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1[[qm_pci_passthrough]]
2PCI(e) Passthrough
3------------------
4ifdef::wiki[]
5:pve-toplevel:
6endif::wiki[]
7
8PCI(e) passthrough is a mechanism to give a virtual machine control over
9a PCI device from the host. This can have some advantages over using
10virtualized hardware, for example lower latency, higher performance, or more
11features (e.g., offloading).
12
13But, if you pass through a device to a virtual machine, you cannot use that
14device anymore on the host or in any other VM.
15
16General Requirements
17~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
18
19Since passthrough is a feature which also needs hardware support, there are
20some requirements to check and preparations to be done to make it work.
21
22
23Hardware
24^^^^^^^^
25Your hardware needs to support `IOMMU` (*I*/*O* **M**emory **M**anagement
26**U**nit) interrupt remapping, this includes the CPU and the mainboard.
27
28Generally, Intel systems with VT-d, and AMD systems with AMD-Vi support this.
29But it is not guaranteed that everything will work out of the box, due
30to bad hardware implementation and missing or low quality drivers.
31
32Further, server grade hardware has often better support than consumer grade
33hardware, but even then, many modern system can support this.
34
35Please refer to your hardware vendor to check if they support this feature
36under Linux for your specific setup.
37
38
39Configuration
40^^^^^^^^^^^^^
41
42Once you ensured that your hardware supports passthrough, you will need to do
43some configuration to enable PCI(e) passthrough.
44
45
46.IOMMU
47
48The IOMMU has to be activated on the
49xref:sysboot_edit_kernel_cmdline[kernel commandline].
50
51The command line parameters are:
52
53* for Intel CPUs:
54+
55----
56 intel_iommu=on
57----
58* for AMD CPUs:
59+
60----
61 amd_iommu=on
62----
63
64
65.Kernel Modules
66
67You have to make sure the following modules are loaded. This can be achieved by
68adding them to `'/etc/modules''
69
70----
71 vfio
72 vfio_iommu_type1
73 vfio_pci
74 vfio_virqfd
75----
76
77[[qm_pci_passthrough_update_initramfs]]
78After changing anything modules related, you need to refresh your
79`initramfs`. On {pve} this can be done by executing:
80
81----
82# update-initramfs -u -k all
83----
84
85.Finish Configuration
86
87Finally reboot to bring the changes into effect and check that it is indeed
88enabled.
89
90----
91# dmesg | grep -e DMAR -e IOMMU -e AMD-Vi
92----
93
94should display that `IOMMU`, `Directed I/O` or `Interrupt Remapping` is
95enabled, depending on hardware and kernel the exact message can vary.
96
97It is also important that the device(s) you want to pass through
98are in a *separate* `IOMMU` group. This can be checked with:
99
100----
101# find /sys/kernel/iommu_groups/ -type l
102----
103
104It is okay if the device is in an `IOMMU` group together with its functions
105(e.g. a GPU with the HDMI Audio device) or with its root port or PCI(e) bridge.
106
107.PCI(e) slots
108[NOTE]
109====
110Some platforms handle their physical PCI(e) slots differently. So, sometimes
111it can help to put the card in a another PCI(e) slot, if you do not get the
112desired `IOMMU` group separation.
113====
114
115.Unsafe interrupts
116[NOTE]
117====
118For some platforms, it may be necessary to allow unsafe interrupts.
119For this add the following line in a file ending with `.conf' file in
120*/etc/modprobe.d/*:
121
122----
123 options vfio_iommu_type1 allow_unsafe_interrupts=1
124----
125
126Please be aware that this option can make your system unstable.
127====
128
129GPU Passthrough Notes
130^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
131
132It is not possible to display the frame buffer of the GPU via NoVNC or SPICE on
133the {pve} web interface.
134
135When passing through a whole GPU or a vGPU and graphic output is wanted, one
136has to either physically connect a monitor to the card, or configure a remote
137desktop software (for example, VNC or RDP) inside the guest.
