On 10/16/2011 05:39 PM, Avi Kivity wrote:
> On 10/14/2011 11:03 AM, Lai Jiangshan wrote:
>> Currently, NMI interrupt is blindly sent to all the vCPUs when NMI
>> button event happens. This doesn't properly emulate real hardware on
>> which NMI button event triggers LINT1. Because of this, NMI is sent to
>> the processor even when LINT1 is masked in LVT. For example, this
>> causes the problem that kdump initiated by NMI sometimes doesn't work
>> on KVM, because kdump assumes NMI is masked on CPUs other than CPU0.
>>
>> With this patch, we introduce introduce KVM_SET_LINT1,
>> and we can use KVM_SET_LINT1 to correctly emulate NMI button
>> without change the old KVM_NMI behavior.
>>
>> @@ -759,6 +762,8 @@ struct kvm_clock_data {
>> #define KVM_CREATE_SPAPR_TCE _IOW(KVMIO, 0xa8, struct
>> kvm_create_spapr_tce)
>> /* Available with KVM_CAP_RMA */
>> #define KVM_ALLOCATE_RMA _IOR(KVMIO, 0xa9, struct kvm_allocate_rma)
>> +/* Available with KVM_CAP_SET_LINT1 for x86 */
>> +#define KVM_SET_LINT1 _IO(KVMIO, 0xaa)
>>
>>
>
> LINT1 may have been programmed as a level -triggered interrupt instead
> of edge triggered (NMI or interrupt). We can use the ioctl argument for
> the level (and pressing the NMI button needs to pulse the level to 1 and
> back to 0).
>
Hi, Avi,
How to handle level=0 in the kernel?
Or just ignore it?
Thanks,
Lai
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