HVF had its own copy of the CR0 and CR4 register definitions. Remove them in favor of the definitions in target/i386/cpu.h.
Change long mode enter and exit code to be clearer. Support AVX512 guests on capable hardware. This involves two separate changes: - Correctly manage the OSXSAVE bit in CPUID[0x01]. cpu_x86_cpuid() attempts to account for OSXSAVE, but it refers to env->cr[4] for the guest copy of CR4. That field isn't up to date under HVF. Instead, we track OSXSAVE separately, by adding OSXSAVE to CR4 mask and saving the state. Then, when handling CPUID[0x01] in EXIT_REASON_CPUID, we reflect the current state of CR4[OSXSAVE]. - macOS lazily enables AVX512 for processes. Explicitly enable AVX512 for QEMU. With these two changes, guests can correctly detect and enable AVX512. Cameron Esfahani (3): hvf: use standard CR0 and CR4 register definitions hvf: Make long mode enter and exit code clearer. hvf: Support AVX512 guests on capable hardware target/i386/cpu.h | 3 ++ target/i386/hvf/hvf.c | 69 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-- target/i386/hvf/vmx.h | 32 ++++++++++++------ target/i386/hvf/x86.c | 6 ++-- target/i386/hvf/x86.h | 34 ------------------- target/i386/hvf/x86_mmu.c | 2 +- target/i386/hvf/x86_task.c | 3 +- target/i386/hvf/x86hvf.c | 2 +- 8 files changed, 98 insertions(+), 53 deletions(-) -- 2.24.0