* GTX 760 passed through
@ 2013-12-02 12:18 Nvidia Reverse
2013-12-02 16:12 ` Gordan Bobic
0 siblings, 1 reply; 7+ messages in thread
From: Nvidia Reverse @ 2013-12-02 12:18 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: xen-devel
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Hello,
I've successfully passed a unmodified GTX 760 to Win7 x64. It involved some
driver patching on the client side but I'm close to getting the required
steps on the server side, too. Are there any legal issues that might arise
from releasing a patch?
Bob
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* Re: GTX 760 passed through
2013-12-02 12:18 GTX 760 passed through Nvidia Reverse
@ 2013-12-02 16:12 ` Gordan Bobic
2013-12-02 17:36 ` Nvidia Reverse
0 siblings, 1 reply; 7+ messages in thread
From: Gordan Bobic @ 2013-12-02 16:12 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Nvidia Reverse; +Cc: xen-devel
On Mon, 2 Dec 2013 13:18:22 +0100, Nvidia Reverse
<aidivnreverse@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hello,
> I've successfully passed a unmodified GTX 760 to Win7 x64. It
> involved
> some driver patching on the client side but I'm close to getting the
> required steps on the server side, too. Are there any legal issues
> that might arise from releasing a patch?
Considering we have everything up to and including a Titan/780 easily
modifiable into Quadros/Teslas/Grids to make them work? :)
I for one would welcome not having to break out my soldering iron.
When you say driver patching, what are we talking about? Unless
something changed very recently, just modifying the .inf file
isn't sufficient (unless your server-side patch does some
device ID faking - which it probably doesn't since the card
is still showing up as a 780 in domU).
Gordan
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* Re: GTX 760 passed through
2013-12-02 16:12 ` Gordan Bobic
@ 2013-12-02 17:36 ` Nvidia Reverse
2013-12-02 20:16 ` Konrad Rzeszutek Wilk
0 siblings, 1 reply; 7+ messages in thread
From: Nvidia Reverse @ 2013-12-02 17:36 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Gordan Bobic; +Cc: xen-devel
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The nvlddmkm.sys needs to be patched removing the whitelist for the device
ids allowed to be virtualized.
But the interesting part is how NVIDIA detects that the GPU is
virtualized...
On Mon, Dec 2, 2013 at 5:12 PM, Gordan Bobic <gordan@bobich.net> wrote:
> On Mon, 2 Dec 2013 13:18:22 +0100, Nvidia Reverse <aidivnreverse@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>> Hello,
>> I've successfully passed a unmodified GTX 760 to Win7 x64. It involved
>> some driver patching on the client side but I'm close to getting the
>> required steps on the server side, too. Are there any legal issues
>> that might arise from releasing a patch?
>>
>
> Considering we have everything up to and including a Titan/780 easily
> modifiable into Quadros/Teslas/Grids to make them work? :)
>
> I for one would welcome not having to break out my soldering iron.
>
> When you say driver patching, what are we talking about? Unless
> something changed very recently, just modifying the .inf file
> isn't sufficient (unless your server-side patch does some
> device ID faking - which it probably doesn't since the card
> is still showing up as a 780 in domU).
>
> Gordan
>
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* Re: GTX 760 passed through
2013-12-02 17:36 ` Nvidia Reverse
@ 2013-12-02 20:16 ` Konrad Rzeszutek Wilk
2013-12-02 21:04 ` Gordan Bobic
0 siblings, 1 reply; 7+ messages in thread
From: Konrad Rzeszutek Wilk @ 2013-12-02 20:16 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Nvidia Reverse; +Cc: Gordan Bobic, xen-devel
On Mon, Dec 02, 2013 at 06:36:48PM +0100, Nvidia Reverse wrote:
> The nvlddmkm.sys needs to be patched removing the whitelist for the device
> ids allowed to be virtualized.
> But the interesting part is how NVIDIA detects that the GPU is
> virtualized...
Interesting. I was thinking that the BIOS/firmware would run itself
in the virtualized or non-virtualized code depending on the device id.
But you seem to imply that it is all in the OS driver code.
At which point the idea of just modifying in QEMU the PCI device ID
to be different would .. well, make it possible to do a lot of
neat stuff as Gordan pointed out.
In terms of legal issues of patching up a windows kernel driver and
showing other folks how to do it?
No idea. Presumarily there is some license thing that you had agreed
when you installed the Nvidia driver - check to see what it says.
