_init instance containing information
2540about preferred CPU target type and recommended features for it. The
2541kvm_vcpu_init->features bitmap returned will have feature bits set if
2542the preferred target recommends setting these features, but this is
2543not mandatory.
2544
2545The information returned by this ioctl can be used to prepare an instance
2546of struct kvm_vcpu_init for KVM_ARM_VCPU_INIT ioctl which will result in
2547in VCPU matching underlying host.
2548
2549
25504.84 KVM_GET_REG_LIST
749cf76c
CD
2551
2552Capability: basic
c2d2c21b 2553Architectures: arm, arm64, mips
749cf76c
CD
2554Type: vcpu ioctl
2555Parameters: struct kvm_reg_list (in/out)
2556Returns: 0 on success; -1 on error
2557Errors:
2558  E2BIG:     the reg index list is too big to fit in the array specified by
2559             the user (the number required will be written into n).
2560
2561struct kvm_reg_list {
2562 __u64 n; /* number of registers in reg[] */
2563 __u64 reg[0];
2564};
2565
2566This ioctl returns the guest registers that are supported for the
2567KVM_GET_ONE_REG/KVM_SET_ONE_REG calls.
2568
ce01e4e8
CD
2569
25704.85 KVM_ARM_SET_DEVICE_ADDR (deprecated)
3401d546
CD
2571
2572Capability: KVM_CAP_ARM_SET_DEVICE_ADDR
379e04c7 2573Architectures: arm, arm64
3401d546
CD
2574Type: vm ioctl
2575Parameters: struct kvm_arm_device_address (in)
2576Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
2577Errors:
2578 ENODEV: The device id is unknown
2579 ENXIO: Device not supported on current system
2580 EEXIST: Address already set
2581 E2BIG: Address outside guest physical address space
330690cd 2582 EBUSY: Address overlaps with other device range
3401d546
CD
2583
2584struct kvm_arm_device_addr {
2585 __u64 id;
2586 __u64 addr;
2587};
2588
2589Specify a device address in the guest's physical address space where guests
2590can access emulated or directly exposed devices, which the host kernel needs
2591to know about. The id field is an architecture specific identifier for a
2592specific device.
2593
379e04c7
MZ
2594ARM/arm64 divides the id field into two parts, a device id and an
2595address type id specific to the individual device.
3401d546
CD
2596
2597  bits: | 63 ... 32 | 31 ... 16 | 15 ... 0 |
2598 field: | 0x00000000 | device id | addr type id |
2599
379e04c7
MZ
2600ARM/arm64 currently only require this when using the in-kernel GIC
2601support for the hardware VGIC features, using KVM_ARM_DEVICE_VGIC_V2
2602as the device id. When setting the base address for the guest's
2603mapping of the VGIC virtual CPU and distributor interface, the ioctl
2604must be called after calling KVM_CREATE_IRQCHIP, but before calling
2605KVM_RUN on any of the VCPUs. Calling this ioctl twice for any of the
2606base addresses will return -EEXIST.
3401d546 2607
ce01e4e8
CD
2608Note, this IOCTL is deprecated and the more flexible SET/GET_DEVICE_ATTR API
2609should be used instead.
2610
2611
740edfc0 26124.86 KVM_PPC_RTAS_DEFINE_TOKEN
8e591cb7
ME
2613
2614Capability: KVM_CAP_PPC_RTAS
2615Architectures: ppc
2616Type: vm ioctl
2617Parameters: struct kvm_rtas_token_args
2618Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
2619
2620Defines a token value for a RTAS (Run Time Abstraction Services)
2621service in order to allow it to be handled in the kernel. The
2622argument struct gives the name of the service, which must be the name
2623of a service that has a kernel-side implementation. If the token
2624value is non-zero, it will be associated with that service, and
2625subsequent RTAS calls by the guest specifying that token will be
2626handled by the kernel. If the token value is 0, then any token
2627associated with the service will be forgotten, and subsequent RTAS
2628calls by the guest for that service will be passed to userspace to be
2629handled.
2630
4bd9d344
AB
26314.87 KVM_SET_GUEST_DEBUG
2632
2633Capability: KVM_CAP_SET_GUEST_DEBUG
0e6f07f2 2634Architectures: x86, s390, ppc, arm64
4bd9d344
AB
2635Type: vcpu ioctl
2636Parameters: struct kvm_guest_debug (in)
2637Returns: 0 on success; -1 on error
2638
2639struct kvm_guest_debug {
2640 __u32 control;
2641 __u32 pad;
2642 struct kvm_guest_debug_arch arch;
2643};
2644
2645Set up the processor specific debug registers and configure vcpu for
2646handling guest debug events. There are two parts to the structure, the
2647first a control bitfield indicates the type of debug events to handle
2648when running. Common control bits are:
2649
2650 - KVM_GUESTDBG_ENABLE: guest debugging is enabled
2651 - KVM_GUESTDBG_SINGLESTEP: the next run should single-step
2652
2653The top 16 bits of the control field are architecture specific control
2654flags which can include the following:
2655
4bd611ca 2656 - KVM_GUESTDBG_USE_SW_BP: using software breakpoints [x86, arm64]
834bf887 2657 - KVM_GUESTDBG_USE_HW_BP: using hardware breakpoints [x86, s390, arm64]
4bd9d344
AB
2658 - KVM_GUESTDBG_INJECT_DB: inject DB type exception [x86]
2659 - KVM_GUESTDBG_INJECT_BP: inject BP type exception [x86]
2660 - KVM_GUESTDBG_EXIT_PENDING: trigger an immediate guest exit [s390]
2661
2662For example KVM_GUESTDBG_USE_SW_BP indicates that software breakpoints
2663are enabled in memory so we need to ensure breakpoint exceptions are
2664correctly trapped and the KVM run loop exits at the breakpoint and not
2665running off into the normal guest vector. For KVM_GUESTDBG_USE_HW_BP
2666we need to ensure the guest vCPUs architecture specific registers are
2667updated to the correct (supplied) values.
2668
2669The second part of the structure is architecture specific and
2670typically contains a set of debug registers.
2671
834bf887
AB
2672For arm64 the number of debug registers is implementation defined and
2673can be determined by querying the KVM_CAP_GUEST_DEBUG_HW_BPS and
2674KVM_CAP_GUEST_DEBUG_HW_WPS capabilities which return a positive number
2675indicating the number of supported registers.
2676
4bd9d344
AB
2677When debug events exit the main run loop with the reason
2678KVM_EXIT_DEBUG with the kvm_debug_exit_arch part of the kvm_run
2679structure containing architecture specific debug information.
3401d546 2680
209cf19f
AB
26814.88 KVM_GET_EMULATED_CPUID
2682
2683Capability: KVM_CAP_EXT_EMUL_CPUID
2684Architectures: x86
2685Type: system ioctl
2686Parameters: struct kvm_cpuid2 (in/out)
2687Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
2688
2689struct kvm_cpuid2 {
2690 __u32 nent;
2691 __u32 flags;
2692 struct kvm_cpuid_entry2 entries[0];
2693};
2694
2695The member 'flags' is used for passing flags from userspace.
2696
2697#define KVM_CPUID_FLAG_SIGNIFCANT_INDEX BIT(0)
2698#define KVM_CPUID_FLAG_STATEFUL_FUNC BIT(1)
2699#define KVM_CPUID_FLAG_STATE_READ_NEXT BIT(2)
2700
2701struct kvm_cpuid_entry2 {
2702 __u32 function;
2703 __u32 index;
2704 __u32 flags;
2705 __u32 eax;
2706 __u32 ebx;
2707 __u32 ecx;
2708 __u32 edx;
2709 __u32 padding[3];
2710};
2711
2712This ioctl returns x86 cpuid features which are emulated by
2713kvm.Userspace can use the information returned by this ioctl to query
2714which features are emulated by kvm instead of being present natively.
2715
2716Userspace invokes KVM_GET_EMULATED_CPUID by passing a kvm_cpuid2
2717structure with the 'nent' field indicating the number of entries in
2718the variable-size array 'entries'. If the number of entries is too low
2719to describe the cpu capabilities, an error (E2BIG) is returned. If the
2720number is too high, the 'nent' field is adjusted and an error (ENOMEM)
2721is returned. If the number is just right, the 'nent' field is adjusted
2722to the number of valid entries in the 'entries' array, which is then
2723filled.
2724
2725The entries returned are the set CPUID bits of the respective features
2726which kvm emulates, as returned by the CPUID instruction, with unknown
2727or unsupported feature bits cleared.
2728
2729Features like x2apic, for example, may not be present in the host cpu
2730but are exposed by kvm in KVM_GET_SUPPORTED_CPUID because they can be
2731emulated efficiently and thus not included here.
2732
2733The fields in each entry are defined as follows:
2734
2735 function: the eax value used to obtain the entry
2736 index: the ecx value used to obtain the entry (for entries that are
2737 affected by ecx)
2738 flags: an OR of zero or more of the following:
2739 KVM_CPUID_FLAG_SIGNIFCANT_INDEX:
2740 if the index field is valid
2741 KVM_CPUID_FLAG_STATEFUL_FUNC:
2742 if cpuid for this function returns different values for successive
2743 invocations; there will be several entries with the same function,
2744 all with this flag set
2745 KVM_CPUID_FLAG_STATE_READ_NEXT:
2746 for KVM_CPUID_FLAG_STATEFUL_FUNC entries, set if this entry is
2747 the first entry to be read by a cpu
2748 eax, ebx, ecx, edx: the values returned by the cpuid instruction for
2749 this function/index combination
2750
41408c28
TH
27514.89 KVM_S390_MEM_OP
2752
2753Capability: KVM_CAP_S390_MEM_OP
2754Architectures: s390
2755Type: vcpu ioctl
2756Parameters: struct kvm_s390_mem_op (in)
2757Returns: = 0 on success,
2758 < 0 on generic error (e.g. -EFAULT or -ENOMEM),
2759 > 0 if an exception occurred while walking the page tables
2760
5d4f6f3d 2761Read or write data from/to the logical (virtual) memory of a VCPU.
41408c28
TH
2762
2763Parameters are specified via the following structure:
2764
2765struct kvm_s390_mem_op {
2766 __u64 gaddr; /* the guest address */
2767 __u64 flags; /* flags */
2768 __u32 size; /* amount of bytes */
2769 __u32 op; /* type of operation */
2770 __u64 buf; /* buffer in userspace */
2771 __u8 ar; /* the access register number */
2772 __u8 reserved[31]; /* should be set to 0 */
2773};
2774
2775The type of operation is specified in the "op" field. It is either
2776KVM_S390_MEMOP_LOGICAL_READ for reading from logical memory space or
2777KVM_S390_MEMOP_LOGICAL_WRITE for writing to logical memory space. The
2778KVM_S390_MEMOP_F_CHECK_ONLY flag can be set in the "flags" field to check
2779whether the corresponding memory access would create an access exception
2780(without touching the data in the memory at the destination). In case an
2781access exception occurred while walking the MMU tables of the guest, the
2782ioctl returns a positive error number to indicate the type of exception.
2783This exception is also raised directly at the corresponding VCPU if the
2784flag KVM_S390_MEMOP_F_INJECT_EXCEPTION is set in the "flags" field.
