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1The memory API
2==============
3
4The memory API models the memory and I/O buses and controllers of a QEMU
5machine. It attempts to allow modelling of:
6
7 - ordinary RAM
8 - memory-mapped I/O (MMIO)
9 - memory controllers that can dynamically reroute physical memory regions
69ddaf66 10 to different destinations
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11
12The memory model provides support for
13
14 - tracking RAM changes by the guest
15 - setting up coalesced memory for kvm
16 - setting up ioeventfd regions for kvm
17
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18Memory is modelled as an acyclic graph of MemoryRegion objects. Sinks
19(leaves) are RAM and MMIO regions, while other nodes represent
20buses, memory controllers, and memory regions that have been rerouted.
21
22In addition to MemoryRegion objects, the memory API provides AddressSpace
23objects for every root and possibly for intermediate MemoryRegions too.
24These represent memory as seen from the CPU or a device's viewpoint.
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25
26Types of regions
27----------------
28
29There are four types of memory regions (all represented by a single C type
30MemoryRegion):
31
32- RAM: a RAM region is simply a range of host memory that can be made available
33 to the guest.
34
35- MMIO: a range of guest memory that is implemented by host callbacks;
36 each read or write causes a callback to be called on the host.
37
38- container: a container simply includes other memory regions, each at
39 a different offset. Containers are useful for grouping several regions
40 into one unit. For example, a PCI BAR may be composed of a RAM region
41 and an MMIO region.
42
43 A container's subregions are usually non-overlapping. In some cases it is
44 useful to have overlapping regions; for example a memory controller that
45 can overlay a subregion of RAM with MMIO or ROM, or a PCI controller
46 that does not prevent card from claiming overlapping BARs.
47
48- alias: a subsection of another region. Aliases allow a region to be
49 split apart into discontiguous regions. Examples of uses are memory banks
50 used when the guest address space is smaller than the amount of RAM
51 addressed, or a memory controller that splits main memory to expose a "PCI
52 hole". Aliases may point to any type of region, including other aliases,
53 but an alias may not point back to itself, directly or indirectly.
54
55
56Region names
57------------
58
59Regions are assigned names by the constructor. For most regions these are
60only used for debugging purposes, but RAM regions also use the name to identify
61live migration sections. This means that RAM region names need to have ABI
62stability.
63
64Region lifecycle
65----------------
66
67A region is created by one of the constructor functions (memory_region_init*())
68and destroyed by the destructor (memory_region_destroy()). In between,
69a region can be added to an address space by using memory_region_add_subregion()
70and removed using memory_region_del_subregion(). Region attributes may be
71changed at any point; they take effect once the region becomes exposed to the
72guest.
73
74Overlapping regions and priority
75--------------------------------
76Usually, regions may not overlap each other; a memory address decodes into
77exactly one target. In some cases it is useful to allow regions to overlap,
78and sometimes to control which of an overlapping regions is visible to the
79guest. This is done with memory_region_add_subregion_overlap(), which
80allows the region to overlap any other region in the same container, and
81specifies a priority that allows the core to decide which of two regions at
82the same address are visible (highest wins).
83
84Visibility
85----------
86The memory core uses the following rules to select a memory region when the
87guest accesses an address:
88
89- all direct subregions of the root region are matched against the address, in
90 descending priority order
91 - if the address lies outside the region offset/size, the subregion is
92 discarded
7075ba30 93 - if the subregion is a leaf (RAM or MMIO), the search terminates
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94 - if the subregion is a container, the same algorithm is used within the
95 subregion (after the address is adjusted by the subregion offset)
96 - if the subregion is an alias, the search is continues at the alias target
97 (after the address is adjusted by the subregion offset and alias offset)
98
99Example memory map
100------------------
101
102system_memory: container@0-2^48-1
103 |
104 +---- lomem: alias@0-0xdfffffff ---> #ram (0-0xdfffffff)
105 |
106 +---- himem: alias@0x100000000-0x11fffffff ---> #ram (0xe0000000-0xffffffff)
107 |
108 +---- vga-window: alias@0xa0000-0xbfffff ---> #pci (0xa0000-0xbffff)
109 | (prio 1)
110 |
111 +---- pci-hole: alias@0xe0000000-0xffffffff ---> #pci (0xe0000000-0xffffffff)
112
113pci (0-2^32-1)
114 |
115 +--- vga-area: container@0xa0000-0xbffff
116 | |
117 | +--- alias@0x00000-0x7fff ---> #vram (0x010000-0x017fff)
118 | |
119 | +--- alias@0x08000-0xffff ---> #vram (0x020000-0x027fff)
120 |
121 +---- vram: ram@0xe1000000-0xe1ffffff
122 |
123 +---- vga-mmio: mmio@0xe2000000-0xe200ffff
124
125ram: ram@0x00000000-0xffffffff
126
69ddaf66 127This is a (simplified) PC memory map. The 4GB RAM block is mapped into the
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128system address space via two aliases: "lomem" is a 1:1 mapping of the first
1293.5GB; "himem" maps the last 0.5GB at address 4GB. This leaves 0.5GB for the
130so-called PCI hole, that allows a 32-bit PCI bus to exist in a system with
1314GB of memory.
132
133The memory controller diverts addresses in the range 640K-768K to the PCI
7075ba30 134address space. This is modelled using the "vga-window" alias, mapped at a
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135higher priority so it obscures the RAM at the same addresses. The vga window
136can be removed by programming the memory controller; this is modelled by
137removing the alias and exposing the RAM underneath.
138
139The pci address space is not a direct child of the system address space, since
140we only want parts of it to be visible (we accomplish this using aliases).
141It has two subregions: vga-area models the legacy vga window and is occupied
142by two 32K memory banks pointing at two sections of the framebuffer.
143In addition the vram is mapped as a BAR at address e1000000, and an additional
144BAR containing MMIO registers is mapped after it.
145
146Note that if the guest maps a BAR outside the PCI hole, it would not be
147visible as the pci-hole alias clips it to a 0.5GB range.
148
149Attributes
150----------
151
152Various region attributes (read-only, dirty logging, coalesced mmio, ioeventfd)
153can be changed during the region lifecycle. They take effect once the region
154is made visible (which can be immediately, later, or never).
155
156MMIO Operations
157---------------
158
159MMIO regions are provided with ->read() and ->write() callbacks; in addition
160various constraints can be supplied to control how these callbacks are called:
161
162 - .valid.min_access_size, .valid.max_access_size define the access sizes
163 (in bytes) which the device accepts; accesses outside this range will
164 have device and bus specific behaviour (ignored, or machine check)
165 - .valid.aligned specifies that the device only accepts naturally aligned
166 accesses. Unaligned accesses invoke device and bus specific behaviour.
167 - .impl.min_access_size, .impl.max_access_size define the access sizes
168 (in bytes) supported by the *implementation*; other access sizes will be
169 emulated using the ones available. For example a 4-byte write will be
69ddaf66 170 emulated using four 1-byte writes, if .impl.max_access_size = 1.
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171 - .impl.valid specifies that the *implementation* only supports unaligned
172 accesses; unaligned accesses will be emulated by two aligned accesses.
173 - .old_portio and .old_mmio can be used to ease porting from code using
174 cpu_register_io_memory() and register_ioport(). They should not be used
175 in new code.