>
>
> On Mon, Dec 2, 2013 at 5:12 PM, Gordan Bobic <gordan@bobich.net> wrote:
>
> > On Mon, 2 Dec 2013 13:18:22 +0100, Nvidia Reverse <aidivnreverse@gmail.com>
> > wrote:
> >
> >> Hello,
> >> I've successfully passed a unmodified GTX 760 to Win7 x64. It involved
> >> some driver patching on the client side but I'm close to getting the
> >> required steps on the server side, too. Are there any legal issues
> >> that might arise from releasing a patch?
> >>
> >
> > Considering we have everything up to and including a Titan/780 easily
> > modifiable into Quadros/Teslas/Grids to make them work? :)
> >
> > I for one would welcome not having to break out my soldering iron.
> >
> > When you say driver patching, what are we talking about? Unless
> > something changed very recently, just modifying the .inf file
> > isn't sufficient (unless your server-side patch does some
> > device ID faking - which it probably doesn't since the card
> > is still showing up as a 780 in domU).
> >
> > Gordan
> >
> _______________________________________________
> Xen-devel mailing list
> Xen-devel@lists.xen.org
> http://lists.xen.org/xen-devel
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* Re: GTX 760 passed through
2013-12-02 20:16 ` Konrad Rzeszutek Wilk
@ 2013-12-02 21:04 ` Gordan Bobic
2013-12-03 16:09 ` Konrad Rzeszutek Wilk
0 siblings, 1 reply; 7+ messages in thread
From: Gordan Bobic @ 2013-12-02 21:04 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Konrad Rzeszutek Wilk; +Cc: xen-devel, Nvidia Reverse
On 12/02/2013 08:16 PM, Konrad Rzeszutek Wilk wrote:
> On Mon, Dec 02, 2013 at 06:36:48PM +0100, Nvidia Reverse wrote:
>> The nvlddmkm.sys needs to be patched removing the whitelist for the device
>> ids allowed to be virtualized.
>> But the interesting part is how NVIDIA detects that the GPU is
>> virtualized...
>
> Interesting. I was thinking that the BIOS/firmware would run itself
> in the virtualized or non-virtualized code depending on the device id.
> But you seem to imply that it is all in the OS driver code.
Certainly not the case with the BIOS part - Quadro BIOS is quite
different. GeForce BIOS, for example, doesn't have ECC control code and
a few other things. For example, flash a 4GB GTX680 with a K5000 BIOS
and the ECC control options start to show up in the control panel. If
they went to the trouble of stripping all that out of the GeForce BIOS
I'd rather like to think that they would have tripped out any magic
required to run virtualized.
Since we know that isn't the case (since removing a single resistor on a
680 makes it work just fine virtualized as a Tesla K10), the only
logical conclusion there is nothing that the BIOS does that makes any
difference to virtualization.
> At which point the idea of just modifying in QEMU the PCI device ID
> to be different would .. well, make it possible to do a lot of
> neat stuff as Gordan pointed out.
Only on pre-Kepler GPUs. As far as I can tell, there is a register in
the GPU where the hard-strapped device ID is kept, and this gets set at
boot time BEFORE the BIOS runs. It is the pre-BIOS device ID that gets
stuck in the GPU, and the soft-strap only affects the PCI device ID -
yes, the two can differ on Kepler. Driver keys off the hard-strapped ID.
> In terms of legal issues of patching up a windows kernel driver and
> showing other folks how to do it?
>
> No idea. Presumarily there is some license thing that you had agreed
> when you installed the Nvidia driver - check to see what it says.
I think the OP was more referring to specifically applying a patch to
Xen to prevent the Nvidia driver in domU from being able to figure out
it's running in a VM. If it doesn't think it's running in a VM, it
doesn't disable the device.
BTW, Konrad, did your GTX460 work with PCI passthrough after modifying
it to a Q4000M?
Gordan
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* Re: GTX 760 passed through
2013-12-02 21:04 ` Gordan Bobic
@ 2013-12-03 16:09 ` Konrad Rzeszutek Wilk
2013-12-03 16:56 ` Gordan Bobic
0 siblings, 1 reply; 7+ messages in thread
From: Konrad Rzeszutek Wilk @ 2013-12-03 16:09 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Gordan Bobic; +Cc: xen-devel, Nvidia Reverse
On Mon, Dec 02, 2013 at 09:04:51PM +0000, Gordan Bobic wrote:
> On 12/02/2013 08:16 PM, Konrad Rzeszutek Wilk wrote:
> >On Mon, Dec 02, 2013 at 06:36:48PM +0100, Nvidia Reverse wrote:
> >>The nvlddmkm.sys needs to be patched removing the whitelist for the device
> >>ids allowed to be virtualized.
