From: David Woodhouse <d...@amazon.co.uk> As noted in the comment, the PCI INTx lines are supposed to be routed to *both* the PIC and the I/O APIC. It's just that we don't cope with the concept of an IRQ being asserted to two *different* pins on the two irqchips.
So we have this hack of routing to I/O APIC only if the PIRQ routing to the PIC is disabled. Which seems to work well enough, even when I try hard to break it with kexec. But should be explicitly documented and understood. Signed-off-by: David Woodhouse <d...@amazon.co.uk> Message-Id: <112a09643b8191c4eae7d92fa247a861ab90a9ee.ca...@infradead.org> Reviewed-by: Michael S. Tsirkin <m...@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Michael S. Tsirkin <m...@redhat.com> --- hw/isa/lpc_ich9.c | 15 +++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 15 insertions(+) diff --git a/hw/isa/lpc_ich9.c b/hw/isa/lpc_ich9.c index 9c47a2f6c7..bce487ac4e 100644 --- a/hw/isa/lpc_ich9.c +++ b/hw/isa/lpc_ich9.c @@ -304,6 +304,21 @@ static PCIINTxRoute ich9_route_intx_pin_to_irq(void *opaque, int pirq_pin) route.irq = -1; } } else { + /* + * Strictly speaking, this is wrong. The PIRQ should be routed + * to *both* the I/O APIC and the PIC, on different pins. The + * I/O APIC has a fixed mapping to IRQ16-23, while the PIC is + * routed according to the PIRQx_ROUT configuration. But QEMU + * doesn't (yet) cope with the concept of pin numbers differing + * between PIC and I/O APIC, and neither does the in-kernel KVM + * irqchip support. So we route to the I/O APIC *only* if the + * routing to the PIC is disabled in the PIRQx_ROUT settings. + * + * This seems to work even if we boot a Linux guest with 'noapic' + * to make it use the legacy PIC, and then kexec directly into a + * new kernel which uses the I/O APIC. The new kernel explicitly + * disables the PIRQ routing even though it doesn't need to care. + */ route.irq = ich9_pirq_to_gsi(pirq_pin); } -- MST