Moving it inside CPU initializer from cpudef will help to split cpu_x86_find_by_name() into default init and user settable properties.
PS: Is kvm_features field necessary in cpudef, what the point if it's almost imediately overwritten to ~0? Could it be removed from cpudef? Signed-off-by: Igor Mammedov <imamm...@redhat.com> --- target-i386/cpu.c | 6 +++--- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) diff --git a/target-i386/cpu.c b/target-i386/cpu.c index 43601a3..e266792 100644 --- a/target-i386/cpu.c +++ b/target-i386/cpu.c @@ -1093,6 +1093,9 @@ static void cpudef_2_x86_cpu(X86CPU *cpu, x86_def_t *def, Error **errp) env->cpuid_7_0_ebx = def->cpuid_7_0_ebx_features; env->cpuid_xlevel2 = def->xlevel2; + /* not supported bits will be filtered out later */ + env->cpuid_kvm_features = ~0; + object_property_set_bool(OBJECT(cpu), true, "hypervisor", errp); } @@ -1175,9 +1178,6 @@ static int cpu_x86_find_by_name(X86CPU *cpu, x86_def_t *x86_cpu_def, cpudef_2_x86_cpu(cpu, def, errp); - /* not supported bits will be filtered out later */ - env->cpuid_kvm_features = ~0; - for (ent = qdict_first(features); ent; ent = qdict_next(features, ent)) { const QString *qval = qobject_to_qstring(qdict_entry_value(ent)); object_property_parse(OBJECT(cpu), qstring_get_str(qval), -- 1.7.11.2