138
139If you want to use the GPU as a hardware accelerator, for example, for
140programs using OpenCL or CUDA, this is not required.
141
142Host Device Passthrough
143~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
144
145The most used variant of PCI(e) passthrough is to pass through a whole
146PCI(e) card, for example a GPU or a network card.
147
148
149Host Configuration
150^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
151
152In this case, the host must not use the card. There are two methods to achieve
153this:
154
155* pass the device IDs to the options of the 'vfio-pci' modules by adding
156+
157----
158 options vfio-pci ids=1234:5678,4321:8765
159----
160+
161to a .conf file in */etc/modprobe.d/* where `1234:5678` and `4321:8765` are
162the vendor and device IDs obtained by:
163+
164----
165# lspci -nn
166----
167
168* blacklist the driver completely on the host, ensuring that it is free to bind
169for passthrough, with
170+
171----
172 blacklist DRIVERNAME
173----
174+
175in a .conf file in */etc/modprobe.d/*.
176
177For both methods you need to
178xref:qm_pci_passthrough_update_initramfs[update the `initramfs`] again and
179reboot after that.
180
181.Verify Configuration
182
183To check if your changes were successful, you can use
184
185----
186# lspci -nnk
187----
188
189and check your device entry. If it says
190
191----
192Kernel driver in use: vfio-pci
193----
194
195or the 'in use' line is missing entirely, the device is ready to be used for
196passthrough.
197
198[[qm_pci_passthrough_vm_config]]
199VM Configuration
200^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
201To pass through the device you need to set the *hostpciX* option in the VM
202configuration, for example by executing:
203
204----
205# qm set VMID -hostpci0 00:02.0
206----
207
208If your device has multiple functions (e.g., ``00:02.0`' and ``00:02.1`' ),
209you can pass them through all together with the shortened syntax ``00:02`'
210
211There are some options to which may be necessary, depending on the device
212and guest OS:
213
214* *x-vga=on|off* marks the PCI(e) device as the primary GPU of the VM.
215With this enabled the *vga* configuration option will be ignored.
216
217* *pcie=on|off* tells {pve} to use a PCIe or PCI port. Some guests/device
218combination require PCIe rather than PCI. PCIe is only available for 'q35'
219machine types.
220
221* *rombar=on|off* makes the firmware ROM visible for the guest. Default is on.
222Some PCI(e) devices need this disabled.
223
224* *romfile=<path>*, is an optional path to a ROM file for the device to use.
225This is a relative path under */usr/share/kvm/*.
226
227.Example
228
229An example of PCIe passthrough with a GPU set to primary:
230
231----
232# qm set VMID -hostpci0 02:00,pcie=on,x-vga=on
233----
234
235
236Other considerations
237^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
238
239When passing through a GPU, the best compatibility is reached when using
240'q35' as machine type, 'OVMF' ('EFI' for VMs) instead of SeaBIOS and PCIe
241instead of PCI. Note that if you want to use 'OVMF' for GPU passthrough, the
242GPU needs to have an EFI capable ROM, otherwise use SeaBIOS instead.
243
244SR-IOV
245~~~~~~
246
247Another variant for passing through PCI(e) devices, is to use the hardware
248virtualization features of your devices, if available.
249
250'SR-IOV' (**S**ingle-**R**oot **I**nput/**O**utput **V**irtualization) enables
251a single device to provide multiple 'VF' (**V**irtual **F**unctions) to the
252system. Each of those 'VF' can be used in a different VM, with full hardware
253features and also better performance and lower latency than software
254virtualized devices.
255
256Currently, the most common use case for this are NICs (**N**etwork
257**I**nterface **C**ard) with SR-IOV support, which can provide multiple VFs per
258physical port. This allows using features such as checksum offloading, etc. to
259be used inside a VM, reducing the (host) CPU overhead.
