On Tue, Nov 8, 2016 at 6:43 PM, Paolo Bonzini <pbonz...@redhat.com> wrote:
>
>
>
> On 08/11/2016 16:39, Vincent Palatin wrote:
> > I took a stab at trying to rebase/upstream the support for Intel HAXM.
> > (Hardware Accelerated Execution Manager).
> > Intel HAX is kernel-based hardware acceleration module for Windows and 
> > MacOSX.
> >
> > I have based my work on the last version of the source code I found:
> > the emu-2.2-release branch in the external/qemu-android repository as used 
> > by
> > the Android emulator.
> > In patch 2/3, I have forward-ported the core HAX code mostly unmodified from
> > there, I just did some minor touch up to make it build and run properly.
> > So it might contain some outdated constructs and probably requires more
> > attention (thus the 'RFC' for this patchset).
>
> Does HAXM support the "unrestricted guest" feature in Westmere and more
> recent processors?


Yes it does, as mentioned in the last paragraph of my message, I have
actually done a fair chunk of my testing in UG mode.

>
>   If so, I think we should only support those
> processors and slash all the part related to HAX_EMULATE_STATE_INITIAL
> and HAX_EMULATE_STATE_REAL.  This would probably let us make patch 3
> much less intrusive.

Sure the whole patchset would be lighter, not sure which proportion of
user have VT machines without UG support though.

>
> That said, patch 3's cpu-exec.c surgery is much nicer on the surface
> than if you look in depth, :) and since you don't look in depth if you
> steer clear of target-i386/hax*, I think it's okay to start with your
> patches and clean up progressively.  Others may disagree...  Also, we're
> now in soft freeze so the patches wouldn't be merged anyway for a few weeks.
>
> Paolo

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