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From: | Alexander Graf |
Subject: | Re: [Qemu-devel] Adding memory region without specifying address |
Date: | Mon, 30 Jun 2014 22:21:49 +0200 |
User-agent: | Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10.9; rv:24.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/24.6.0 |
On 30.06.14 19:53, Stalley, Sean wrote:
Thanks for the quick response! Sorry for my belated reply...-----Original Message----- From: address@hidden [mailto:address@hidden On Behalf Of Peter Crosthwaite Sent: Friday, June 27, 2014 6:26 PM To: Stalley, Sean; Alexander Graf Cc: address@hidden Subject: Re: [Qemu-devel] Adding memory region without specifying address On Sat, Jun 28, 2014 at 10:29 AM, Stalley, Sean <address@hidden> wrote:Hello All, I am working on building a hardware model for QEMU. This model needs a couple memory regions for MMIO. The thing is, I don’t particularly care what the physical address of the memory region is (so long as it doesn’t overlap with any other memory region).Curious, what's your mechanism for giving the auto allocated address to the guest?We have one memory space that is fixed. The plan is to put the addresses of the automatically allocated locations in the fixed space.
That sounds exactly like what I've been working on. The first incarnation was called "platform bus", the second "platform devices", the current work is going to be "sysbus hints" - but it's WIP.
I was wondering if QEMU is able to ‘allocate’ a memory region for hardware (IE: I call into something saying I need a memory region X bytes long, and QEMU returns with a pointer to a memory region X bytes long).Do you have full control over the memory region you are adding these sub- regions too and can you implement a "for-everything" allocator on the machine level?We want to be able to put these sub-regions anywhere in memory-space, so a "for-everything" allocator isn't really a good option.
Why not?
Can QEMU do this? was looking at the various flavors of memory_region_add_subregion(), but they all seem to require a hardware offset…Alex's addressless -device work may be related but it's more about command line usability. Autoallocation of MMIO addresses is a feature there however.Where is this code located? I have been looking, but I haven’t been able to find it yet. Is this called by qdev_device_add()?
It's not upstream yet ;). Alex
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