On 3/31/20 3:13 AM, David Gibson wrote: > On Mon, Mar 30, 2020 at 05:34:40PM +0200, Cédric Le Goater wrote: >>>>> + /* No valid pte or access denied due to protection */ >>>>> + if (cause_excp) { >>>>> + ppc_radix64_raise_si(cpu, rwx, eaddr, fault_cause); >>>>> + } >>>>> + return 1; >>>>> + } >>>>> + >>>>> + ppc_radix64_set_rc(cpu, rwx, pte, pte_addr, g_prot); >>>>> + >>>>> + return 0; >>>>> +} >>>>> + >>>>> +static int ppc_radix64_xlate(PowerPCCPU *cpu, vaddr eaddr, int rwx, >>>>> + uint64_t lpid, uint64_t pid, bool >>>>> relocation, >>>>> + hwaddr *raddr, int *psizep, int *protp, >>>>> + bool cause_excp) >>>>> +{ >>>>> + ppc_v3_pate_t pate; >>>>> + int psize, prot; >>>>> + hwaddr g_raddr; >>>>> + >>>>> + *psizep = INT_MAX; >>>>> + *protp = PAGE_READ | PAGE_WRITE | PAGE_EXEC; >>>>> + >>>>> + /* Get Process Table */ >>>>> + if (cpu->vhyp && lpid == 0) { >>>> >>>> Current code doesn't check lpid == 0. Not sure to see what it's for... >>> >>> cpu->vhyp means a pseries machine, lpid == 0 means accessing quadrant3, >>> so it's the kernel. >> >> Sorry. I misread that. It would pid == 0 for the kernel. >> >> So yes, the test cpu->vhyp && lpid == 0 might be a bit overkill, given >> that lpid is always 0 when running under a QEMU pseries machine. > > Overkill and conceptually incorrect. When in vhyp mode we're not > modelling the hypervisor part of the CPU, which means that really the > LPID doesn't exist, so we shouldn't be looking at it (though it will > always be 0 in practice).
I will remove the extra check. This has the nice effect of cleaning up a couple of weird changes in patch 7. Thanks, C.