This patch series is a collection of enhancements for PowerPC CPUs on PowerKVM.

Series Summary:
==========
Patch 1/3 : Introduce a new architecture 'ppc64le' for libvirt.
Patch 2/3 : Add libvirt support for VMs running in 'compat' mode on Power KVM.
Patch 3/3 : Optimize PVR comparison for PowerPC CPUs.

Detail:
====
* PowerPC has traditionally been a Big-endian architecture. However, with 
PowerPC ISA version 2.07, it can run in Little-endian mode as well. IBM Power8 
processors, compliant with ISA 2.07 allow launching VMs in little-endian mode. 
This is signified by 'ppc64le' architecture. Patch 1 adds this support to 
libvirt, to allow running VMs based on ppc64le architecture.

* Patch 2,3 tweak libvirt to correctly model PowerPC CPUs based on recent 
PowerKVM implementation.

PowerKVM permits VMs with vcpus in the following allowed modes :
    i) Host native mode:
      where the vcpu seen in the VM belongs to the same processor generation as 
the host.
      Example: A POWER7 host, conforming to PowerISA version 2.06, will run VMs 
with "power7" vcpus.
    ii) Binary Compatibility ("compat") mode:
      PowerISA allows processors to run VMs in binary compatibility ("compat") 
mode supporting an older version of ISA.
      As an example: In compatibility mode, a POWER7 host can run a "power6" 
VM, conforming to power ISA v2.05.        
      Similarly, a POWER8 host can run a "power7" VM conforming to PowerISA 
v2.06.

QEMU has recently added support to explicitly denote a VM running in 
compatibility mode through commits 6d9412ea & 8dfa3a5e85. Henceforth, VMs of 
type (i) will be invoked with the QEMU invocation "-cpu host", while VMs of 
type (ii) will be invoked using "-cpu host, compat=power6".
Now, an explicit cpu selection using "-cpu POWER6" is not valid. Instead, the 
recommended practice is to use the matching compat mode, if the requested cpu 
type differs from the host.
Patches 2-3 address various aspects of this change.

* Patch 2 : Adds support for generating the correct command line for QEMU. New 
xml semantics are introduced to signify this type.
 
* Patch 3 : PowerKVM vCPUs differ uniquely across generations ( such as power6, 
power7, power8). Each generation signifies a new PowerISA version that exhibits 
features unique to that generation. The higher order 16 bits of PVR denote the 
processor generation and the lower order 16 bits denote the cpu chip 
(sub)version.
For all practical purposes of launching a VM, we care about the generation the 
vCPU will belong to, and not specifically the chip version. In fact, PowerKVM 
does not seek out specification of a unique chip version(such as POWER7_v2.3) 
for running a vCPU. This patch updates the libvirt PVR check to reflect this 
relationship.


Changelog:
=========
v1 : https://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2014-June/msg01338.html
v2 : http://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2014-October/msg00351.html

Changes since v2:
i) CPU compat mode is now introduced under CPU mode 'host-model' as against the 
original proposal of using cpu mode'custom'. (Thanks for the tip, Dan.)
ii) Patch 4/4 that renamed models in cpu_map.xml is dropped. Instead, CPU 
generations are added to cpu_map.xml as new listings. The PVR check in patch 3 
of this series takes care of making the right match happen for compat mode.

Regards,

-- 
Prerna Saxena

Linux Technology Centre,
IBM Systems and Technology Lab,
Bangalore, India

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