2785
2786The start address of the memory region has to be specified in the "gaddr"
2787field, and the length of the region in the "size" field. "buf" is the buffer
2788supplied by the userspace application where the read data should be written
2789to for KVM_S390_MEMOP_LOGICAL_READ, or where the data that should be written
2790is stored for a KVM_S390_MEMOP_LOGICAL_WRITE. "buf" is unused and can be NULL
2791when KVM_S390_MEMOP_F_CHECK_ONLY is specified. "ar" designates the access
2792register number to be used.
2793
2794The "reserved" field is meant for future extensions. It is not used by
2795KVM with the currently defined set of flags.
2796
30ee2a98
JH
27974.90 KVM_S390_GET_SKEYS
2798
2799Capability: KVM_CAP_S390_SKEYS
2800Architectures: s390
2801Type: vm ioctl
2802Parameters: struct kvm_s390_skeys
2803Returns: 0 on success, KVM_S390_GET_KEYS_NONE if guest is not using storage
2804 keys, negative value on error
2805
2806This ioctl is used to get guest storage key values on the s390
2807architecture. The ioctl takes parameters via the kvm_s390_skeys struct.
2808
2809struct kvm_s390_skeys {
2810 __u64 start_gfn;
2811 __u64 count;
2812 __u64 skeydata_addr;
2813 __u32 flags;
2814 __u32 reserved[9];
2815};
2816
2817The start_gfn field is the number of the first guest frame whose storage keys
2818you want to get.
2819
2820The count field is the number of consecutive frames (starting from start_gfn)
2821whose storage keys to get. The count field must be at least 1 and the maximum
2822allowed value is defined as KVM_S390_SKEYS_ALLOC_MAX. Values outside this range
2823will cause the ioctl to return -EINVAL.
2824
2825The skeydata_addr field is the address to a buffer large enough to hold count
2826bytes. This buffer will be filled with storage key data by the ioctl.
2827
28284.91 KVM_S390_SET_SKEYS
2829
2830Capability: KVM_CAP_S390_SKEYS
2831Architectures: s390
2832Type: vm ioctl
2833Parameters: struct kvm_s390_skeys
2834Returns: 0 on success, negative value on error
2835
2836This ioctl is used to set guest storage key values on the s390
2837architecture. The ioctl takes parameters via the kvm_s390_skeys struct.
2838See section on KVM_S390_GET_SKEYS for struct definition.
2839
2840The start_gfn field is the number of the first guest frame whose storage keys
2841you want to set.
2842
2843The count field is the number of consecutive frames (starting from start_gfn)
2844whose storage keys to get. The count field must be at least 1 and the maximum
2845allowed value is defined as KVM_S390_SKEYS_ALLOC_MAX. Values outside this range
2846will cause the ioctl to return -EINVAL.
2847
2848The skeydata_addr field is the address to a buffer containing count bytes of
2849storage keys. Each byte in the buffer will be set as the storage key for a
2850single frame starting at start_gfn for count frames.
2851
2852Note: If any architecturally invalid key value is found in the given data then
2853the ioctl will return -EINVAL.
2854
47b43c52
JF
28554.92 KVM_S390_IRQ
2856
2857Capability: KVM_CAP_S390_INJECT_IRQ
2858Architectures: s390
2859Type: vcpu ioctl
2860Parameters: struct kvm_s390_irq (in)
2861Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
2862Errors:
2863 EINVAL: interrupt type is invalid
2864 type is KVM_S390_SIGP_STOP and flag parameter is invalid value
2865 type is KVM_S390_INT_EXTERNAL_CALL and code is bigger
2866 than the maximum of VCPUs
2867 EBUSY: type is KVM_S390_SIGP_SET_PREFIX and vcpu is not stopped
2868 type is KVM_S390_SIGP_STOP and a stop irq is already pending
2869 type is KVM_S390_INT_EXTERNAL_CALL and an external call interrupt
2870 is already pending
2871
2872Allows to inject an interrupt to the guest.
2873
2874Using struct kvm_s390_irq as a parameter allows
2875to inject additional payload which is not
2876possible via KVM_S390_INTERRUPT.
2877
2878Interrupt parameters are passed via kvm_s390_irq:
2879
2880struct kvm_s390_irq {
2881 __u64 type;
2882 union {
2883 struct kvm_s390_io_info io;
2884 struct kvm_s390_ext_info ext;
2885 struct kvm_s390_pgm_info pgm;
2886 struct kvm_s390_emerg_info emerg;
2887 struct kvm_s390_extcall_info extcall;
2888 struct kvm_s390_prefix_info prefix;
2889 struct kvm_s390_stop_info stop;
2890 struct kvm_s390_mchk_info mchk;
2891 char reserved[64];
2892 } u;
2893};
2894
2895type can be one of the following:
2896
2897KVM_S390_SIGP_STOP - sigp stop; parameter in .stop
2898KVM_S390_PROGRAM_INT - program check; parameters in .pgm
2899KVM_S390_SIGP_SET_PREFIX - sigp set prefix; parameters in .prefix
2900KVM_S390_RESTART - restart; no parameters
2901KVM_S390_INT_CLOCK_COMP - clock comparator interrupt; no parameters
2902KVM_S390_INT_CPU_TIMER - CPU timer interrupt; no parameters
2903KVM_S390_INT_EMERGENCY - sigp emergency; parameters in .emerg
2904KVM_S390_INT_EXTERNAL_CALL - sigp external call; parameters in .extcall
2905KVM_S390_MCHK - machine check interrupt; parameters in .mchk
2906
2907
2908Note that the vcpu ioctl is asynchronous to vcpu execution.
2909
816c7667
JF
29104.94 KVM_S390_GET_IRQ_STATE
2911
2912Capability: KVM_CAP_S390_IRQ_STATE
2913Architectures: s390
2914Type: vcpu ioctl
2915Parameters: struct kvm_s390_irq_state (out)
2916Returns: >= number of bytes copied into buffer,
2917 -EINVAL if buffer size is 0,
2918 -ENOBUFS if buffer size is too small to fit all pending interrupts,
2919 -EFAULT if the buffer address was invalid
2920
2921This ioctl allows userspace to retrieve the complete state of all currently
2922pending interrupts in a single buffer. Use cases include migration
2923and introspection. The parameter structure contains the address of a
2924userspace buffer and its length:
2925
2926struct kvm_s390_irq_state {
2927 __u64 buf;
bb64da9a 2928 __u32 flags; /* will stay unused for compatibility reasons */
816c7667 2929 __u32 len;
bb64da9a 2930 __u32 reserved[4]; /* will stay unused for compatibility reasons */
816c7667
JF
2931};
2932
2933Userspace passes in the above struct and for each pending interrupt a
2934struct kvm_s390_irq is copied to the provided buffer.
2935
bb64da9a
CB
2936The structure contains a flags and a reserved field for future extensions. As
2937the kernel never checked for flags == 0 and QEMU never pre-zeroed flags and
2938reserved, these fields can not be used in the future without breaking
2939compatibility.
2940
816c7667
JF
2941If -ENOBUFS is returned the buffer provided was too small and userspace
2942may retry with a bigger buffer.
2943
29444.95 KVM_S390_SET_IRQ_STATE
2945
2946Capability: KVM_CAP_S390_IRQ_STATE
2947Architectures: s390
2948Type: vcpu ioctl
2949Parameters: struct kvm_s390_irq_state (in)
2950Returns: 0 on success,
2951 -EFAULT if the buffer address was invalid,
2952 -EINVAL for an invalid buffer length (see below),
2953 -EBUSY if there were already interrupts pending,
2954 errors occurring when actually injecting the
2955 interrupt. See KVM_S390_IRQ.
2956
2957This ioctl allows userspace to set the complete state of all cpu-local
2958interrupts currently pending for the vcpu. It is intended for restoring
2959interrupt state after a migration. The input parameter is a userspace buffer
2960containing a struct kvm_s390_irq_state:
2961
2962struct kvm_s390_irq_state {
2963 __u64 buf;
bb64da9a 2964 __u32 flags; /* will stay unused for compatibility reasons */
816c7667 2965 __u32 len;
bb64da9a 2966 __u32 reserved[4]; /* will stay unused for compatibility reasons */
816c7667
JF
2967};
2968
bb64da9a
CB
2969The restrictions for flags and reserved apply as well.
2970(see KVM_S390_GET_IRQ_STATE)
2971
816c7667
JF
2972The userspace memory referenced by buf contains a struct kvm_s390_irq
2973for each interrupt to be injected into the guest.
2974If one of the interrupts could not be injected for some reason the
2975ioctl aborts.
2976
2977len must be a multiple of sizeof(struct kvm_s390_irq). It must be > 0
2978and it must not exceed (max_vcpus + 32) * sizeof(struct kvm_s390_irq),
2979which is the maximum number of possibly pending cpu-local interrupts.
47b43c52 2980
ed8e5a24 29814.96 KVM_SMI
f077825a
PB
2982
2983Capability: KVM_CAP_X86_SMM
2984Architectures: x86
2985Type: vcpu ioctl
2986Parameters: none
2987Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
2988
2989Queues an SMI on the thread's vcpu.
2990
d3695aa4
AK
29914.97 KVM_CAP_PPC_MULTITCE
2992
2993Capability: KVM_CAP_PPC_MULTITCE
2994Architectures: ppc
2995Type: vm
2996
2997This capability means the kernel is capable of handling hypercalls
2998H_PUT_TCE_INDIRECT and H_STUFF_TCE without passing those into the user
2999space. This significantly accelerates DMA operations for PPC KVM guests.
3000User space should expect that its handlers for these hypercalls
3001are not going to be called if user space previously registered LIOBN
3002in KVM (via KVM_CREATE_SPAPR_TCE or similar calls).
3003
3004In order to enable H_PUT_TCE_INDIRECT and H_STUFF_TCE use in the guest,
3005user space might have to advertise it for the guest. For example,
3006IBM pSeries (sPAPR) guest starts using them if "hcall-multi-tce" is
3007present in the "ibm,hypertas-functions" device-tree property.
3008
3009The hypercalls mentioned above may or may not be processed successfully
3010in the kernel based fast path. If they can not be handled by the kernel,
3011they will get passed on to user space. So user space still has to have
3012an implementation for these despite the in kernel acceleration.
3013
3014This capability is always enabled.
3015
58ded420
AK
30164.98 KVM_CREATE_SPAPR_TCE_64
3017
3018Capability: KVM_CAP_SPAPR_TCE_64
3019Architectures: powerpc
3020Type: vm ioctl
3021Parameters: struct kvm_create_spapr_tce_64 (in)
3022Returns: file descriptor for manipulating the created TCE table
3023
3024This is an extension for KVM_CAP_SPAPR_TCE which only supports 32bit
3025windows, described in 4.62 KVM_CREATE_SPAPR_TCE
3026
3027This capability uses extended struct in ioctl interface:
3028
3029/* for KVM_CAP_SPAPR_TCE_64 */
3030struct kvm_create_spapr_tce_64 {
3031 __u64 liobn;
3032 __u32 page_shift;
3033 __u32 flags;
3034 __u64 offset; /* in pages */
3035 __u64 size; /* in pages */
3036};
3037
3038The aim of extension is to support an additional bigger DMA window with
3039a variable page size.
3040KVM_CREATE_SPAPR_TCE_64 receives a 64bit window size, an IOMMU page shift and
3041a bus offset of the corresponding DMA window, @size and @offset are numbers
3042of IOMMU pages.
3043
3044@flags are not used at the moment.
