diff mbox series

[v3,02/12] docs: gunyah: Introduce Gunyah Hypervisor

Message ID 20220811214107.1074343-3-quic_eberman@quicinc.com
State Superseded
Headers show
Series Drivers for gunyah hypervisor | expand

Commit Message

Elliot Berman Aug. 11, 2022, 9:40 p.m. UTC
Gunyah is an open-source Type-1 hypervisor developed by Qualcomm. It
does not depend on any lower-privileged OS/kernel code for its core
functionality. This increases its security and can support a smaller
trusted computing based when compared to Type-2 hypervisors.

Add documentation describing the Gunyah hypervisor and the main
components of the Gunyah hypervisor which are of interest to Linux
virtualization development.

Signed-off-by: Elliot Berman <quic_eberman@quicinc.com>
---
 Documentation/virt/gunyah/index.rst         | 102 ++++++++++++++++++++
 Documentation/virt/gunyah/message-queue.rst |  52 ++++++++++
 Documentation/virt/index.rst                |   1 +
 MAINTAINERS                                 |   7 ++
 4 files changed, 162 insertions(+)
 create mode 100644 Documentation/virt/gunyah/index.rst
 create mode 100644 Documentation/virt/gunyah/message-queue.rst

Comments

Bagas Sanjaya Aug. 12, 2022, 8:25 a.m. UTC | #1
On Thu, Aug 11, 2022 at 02:40:57PM -0700, Elliot Berman wrote:
> +Gunyah provides these following features.
> +
> +- Scheduling:
> +  A scheduler for virtual CPUs (vCPUs) on physical CPUs and enables time-sharing
> +  of the CPUs. Gunyah supports two models of scheduling:
> +    1. "Behind the back" scheduling in which Gunyah hypervisor schedules vCPUS on its own
> +    2. "Proxy" scheduling in which a delegated VM can donate part of one of its vCPU slice
> +       to another VM's vCPU via a hypercall.
> +- Memory Management:
> +  APIs handling memory, abstracted as objects, limiting direct use of physical
> +  addresses. Memory ownership and usage tracking of all memory under its control.
> +  Memory partitioning between VMs is a fundamental security feature.
> +- Interrupt Virtualization:
> +  Uses CPU hardware interrupt virtualization capabilities. Interrupts are handled
> +  in the hypervisor and routed to the assigned VM.
> +- Inter-VM Communication:
> +  There are several different mechanisms provided for communicating between VMs.
> +- Virtual platform:
> +  Architectural devices such as interrupt controllers and CPU timers are directly provided
> +  by the hypervisor as well as core virtual platform devices and system APIs such as ARM PSCI.
> +- Device Virtualization:
> +  Para-virtualization of devices is supported using inter-VM communication.

htmldocs build produces a new warning:

Documentation/virt/gunyah/index.rst:25: WARNING: Unexpected indentation.

I have applied the fixup for lists above:

---- >8 ----

diff --git a/Documentation/virt/gunyah/index.rst b/Documentation/virt/gunyah/index.rst
index 780ff958a83b8c..c55e02f17ca318 100644
--- a/Documentation/virt/gunyah/index.rst
+++ b/Documentation/virt/gunyah/index.rst
@@ -20,24 +20,36 @@ https://github.com/quic/gunyah-hypervisor.
 Gunyah provides these following features.
 
 - Scheduling:
+
   A scheduler for virtual CPUs (vCPUs) on physical CPUs and enables time-sharing
   of the CPUs. Gunyah supports two models of scheduling:
+
     1. "Behind the back" scheduling in which Gunyah hypervisor schedules vCPUS on its own
     2. "Proxy" scheduling in which a delegated VM can donate part of one of its vCPU slice
        to another VM's vCPU via a hypercall.
+
 - Memory Management:
+
   APIs handling memory, abstracted as objects, limiting direct use of physical
   addresses. Memory ownership and usage tracking of all memory under its control.
   Memory partitioning between VMs is a fundamental security feature.
+
 - Interrupt Virtualization:
+
   Uses CPU hardware interrupt virtualization capabilities. Interrupts are handled
   in the hypervisor and routed to the assigned VM.
+
 - Inter-VM Communication:
+
   There are several different mechanisms provided for communicating between VMs.
+
 - Virtual platform:
+
   Architectural devices such as interrupt controllers and CPU timers are directly provided
   by the hypervisor as well as core virtual platform devices and system APIs such as ARM PSCI.
+
 - Device Virtualization:
+
   Para-virtualization of devices is supported using inter-VM communication.
 