> >>But the interesting part is how NVIDIA detects that the GPU is
> >>virtualized...
> >
> >Interesting. I was thinking that the BIOS/firmware would run itself
> >in the virtualized or non-virtualized code depending on the device id.
> >But you seem to imply that it is all in the OS driver code.
>
> Certainly not the case with the BIOS part - Quadro BIOS is quite
> different. GeForce BIOS, for example, doesn't have ECC control code
> and a few other things. For example, flash a 4GB GTX680 with a K5000
> BIOS and the ECC control options start to show up in the control
> panel. If they went to the trouble of stripping all that out of the
> GeForce BIOS I'd rather like to think that they would have tripped
> out any magic required to run virtualized.
>
> Since we know that isn't the case (since removing a single resistor
> on a 680 makes it work just fine virtualized as a Tesla K10), the
> only logical conclusion there is nothing that the BIOS does that
> makes any difference to virtualization.
>
> >At which point the idea of just modifying in QEMU the PCI device ID
> >to be different would .. well, make it possible to do a lot of
> >neat stuff as Gordan pointed out.
>
> Only on pre-Kepler GPUs. As far as I can tell, there is a register
> in the GPU where the hard-strapped device ID is kept, and this gets
> set at boot time BEFORE the BIOS runs. It is the pre-BIOS device ID
> that gets stuck in the GPU, and the soft-strap only affects the PCI
> device ID - yes, the two can differ on Kepler. Driver keys off the
HA! Schizophrenic card.
> hard-strapped ID.
>
> >In terms of legal issues of patching up a windows kernel driver and
> >showing other folks how to do it?
> >
> >No idea. Presumarily there is some license thing that you had agreed
> >when you installed the Nvidia driver - check to see what it says.
>
> I think the OP was more referring to specifically applying a patch
> to Xen to prevent the Nvidia driver in domU from being able to
> figure out it's running in a VM. If it doesn't think it's running in
> a VM, it doesn't disable the device.
Oh, Xen is open-source so you can do whatever you want (to a certain
extent of course - you can't package and resell it without providing
a means to get the source code).
>
> BTW, Konrad, did your GTX460 work with PCI passthrough after
> modifying it to a Q4000M?
Yes, pretty fantastic! And it seems to work OK - I am loading some
games on the Windows guest to double-check. The audio part does not
seem to work - oddly enough.
I also have a Radeon 4870 that in the past worked when passing
in the guest but one had to 'unplug' it in Windows to be able to
restart it again. Will try that once I get a machine that can have
three GPUs in it.
Now I hadn't tried to start the Windows guest with more than 2GB -
but when I do that I should have some patches to make that work (based
on your work).
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* Re: GTX 760 passed through
2013-12-03 16:09 ` Konrad Rzeszutek Wilk
@ 2013-12-03 16:56 ` Gordan Bobic
0 siblings, 0 replies; 7+ messages in thread
From: Gordan Bobic @ 2013-12-03 16:56 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Konrad Rzeszutek Wilk; +Cc: xen-devel, Nvidia Reverse
On Tue, 3 Dec 2013 11:09:34 -0500, Konrad Rzeszutek Wilk
<konrad.wilk@oracle.com> wrote:
> On Mon, Dec 02, 2013 at 09:04:51PM +0000, Gordan Bobic wrote:
>> On 12/02/2013 08:16 PM, Konrad Rzeszutek Wilk wrote:
>> >On Mon, Dec 02, 2013 at 06:36:48PM +0100, Nvidia Reverse wrote:
>> >>The nvlddmkm.sys needs to be patched removing the whitelist for
>> the device
>> >>ids allowed to be virtualized.
>> >>But the interesting part is how NVIDIA detects that the GPU is
>> >>virtualized...
>> >
>> >Interesting. I was thinking that the BIOS/firmware would run itself
>> >in the virtualized or non-virtualized code depending on the device
>> id.
>> >But you seem to imply that it is all in the OS driver code.
>>
>> Certainly not the case with the BIOS part - Quadro BIOS is quite
>> different. GeForce BIOS, for example, doesn't have ECC control code
>> and a few other things. For example, flash a 4GB GTX680 with a K5000
>> BIOS and the ECC control options start to show up in the control
>> panel. If they went to the trouble of stripping all that out of the
>> GeForce BIOS I'd rather like to think that they would have tripped
>> out any magic required to run virtualized.
>>
>> Since we know that isn't the case (since removing a single resistor
>> on a 680 makes it work just fine virtualized as a Tesla K10), the
>> only logical conclusion there is nothing that the BIOS does that
>> makes any difference to virtualization.