260
261
262Host Configuration
263^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
264
265Generally, there are two methods for enabling virtual functions on a device.
266
267* sometimes there is an option for the driver module e.g. for some
268Intel drivers
269+
270----
271 max_vfs=4
272----
273+
274which could be put file with '.conf' ending under */etc/modprobe.d/*.
275(Do not forget to update your initramfs after that)
276+
277Please refer to your driver module documentation for the exact
278parameters and options.
279
280* The second, more generic, approach is using the `sysfs`.
281If a device and driver supports this you can change the number of VFs on
282the fly. For example, to setup 4 VFs on device 0000:01:00.0 execute:
283+
284----
285# echo 4 > /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000:01:00.0/sriov_numvfs
286----
287+
288To make this change persistent you can use the `sysfsutils` Debian package.
289After installation configure it via */etc/sysfs.conf* or a `FILE.conf' in
290*/etc/sysfs.d/*.
291
292VM Configuration
293^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
294
295After creating VFs, you should see them as separate PCI(e) devices when
296outputting them with `lspci`. Get their ID and pass them through like a
297xref:qm_pci_passthrough_vm_config[normal PCI(e) device].
298
299Other considerations
300^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
301
302For this feature, platform support is especially important. It may be necessary
303to enable this feature in the BIOS/EFI first, or to use a specific PCI(e) port
304for it to work. In doubt, consult the manual of the platform or contact its
305vendor.
306
307Mediated Devices (vGPU, GVT-g)
308~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
309
310Mediated devices are another method to reuse features and performance from
311physical hardware for virtualized hardware. These are found most common in
312virtualized GPU setups such as Intels GVT-g and Nvidias vGPUs used in their
313GRID technology.
314
315With this, a physical Card is able to create virtual cards, similar to SR-IOV.
316The difference is that mediated devices do not appear as PCI(e) devices in the
317host, and are such only suited for using in virtual machines.
318
319
320Host Configuration
321^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
322
323In general your card's driver must support that feature, otherwise it will
324not work. So please refer to your vendor for compatible drivers and how to
325configure them.
326
327Intels drivers for GVT-g are integrated in the Kernel and should work
328with 5th, 6th and 7th generation Intel Core Processors, as well as E3 v4, E3
329v5 and E3 v6 Xeon Processors.
330
331To enable it for Intel Graphics, you have to make sure to load the module
332'kvmgt' (for example via `/etc/modules`) and to enable it on the
333xref:sysboot_edit_kernel_cmdline[Kernel commandline] and add the following parameter:
334
335----
336 i915.enable_gvt=1
337----
338
339After that remember to
340xref:qm_pci_passthrough_update_initramfs[update the `initramfs`],
341and reboot your host.
342
343VM Configuration
344^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
345
346To use a mediated device, simply specify the `mdev` property on a `hostpciX`
347VM configuration option.
348
349You can get the supported devices via the 'sysfs'. For example, to list the
350supported types for the device '0000:00:02.0' you would simply execute:
351
352----
353# ls /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000:00:02.0/mdev_supported_types
354----
355
356Each entry is a directory which contains the following important files:
357
358* 'available_instances' contains the amount of still available instances of
359this type, each 'mdev' use in a VM reduces this.
360* 'description' contains a short description about the capabilities of the type
361* 'create' is the endpoint to create such a device, {pve} does this
362automatically for you, if a 'hostpciX' option with `mdev` is configured.
363
364Example configuration with an `Intel GVT-g vGPU` (`Intel Skylake 6700k`):
365
366----
367# qm set VMID -hostpci0 00:02.0,mdev=i915-GVTg_V5_4
368----
369
370With this set, {pve} automatically creates such a device on VM start, and
371cleans it up again when the VM stops.
372
373ifdef::wiki[]
374
375See Also
376~~~~~~~~
377
378* link:/wiki/Pci_passthrough[PCI Passthrough Examples]
379
380endif::wiki[]