3045
3046The rest of functionality is identical to KVM_CREATE_SPAPR_TCE.
3047
ccc4df4e 30484.99 KVM_REINJECT_CONTROL
107d44a2
RK
3049
3050Capability: KVM_CAP_REINJECT_CONTROL
3051Architectures: x86
3052Type: vm ioctl
3053Parameters: struct kvm_reinject_control (in)
3054Returns: 0 on success,
3055 -EFAULT if struct kvm_reinject_control cannot be read,
3056 -ENXIO if KVM_CREATE_PIT or KVM_CREATE_PIT2 didn't succeed earlier.
3057
3058i8254 (PIT) has two modes, reinject and !reinject. The default is reinject,
3059where KVM queues elapsed i8254 ticks and monitors completion of interrupt from
3060vector(s) that i8254 injects. Reinject mode dequeues a tick and injects its
3061interrupt whenever there isn't a pending interrupt from i8254.
3062!reinject mode injects an interrupt as soon as a tick arrives.
3063
3064struct kvm_reinject_control {
3065 __u8 pit_reinject;
3066 __u8 reserved[31];
3067};
3068
3069pit_reinject = 0 (!reinject mode) is recommended, unless running an old
3070operating system that uses the PIT for timing (e.g. Linux 2.4.x).
3071
ccc4df4e 30724.100 KVM_PPC_CONFIGURE_V3_MMU
c9270132
PM
3073
3074Capability: KVM_CAP_PPC_RADIX_MMU or KVM_CAP_PPC_HASH_MMU_V3
3075Architectures: ppc
3076Type: vm ioctl
3077Parameters: struct kvm_ppc_mmuv3_cfg (in)
3078Returns: 0 on success,
3079 -EFAULT if struct kvm_ppc_mmuv3_cfg cannot be read,
3080 -EINVAL if the configuration is invalid
3081
3082This ioctl controls whether the guest will use radix or HPT (hashed
3083page table) translation, and sets the pointer to the process table for
3084the guest.
3085
3086struct kvm_ppc_mmuv3_cfg {
3087 __u64 flags;
3088 __u64 process_table;
3089};
3090
3091There are two bits that can be set in flags; KVM_PPC_MMUV3_RADIX and
3092KVM_PPC_MMUV3_GTSE. KVM_PPC_MMUV3_RADIX, if set, configures the guest
3093to use radix tree translation, and if clear, to use HPT translation.
3094KVM_PPC_MMUV3_GTSE, if set and if KVM permits it, configures the guest
3095to be able to use the global TLB and SLB invalidation instructions;
3096if clear, the guest may not use these instructions.
3097
3098The process_table field specifies the address and size of the guest
3099process table, which is in the guest's space. This field is formatted
3100as the second doubleword of the partition table entry, as defined in
3101the Power ISA V3.00, Book III section 5.7.6.1.
3102
ccc4df4e 31034.101 KVM_PPC_GET_RMMU_INFO
c9270132
PM
3104
3105Capability: KVM_CAP_PPC_RADIX_MMU
3106Architectures: ppc
3107Type: vm ioctl
3108Parameters: struct kvm_ppc_rmmu_info (out)
3109Returns: 0 on success,
3110 -EFAULT if struct kvm_ppc_rmmu_info cannot be written,
3111 -EINVAL if no useful information can be returned
3112
3113This ioctl returns a structure containing two things: (a) a list
3114containing supported radix tree geometries, and (b) a list that maps
3115page sizes to put in the "AP" (actual page size) field for the tlbie
3116(TLB invalidate entry) instruction.
3117
3118struct kvm_ppc_rmmu_info {
3119 struct kvm_ppc_radix_geom {
3120 __u8 page_shift;
3121 __u8 level_bits[4];
3122 __u8 pad[3];
3123 } geometries[8];
3124 __u32 ap_encodings[8];
3125};
3126
3127The geometries[] field gives up to 8 supported geometries for the
3128radix page table, in terms of the log base 2 of the smallest page
3129size, and the number of bits indexed at each level of the tree, from
3130the PTE level up to the PGD level in that order. Any unused entries
3131will have 0 in the page_shift field.
3132
3133The ap_encodings gives the supported page sizes and their AP field
3134encodings, encoded with the AP value in the top 3 bits and the log
3135base 2 of the page size in the bottom 6 bits.
3136
ef1ead0c
DG
31374.102 KVM_PPC_RESIZE_HPT_PREPARE
3138
3139Capability: KVM_CAP_SPAPR_RESIZE_HPT
3140Architectures: powerpc
3141Type: vm ioctl
3142Parameters: struct kvm_ppc_resize_hpt (in)
3143Returns: 0 on successful completion,
3144 >0 if a new HPT is being prepared, the value is an estimated
3145 number of milliseconds until preparation is complete
3146 -EFAULT if struct kvm_reinject_control cannot be read,
3147 -EINVAL if the supplied shift or flags are invalid
3148 -ENOMEM if unable to allocate the new HPT
3149 -ENOSPC if there was a hash collision when moving existing
3150 HPT entries to the new HPT
3151 -EIO on other error conditions
3152
3153Used to implement the PAPR extension for runtime resizing of a guest's
3154Hashed Page Table (HPT). Specifically this starts, stops or monitors
3155the preparation of a new potential HPT for the guest, essentially
3156implementing the H_RESIZE_HPT_PREPARE hypercall.
3157
3158If called with shift > 0 when there is no pending HPT for the guest,
3159this begins preparation of a new pending HPT of size 2^(shift) bytes.
3160It then returns a positive integer with the estimated number of
3161milliseconds until preparation is complete.
3162
3163If called when there is a pending HPT whose size does not match that
3164requested in the parameters, discards the existing pending HPT and
3165creates a new one as above.
3166
3167If called when there is a pending HPT of the size requested, will:
3168 * If preparation of the pending HPT is already complete, return 0
3169 * If preparation of the pending HPT has failed, return an error
3170 code, then discard the pending HPT.
3171 * If preparation of the pending HPT is still in progress, return an
3172 estimated number of milliseconds until preparation is complete.
3173
3174If called with shift == 0, discards any currently pending HPT and
3175returns 0 (i.e. cancels any in-progress preparation).
3176
3177flags is reserved for future expansion, currently setting any bits in
3178flags will result in an -EINVAL.
3179
3180Normally this will be called repeatedly with the same parameters until
3181it returns <= 0. The first call will initiate preparation, subsequent
3182ones will monitor preparation until it completes or fails.
3183
3184struct kvm_ppc_resize_hpt {
3185 __u64 flags;
3186 __u32 shift;
3187 __u32 pad;
3188};
3189
31904.103 KVM_PPC_RESIZE_HPT_COMMIT
3191
3192Capability: KVM_CAP_SPAPR_RESIZE_HPT
3193Architectures: powerpc
3194Type: vm ioctl
3195Parameters: struct kvm_ppc_resize_hpt (in)
3196Returns: 0 on successful completion,
3197 -EFAULT if struct kvm_reinject_control cannot be read,
3198 -EINVAL if the supplied shift or flags are invalid
3199 -ENXIO is there is no pending HPT, or the pending HPT doesn't
3200 have the requested size
3201 -EBUSY if the pending HPT is not fully prepared
3202 -ENOSPC if there was a hash collision when moving existing
3203 HPT entries to the new HPT
3204 -EIO on other error conditions
3205
3206Used to implement the PAPR extension for runtime resizing of a guest's
3207Hashed Page Table (HPT). Specifically this requests that the guest be
3208transferred to working with the new HPT, essentially implementing the
3209H_RESIZE_HPT_COMMIT hypercall.
3210
3211This should only be called after KVM_PPC_RESIZE_HPT_PREPARE has
3212returned 0 with the same parameters. In other cases
3213KVM_PPC_RESIZE_HPT_COMMIT will return an error (usually -ENXIO or
3214-EBUSY, though others may be possible if the preparation was started,
3215but failed).
3216
3217This will have undefined effects on the guest if it has not already
3218placed itself in a quiescent state where no vcpu will make MMU enabled
3219memory accesses.
3220
3221On succsful completion, the pending HPT will become the guest's active
3222HPT and the previous HPT will be discarded.
3223
3224On failure, the guest will still be operating on its previous HPT.
3225
3226struct kvm_ppc_resize_hpt {
3227 __u64 flags;
3228 __u32 shift;
3229 __u32 pad;
3230};
3231
3aa53859
LC
32324.104 KVM_X86_GET_MCE_CAP_SUPPORTED
3233
3234Capability: KVM_CAP_MCE
3235Architectures: x86
3236Type: system ioctl
3237Parameters: u64 mce_cap (out)
3238Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
3239
3240Returns supported MCE capabilities. The u64 mce_cap parameter
3241has the same format as the MSR_IA32_MCG_CAP register. Supported
3242capabilities will have the corresponding bits set.
3243
32444.105 KVM_X86_SETUP_MCE
3245
3246Capability: KVM_CAP_MCE
3247Architectures: x86
3248Type: vcpu ioctl
3249Parameters: u64 mcg_cap (in)
3250Returns: 0 on success,
3251 -EFAULT if u64 mcg_cap cannot be read,
3252 -EINVAL if the requested number of banks is invalid,
3253 -EINVAL if requested MCE capability is not supported.
3254
3255Initializes MCE support for use. The u64 mcg_cap parameter
3256has the same format as the MSR_IA32_MCG_CAP register and
3257specifies which capabilities should be enabled. The maximum
3258supported number of error-reporting banks can be retrieved when
3259checking for KVM_CAP_MCE. The supported capabilities can be
3260retrieved with KVM_X86_GET_MCE_CAP_SUPPORTED.
3261
32624.106 KVM_X86_SET_MCE
3263
3264Capability: KVM_CAP_MCE
3265Architectures: x86
3266Type: vcpu ioctl
3267Parameters: struct kvm_x86_mce (in)
3268Returns: 0 on success,
3269 -EFAULT if struct kvm_x86_mce cannot be read,
3270 -EINVAL if the bank number is invalid,
3271 -EINVAL if VAL bit is not set in status field.
3272
3273Inject a machine check error (MCE) into the guest. The input
3274parameter is:
3275
3276struct kvm_x86_mce {
3277 __u64 status;
3278 __u64 addr;
3279 __u64 misc;
3280 __u64 mcg_status;
3281 __u8 bank;
3282 __u8 pad1[7];
3283 __u64 pad2[3];
3284};
3285
3286If the MCE being reported is an uncorrected error, KVM will
3287inject it as an MCE exception into the guest. If the guest
3288MCG_STATUS register reports that an MCE is in progress, KVM
3289causes an KVM_EXIT_SHUTDOWN vmexit.
3290
3291Otherwise, if the MCE is a corrected error, KVM will just
3292store it in the corresponding bank (provided this bank is
3293not holding a previously reported uncorrected error).
3294
4036e387
CI
32954.107 KVM_S390_GET_CMMA_BITS
3296
3297Capability: KVM_CAP_S390_CMMA_MIGRATION
3298Architectures: s390
3299Type: vm ioctl
3300Parameters: struct kvm_s390_cmma_log (in, out)
3301Returns: 0 on success, a negative value on error
3302
3303This ioctl is used to get the values of the CMMA bits on the s390
3304architecture. It is meant to be used in two scenarios:
3305- During live migration to save the CMMA values. Live migration needs
3306 to be enabled via the KVM_REQ_START_MIGRATION VM property.
