Hi Gerd, On 25/07/15 10:49, Gerd Hoffmann wrote: > Hi, > >>> I agree. Also, as far as I understood Marc, his hope was that the fix to >>> halfway working VGA emulation would be virtio-gpu. > > Note we have both virtio-vga and virtio-gpu-pci. virtio-vga has vga > compatibility built-in, otherwise the two are identical. virtio-gpu-pci > is enabled along with all other virtio drivers, so arm + aarch64 have > that already. > >> 2) Use the fact that there is actually hardly any legacy for ARM VMs, >> and embrace paravirtualized devices entirely. We do it for disks, >> network interfaces. Why not display? Why not input? > > We have both now (qemu 2.4+, linux 4.1+ for input, linux 4.2+ for gpu). > Works just fine on arm (tcg tested). aarch64 not yet (with vanilla > upstream linux kernel) due to lack of generic pci host support. > >> Using VGA makes sense on x86 because this is a standard on that >> platform. Every system has one. You can't expect the same thing on ARM >> (evil persons would even say that you can't expect anything at all). So >> let's take this opportunity to use the best tool for the job. Virtio >> fits that bill pretty well apparently. > > Big question is (a) whenever we need a firmware framebuffer and (b) how > to implement that best. > > virtio-vga/virtio-gpu-pci in paravirt (native) mode requires the guest > explicitly request screen updates. There is no dirty page tracking, and > guest writes to memory do *not* magically appear on the screen. I don't > think implementing a EFI driver for that is going to fly. > > virtio-vga in vga-compat mode uses a framebuffer with the usual dirty > tracking logic in pci bar 0 (simliar to stdvga). Which is exactly the > thing causing the cache coherency issues on aarch64 if I understand > things correctly.
If this new virtio-vga driver still insists on always mapping the memory as "non-cacheable", then it will face the same fate indeed. Which is a bit odd, as it really *knows* this is a paravirtualized device, and that the data will be read back from the CPU side. The dirty tracking logic plays no part in that, AFAIK. Thanks, M. -- Jazz is not dead. It just smells funny...