>>
>> >At which point the idea of just modifying in QEMU the PCI device ID
>> >to be different would .. well, make it possible to do a lot of
>> >neat stuff as Gordan pointed out.
>>
>> Only on pre-Kepler GPUs. As far as I can tell, there is a register
>> in the GPU where the hard-strapped device ID is kept, and this gets
>> set at boot time BEFORE the BIOS runs. It is the pre-BIOS device ID
>> that gets stuck in the GPU, and the soft-strap only affects the PCI
>> device ID - yes, the two can differ on Kepler. Driver keys off the
>
> HA! Schizophrenic card.
I think it's to do with the way Grid cards are designed to work.
The idea being that the card itself is a Grid, but you can run
it in different modes in the guest (at least on ESXi), e.g.
GeForce, Quadro or Tesla. So the guest sees the PCI device ID
of a GeForce card, and the driver for the GeForce card loads,
but it only works because it checks the GPU's device ID, and
only works if the GPU's device ID is one that it is supposed
to work on.
The PCI device IDs for the virtual GPUs are different from
the physical ones, though (see the thing I pasted in the
other thread.
>> hard-strapped ID.
>>
>> >In terms of legal issues of patching up a windows kernel driver and
>> >showing other folks how to do it?
>> >
>> >No idea. Presumarily there is some license thing that you had
>> agreed
>> >when you installed the Nvidia driver - check to see what it says.
>>
>> I think the OP was more referring to specifically applying a patch
>> to Xen to prevent the Nvidia driver in domU from being able to
>> figure out it's running in a VM. If it doesn't think it's running in
>> a VM, it doesn't disable the device.
>
> Oh, Xen is open-source so you can do whatever you want (to a certain
> extent of course - you can't package and resell it without providing
> a means to get the source code).
I for one am very much looking forward to seeing aidivn's patch
for this. :)
>> BTW, Konrad, did your GTX460 work with PCI passthrough after
>> modifying it to a Q4000M?
>
> Yes, pretty fantastic! And it seems to work OK - I am loading some
> games on the Windows guest to double-check. The audio part does not
> seem to work - oddly enough.
Splendid! I never tried HDMI audio - I don't have any HDMI audio
hardware, so I have no way of testing whether it works. In fairness
I find PCI audio passthrough to be problematic anyway. Sound gets
choppy with both Intel HDA (ICH10) and Creative Labs PCIe audio
at times (both run with intel-snd-hda driver on Linux). OTOH, a
£3 USB audio adapter (USB host passed via PCI passthrough) works
lovely.
> I also have a Radeon 4870 that in the past worked when passing
> in the guest but one had to 'unplug' it in Windows to be able to
> restart it again. Will try that once I get a machine that can have
> three GPUs in it.
I have seen major problems with a setup where I have a dom0 ATI
card and want another ATI card for domU. With 4850 in dom0 and a
7970 for domU, when the domU starts up the host crashes solid.
As far as I can tell, something happens with BIOS on one card
initializing the other, and the dom0 GPU gets wiped out in
the process. I just gave up on ATI for this decade. Maybe next
decade.
> Now I hadn't tried to start the Windows guest with more than 2GB -
> but when I do that I should have some patches to make that work
> (based
> on your work).
If your IOMMU and PCIe bridges work fine you shouldn't need
them. Remember that those (unfinished) patches were only
useful when running with secondary PCIe bridges that bypas
the root PCIe bridge and do DMA directly (thus preventing
the IOMMU from translating the memory addresses). If your
motherboard doesn't engage in such crazyness, you shouldn't
need those patches.
I've put the work on those patches on hold because
everything I've read about PVH thus far looks suspiciously
like it might solve the problem anyway (in fact, some of the
patches in the set you mention came straight out of the PVH
implementation, IIRC). So I think I'll try PVH when the next
version comes out and see how that fares. For now I can live
with the fact that my incomplete patch set results in 2.5GB
or RAM going "missing" for each domU.
Either way, even if you need the patches, you should be OK
with passing the amount of RAM to domU that only goes up to
the address where your lowest mapped BAR is on the host.
Gordan
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2013-12-03 16:56 UTC | newest]
Thread overview: 7+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2013-12-02 12:18 GTX 760 passed through Nvidia Reverse
2013-12-02 16:12 ` Gordan Bobic
2013-12-02 17:36 ` Nvidia Reverse
2013-12-02 20:16 ` Konrad Rzeszutek Wilk
2013-12-02 21:04 ` Gordan Bobic
2013-12-03 16:09 ` Konrad Rzeszutek Wilk
2013-12-03 16:56 ` Gordan Bobic
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