3307- To non-destructively peek at the CMMA values, with the flag
3308 KVM_S390_CMMA_PEEK set.
3309
3310The ioctl takes parameters via the kvm_s390_cmma_log struct. The desired
3311values are written to a buffer whose location is indicated via the "values"
3312member in the kvm_s390_cmma_log struct. The values in the input struct are
3313also updated as needed.
3314Each CMMA value takes up one byte.
3315
3316struct kvm_s390_cmma_log {
3317 __u64 start_gfn;
3318 __u32 count;
3319 __u32 flags;
3320 union {
3321 __u64 remaining;
3322 __u64 mask;
3323 };
3324 __u64 values;
3325};
3326
3327start_gfn is the number of the first guest frame whose CMMA values are
3328to be retrieved,
3329
3330count is the length of the buffer in bytes,
3331
3332values points to the buffer where the result will be written to.
3333
3334If count is greater than KVM_S390_SKEYS_MAX, then it is considered to be
3335KVM_S390_SKEYS_MAX. KVM_S390_SKEYS_MAX is re-used for consistency with
3336other ioctls.
3337
3338The result is written in the buffer pointed to by the field values, and
3339the values of the input parameter are updated as follows.
3340
3341Depending on the flags, different actions are performed. The only
3342supported flag so far is KVM_S390_CMMA_PEEK.
3343
3344The default behaviour if KVM_S390_CMMA_PEEK is not set is:
3345start_gfn will indicate the first page frame whose CMMA bits were dirty.
3346It is not necessarily the same as the one passed as input, as clean pages
3347are skipped.
3348
3349count will indicate the number of bytes actually written in the buffer.
3350It can (and very often will) be smaller than the input value, since the
3351buffer is only filled until 16 bytes of clean values are found (which
3352are then not copied in the buffer). Since a CMMA migration block needs
3353the base address and the length, for a total of 16 bytes, we will send
3354back some clean data if there is some dirty data afterwards, as long as
3355the size of the clean data does not exceed the size of the header. This
3356allows to minimize the amount of data to be saved or transferred over
3357the network at the expense of more roundtrips to userspace. The next
3358invocation of the ioctl will skip over all the clean values, saving
3359potentially more than just the 16 bytes we found.
3360
3361If KVM_S390_CMMA_PEEK is set:
3362the existing storage attributes are read even when not in migration
3363mode, and no other action is performed;
3364
3365the output start_gfn will be equal to the input start_gfn,
3366
3367the output count will be equal to the input count, except if the end of
3368memory has been reached.
3369
3370In both cases:
3371the field "remaining" will indicate the total number of dirty CMMA values
3372still remaining, or 0 if KVM_S390_CMMA_PEEK is set and migration mode is
3373not enabled.
3374
3375mask is unused.
3376
3377values points to the userspace buffer where the result will be stored.
3378
3379This ioctl can fail with -ENOMEM if not enough memory can be allocated to
3380complete the task, with -ENXIO if CMMA is not enabled, with -EINVAL if
3381KVM_S390_CMMA_PEEK is not set but migration mode was not enabled, with
3382-EFAULT if the userspace address is invalid or if no page table is
3383present for the addresses (e.g. when using hugepages).
3384
33854.108 KVM_S390_SET_CMMA_BITS
3386
3387Capability: KVM_CAP_S390_CMMA_MIGRATION
3388Architectures: s390
3389Type: vm ioctl
3390Parameters: struct kvm_s390_cmma_log (in)
3391Returns: 0 on success, a negative value on error
3392
3393This ioctl is used to set the values of the CMMA bits on the s390
3394architecture. It is meant to be used during live migration to restore
3395the CMMA values, but there are no restrictions on its use.
3396The ioctl takes parameters via the kvm_s390_cmma_values struct.
3397Each CMMA value takes up one byte.
3398
3399struct kvm_s390_cmma_log {
3400 __u64 start_gfn;
3401 __u32 count;
3402 __u32 flags;
3403 union {
3404 __u64 remaining;
3405 __u64 mask;
3406 };
3407 __u64 values;
3408};
3409
3410start_gfn indicates the starting guest frame number,
3411
3412count indicates how many values are to be considered in the buffer,
3413
3414flags is not used and must be 0.
3415
3416mask indicates which PGSTE bits are to be considered.
3417
3418remaining is not used.
3419
3420values points to the buffer in userspace where to store the values.
3421
3422This ioctl can fail with -ENOMEM if not enough memory can be allocated to
3423complete the task, with -ENXIO if CMMA is not enabled, with -EINVAL if
3424the count field is too large (e.g. more than KVM_S390_CMMA_SIZE_MAX) or
3425if the flags field was not 0, with -EFAULT if the userspace address is
3426invalid, if invalid pages are written to (e.g. after the end of memory)
3427or if no page table is present for the addresses (e.g. when using
3428hugepages).
3429
7bf14c28 34304.109 KVM_PPC_GET_CPU_CHAR
3214d01f
PM
3431
3432Capability: KVM_CAP_PPC_GET_CPU_CHAR
3433Architectures: powerpc
3434Type: vm ioctl
3435Parameters: struct kvm_ppc_cpu_char (out)
3436Returns: 0 on successful completion
3437 -EFAULT if struct kvm_ppc_cpu_char cannot be written
3438
3439This ioctl gives userspace information about certain characteristics
3440of the CPU relating to speculative execution of instructions and
3441possible information leakage resulting from speculative execution (see
3442CVE-2017-5715, CVE-2017-5753 and CVE-2017-5754). The information is
3443returned in struct kvm_ppc_cpu_char, which looks like this:
3444
3445struct kvm_ppc_cpu_char {
3446 __u64 character; /* characteristics of the CPU */
3447 __u64 behaviour; /* recommended software behaviour */
3448 __u64 character_mask; /* valid bits in character */
3449 __u64 behaviour_mask; /* valid bits in behaviour */
3450};
3451
3452For extensibility, the character_mask and behaviour_mask fields
3453indicate which bits of character and behaviour have been filled in by
3454the kernel. If the set of defined bits is extended in future then
3455userspace will be able to tell whether it is running on a kernel that
3456knows about the new bits.
3457
3458The character field describes attributes of the CPU which can help
3459with preventing inadvertent information disclosure - specifically,
3460whether there is an instruction to flash-invalidate the L1 data cache
3461(ori 30,30,0 or mtspr SPRN_TRIG2,rN), whether the L1 data cache is set
3462to a mode where entries can only be used by the thread that created
3463them, whether the bcctr[l] instruction prevents speculation, and
3464whether a speculation barrier instruction (ori 31,31,0) is provided.
3465
3466The behaviour field describes actions that software should take to
3467prevent inadvertent information disclosure, and thus describes which
3468vulnerabilities the hardware is subject to; specifically whether the
3469L1 data cache should be flushed when returning to user mode from the
3470kernel, and whether a speculation barrier should be placed between an
3471array bounds check and the array access.
3472
3473These fields use the same bit definitions as the new
3474H_GET_CPU_CHARACTERISTICS hypercall.
3475
7bf14c28 34764.110 KVM_MEMORY_ENCRYPT_OP
5acc5c06
BS
3477
3478Capability: basic
3479Architectures: x86
3480Type: system
3481Parameters: an opaque platform specific structure (in/out)
3482Returns: 0 on success; -1 on error
3483
3484If the platform supports creating encrypted VMs then this ioctl can be used
3485for issuing platform-specific memory encryption commands to manage those
3486encrypted VMs.
3487
3488Currently, this ioctl is used for issuing Secure Encrypted Virtualization
3489(SEV) commands on AMD Processors. The SEV commands are defined in
21e94aca 3490Documentation/virtual/kvm/amd-memory-encryption.rst.
5acc5c06 3491
7bf14c28 34924.111 KVM_MEMORY_ENCRYPT_REG_REGION
69eaedee
BS
3493
3494Capability: basic
3495Architectures: x86
3496Type: system
3497Parameters: struct kvm_enc_region (in)
3498Returns: 0 on success; -1 on error
3499
3500This ioctl can be used to register a guest memory region which may
3501contain encrypted data (e.g. guest RAM, SMRAM etc).
3502
3503It is used in the SEV-enabled guest. When encryption is enabled, a guest
3504memory region may contain encrypted data. The SEV memory encryption
3505engine uses a tweak such that two identical plaintext pages, each at
3506different locations will have differing ciphertexts. So swapping or
3507moving ciphertext of those pages will not result in plaintext being
3508swapped. So relocating (or migrating) physical backing pages for the SEV
3509guest will require some additional steps.
3510
3511Note: The current SEV key management spec does not provide commands to
3512swap or migrate (move) ciphertext pages. Hence, for now we pin the guest
3513memory region registered with the ioctl.
3514
7bf14c28 35154.112 KVM_MEMORY_ENCRYPT_UNREG_REGION
69eaedee
BS
3516
3517Capability: basic
3518Architectures: x86
3519Type: system
3520Parameters: struct kvm_enc_region (in)
3521Returns: 0 on success; -1 on error
3522
3523This ioctl can be used to unregister the guest memory region registered
3524with KVM_MEMORY_ENCRYPT_REG_REGION ioctl above.
3525
faeb7833
RK
35264.113 KVM_HYPERV_EVENTFD
3527
3528Capability: KVM_CAP_HYPERV_EVENTFD
3529Architectures: x86
3530Type: vm ioctl
3531Parameters: struct kvm_hyperv_eventfd (in)
3532
3533This ioctl (un)registers an eventfd to receive notifications from the guest on
3534the specified Hyper-V connection id through the SIGNAL_EVENT hypercall, without
3535causing a user exit. SIGNAL_EVENT hypercall with non-zero event flag number
3536(bits 24-31) still triggers a KVM_EXIT_HYPERV_HCALL user exit.
3537
3538struct kvm_hyperv_eventfd {
3539 __u32 conn_id;
3540 __s32 fd;
3541 __u32 flags;
3542 __u32 padding[3];
3543};
3544
3545The conn_id field should fit within 24 bits:
3546
3547#define KVM_HYPERV_CONN_ID_MASK 0x00ffffff
3548
3549The acceptable values for the flags field are:
3550
3551#define KVM_HYPERV_EVENTFD_DEASSIGN (1 << 0)
3552
3553Returns: 0 on success,
3554 -EINVAL if conn_id or flags is outside the allowed range
3555 -ENOENT on deassign if the conn_id isn't registered
3556 -EEXIST on assign if the conn_id is already registered
3557
7bf14c28 3558
9c1b96e3 35595. The kvm_run structure
414fa985 3560------------------------
9c1b96e3
AK
3561
3562Application code obtains a pointer to the kvm_run structure by
3563mmap()ing a vcpu fd. From that point, application code can control
3564execution by changing fields in kvm_run prior to calling the KVM_RUN
3565ioctl, and obtain information about the reason KVM_RUN returned by
3566looking up structure members.
3567
3568struct kvm_run {
3569 /* in */
3570 __u8 request_interrupt_window;
3571
3572Request that KVM_RUN return when it becomes possible to inject external
3573interrupts into the guest. Useful in conjunction with KVM_INTERRUPT.
3574
460df4c1
PB
3575 __u8 immediate_exit;
3576
3577This field is polled once when KVM_RUN starts; if non-zero, KVM_RUN
3578exits immediately, returning -EINTR. In the common scenario where a
3579signal is used to "kick" a VCPU out of KVM_RUN, this field can be used
3580to avoid usage of KVM_SET_SIGNAL_MASK, which has worse scalability.
