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-rw-r--r--include/linux/virtio_ring.h119
1 files changed, 119 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/include/linux/virtio_ring.h b/include/linux/virtio_ring.h
new file mode 100644
index 000000000000..ac69e7bb5a14
--- /dev/null
+++ b/include/linux/virtio_ring.h
@@ -0,0 +1,119 @@
1#ifndef _LINUX_VIRTIO_RING_H
2#define _LINUX_VIRTIO_RING_H
3/* An interface for efficient virtio implementation, currently for use by KVM
4 * and lguest, but hopefully others soon. Do NOT change this since it will
5 * break existing servers and clients.
6 *
7 * This header is BSD licensed so anyone can use the definitions to implement
8 * compatible drivers/servers.
9 *
10 * Copyright Rusty Russell IBM Corporation 2007. */
11#include <linux/types.h>
12
13/* This marks a buffer as continuing via the next field. */
14#define VRING_DESC_F_NEXT 1
15/* This marks a buffer as write-only (otherwise read-only). */
16#define VRING_DESC_F_WRITE 2
17
18/* This means don't notify other side when buffer added. */
19#define VRING_USED_F_NO_NOTIFY 1
20/* This means don't interrupt guest when buffer consumed. */
21#define VRING_AVAIL_F_NO_INTERRUPT 1
22
23/* Virtio ring descriptors: 16 bytes. These can chain together via "next". */
24struct vring_desc
25{
26 /* Address (guest-physical). */
27 __u64 addr;
28 /* Length. */
29 __u32 len;
30 /* The flags as indicated above. */
31 __u16 flags;
32 /* We chain unused descriptors via this, too */
33 __u16 next;
34};
35
36struct vring_avail
37{
38 __u16 flags;
39 __u16 idx;
40 __u16 ring[];
41};
42
43/* u32 is used here for ids for padding reasons. */
44struct vring_used_elem
45{
46 /* Index of start of used descriptor chain. */
47 __u32 id;
48 /* Total length of the descriptor chain which was used (written to) */
49 __u32 len;
50};
51
52struct vring_used
53{
54 __u16 flags;
55 __u16 idx;
56 struct vring_used_elem ring[];
57};
58
59struct vring {
60 unsigned int num;
61
62 struct vring_desc *desc;
63
64 struct vring_avail *avail;
65
66 struct vring_used *used;
67};
68
69/* The standard layout for the ring is a continuous chunk of memory which looks
70 * like this. The used fields will be aligned to a "num+1" boundary.
71 *
72 * struct vring
73 * {
74 * // The actual descriptors (16 bytes each)
75 * struct vring_desc desc[num];
76 *
77 * // A ring of available descriptor heads with free-running index.
78 * __u16 avail_flags;
79 * __u16 avail_idx;
80 * __u16 available[num];
81 *
82 * // Padding so a correctly-chosen num value will cache-align used_idx.
83 * char pad[sizeof(struct vring_desc) - sizeof(avail_flags)];
84 *
85 * // A ring of used descriptor heads with free-running index.
86 * __u16 used_flags;
87 * __u16 used_idx;
88 * struct vring_used_elem used[num];
89 * };
90 */
91static inline void vring_init(struct vring *vr, unsigned int num, void *p)
92{
93 vr->num = num;
94 vr->desc = p;
95 vr->avail = p + num*sizeof(struct vring);
96 vr->used = p + (num+1)*(sizeof(struct vring) + sizeof(__u16));
97}
98
99static inline unsigned vring_size(unsigned int num)
100{
101 return (num + 1) * (sizeof(struct vring_desc) + sizeof(__u16))
102 + sizeof(__u32) + num * sizeof(struct vring_used_elem);
103}
104
105#ifdef __KERNEL__
106#include <linux/irqreturn.h>
107struct virtio_device;
108struct virtqueue;
109
110struct virtqueue *vring_new_virtqueue(unsigned int num,
111 struct virtio_device *vdev,
112 void *pages,
113 void (*notify)(struct virtqueue *vq),
114 bool (*callback)(struct virtqueue *vq));
115void vring_del_virtqueue(struct virtqueue *vq);
116
117irqreturn_t vring_interrupt(int irq, void *_vq);
118#endif /* __KERNEL__ */
119#endif /* _LINUX_VIRTIO_RING_H */