};
};
+/*
+ * The guest OS needs to register the guest ID with the hypervisor.
+ * The guest ID is a 64 bit entity and the structure of this ID is
+ * specified in the Hyper-V specification:
+ *
+ * msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/hardware/ff542653%28v=vs.85%29.aspx
+ *
+ * While the current guideline does not specify how Linux guest ID(s)
+ * need to be generated, our plan is to publish the guidelines for
+ * Linux and other guest operating systems that currently are hosted
+ * on Hyper-V. The implementation here conforms to this yet
+ * unpublished guidelines.
+ *
+ *
+ * Bit(s)
+ * 63 - Indicates if the OS is Open Source or not; 1 is Open Source
+ * 62:56 - Os Type; Linux is 0x100
+ * 55:48 - Distro specific identification
+ * 47:16 - Linux kernel version number
+ * 15:0 - Distro specific identification
+ *
+ *
+ */
+
+#define HV_LINUX_VENDOR_ID 0x8800
+
+/*
+ * Generate the guest ID based on the guideline described above.
+ */
+
+static inline __u64 generate_guest_id(__u64 d_info1, __u64 kernel_version,
+ __u64 d_info2)
+{
+ __u64 guest_id = 0;
+
+ guest_id = (((__u64)HV_LINUX_VENDOR_ID) << 56);
+ guest_id |= (d_info1 << 48);
+ guest_id |= (kernel_version << 16);
+ guest_id |= d_info2;
+
+ return guest_id;
+}
+
void hyperv_callback_vector(void);
#ifdef CONFIG_TRACING
#define trace_hyperv_callback_vector hyperv_callback_vector
void hv_remove_kexec_handler(void);
void hv_setup_crash_handler(void (*handler)(struct pt_regs *regs));
void hv_remove_crash_handler(void);
+
+#if IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_HYPERV)
+void hyperv_init(void);
+extern void *hv_hypercall_pg;
+#endif
#endif