3581Rather than blocking the signal outside KVM_RUN, userspace can set up
3582a signal handler that sets run->immediate_exit to a non-zero value.
3583
3584This field is ignored if KVM_CAP_IMMEDIATE_EXIT is not available.
3585
3586 __u8 padding1[6];
9c1b96e3
AK
3587
3588 /* out */
3589 __u32 exit_reason;
3590
3591When KVM_RUN has returned successfully (return value 0), this informs
3592application code why KVM_RUN has returned. Allowable values for this
3593field are detailed below.
3594
3595 __u8 ready_for_interrupt_injection;
3596
3597If request_interrupt_window has been specified, this field indicates
3598an interrupt can be injected now with KVM_INTERRUPT.
3599
3600 __u8 if_flag;
3601
3602The value of the current interrupt flag. Only valid if in-kernel
3603local APIC is not used.
3604
f077825a
PB
3605 __u16 flags;
3606
3607More architecture-specific flags detailing state of the VCPU that may
3608affect the device's behavior. The only currently defined flag is
3609KVM_RUN_X86_SMM, which is valid on x86 machines and is set if the
3610VCPU is in system management mode.
9c1b96e3
AK
3611
3612 /* in (pre_kvm_run), out (post_kvm_run) */
3613 __u64 cr8;
3614
3615The value of the cr8 register. Only valid if in-kernel local APIC is
3616not used. Both input and output.
3617
3618 __u64 apic_base;
3619
3620The value of the APIC BASE msr. Only valid if in-kernel local
3621APIC is not used. Both input and output.
3622
3623 union {
3624 /* KVM_EXIT_UNKNOWN */
3625 struct {
3626 __u64 hardware_exit_reason;
3627 } hw;
3628
3629If exit_reason is KVM_EXIT_UNKNOWN, the vcpu has exited due to unknown
3630reasons. Further architecture-specific information is available in
3631hardware_exit_reason.
3632
3633 /* KVM_EXIT_FAIL_ENTRY */
3634 struct {
3635 __u64 hardware_entry_failure_reason;
3636 } fail_entry;
3637
3638If exit_reason is KVM_EXIT_FAIL_ENTRY, the vcpu could not be run due
3639to unknown reasons. Further architecture-specific information is
3640available in hardware_entry_failure_reason.
3641
3642 /* KVM_EXIT_EXCEPTION */
3643 struct {
3644 __u32 exception;
3645 __u32 error_code;
3646 } ex;
3647
3648Unused.
3649
3650 /* KVM_EXIT_IO */
3651 struct {
3652#define KVM_EXIT_IO_IN 0
3653#define KVM_EXIT_IO_OUT 1
3654 __u8 direction;
3655 __u8 size; /* bytes */
3656 __u16 port;
3657 __u32 count;
3658 __u64 data_offset; /* relative to kvm_run start */
3659 } io;
3660
2044892d 3661If exit_reason is KVM_EXIT_IO, then the vcpu has
9c1b96e3
AK
3662executed a port I/O instruction which could not be satisfied by kvm.
3663data_offset describes where the data is located (KVM_EXIT_IO_OUT) or
3664where kvm expects application code to place the data for the next
2044892d 3665KVM_RUN invocation (KVM_EXIT_IO_IN). Data format is a packed array.
9c1b96e3 3666
8ab30c15 3667 /* KVM_EXIT_DEBUG */
9c1b96e3
AK
3668 struct {
3669 struct kvm_debug_exit_arch arch;
3670 } debug;
3671
8ab30c15
AB
3672If the exit_reason is KVM_EXIT_DEBUG, then a vcpu is processing a debug event
3673for which architecture specific information is returned.
9c1b96e3
AK
3674
3675 /* KVM_EXIT_MMIO */
3676 struct {
3677 __u64 phys_addr;
3678 __u8 data[8];
3679 __u32 len;
3680 __u8 is_write;
3681 } mmio;
3682
2044892d 3683If exit_reason is KVM_EXIT_MMIO, then the vcpu has
9c1b96e3
AK
3684executed a memory-mapped I/O instruction which could not be satisfied
3685by kvm. The 'data' member contains the written data if 'is_write' is
3686true, and should be filled by application code otherwise.
3687
6acdb160
CD
3688The 'data' member contains, in its first 'len' bytes, the value as it would
3689appear if the VCPU performed a load or store of the appropriate width directly
3690to the byte array.
3691
cc568ead 3692NOTE: For KVM_EXIT_IO, KVM_EXIT_MMIO, KVM_EXIT_OSI, KVM_EXIT_PAPR and
ce91ddc4 3693 KVM_EXIT_EPR the corresponding
ad0a048b
AG
3694operations are complete (and guest state is consistent) only after userspace
3695has re-entered the kernel with KVM_RUN. The kernel side will first finish
67961344
MT
3696incomplete operations and then check for pending signals. Userspace
3697can re-enter the guest with an unmasked signal pending to complete
3698pending operations.
3699
9c1b96e3
AK
3700 /* KVM_EXIT_HYPERCALL */
3701 struct {
3702 __u64 nr;
3703 __u64 args[6];
3704 __u64 ret;
3705 __u32 longmode;
3706 __u32 pad;
3707 } hypercall;
3708
647dc49e
AK
3709Unused. This was once used for 'hypercall to userspace'. To implement
3710such functionality, use KVM_EXIT_IO (x86) or KVM_EXIT_MMIO (all except s390).
3711Note KVM_EXIT_IO is significantly faster than KVM_EXIT_MMIO.
9c1b96e3
AK
3712
3713 /* KVM_EXIT_TPR_ACCESS */
3714 struct {
3715 __u64 rip;
3716 __u32 is_write;
3717 __u32 pad;
3718 } tpr_access;
3719
3720To be documented (KVM_TPR_ACCESS_REPORTING).
3721
3722 /* KVM_EXIT_S390_SIEIC */
3723 struct {
3724 __u8 icptcode;
3725 __u64 mask; /* psw upper half */
3726 __u64 addr; /* psw lower half */
3727 __u16 ipa;
3728 __u32 ipb;
3729 } s390_sieic;
3730
3731s390 specific.
3732
3733 /* KVM_EXIT_S390_RESET */
3734#define KVM_S390_RESET_POR 1
3735#define KVM_S390_RESET_CLEAR 2
3736#define KVM_S390_RESET_SUBSYSTEM 4
3737#define KVM_S390_RESET_CPU_INIT 8
3738#define KVM_S390_RESET_IPL 16
3739 __u64 s390_reset_flags;
3740
3741s390 specific.
3742
e168bf8d
CO
3743 /* KVM_EXIT_S390_UCONTROL */
3744 struct {
3745 __u64 trans_exc_code;
3746 __u32 pgm_code;
3747 } s390_ucontrol;
3748
3749s390 specific. A page fault has occurred for a user controlled virtual
3750machine (KVM_VM_S390_UNCONTROL) on it's host page table that cannot be
3751resolved by the kernel.
3752The program code and the translation exception code that were placed
3753in the cpu's lowcore are presented here as defined by the z Architecture
3754Principles of Operation Book in the Chapter for Dynamic Address Translation
3755(DAT)
3756
9c1b96e3
AK
3757 /* KVM_EXIT_DCR */
3758 struct {
3759 __u32 dcrn;
3760 __u32 data;
3761 __u8 is_write;
3762 } dcr;
3763
ce91ddc4 3764Deprecated - was used for 440 KVM.
9c1b96e3 3765
ad0a048b
AG
3766 /* KVM_EXIT_OSI */
3767 struct {
3768 __u64 gprs[32];
3769 } osi;
3770
3771MOL uses a special hypercall interface it calls 'OSI'. To enable it, we catch
3772hypercalls and exit with this exit struct that contains all the guest gprs.
3773
3774If exit_reason is KVM_EXIT_OSI, then the vcpu has triggered such a hypercall.
3775Userspace can now handle the hypercall and when it's done modify the gprs as
3776necessary. Upon guest entry all guest GPRs will then be replaced by the values
3777in this struct.
3778
de56a948
PM
3779 /* KVM_EXIT_PAPR_HCALL */
3780 struct {
3781 __u64 nr;
3782 __u64 ret;
3783 __u64 args[9];
3784 } papr_hcall;
3785
3786This is used on 64-bit PowerPC when emulating a pSeries partition,
3787e.g. with the 'pseries' machine type in qemu. It occurs when the
3788guest does a hypercall using the 'sc 1' instruction. The 'nr' field
3789contains the hypercall number (from the guest R3), and 'args' contains
3790the arguments (from the guest R4 - R12). Userspace should put the
3791return code in 'ret' and any extra returned values in args[].
3792The possible hypercalls are defined in the Power Architecture Platform
3793Requirements (PAPR) document available from www.power.org (free
3794developer registration required to access it).
3795
fa6b7fe9
CH
3796 /* KVM_EXIT_S390_TSCH */
3797 struct {
3798 __u16 subchannel_id;
3799 __u16 subchannel_nr;
3800 __u32 io_int_parm;
3801 __u32 io_int_word;
3802 __u32 ipb;
3803 __u8 dequeued;
3804 } s390_tsch;
3805
3806s390 specific. This exit occurs when KVM_CAP_S390_CSS_SUPPORT has been enabled
3807and TEST SUBCHANNEL was intercepted. If dequeued is set, a pending I/O
3808interrupt for the target subchannel has been dequeued and subchannel_id,
3809subchannel_nr, io_int_parm and io_int_word contain the parameters for that
3810interrupt. ipb is needed for instruction parameter decoding.
3811
1c810636
AG
3812 /* KVM_EXIT_EPR */
3813 struct {
3814 __u32 epr;
3815 } epr;
3816
3817On FSL BookE PowerPC chips, the interrupt controller has a fast patch
3818interrupt acknowledge path to the core. When the core successfully
3819delivers an interrupt, it automatically populates the EPR register with
3820the interrupt vector number and acknowledges the interrupt inside
3821the interrupt controller.
3822
3823In case the interrupt controller lives in user space, we need to do
3824the interrupt acknowledge cycle through it to fetch the next to be
3825delivered interrupt vector using this exit.
3826
3827It gets triggered whenever both KVM_CAP_PPC_EPR are enabled and an
3828external interrupt has just been delivered into the guest. User space
3829should put the acknowledged interrupt vector into the 'epr' field.
3830
8ad6b634
AP
3831 /* KVM_EXIT_SYSTEM_EVENT */
3832 struct {
3833#define KVM_SYSTEM_EVENT_SHUTDOWN 1
3834#define KVM_SYSTEM_EVENT_RESET 2
2ce79189 3835#define KVM_SYSTEM_EVENT_CRASH 3
8ad6b634
AP
3836 __u32 type;
3837 __u64 flags;
3838 } system_event;
3839
3840If exit_reason is KVM_EXIT_SYSTEM_EVENT then the vcpu has triggered
3841a system-level event using some architecture specific mechanism (hypercall
3842or some special instruction). In case of ARM/ARM64, this is triggered using
3843HVC instruction based PSCI call from the vcpu. The 'type' field describes
3844the system-level event type. The 'flags' field describes architecture
3845specific flags for the system-level event.
