On 26/09/13 15:41, Christoffer Dall wrote:
> On Thu, Sep 26, 2013 at 01:48:51PM +0200, Ulrich Hecht wrote:
>> KVM runs fine on Cortex A7 cores, so they should be enabled. Tested on an
>> APE6EVM board (r8a73a4 SoC).
>>
>> Signed-off-by: Ulrich Hecht <[email protected]>
>> ---
>> arch/arm/kvm/guest.c | 2 ++
>> 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+)
>>
>> diff --git a/arch/arm/kvm/guest.c b/arch/arm/kvm/guest.c
>> index 152d036..05c62d5 100644
>> --- a/arch/arm/kvm/guest.c
>> +++ b/arch/arm/kvm/guest.c
>> @@ -192,6 +192,8 @@ int __attribute_const__ kvm_target_cpu(void)
>> switch (part_number) {
>> case ARM_CPU_PART_CORTEX_A15:
>> return KVM_ARM_TARGET_CORTEX_A15;
>> + case ARM_CPU_PART_CORTEX_A7:
>> + return KVM_ARM_TARGET_CORTEX_A15;
>> default:
>> return -EINVAL;
>> }
>> --
>> 1.8.3.1
>>
>
> nack
>
> we need to have support and implementation for A7 cores and not try to
> shoehorn A7 support by pretending that it's an A15.
>
> The fact that you have tested this and it happens to work with the
> workload you ran does not mean it is the right solution. At the very
> least, you need to document and think about the different system
> register implementation and deal with them correctly.
Not to mention that supporting Cortex-A7 requires some generic KVM/ARM
fixes to work properly.
I believe Jonny is going to post these patches shortly, along with a
more compelling set of changes to support Cortex-A7.
Cheers,
M.
--
Jazz is not dead. It just smells funny...
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