| KVM/ARM VGIC Forwarded Physical Interrupts |
| ========================================== |
| |
| The KVM/ARM code implements software support for the ARM Generic |
| Interrupt Controller's (GIC's) hardware support for virtualization by |
| allowing software to inject virtual interrupts to a VM, which the guest |
| OS sees as regular interrupts. The code is famously known as the VGIC. |
| |
| Some of these virtual interrupts, however, correspond to physical |
| interrupts from real physical devices. One example could be the |
| architected timer, which itself supports virtualization, and therefore |
| lets a guest OS program the hardware device directly to raise an |
| interrupt at some point in time. When such an interrupt is raised, the |
| host OS initially handles the interrupt and must somehow signal this |
| event as a virtual interrupt to the guest. Another example could be a |
| passthrough device, where the physical interrupts are initially handled |
| by the host, but the device driver for the device lives in the guest OS |
| and KVM must therefore somehow inject a virtual interrupt on behalf of |
| the physical one to the guest OS. |
| |
| These virtual interrupts corresponding to a physical interrupt on the |
| host are called forwarded physical interrupts, but are also sometimes |
| referred to as 'virtualized physical interrupts' and 'mapped interrupts'. |
| |
| Forwarded physical interrupts are handled slightly differently compared |
| to virtual interrupts generated purely by a software emulated device. |
| |
| |
| The HW bit |
| ---------- |
| Virtual interrupts are signalled to the guest by programming the List |
| Registers (LRs) on the GIC before running a VCPU. The LR is programmed |
| with the virtual IRQ number and the state of the interrupt (Pending, |
| Active, or Pending+Active). When the guest ACKs and EOIs a virtual |
| interrupt, the LR state moves from Pending to Active, and finally to |
| inactive. |
| |
| The LRs include an extra bit, called the HW bit. When this bit is set, |
| KVM must also program an additional field in the LR, the physical IRQ |
| number, to link the virtual with the physical IRQ. |
| |
| When the HW bit is set, KVM must EITHER set the Pending OR the Active |
| bit, never both at the same time. |
| |
| Setting the HW bit causes the hardware to deactivate the physical |
| interrupt on the physical distributor when the guest deactivates the |
| corresponding virtual interrupt. |
| |
| |
| Forwarded Physical Interrupts Life Cycle |
| ---------------------------------------- |
| |
| The state of forwarded physical interrupts is managed in the following way: |
| |
| - The physical interrupt is acked by the host, and becomes active on |
| the physical distributor (*). |
| - KVM sets the LR.Pending bit, because this is the only way the GICV |
| interface is going to present it to the guest. |
| - LR.Pending will stay set as long as the guest has not acked the interrupt. |
| - LR.Pending transitions to LR.Active on the guest read of the IAR, as |
| expected. |
| - On guest EOI, the *physical distributor* active bit gets cleared, |
| but the LR.Active is left untouched (set). |
| - KVM clears the LR on VM exits when the physical distributor |
| active state has been cleared. |
| |
| (*): The host handling is slightly more complicated. For some forwarded |
| interrupts (shared), KVM directly sets the active state on the physical |
| distributor before entering the guest, because the interrupt is never actually |
| handled on the host (see details on the timer as an example below). For other |
| forwarded interrupts (non-shared) the host does not deactivate the interrupt |
| when the host ISR completes, but leaves the interrupt active until the guest |
| deactivates it. Leaving the interrupt active is allowed, because Linux |
| configures the physical GIC with EOIMode=1, which causes EOI operations to |
| perform a priority drop allowing the GIC to receive other interrupts of the |
| default priority. |
| |
| |
| Forwarded Edge and Level Triggered PPIs and SPIs |
| ------------------------------------------------ |
| Forwarded physical interrupts injected should always be active on the |
| physical distributor when injected to a guest. |
| |
| Level-triggered interrupts will keep the interrupt line to the GIC |
| asserted, typically until the guest programs the device to deassert the |
| line. This means that the interrupt will remain pending on the physical |
| distributor until the guest has reprogrammed the device. Since we |
| always run the VM with interrupts enabled on the CPU, a pending |
| interrupt will exit the guest as soon as we switch into the guest, |
| preventing the guest from ever making progress as the process repeats |
| over and over. Therefore, the active state on the physical distributor |
| must be set when entering the guest, preventing the GIC from forwarding |
| the pending interrupt to the CPU. As soon as the guest deactivates the |
| interrupt, the physical line is sampled by the hardware again and the host |