3846
cf5d3188
CD
3847Valid values for 'type' are:
3848 KVM_SYSTEM_EVENT_SHUTDOWN -- the guest has requested a shutdown of the
3849 VM. Userspace is not obliged to honour this, and if it does honour
3850 this does not need to destroy the VM synchronously (ie it may call
3851 KVM_RUN again before shutdown finally occurs).
3852 KVM_SYSTEM_EVENT_RESET -- the guest has requested a reset of the VM.
3853 As with SHUTDOWN, userspace can choose to ignore the request, or
3854 to schedule the reset to occur in the future and may call KVM_RUN again.
2ce79189
AS
3855 KVM_SYSTEM_EVENT_CRASH -- the guest crash occurred and the guest
3856 has requested a crash condition maintenance. Userspace can choose
3857 to ignore the request, or to gather VM memory core dump and/or
3858 reset/shutdown of the VM.
cf5d3188 3859
7543a635
SR
3860 /* KVM_EXIT_IOAPIC_EOI */
3861 struct {
3862 __u8 vector;
3863 } eoi;
3864
3865Indicates that the VCPU's in-kernel local APIC received an EOI for a
3866level-triggered IOAPIC interrupt. This exit only triggers when the
3867IOAPIC is implemented in userspace (i.e. KVM_CAP_SPLIT_IRQCHIP is enabled);
3868the userspace IOAPIC should process the EOI and retrigger the interrupt if
3869it is still asserted. Vector is the LAPIC interrupt vector for which the
3870EOI was received.
3871
db397571
AS
3872 struct kvm_hyperv_exit {
3873#define KVM_EXIT_HYPERV_SYNIC 1
83326e43 3874#define KVM_EXIT_HYPERV_HCALL 2
db397571
AS
3875 __u32 type;
3876 union {
3877 struct {
3878 __u32 msr;
3879 __u64 control;
3880 __u64 evt_page;
3881 __u64 msg_page;
3882 } synic;
83326e43
AS
3883 struct {
3884 __u64 input;
3885 __u64 result;
3886 __u64 params[2];
3887 } hcall;
db397571
AS
3888 } u;
3889 };
3890 /* KVM_EXIT_HYPERV */
3891 struct kvm_hyperv_exit hyperv;
3892Indicates that the VCPU exits into userspace to process some tasks
3893related to Hyper-V emulation.
3894Valid values for 'type' are:
3895 KVM_EXIT_HYPERV_SYNIC -- synchronously notify user-space about
3896Hyper-V SynIC state change. Notification is used to remap SynIC
3897event/message pages and to enable/disable SynIC messages/events processing
3898in userspace.
3899
9c1b96e3
AK
3900 /* Fix the size of the union. */
3901 char padding[256];
3902 };
b9e5dc8d
CB
3903
3904 /*
3905 * shared registers between kvm and userspace.
3906 * kvm_valid_regs specifies the register classes set by the host
3907 * kvm_dirty_regs specified the register classes dirtied by userspace
3908 * struct kvm_sync_regs is architecture specific, as well as the
3909 * bits for kvm_valid_regs and kvm_dirty_regs
3910 */
3911 __u64 kvm_valid_regs;
3912 __u64 kvm_dirty_regs;
3913 union {
3914 struct kvm_sync_regs regs;
7b7e3952 3915 char padding[SYNC_REGS_SIZE_BYTES];
b9e5dc8d
CB
3916 } s;
3917
3918If KVM_CAP_SYNC_REGS is defined, these fields allow userspace to access
3919certain guest registers without having to call SET/GET_*REGS. Thus we can
3920avoid some system call overhead if userspace has to handle the exit.
3921Userspace can query the validity of the structure by checking
3922kvm_valid_regs for specific bits. These bits are architecture specific
3923and usually define the validity of a groups of registers. (e.g. one bit
3924 for general purpose registers)
3925
d8482c0d
DH
3926Please note that the kernel is allowed to use the kvm_run structure as the
3927primary storage for certain register types. Therefore, the kernel may use the
3928values in kvm_run even if the corresponding bit in kvm_dirty_regs is not set.
3929
9c1b96e3 3930};
821246a5 3931
414fa985 3932
9c15bb1d 3933
699a0ea0
PM
39346. Capabilities that can be enabled on vCPUs
3935--------------------------------------------
821246a5 3936
0907c855
CH
3937There are certain capabilities that change the behavior of the virtual CPU or
3938the virtual machine when enabled. To enable them, please see section 4.37.
3939Below you can find a list of capabilities and what their effect on the vCPU or
3940the virtual machine is when enabling them.
821246a5
AG
3941
3942The following information is provided along with the description:
3943
3944 Architectures: which instruction set architectures provide this ioctl.
3945 x86 includes both i386 and x86_64.
3946
0907c855
CH
3947 Target: whether this is a per-vcpu or per-vm capability.
3948
821246a5
AG
3949 Parameters: what parameters are accepted by the capability.
3950
3951 Returns: the return value. General error numbers (EBADF, ENOMEM, EINVAL)
3952 are not detailed, but errors with specific meanings are.
3953
414fa985 3954
821246a5
AG
39556.1 KVM_CAP_PPC_OSI
3956
3957Architectures: ppc
0907c855 3958Target: vcpu
821246a5
AG
3959Parameters: none
3960Returns: 0 on success; -1 on error
3961
3962This capability enables interception of OSI hypercalls that otherwise would
3963be treated as normal system calls to be injected into the guest. OSI hypercalls
3964were invented by Mac-on-Linux to have a standardized communication mechanism
3965between the guest and the host.
3966
3967When this capability is enabled, KVM_EXIT_OSI can occur.
3968
414fa985 3969
821246a5
AG
39706.2 KVM_CAP_PPC_PAPR
3971
3972Architectures: ppc
0907c855 3973Target: vcpu
821246a5
AG
3974Parameters: none
3975Returns: 0 on success; -1 on error
3976
3977This capability enables interception of PAPR hypercalls. PAPR hypercalls are
3978done using the hypercall instruction "sc 1".
3979
3980It also sets the guest privilege level to "supervisor" mode. Usually the guest
3981runs in "hypervisor" privilege mode with a few missing features.
3982
3983In addition to the above, it changes the semantics of SDR1. In this mode, the
3984HTAB address part of SDR1 contains an HVA instead of a GPA, as PAPR keeps the
3985HTAB invisible to the guest.
3986
3987When this capability is enabled, KVM_EXIT_PAPR_HCALL can occur.
dc83b8bc 3988
414fa985 3989
dc83b8bc
SW
39906.3 KVM_CAP_SW_TLB
3991
3992Architectures: ppc
0907c855 3993Target: vcpu
dc83b8bc
SW
3994Parameters: args[0] is the address of a struct kvm_config_tlb
3995Returns: 0 on success; -1 on error
3996
3997struct kvm_config_tlb {
3998 __u64 params;
3999 __u64 array;
4000 __u32 mmu_type;
4001 __u32 array_len;
4002};
4003
4004Configures the virtual CPU's TLB array, establishing a shared memory area
4005between userspace and KVM. The "params" and "array" fields are userspace
4006addresses of mmu-type-specific data structures. The "array_len" field is an
4007safety mechanism, and should be set to the size in bytes of the memory that
4008userspace has reserved for the array. It must be at least the size dictated
4009by "mmu_type" and "params".
4010
4011While KVM_RUN is active, the shared region is under control of KVM. Its
4012contents are undefined, and any modification by userspace results in
4013boundedly undefined behavior.
4014
4015On return from KVM_RUN, the shared region will reflect the current state of
4016the guest's TLB. If userspace makes any changes, it must call KVM_DIRTY_TLB
4017to tell KVM which entries have been changed, prior to calling KVM_RUN again
4018on this vcpu.
4019
4020For mmu types KVM_MMU_FSL_BOOKE_NOHV and KVM_MMU_FSL_BOOKE_HV:
4021 - The "params" field is of type "struct kvm_book3e_206_tlb_params".
4022 - The "array" field points to an array of type "struct
4023 kvm_book3e_206_tlb_entry".
4024 - The array consists of all entries in the first TLB, followed by all
4025 entries in the second TLB.
4026 - Within a TLB, entries are ordered first by increasing set number. Within a
4027 set, entries are ordered by way (increasing ESEL).
4028 - The hash for determining set number in TLB0 is: (MAS2 >> 12) & (num_sets - 1)
4029 where "num_sets" is the tlb_sizes[] value divided by the tlb_ways[] value.
4030 - The tsize field of mas1 shall be set to 4K on TLB0, even though the
4031 hardware ignores this value for TLB0.
fa6b7fe9
CH
4032
40336.4 KVM_CAP_S390_CSS_SUPPORT
4034
4035Architectures: s390
0907c855 4036Target: vcpu
fa6b7fe9
CH
4037Parameters: none
4038Returns: 0 on success; -1 on error
4039
4040This capability enables support for handling of channel I/O instructions.
4041
4042TEST PENDING INTERRUPTION and the interrupt portion of TEST SUBCHANNEL are
4043handled in-kernel, while the other I/O instructions are passed to userspace.
4044
4045When this capability is enabled, KVM_EXIT_S390_TSCH will occur on TEST
4046SUBCHANNEL intercepts.
1c810636 4047
0907c855
CH
4048Note that even though this capability is enabled per-vcpu, the complete
4049virtual machine is affected.
4050
1c810636
AG
40516.5 KVM_CAP_PPC_EPR
4052
4053Architectures: ppc
0907c855 4054Target: vcpu
1c810636
AG
4055Parameters: args[0] defines whether the proxy facility is active
4056Returns: 0 on success; -1 on error
4057
4058This capability enables or disables the delivery of interrupts through the
4059external proxy facility.
4060
4061When enabled (args[0] != 0), every time the guest gets an external interrupt
4062delivered, it automatically exits into user space with a KVM_EXIT_EPR exit
4063to receive the topmost interrupt vector.
4064
4065When disabled (args[0] == 0), behavior is as if this facility is unsupported.
4066
4067When this capability is enabled, KVM_EXIT_EPR can occur.
eb1e4f43
SW
4068
40696.6 KVM_CAP_IRQ_MPIC
4070
4071Architectures: ppc
4072Parameters: args[0] is the MPIC device fd
4073 args[1] is the MPIC CPU number for this vcpu
4074
4075This capability connects the vcpu to an in-kernel MPIC device.
5975a2e0
PM
4076
40776.7 KVM_CAP_IRQ_XICS
4078
4079Architectures: ppc
0907c855 4080Target: vcpu
5975a2e0
PM
4081Parameters: args[0] is the XICS device fd
4082 args[1] is the XICS CPU number (server ID) for this vcpu
4083
4084This capability connects the vcpu to an in-kernel XICS device.
8a366a4b
CH
4085
40866.8 KVM_CAP_S390_IRQCHIP
4087
4088Architectures: s390
4089Target: vm
4090Parameters: none
4091
4092This capability enables the in-kernel irqchip for s390. Please refer to
4093"4.24 KVM_CREATE_IRQCHIP" for details.
699a0ea0 4094
5fafd874
JH
40956.9 KVM_CAP_MIPS_FPU
4096
4097Architectures: mips
4098Target: vcpu
4099Parameters: args[0] is reserved for future use (should be 0).
4100
4101This capability allows the use of the host Floating Point Unit by the guest. It
4102allows the Config1.FP bit to be set to enable the FPU in the guest. Once this is
4103done the KVM_REG_MIPS_FPR_* and KVM_REG_MIPS_FCR_* registers can be accessed
4104(depending on the current guest FPU register mode), and the Status.FR,
4105Config5.FRE bits are accessible via the KVM API and also from the guest,
4106depending on them being supported by the FPU.