 Architectures supported

Thanks.
diff mbox series

Patch

diff --git a/Documentation/virt/gunyah/index.rst b/Documentation/virt/gunyah/index.rst
new file mode 100644
index 000000000000..780ff958a83b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/Documentation/virt/gunyah/index.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,102 @@ 
+.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
+
+=================
+Gunyah Hypervisor
+=================
+
+.. toctree::
+   :maxdepth: 1
+
+   message-queue
+
+Gunyah is a Type-1 hypervisor which is independent of any OS kernel, and runs in
+a higher CPU privilege level. It does not depend on any lower-privileged operating system
+for its core functionality. This increases its security and can support a much smaller
+trusted computing base than a Type-2 hypervisor.
+
+Gunyah is an open source hypervisor. The source repo is available at
+https://github.com/quic/gunyah-hypervisor.
+
+Gunyah provides these following features.
+
+- Scheduling:
+  A scheduler for virtual CPUs (vCPUs) on physical CPUs and enables time-sharing
+  of the CPUs. Gunyah supports two models of scheduling:
+    1. "Behind the back" scheduling in which Gunyah hypervisor schedules vCPUS on its own
+    2. "Proxy" scheduling in which a delegated VM can donate part of one of its vCPU slice
+       to another VM's vCPU via a hypercall.
+- Memory Management:
+  APIs handling memory, abstracted as objects, limiting direct use of physical
+  addresses. Memory ownership and usage tracking of all memory under its control.
+  Memory partitioning between VMs is a fundamental security feature.
+- Interrupt Virtualization:
+  Uses CPU hardware interrupt virtualization capabilities. Interrupts are handled
+  in the hypervisor and routed to the assigned VM.
+- Inter-VM Communication:
+  There are several different mechanisms provided for communicating between VMs.
+- Virtual platform:
+  Architectural devices such as interrupt controllers and CPU timers are directly provided
+  by the hypervisor as well as core virtual platform devices and system APIs such as ARM PSCI.
+- Device Virtualization:
+  Para-virtualization of devices is supported using inter-VM communication.
+
+Architectures supported
+=======================
+AArch64 with a GIC
+
+Resources and Capabilities
+==========================
+
+Some services or resources provided by the Gunyah hypervisor are described to a virtual machine by
+capability IDs. For instance, inter-VM communication is performed with doorbells and message queues.
+Gunyah allows access to manipulate that doorbell via the capability ID. These devices are described
+in Linux as a struct gunyah_device.
+
+High level management of these resources is performed by the resource manager VM. RM informs a
+guest VM about resources it can access through either the device tree or via guest-initiated RPC.
+
+For each virtual machine, Gunyah maintains a table of resources which can be accessed by that VM.
+An entry in this table is called a "capability" and VMs can only access resources via this
+capability table. Hence, virtual Gunyah devices are referenced by a "capability IDs" and not a
+"resource IDs". A VM can have multiple capability IDs mapping to the same resource. If 2 VMs have
+access to the same resource, they may not be using the same capability ID to access that resource
+since the tables are independent per VM.
+
+Resource Manager
+================
+
+The resource manager (RM) is a privileged application VM supporting the Gunyah Hypervisor.
+It provides policy enforcement aspects of the virtualization system. The resource manager can
+be treated as an extension of the Hypervisor but is separated to its own partition to ensure
+that the hypervisor layer itself remains small and secure and to maintain a separation of policy
+and mechanism in the platform. On arm64, RM runs at NS-EL1 similar to other virtual machines.
+
+Communication with the resource manager from each guest VM happens with message-queue.rst. Details
+about the specific messages can be found in drivers/virt/gunyah/rsc_mgr.c
+
+::
+
+  +-------+   +--------+   +--------+
+  |  RM   |   |  VM_A  |   |  VM_B  |
+  +-.-.-.-+   +---.----+   +---.----+
+    | |           |            |
+  +-.-.-----------.------------.----+
+  | | \==========/             |    |
+  |  \========================/     |
+  |            Gunyah               |
+  +---------------------------------+
+
+The source for the resource manager is available at https://github.com/quic/gunyah-resource-manager.
+
+The resource manager provides the following features:
+
+- VM lifecycle management: allocating a VM, starting VMs, destruction of VMs