| takes a new interrupt if and only if the physical line is still asserted. |
| |
| Edge-triggered interrupts do not exhibit the same problem with |
| preventing guest execution that level-triggered interrupts do. One |
| option is to not use HW bit at all, and inject edge-triggered interrupts |
| from a physical device as pure virtual interrupts. But that would |
| potentially slow down handling of the interrupt in the guest, because a |
| physical interrupt occurring in the middle of the guest ISR would |
| preempt the guest for the host to handle the interrupt. Additionally, |
| if you configure the system to handle interrupts on a separate physical |
| core from that running your VCPU, you still have to interrupt the VCPU |
| to queue the pending state onto the LR, even though the guest won't use |
| this information until the guest ISR completes. Therefore, the HW |
| bit should always be set for forwarded edge-triggered interrupts. With |
| the HW bit set, the virtual interrupt is injected and additional |
| physical interrupts occurring before the guest deactivates the interrupt |
| simply mark the state on the physical distributor as Pending+Active. As |
| soon as the guest deactivates the interrupt, the host takes another |
| interrupt if and only if there was a physical interrupt between injecting |
| the forwarded interrupt to the guest and the guest deactivating the |
| interrupt. |
| |
| Consequently, whenever we schedule a VCPU with one or more LRs with the |
| HW bit set, the interrupt must also be active on the physical |
| distributor. |
| |
| |
| Forwarded LPIs |
| -------------- |
| LPIs, introduced in GICv3, are always edge-triggered and do not have an |
| active state. They become pending when a device signal them, and as |
| soon as they are acked by the CPU, they are inactive again. |
| |
| It therefore doesn't make sense, and is not supported, to set the HW bit |
| for physical LPIs that are forwarded to a VM as virtual interrupts, |
| typically virtual SPIs. |
| |
| For LPIs, there is no other choice than to preempt the VCPU thread if |
| necessary, and queue the pending state onto the LR. |
| |
| |
| Putting It Together: The Architected Timer |
| ------------------------------------------ |
| The architected timer is a device that signals interrupts with level |
| triggered semantics. The timer hardware is directly accessed by VCPUs |
| which program the timer to fire at some point in time. Each VCPU on a |
| system programs the timer to fire at different times, and therefore the |
| hardware is multiplexed between multiple VCPUs. This is implemented by |
| context-switching the timer state along with each VCPU thread. |
| |
| However, this means that a scenario like the following is entirely |
| possible, and in fact, typical: |
| |
| 1. KVM runs the VCPU |
| 2. The guest programs the time to fire in T+100 |
| 3. The guest is idle and calls WFI (wait-for-interrupts) |
| 4. The hardware traps to the host |
| 5. KVM stores the timer state to memory and disables the hardware timer |
| 6. KVM schedules a soft timer to fire in T+(100 - time since step 2) |
| 7. KVM puts the VCPU thread to sleep (on a waitqueue) |
| 8. The soft timer fires, waking up the VCPU thread |
| 9. KVM reprograms the timer hardware with the VCPU's values |
| 10. KVM marks the timer interrupt as active on the physical distributor |
| 11. KVM injects a forwarded physical interrupt to the guest |
| 12. KVM runs the VCPU |
| |
| Notice that KVM injects a forwarded physical interrupt in step 11 without |
| the corresponding interrupt having actually fired on the host. That is |
| exactly why we mark the timer interrupt as active in step 10, because |
| the active state on the physical distributor is part of the state |
| belonging to the timer hardware, which is context-switched along with |
| the VCPU thread. |
| |
| If the guest does not idle because it is busy, the flow looks like this |
| instead: |
| |
| 1. KVM runs the VCPU |
| 2. The guest programs the time to fire in T+100 |
| 4. At T+100 the timer fires and a physical IRQ causes the VM to exit |
| (note that this initially only traps to EL2 and does not run the host ISR |
| until KVM has returned to the host). |
| 5. With interrupts still disabled on the CPU coming back from the guest, KVM |
| stores the virtual timer state to memory and disables the virtual hw timer. |
| 6. KVM looks at the timer state (in memory) and injects a forwarded physical |
| interrupt because it concludes the timer has expired. |
| 7. KVM marks the timer interrupt as active on the physical distributor |
| 7. KVM enables the timer, enables interrupts, and runs the VCPU |
| |
| Notice that again the forwarded physical interrupt is injected to the |
| guest without having actually been handled on the host. In this case it |
| is because the physical interrupt is never actually seen by the host because the |
| timer is disabled upon guest return, and the virtual forwarded interrupt is |
| injected on the KVM guest entry path. |