On Wed, Feb 26, 2014 at 1:55 PM, Arnd Bergmann arnd@arndb.de wrote:
On Wednesday 26 February 2014 10:34:54 Christoffer Dall wrote:
ARM VM System Specification
Goal
The goal of this spec is to allow suitably-built OS images to run on all ARM virtualization solutions, such as KVM or Xen.
Recommendations in this spec are valid for aarch32 and aarch64 alike, and they aim to be hypervisor agnostic.
Note that simply adhering to the SBSA [2] is not a valid approach, for example because the SBSA mandates EL2, which will not be available for VMs. Further, the SBSA mandates peripherals like the pl011, which may be controversial for some ARM VM implementations to support. This spec also covers the aarch32 execution mode, not covered in the SBSA.
I would prefer if we can stay as close as possible to SBSA for individual hardware components, and only stray from it when there is a strong reason. pl011-subset doesn't sound like a significant problem to implement, especially as SBSA makes the DMA part of that optional. Can you elaborate on what hypervisor would have a problem with that?
The SBSA only spec's a very minimal pl011 subset which is only suitable for early serial output. Not only is there no DMA, but there are no interrupts and maybe no input. I think it also assumes the uart is enabled and configured already by firmware. It is all somewhat pointless because the location is still not known or discoverable by early code. Just mandating a real pl011 would have been better, but I guess uart IP is value add for some. There is a downside to the pl011 which is the tty name is different from x86 uarts which gets exposed to users and things like libvirt.
I think the VM image just has to support pl011, virtio-console, and xen console. Arguably, an 8250 should also be included in interest of making things just work.
Rob