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Re: [Qemu-devel] balloon driver on winxp guest start failed


From: hkran
Subject: Re: [Qemu-devel] balloon driver on winxp guest start failed
Date: Thu, 27 Oct 2011 17:49:18 +0800
User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux x86_64; en-US; rv:1.9.2.18) Gecko/20110617 Red Hat/3.1.11-2.el6_1 Thunderbird/3.1.11

On 10/17/2011 08:55 PM, Vadim Rozenfeld wrote:
On Fri, 2011-10-14 at 17:49 +0800, hkran wrote:
On 10/14/2011 04:55 AM, Vadim Rozenfeld wrote:
On Thu, 2011-10-13 at 15:47 +0100, Stefan Hajnoczi wrote:
On Thu, Oct 13, 2011 at 5:00 AM, hkran<address@hidden>   wrote:
On 10/12/2011 07:09 PM, hkran wrote:
I used balloon driver for windows  virtio-win-0.1-15.iso (from
http://alt.fedoraproject.org/pub/alt/virtio-win/latest/images/bin/)

following the install guard , I installed the balloon driver like this:

devcon.exe install d:\wxp\x86\balloon.inf
"PCI\VEN_1AF4&DEV_1002&SUBSYS_00051AF4&REV_00"
   then reboot guest Os, but the status of driver installed is always
incorrect, that show me the driver start failed (code 10) in the device
manager.
Seems like a resource allocation problem
I typed the following cmds in the monitor command line:

(qemu) device_add virtio-balloon
(qemu) info balloon
balloon: actual=2048
(qemu) balloon 1024
(qemu) info balloon
balloon: actual=2048
(qemu) info balloon
balloon: actual=2048

And I also tried it by using "qemu -balloon virtio" param  when getting
qemu up, the status is worse, the winxp guest froze at boot screen.

Am I using balloon driver in a correct way?



For the boot failure case, I take more looks into it.  I open the trace
output and see the following when boot failed
Balloon driver, built on Oct 13 2011 10:46:59
^M<-- DriverEntry
^Mfile z:\source\kvm-guest-drivers-windows\balloon\sys\driver.c line 151
^M-->   BalloonDeviceAdd
^M<-- BalloonDeviceAdd
^M-->   BalloonEvtDevicePrepareHardware
^M<->   Port   Resource [0000C0A0-0000C0C0]
^M<-- BalloonEvtDevicePrepareHardware
^M-->   BalloonEvtDeviceD0Entry
^M-->   BalloonInit
^M-->   VIRTIO_BALLOON_F_STATS_VQ
^M<-- BalloonInit
^M-->   BalloonInterruptEnable
^M<-- BalloonInterruptEnable

here, the system is blocked.

I compare it with the logfile in the normal case that I hot-plugin the
balloon device, and then find the system blocked before calling at
BalloonInterruptDpc.

What about ISR? Can you try changing balloon size and check if balloon
ISR was invoked or not?
Is it meaning that we open the interrupt of balloon device too soon when
booting the system?
I suggest CCing Vadim on virtio Windows driver questions.  Not sure if
he sees every qemu-devel email.

Stefan

To make the issue clearer, I do more tests about that. Now I use the
package virtio-win-prewhql-0.1-15-sources.zip from
http://alt.fedoraproject.org/pub/alt/virtio-win/latest/images/src/
The problem that the balloon driver status is incorrect was not
reproduced any longer, but boot failure still be there.
more tests told me as if the failure will occur only in the case where
virtio-serial and balloon are all attached when qemu booting:

(qemu) address@hidden ~]$
/home/huikai/qemu15/bin/qemu-system-x86_64 --enable-kvm -m 2048   -drive
file=/home/huikai/xp_shanghai.img,if=virtio -net user  -net
nic,model=viga qxl -localtime -chardev stdio,id=muxstdio -mon
chardev=muxstdio -usb -usbdevice tablet -device virtio-serial,id=vs0
-chardev socket,path=/tmp/foo,server,nowait,id=foo -device
virtserialport,bus=vs0.0,chardev=foo,name=helloworld -serial
file:/tmp/xp_1014_6.log -balloon virtio,id=ball1

the trace:

