From: Jeremy Fitzhardinge <jeremy@goop.org>
To: Ritu kaur <ritu.kaur.us@gmail.com>
Cc: "xen-devel@lists.xensource.com" <xen-devel@lists.xensource.com>,
Ian Campbell <Ian.Campbell@citrix.com>
Subject: Re: modifying drivers
Date: Fri, 19 Feb 2010 16:22:12 -0800 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <4B7F2B34.6040608@goop.org> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <29b32d341002191430q4261fd32y8b6834125c0ca04@mail.gmail.com>
On 02/19/2010 02:30 PM, Ritu kaur wrote:
> Thanks for the clarification. In our team meeting we decided to drop
> netback changes to support exclusive access and go with xe command
> line or xencenter way to do it(We are using Citrix Xenserver). Had
> couple of follow-up questions related to Xen.
>
> 1.Is it correct that netfront driver(or any *front driver) has to be
> explicitly integrated or compiled in the guest OS? the reason I ask
> this is,
An HVM domain can be completely unmodified, but it will be using
emulated hardware devices with its normal drivers.
> a. In the documents I have read, it mentions guest OS can run without
> any modification, however, if above is true we have to make sure guest
> OS we use are compiled with the relevant *front drivers.
An HVM domain can use PV drivers to optimise its IO path by bypassing
the emulated devices and talking directly to the backends. PV domains
always use PV drivers (but they've already been modified).
> b. we had done some changes to netback and netfront(as mentioned in
> the previous email), when compiling kernel for dom0 it includes both
> netfront and netback and assumed via some mechanism this netfront
> driver would be integrated/installed into guest domains when they are
> installed.
No. A dom0 kernel doesn't have much use for frontends. They're usually
present because a given kernel can run in either the dom0 or domU roles.
> 2. Any front or back driver communication is via xenbus only?
Xenbus is used to pass small amounts of control/status/config
information between front and backends. Bulk data transfer is usually
handled with shared pages containing ring buffers, and event channels
for event signalling.
> 3. Supporting ioctl calls. Our driver has ioctl support to read/write
> hardware registers and one solution was to use pci passthrough
> mechanism, however, it binds the NIC to a specific domU and we do not
> want that. We would like to have multiple users access to hw
> registers(mainly stats and other stuff) via guest domains and be able
> to access them simultaneously. For this, we decided to go with the
> mechanism of shared memory/event channel similar to front and back
> drivers. Can you please provide some inputs on this?
It's hard to make any suggestions without knowing what your hardware is
or what the use-cases are for these ioctls. Are you saying that you
want to give multiple domUs direct unrestricted (read only?) access to
the same set of registers? What kind of stats? Do guests need to read
them at a very high rate, or could they fetch accumulated results at a
lower rate?
J
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2010-02-20 0:22 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 14+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2010-02-18 16:27 modifying drivers Ritu kaur
2010-02-18 16:39 ` Ian Campbell
2010-02-19 0:03 ` Ritu kaur
2010-02-19 9:07 ` Ian Campbell
2010-02-19 17:12 ` Ritu kaur
2010-02-19 17:24 ` Ian Campbell
2010-02-19 22:30 ` Ritu kaur
2010-02-20 0:22 ` Jeremy Fitzhardinge [this message]
2010-02-20 2:15 ` Ritu kaur
2010-02-20 3:03 ` Ritu kaur
2010-02-21 13:03 ` Problems with Xen 4.0-rc4 forcedeth driver / Regression? Carsten Schiers
2010-02-20 7:29 ` modifying drivers Daniel Stodden
2010-02-20 11:58 ` Pasi Kärkkäinen
2010-02-20 23:10 ` Ritu kaur
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