4107
d952bd07
JH
41086.10 KVM_CAP_MIPS_MSA
4109
4110Architectures: mips
4111Target: vcpu
4112Parameters: args[0] is reserved for future use (should be 0).
4113
4114This capability allows the use of the MIPS SIMD Architecture (MSA) by the guest.
4115It allows the Config3.MSAP bit to be set to enable the use of MSA by the guest.
4116Once this is done the KVM_REG_MIPS_VEC_* and KVM_REG_MIPS_MSA_* registers can be
4117accessed, and the Config5.MSAEn bit is accessible via the KVM API and also from
4118the guest.
4119
01643c51
KH
41206.74 KVM_CAP_SYNC_REGS
4121Architectures: s390, x86
4122Target: s390: always enabled, x86: vcpu
4123Parameters: none
4124Returns: x86: KVM_CHECK_EXTENSION returns a bit-array indicating which register
4125sets are supported (bitfields defined in arch/x86/include/uapi/asm/kvm.h).
4126
4127As described above in the kvm_sync_regs struct info in section 5 (kvm_run):
4128KVM_CAP_SYNC_REGS "allow[s] userspace to access certain guest registers
4129without having to call SET/GET_*REGS". This reduces overhead by eliminating
4130repeated ioctl calls for setting and/or getting register values. This is
4131particularly important when userspace is making synchronous guest state
4132modifications, e.g. when emulating and/or intercepting instructions in
4133userspace.
4134
4135For s390 specifics, please refer to the source code.
4136
4137For x86:
4138- the register sets to be copied out to kvm_run are selectable
4139 by userspace (rather that all sets being copied out for every exit).
4140- vcpu_events are available in addition to regs and sregs.
4141
4142For x86, the 'kvm_valid_regs' field of struct kvm_run is overloaded to
4143function as an input bit-array field set by userspace to indicate the
4144specific register sets to be copied out on the next exit.
4145
4146To indicate when userspace has modified values that should be copied into
4147the vCPU, the all architecture bitarray field, 'kvm_dirty_regs' must be set.
4148This is done using the same bitflags as for the 'kvm_valid_regs' field.
4149If the dirty bit is not set, then the register set values will not be copied
4150into the vCPU even if they've been modified.
4151
4152Unused bitfields in the bitarrays must be set to zero.
4153
4154struct kvm_sync_regs {
4155 struct kvm_regs regs;
4156 struct kvm_sregs sregs;
4157 struct kvm_vcpu_events events;
4158};
4159
699a0ea0
PM
41607. Capabilities that can be enabled on VMs
4161------------------------------------------
4162
4163There are certain capabilities that change the behavior of the virtual
4164machine when enabled. To enable them, please see section 4.37. Below
4165you can find a list of capabilities and what their effect on the VM
4166is when enabling them.
4167
4168The following information is provided along with the description:
4169
4170 Architectures: which instruction set architectures provide this ioctl.
4171 x86 includes both i386 and x86_64.
4172
4173 Parameters: what parameters are accepted by the capability.
4174
4175 Returns: the return value. General error numbers (EBADF, ENOMEM, EINVAL)
4176 are not detailed, but errors with specific meanings are.
4177
4178
41797.1 KVM_CAP_PPC_ENABLE_HCALL
4180
4181Architectures: ppc
4182Parameters: args[0] is the sPAPR hcall number
4183 args[1] is 0 to disable, 1 to enable in-kernel handling
4184
4185This capability controls whether individual sPAPR hypercalls (hcalls)
4186get handled by the kernel or not. Enabling or disabling in-kernel
4187handling of an hcall is effective across the VM. On creation, an
4188initial set of hcalls are enabled for in-kernel handling, which
4189consists of those hcalls for which in-kernel handlers were implemented
4190before this capability was implemented. If disabled, the kernel will
4191not to attempt to handle the hcall, but will always exit to userspace
4192to handle it. Note that it may not make sense to enable some and
4193disable others of a group of related hcalls, but KVM does not prevent
4194userspace from doing that.
ae2113a4
PM
4195
4196If the hcall number specified is not one that has an in-kernel
4197implementation, the KVM_ENABLE_CAP ioctl will fail with an EINVAL
4198error.
2444b352
DH
4199
42007.2 KVM_CAP_S390_USER_SIGP
4201
4202Architectures: s390
4203Parameters: none
4204
4205This capability controls which SIGP orders will be handled completely in user
4206space. With this capability enabled, all fast orders will be handled completely
4207in the kernel:
4208- SENSE
4209- SENSE RUNNING
4210- EXTERNAL CALL
4211- EMERGENCY SIGNAL
4212- CONDITIONAL EMERGENCY SIGNAL
4213
4214All other orders will be handled completely in user space.
4215
4216Only privileged operation exceptions will be checked for in the kernel (or even
4217in the hardware prior to interception). If this capability is not enabled, the
4218old way of handling SIGP orders is used (partially in kernel and user space).
68c55750
EF
4219
42207.3 KVM_CAP_S390_VECTOR_REGISTERS
4221
4222Architectures: s390
4223Parameters: none
4224Returns: 0 on success, negative value on error
4225
4226Allows use of the vector registers introduced with z13 processor, and
4227provides for the synchronization between host and user space. Will
4228return -EINVAL if the machine does not support vectors.
e44fc8c9
ET
4229
42307.4 KVM_CAP_S390_USER_STSI
4231
4232Architectures: s390
4233Parameters: none
4234
4235This capability allows post-handlers for the STSI instruction. After
4236initial handling in the kernel, KVM exits to user space with
4237KVM_EXIT_S390_STSI to allow user space to insert further data.
4238
4239Before exiting to userspace, kvm handlers should fill in s390_stsi field of
4240vcpu->run:
4241struct {
4242 __u64 addr;
4243 __u8 ar;
4244 __u8 reserved;
4245 __u8 fc;
4246 __u8 sel1;
4247 __u16 sel2;
4248} s390_stsi;
4249
4250@addr - guest address of STSI SYSIB
4251@fc - function code
4252@sel1 - selector 1
4253@sel2 - selector 2
4254@ar - access register number
4255
4256KVM handlers should exit to userspace with rc = -EREMOTE.
e928e9cb 4257
49df6397
SR
42587.5 KVM_CAP_SPLIT_IRQCHIP
4259
4260Architectures: x86
b053b2ae 4261Parameters: args[0] - number of routes reserved for userspace IOAPICs
49df6397
SR
4262Returns: 0 on success, -1 on error
4263
4264Create a local apic for each processor in the kernel. This can be used
4265instead of KVM_CREATE_IRQCHIP if the userspace VMM wishes to emulate the
4266IOAPIC and PIC (and also the PIT, even though this has to be enabled
4267separately).
4268
b053b2ae
SR
4269This capability also enables in kernel routing of interrupt requests;
4270when KVM_CAP_SPLIT_IRQCHIP only routes of KVM_IRQ_ROUTING_MSI type are
4271used in the IRQ routing table. The first args[0] MSI routes are reserved
4272for the IOAPIC pins. Whenever the LAPIC receives an EOI for these routes,
4273a KVM_EXIT_IOAPIC_EOI vmexit will be reported to userspace.
49df6397
SR
4274
4275Fails if VCPU has already been created, or if the irqchip is already in the
4276kernel (i.e. KVM_CREATE_IRQCHIP has already been called).
4277
051c87f7
DH
42787.6 KVM_CAP_S390_RI
4279
4280Architectures: s390
4281Parameters: none
4282
4283Allows use of runtime-instrumentation introduced with zEC12 processor.
4284Will return -EINVAL if the machine does not support runtime-instrumentation.
4285Will return -EBUSY if a VCPU has already been created.
e928e9cb 4286
37131313
RK
42877.7 KVM_CAP_X2APIC_API
4288
4289Architectures: x86
4290Parameters: args[0] - features that should be enabled
4291Returns: 0 on success, -EINVAL when args[0] contains invalid features
4292
4293Valid feature flags in args[0] are
4294
4295#define KVM_X2APIC_API_USE_32BIT_IDS (1ULL << 0)
c519265f 4296#define KVM_X2APIC_API_DISABLE_BROADCAST_QUIRK (1ULL << 1)
37131313
RK
4297
4298Enabling KVM_X2APIC_API_USE_32BIT_IDS changes the behavior of
4299KVM_SET_GSI_ROUTING, KVM_SIGNAL_MSI, KVM_SET_LAPIC, and KVM_GET_LAPIC,
4300allowing the use of 32-bit APIC IDs. See KVM_CAP_X2APIC_API in their
4301respective sections.
4302
c519265f
RK
4303KVM_X2APIC_API_DISABLE_BROADCAST_QUIRK must be enabled for x2APIC to work
4304in logical mode or with more than 255 VCPUs. Otherwise, KVM treats 0xff
4305as a broadcast even in x2APIC mode in order to support physical x2APIC
4306without interrupt remapping. This is undesirable in logical mode,
4307where 0xff represents CPUs 0-7 in cluster 0.
37131313 4308
6502a34c
DH
43097.8 KVM_CAP_S390_USER_INSTR0
4310
4311Architectures: s390
4312Parameters: none
4313
4314With this capability enabled, all illegal instructions 0x0000 (2 bytes) will
4315be intercepted and forwarded to user space. User space can use this
4316mechanism e.g. to realize 2-byte software breakpoints. The kernel will
4317not inject an operating exception for these instructions, user space has
4318to take care of that.
4319
4320This capability can be enabled dynamically even if VCPUs were already
4321created and are running.
37131313 4322
4e0b1ab7
FZ
43237.9 KVM_CAP_S390_GS
4324
4325Architectures: s390
4326Parameters: none
4327Returns: 0 on success; -EINVAL if the machine does not support
4328 guarded storage; -EBUSY if a VCPU has already been created.
4329
4330Allows use of guarded storage for the KVM guest.
4331
47a4693e
YMZ
43327.10 KVM_CAP_S390_AIS
4333
4334Architectures: s390
4335Parameters: none
4336
4337Allow use of adapter-interruption suppression.
4338Returns: 0 on success; -EBUSY if a VCPU has already been created.
4339
3c313524
PM
43407.11 KVM_CAP_PPC_SMT
4341
4342Architectures: ppc
4343Parameters: vsmt_mode, flags
4344
4345Enabling this capability on a VM provides userspace with a way to set
4346the desired virtual SMT mode (i.e. the number of virtual CPUs per
4347virtual core). The virtual SMT mode, vsmt_mode, must be a power of 2
4348between 1 and 8. On POWER8, vsmt_mode must also be no greater than
4349the number of threads per subcore for the host. Currently flags must
4350be 0. A successful call to enable this capability will result in
4351vsmt_mode being returned when the KVM_CAP_PPC_SMT capability is
4352subsequently queried for the VM. This capability is only supported by
4353HV KVM, and can only be set before any VCPUs have been created.
2ed4f9dd
PM
4354The KVM_CAP_PPC_SMT_POSSIBLE capability indicates which virtual SMT
4355modes are available.