+- VM access control policy, including memory sharing and lending
+- Interrupt routing configuration
+- Forwarding of system-level events (e.g. VM shutdown) to owner VM
+
+When booting a virtual machine which uses a devicetree, resource manager overlays a
+/hypervisor node. This node can let Linux know it is running as a Gunyah guest VM,
+how to communicate with resource manager, and basic description and capabilities of
+this VM. See Documentation/devicetree/bindings/firmware/gunyah-hypervisor.yaml for a description
+of this node.
diff --git a/Documentation/virt/gunyah/message-queue.rst b/Documentation/virt/gunyah/message-queue.rst
new file mode 100644
index 000000000000..e130f124ed52
--- /dev/null
+++ b/Documentation/virt/gunyah/message-queue.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,52 @@ 
+.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
+
+Message Queues
+==============
+Message queue is a simple low-capacity IPC channel between two VMs. It is
+intended for sending small control and configuration messages. Each message
+queue object is unidirectional, so a full-duplex IPC channel requires a pair of
+objects.
+
+Messages can be up to 1024 bytes in length. Longer messages require a further
+protocol on top of the message queue messages themselves. For instance, communication
+with the resource manager adds a header field for sending longer messages via multiple
+message fragments.
+
+The diagram below shows how message queue works. A typical configuration involves
+2 message queues. Message queue 1 allows VM_A to send messages to VM_B. Message
+queue 2 allows VM_B to send messages to VM_A.
+
+1. VM_A sends a message of up to 1024 bytes in length. It raises a hypercall
+   with the message to inform the hypervisor to add the message to
+   message queue 1's queue.
+2. Gunyah raises the corresponding interrupt for VM_B when any of these happens:
+   a. gh_msgq_send has PUSH flag. Queue is immediately flushed. This is the typical case.
+   b. Explicility with gh_msgq_push command from VM_A.
+   c. Message queue has reached a threshold depth.
+3. VM_B calls gh_msgq_recv and Gunyah copies message to requested buffer.
+
+For VM_B to send a message to VM_A, the process is identical, except that hypercalls
+reference message queue 2's capability ID.
+
+::
+
+      +---------------+         +-----------------+         +---------------+
+      |      VM_A     |         |Gunyah hypervisor|         |      VM_B     |
+      |               |         |                 |         |               |
+      |               |         |                 |         |               |
+      |               |   Tx    |                 |         |               |
+      |               |-------->|                 | Rx vIRQ |               |
+      |gh_msgq_send() | Tx vIRQ |Message queue 1  |-------->|gh_msgq_recv() |
+      |               |<------- |                 |         |               |
+      |               |         |                 |         |               |
+      | Message Queue |         |                 |         | Message Queue |
+      | driver        |         |                 |         | driver        |
+      |               |         |                 |         |               |
+      |               |         |                 |         |               |
+      |               |         |                 |   Tx    |               |
+      |               | Rx vIRQ |                 |<--------|               |
+      |gh_msgq_recv() |<--------|Message queue 2  | Tx vIRQ |gh_msgq_send() |
+      |               |         |                 |-------->|               |
+      |               |         |                 |         |               |
+      |               |         |                 |         |               |
+      +---------------+         +-----------------+         +---------------+
diff --git a/Documentation/virt/index.rst b/Documentation/virt/index.rst
index 492f0920b988..dd4e8ef284eb 100644
--- a/Documentation/virt/index.rst
+++ b/Documentation/virt/index.rst
@@ -14,6 +14,7 @@  Linux Virtualization Support
    ne_overview
    acrn/index
    coco/sev-guest
+   gunyah/index
 
 .. only:: html and subproject
 
diff --git a/MAINTAINERS b/MAINTAINERS
index 64379c699903..24d1660bbafa 100644
--- a/MAINTAINERS
+++ b/MAINTAINERS
@@ -8734,6 +8734,13 @@  L:	linux-efi@vger.kernel.org
 S:	Maintained
 F:	block/partitions/efi.*
 
+GUNYAH HYPERVISOR DRIVER
+M:	Elliot Berman <quic_eberman@quicinc.com>
+M:	Murali Nalajala <quic_mnalajal@quicinc.com>
+L:	linux-arm-msm@vger.kernel.org
+S:	Supported
+F:	Documentation/virt/gunyah/
+
 HABANALABS PCI DRIVER
 M:	Oded Gabbay <ogabbay@kernel.org>
 S:	Supported