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linux-next/include/linux/virtio_ring.h
Andy Lutomirski 2a2d1382fe virtio: Add improved queue allocation API
This leaves vring_new_virtqueue alone for compatbility, but it
adds two new improved APIs:

vring_create_virtqueue: Creates a virtqueue backed by automatically
allocated coherent memory.  (Some day it this could be extended to
support non-coherent memory, too, if there ends up being a platform
on which it's worthwhile.)

__vring_new_virtqueue: Creates a virtqueue with a manually-specified
layout.  This should allow mic_virtio to work much more cleanly.

Signed-off-by: Andy Lutomirski <luto@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Michael S. Tsirkin <mst@redhat.com>
2016-03-02 17:01:57 +02:00

112 lines
2.9 KiB
C

#ifndef _LINUX_VIRTIO_RING_H
#define _LINUX_VIRTIO_RING_H
#include <asm/barrier.h>
#include <linux/irqreturn.h>
#include <uapi/linux/virtio_ring.h>
/*
* Barriers in virtio are tricky. Non-SMP virtio guests can't assume
* they're not on an SMP host system, so they need to assume real
* barriers. Non-SMP virtio hosts could skip the barriers, but does
* anyone care?
*
* For virtio_pci on SMP, we don't need to order with respect to MMIO
* accesses through relaxed memory I/O windows, so virt_mb() et al are
* sufficient.
*
* For using virtio to talk to real devices (eg. other heterogeneous
* CPUs) we do need real barriers. In theory, we could be using both
* kinds of virtio, so it's a runtime decision, and the branch is
* actually quite cheap.
*/
static inline void virtio_mb(bool weak_barriers)
{
if (weak_barriers)
virt_mb();
else
mb();
}
static inline void virtio_rmb(bool weak_barriers)
{
if (weak_barriers)
virt_rmb();
else
rmb();
}
static inline void virtio_wmb(bool weak_barriers)
{
if (weak_barriers)
virt_wmb();
else
wmb();
}
static inline void virtio_store_mb(bool weak_barriers,
__virtio16 *p, __virtio16 v)
{
if (weak_barriers) {
virt_store_mb(*p, v);
} else {
WRITE_ONCE(*p, v);
mb();
}
}
struct virtio_device;
struct virtqueue;
/*
* Creates a virtqueue and allocates the descriptor ring. If
* may_reduce_num is set, then this may allocate a smaller ring than
* expected. The caller should query virtqueue_get_ring_size to learn
* the actual size of the ring.
*/
struct virtqueue *vring_create_virtqueue(unsigned int index,
unsigned int num,
unsigned int vring_align,
struct virtio_device *vdev,
bool weak_barriers,
bool may_reduce_num,
bool (*notify)(struct virtqueue *vq),
void (*callback)(struct virtqueue *vq),
const char *name);
/* Creates a virtqueue with a custom layout. */
struct virtqueue *__vring_new_virtqueue(unsigned int index,
struct vring vring,
struct virtio_device *vdev,
bool weak_barriers,
bool (*notify)(struct virtqueue *),
void (*callback)(struct virtqueue *),
const char *name);
/*
* Creates a virtqueue with a standard layout but a caller-allocated
* ring.
*/
struct virtqueue *vring_new_virtqueue(unsigned int index,
unsigned int num,
unsigned int vring_align,
struct virtio_device *vdev,
bool weak_barriers,
void *pages,
bool (*notify)(struct virtqueue *vq),
void (*callback)(struct virtqueue *vq),
const char *name);
/*
* Destroys a virtqueue. If created with vring_create_virtqueue, this
* also frees the ring.
*/
void vring_del_virtqueue(struct virtqueue *vq);
/* Filter out transport-specific feature bits. */
void vring_transport_features(struct virtio_device *vdev);
irqreturn_t vring_interrupt(int irq, void *_vq);
#endif /* _LINUX_VIRTIO_RING_H */