3c313524 4356
134764ed
AP
43577.12 KVM_CAP_PPC_FWNMI
4358
4359Architectures: ppc
4360Parameters: none
4361
4362With this capability a machine check exception in the guest address
4363space will cause KVM to exit the guest with NMI exit reason. This
4364enables QEMU to build error log and branch to guest kernel registered
4365machine check handling routine. Without this capability KVM will
4366branch to guests' 0x200 interrupt vector.
4367
4d5422ce
WL
43687.13 KVM_CAP_X86_DISABLE_EXITS
4369
4370Architectures: x86
4371Parameters: args[0] defines which exits are disabled
4372Returns: 0 on success, -EINVAL when args[0] contains invalid exits
4373
4374Valid bits in args[0] are
4375
4376#define KVM_X86_DISABLE_EXITS_MWAIT (1 << 0)
caa057a2 4377#define KVM_X86_DISABLE_EXITS_HLT (1 << 1)
4d5422ce
WL
4378
4379Enabling this capability on a VM provides userspace with a way to no
4380longer intercept some instructions for improved latency in some
4381workloads, and is suggested when vCPUs are associated to dedicated
4382physical CPUs. More bits can be added in the future; userspace can
4383just pass the KVM_CHECK_EXTENSION result to KVM_ENABLE_CAP to disable
4384all such vmexits.
4385
caa057a2 4386Do not enable KVM_FEATURE_PV_UNHALT if you disable HLT exits.
4d5422ce 4387
e928e9cb
ME
43888. Other capabilities.
4389----------------------
4390
4391This section lists capabilities that give information about other
4392features of the KVM implementation.
4393
43948.1 KVM_CAP_PPC_HWRNG
4395
4396Architectures: ppc
4397
4398This capability, if KVM_CHECK_EXTENSION indicates that it is
4399available, means that that the kernel has an implementation of the
4400H_RANDOM hypercall backed by a hardware random-number generator.
4401If present, the kernel H_RANDOM handler can be enabled for guest use
4402with the KVM_CAP_PPC_ENABLE_HCALL capability.
5c919412
AS
4403
44048.2 KVM_CAP_HYPERV_SYNIC
4405
4406Architectures: x86
4407This capability, if KVM_CHECK_EXTENSION indicates that it is
4408available, means that that the kernel has an implementation of the
4409Hyper-V Synthetic interrupt controller(SynIC). Hyper-V SynIC is
4410used to support Windows Hyper-V based guest paravirt drivers(VMBus).
4411
4412In order to use SynIC, it has to be activated by setting this
4413capability via KVM_ENABLE_CAP ioctl on the vcpu fd. Note that this
4414will disable the use of APIC hardware virtualization even if supported
4415by the CPU, as it's incompatible with SynIC auto-EOI behavior.
c9270132
PM
4416
44178.3 KVM_CAP_PPC_RADIX_MMU
4418
4419Architectures: ppc
4420
4421This capability, if KVM_CHECK_EXTENSION indicates that it is
4422available, means that that the kernel can support guests using the
4423radix MMU defined in Power ISA V3.00 (as implemented in the POWER9
4424processor).
4425
44268.4 KVM_CAP_PPC_HASH_MMU_V3
4427
4428Architectures: ppc
4429
4430This capability, if KVM_CHECK_EXTENSION indicates that it is
4431available, means that that the kernel can support guests using the
4432hashed page table MMU defined in Power ISA V3.00 (as implemented in
4433the POWER9 processor), including in-memory segment tables.
a8a3c426
JH
4434
44358.5 KVM_CAP_MIPS_VZ
4436
4437Architectures: mips
4438
4439This capability, if KVM_CHECK_EXTENSION on the main kvm handle indicates that
4440it is available, means that full hardware assisted virtualization capabilities
4441of the hardware are available for use through KVM. An appropriate
4442KVM_VM_MIPS_* type must be passed to KVM_CREATE_VM to create a VM which
4443utilises it.
4444
4445If KVM_CHECK_EXTENSION on a kvm VM handle indicates that this capability is
4446available, it means that the VM is using full hardware assisted virtualization
4447capabilities of the hardware. This is useful to check after creating a VM with
4448KVM_VM_MIPS_DEFAULT.
4449
4450The value returned by KVM_CHECK_EXTENSION should be compared against known
4451values (see below). All other values are reserved. This is to allow for the
4452possibility of other hardware assisted virtualization implementations which
4453may be incompatible with the MIPS VZ ASE.
4454
4455 0: The trap & emulate implementation is in use to run guest code in user
4456 mode. Guest virtual memory segments are rearranged to fit the guest in the
4457 user mode address space.
4458
4459 1: The MIPS VZ ASE is in use, providing full hardware assisted
4460 virtualization, including standard guest virtual memory segments.
4461
44628.6 KVM_CAP_MIPS_TE
4463
4464Architectures: mips
4465
4466This capability, if KVM_CHECK_EXTENSION on the main kvm handle indicates that
4467it is available, means that the trap & emulate implementation is available to
4468run guest code in user mode, even if KVM_CAP_MIPS_VZ indicates that hardware
4469assisted virtualisation is also available. KVM_VM_MIPS_TE (0) must be passed
4470to KVM_CREATE_VM to create a VM which utilises it.
4471
4472If KVM_CHECK_EXTENSION on a kvm VM handle indicates that this capability is
4473available, it means that the VM is using trap & emulate.
578fd61d
JH
4474
44758.7 KVM_CAP_MIPS_64BIT
4476
4477Architectures: mips
4478
4479This capability indicates the supported architecture type of the guest, i.e. the
4480supported register and address width.
4481
4482The values returned when this capability is checked by KVM_CHECK_EXTENSION on a
4483kvm VM handle correspond roughly to the CP0_Config.AT register field, and should
4484be checked specifically against known values (see below). All other values are
4485reserved.
4486
4487 0: MIPS32 or microMIPS32.
4488 Both registers and addresses are 32-bits wide.
4489 It will only be possible to run 32-bit guest code.
4490
4491 1: MIPS64 or microMIPS64 with access only to 32-bit compatibility segments.
4492 Registers are 64-bits wide, but addresses are 32-bits wide.
4493 64-bit guest code may run but cannot access MIPS64 memory segments.
4494 It will also be possible to run 32-bit guest code.
4495
4496 2: MIPS64 or microMIPS64 with access to all address segments.
4497 Both registers and addresses are 64-bits wide.
4498 It will be possible to run 64-bit or 32-bit guest code.
668fffa3 4499
c24a7be2 45008.9 KVM_CAP_ARM_USER_IRQ
3fe17e68
AG
4501
4502Architectures: arm, arm64
4503This capability, if KVM_CHECK_EXTENSION indicates that it is available, means
4504that if userspace creates a VM without an in-kernel interrupt controller, it
4505will be notified of changes to the output level of in-kernel emulated devices,
4506which can generate virtual interrupts, presented to the VM.
4507For such VMs, on every return to userspace, the kernel
4508updates the vcpu's run->s.regs.device_irq_level field to represent the actual
4509output level of the device.
4510
4511Whenever kvm detects a change in the device output level, kvm guarantees at
4512least one return to userspace before running the VM. This exit could either
4513be a KVM_EXIT_INTR or any other exit event, like KVM_EXIT_MMIO. This way,
4514userspace can always sample the device output level and re-compute the state of
4515the userspace interrupt controller. Userspace should always check the state
4516of run->s.regs.device_irq_level on every kvm exit.
4517The value in run->s.regs.device_irq_level can represent both level and edge
4518triggered interrupt signals, depending on the device. Edge triggered interrupt
4519signals will exit to userspace with the bit in run->s.regs.device_irq_level
4520set exactly once per edge signal.
4521
4522The field run->s.regs.device_irq_level is available independent of
4523run->kvm_valid_regs or run->kvm_dirty_regs bits.
4524
4525If KVM_CAP_ARM_USER_IRQ is supported, the KVM_CHECK_EXTENSION ioctl returns a
4526number larger than 0 indicating the version of this capability is implemented
4527and thereby which bits in in run->s.regs.device_irq_level can signal values.
4528
4529Currently the following bits are defined for the device_irq_level bitmap:
4530
4531 KVM_CAP_ARM_USER_IRQ >= 1:
4532
4533 KVM_ARM_DEV_EL1_VTIMER - EL1 virtual timer
4534 KVM_ARM_DEV_EL1_PTIMER - EL1 physical timer
4535 KVM_ARM_DEV_PMU - ARM PMU overflow interrupt signal
4536
4537Future versions of kvm may implement additional events. These will get
4538indicated by returning a higher number from KVM_CHECK_EXTENSION and will be
4539listed above.
2ed4f9dd
PM
4540
45418.10 KVM_CAP_PPC_SMT_POSSIBLE
4542
4543Architectures: ppc
4544
4545Querying this capability returns a bitmap indicating the possible
4546virtual SMT modes that can be set using KVM_CAP_PPC_SMT. If bit N
4547(counting from the right) is set, then a virtual SMT mode of 2^N is
4548available.
efc479e6
RK
4549
45508.11 KVM_CAP_HYPERV_SYNIC2
4551
4552Architectures: x86
4553
4554This capability enables a newer version of Hyper-V Synthetic interrupt
4555controller (SynIC). The only difference with KVM_CAP_HYPERV_SYNIC is that KVM
4556doesn't clear SynIC message and event flags pages when they are enabled by
4557writing to the respective MSRs.
d3457c87
RK
4558
45598.12 KVM_CAP_HYPERV_VP_INDEX
4560
4561Architectures: x86
4562
4563This capability indicates that userspace can load HV_X64_MSR_VP_INDEX msr. Its
4564value is used to denote the target vcpu for a SynIC interrupt. For
4565compatibilty, KVM initializes this msr to KVM's internal vcpu index. When this
4566capability is absent, userspace can still query this msr's value.
da9a1446
CB
4567
45688.13 KVM_CAP_S390_AIS_MIGRATION
4569
4570Architectures: s390
4571Parameters: none
4572
4573This capability indicates if the flic device will be able to get/set the
4574AIS states for migration via the KVM_DEV_FLIC_AISM_ALL attribute and allows
4575to discover this without having to create a flic device.
5c2b4d5b
CB
4576
45778.14 KVM_CAP_S390_PSW
4578
4579Architectures: s390
4580
4581This capability indicates that the PSW is exposed via the kvm_run structure.
4582
45838.15 KVM_CAP_S390_GMAP
4584
4585Architectures: s390
4586
4587This capability indicates that the user space memory used as guest mapping can
4588be anywhere in the user memory address space, as long as the memory slots are
4589aligned and sized to a segment (1MB) boundary.
4590
45918.16 KVM_CAP_S390_COW
4592
4593Architectures: s390
4594
4595This capability indicates that the user space memory used as guest mapping can
4596use copy-on-write semantics as well as dirty pages tracking via read-only page
4597tables.
4598
45998.17 KVM_CAP_S390_BPB
4600
4601Architectures: s390
4602
4603This capability indicates that kvm will implement the interfaces to handle
4604reset, migration and nested KVM for branch prediction blocking. The stfle
4605facility 82 should not be provided to the guest without this capability.
c1aea919
VK
4606
46078.14 KVM_CAP_HYPERV_TLBFLUSH
4608
4609Architectures: x86
4610
4611This capability indicates that KVM supports paravirtualized Hyper-V TLB Flush
4612hypercalls:
4613HvFlushVirtualAddressSpace, HvFlushVirtualAddressSpaceEx,
4614HvFlushVirtualAddressList, HvFlushVirtualAddressListEx.