Virtio-Serial driver started...built on Oct 14 2011 15:58:02
^M<-->  VIOSerialEvtDeviceAdd
^M<-->  VIOSerialInitInterruptHandling
^MBalloon driver, built on Oct 13 2011 17:34:56
^M<-- DriverEntry
^M-->  BalloonDeviceAdd
^M<-- BalloonDeviceAdd
^M-->  BalloonEvtDevicePrepareHardware
^M<->  Port   Resource [0000C0A0-0000C0C0]
^M<-- BalloonEvtDevicePrepareHardware
^M-->  BalloonEvtDeviceD0Entry
^M-->  BalloonInit
^M-->  VIRTIO_BALLOON_F_STATS_VQ
^M<-- BalloonInit
^M-->  BalloonInterruptEnable
^M<-- BalloonInterruptEnable
^M<-->  VIOSerialEvtDevicePrepareHardware
^MIO Port Info  [0000C080-0000C0A0]
^MWe have multiport host
^MVirtIOConsoleConfig->max_nr_ports 31
^M<-->  VIOSerialEvtDeviceD0Entry
^M<-->  VIOSerialInitAllQueues
^M<-->  VIOSerialFillQueue
^M-->  VIOSerialAllocateBuffer
^M-->  VIOSerialAddInBuf  buf = 89B13A50
^M-->  VIOSerialAllocateBuffer
^M-->  VIOSerialAddInBuf  buf = 89B13638
^M-->  VIOSerialAllocateBuffer
^M-->  VIOSerialAddInBuf  buf = 89C07E08
^M-->  VIOSerialAllocateBuffer
^M-->  VIOSerialAddInBuf  buf = 89C07C50
^M-->  VIOSerialAllocateBuffer
^M-->  VIOSerialAddInBuf  buf = 89C07A98
... ...
^M-->  VIOSerialAllocateBuffer
^M-->  VIOSerialAddInBuf  buf = 89BD14B8
^M-->  VIOSerialAllocateBuffer
^M-->  VIOSerialAddInBuf  buf = 89B826E8
^M-->  VIOSerialAllocateBuffer
^M-->  VIOSerialAddInBuf  buf = 89BE4450
^M-->  VIOSerialAllocateBuffer
^M-->  VIOSerialAddInBuf  buf = 89BE2398
^M-->  VIOSerialAllocateBuffer
^M-->  VIOSerialAddInBuf  buf = 89C53468
^M-->  VIOSerialAllocateBuffer
^M-->  VIOSerialAddInBuf  buf = 89C37E18
^M-->  VIOSerialAllocateBuffer
^M-->  VIOSerialAddInBuf  buf = 89C374C0
^M-->  VIOSerialFreeBuffer  buf = 89C374C0, buf->va_buf = 89983000
^MVIOSerialRenewAllPorts
^M<-->  VIOSerialFillQueue
^M-->  VIOSerialAllocateBuffer
^M-->  VIOSerialAddInBuf  buf = 89C374C0
^M-->  VIOSerialFreeBuffer  buf = 89C374C0, buf->va_buf = 89983000
^MSetting VIRTIO_CONFIG_S_DRIVER_OK flag
^M

not any more output here.

What does "info pci" say?
Best,
Vadim.



when hotplugin the virtio-serial, hanggning  is easy to happen.
when windows hung, captched the callstack by using windbg tool here. not sure if it helps.

kd> k
ChildEBP RetAddr
f315194c 80542155 nt!RtlpBreakWithStatusInstruction
f315194c 806d42a8 nt!KeUpdateSystemTime+0x165
f31519d0 80546451 hal!KeRaiseIrqlToDpcLevel+0x10
f3151a2c 8056bab8 nt!ExAllocatePoolWithTag+0x4d1
f3151a50 f576bfbf nt!IoConnectInterrupt+0x48
f3151ac4 f5768f55 wdf01000!FxInterrupt::Connect+0x11d
f3151ae4 f5765fc7 wdf01000!FxPkgPnp::NotifyResourceObjectsD0+0x27
f3151af4 f5765d81 wdf01000!FxPkgPnp::PowerD0StartingConnectInterrupt+0x12
f3151b7c f5766bb2 wdf01000!FxPkgPnp::PowerEnterNewState+0x11c
f3151ba0 f57675bb wdf01000!FxPkgPnp::PowerProcessEventInner+0x171
f3151bc4 f576c8b4 wdf01000!FxPkgPnp::PowerProcessEvent+0x15c
f3151bd4 f576c832 wdf01000!FxPkgPnp::PowerPolStarting+0x1d
f3151c5c f576d716 wdf01000!FxPkgPnp::PowerPolicyEnterNewState+0x11c
f3151c80 f576e388 wdf01000!FxPkgPnp::PowerPolicyProcessEventInner+0x185
f3151ca4 f576b5a8 wdf01000!FxPkgPnp::PowerPolicyProcessEvent+0x172
f3151cc0 f576a484 wdf01000!FxPkgPnp::PnpEventHardwareAvailable+0x90
f3151ce8 f576adb2 wdf01000!FxPkgPnp::PnpEnterNewState+0x104
f3151d0c f576b503 wdf01000!FxPkgPnp::PnpProcessEventInner+0x149
f3151d20 f576ed1c wdf01000!FxPkgPnp::_PnpProcessEventInner+0x26
f3151d50 f576fff8 wdf01000!FxEventQueue::EventQueueWorker+0x6f
f3151d60 8056cdd5 wdf01000!FxWorkItemEventQueue::_WorkItemCallback+0x21
f3151d74 80535ca0 nt!IopProcessWorkItem+0x13
f3151dac 805c72c2 nt!ExpWorkerThread+0x100
f3151ddc 80542e82 nt!PspSystemThreadStartup+0x34
00000000 00000000 nt!KiThreadStartup+0x16





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