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authorMarkus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com>2009-12-17 17:19:17 +0100
committerAnthony Liguori <aliguori@us.ibm.com>2010-01-13 17:14:16 -0600
commit96560cb34c3183a4fb1769e4eff4d860a24579a8 (patch)
tree368be94a37b93701b85e9dee8cd855bfc2702b4f /docs
parent1cb1a66aed921060fa34d161b52e95d05de18ec1 (diff)
docs: New qdev-device-use.txt
Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Anthony Liguori <aliguori@us.ibm.com>
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+= How to convert to -device & friends =
+
+=== Specifying Bus and Address on Bus ===
+
+In qdev, each device has a parent bus. Some devices provide one or
+more buses for children. You can specify a device's parent bus with
+-device parameter bus.
+
+A device typically has a device address on its parent bus. For buses
+where this address can be configured, devices provide a bus-specific
+property. These are
+
+ bus property name value format
+ PCI addr %x.%x (dev.fn, .fn optional)
+ I2C address %u
+ SCSI scsi-id %u
+
+Example: device i440FX-pcihost is on the root bus, and provides a PCI
+bus named pci.0. To put a FOO device into its slot 4, use -device
+FOO,bus=/i440FX-pcihost/pci.0,addr=4. The abbreviated form bus=pci.0
+also works as long as the bus name is unique.
+
+Note: the USB device address can't be controlled at this time.
+
+=== Block Devices ===
+
+A QEMU block device (drive) has a host and a guest part.
+
+In the general case, the guest device is connected to a controller
+device. For instance, the IDE controller provides two IDE buses, each
+of which can have up to two ide-drive devices, and each ide-drive
+device is a guest part, and is connected to a host part.
+
+Except we sometimes lump controller, bus(es) and drive device(s) all
+together into a single device. For instance, the ISA floppy
+controller is connected to up to two host drives.
+
+The old ways to define block devices define host and guest part
+together. Sometimes, they can even define a controller device in
+addition to the block device.
+
+The new way keeps the parts separate: you create the host part with
+-drive, and guest device(s) with -device.
+
+The various old ways to define drives all boil down to the common form
+
+ -drive if=TYPE,index=IDX,bus=BUS,unit=UNIT,HOST-OPTS...
+
+TYPE, BUS and UNIT identify the controller device, which of its buses
+to use, and the drive's address on that bus. Details depend on TYPE.
+IDX is an alternative way to specify BUS and UNIT.
+
+In the new way, this becomes something like
+
+ -drive if=none,id=DRIVE-ID,HOST-OPTS...
+ -device DEVNAME,drive=DRIVE-ID,DEV-OPTS...
+
+The -device argument differs in detail for each kind of drive:
+
+* if=ide
+
+ -device ide-drive,drive=DRIVE-ID,bus=IDE-BUS,unit=UNIT
+
+ where IDE-BUS identifies an IDE bus, normally either ide.0 or ide.1,
+ and UNIT is either 0 or 1.
+
+ Bug: new way does not work for ide.1 unit 0 (in old terms: index=2)
+ unless you disable the default CD-ROM with -nodefaults.
+
+* if=scsi
+
+ The old way implicitly creates SCSI controllers as needed. The new
+ way makes that explicit:
+
+ -device lsi53c895a,id=ID
+
+ As for all PCI devices, you can add bus=PCI-BUS,addr=DEVFN to
+ control the PCI device address.
+
+ This SCSI controller a single SCSI bus, named ID.0. Put a disk on
+ it:
+
+ -device scsi-disk,drive=DRIVE-ID,bus=ID.0,scsi-id=SCSI-ID
+
+* if=floppy
+
+ -global isa-fdc,driveA=DRIVE-ID,driveB=DRIVE-ID
+
+ This is -global instead of -device, because the floppy controller is
+ created automatically, and we want to configure that one, not create
+ a second one (which isn't possible anyway).
+
+ Omitting a drive parameter makes that drive empty.
+
+ Bug: driveA works only if you disable the default floppy drive with
+ -nodefaults.
+
+* if=virtio
+
+ -device virtio-blk-pci,drive=DRIVE-ID,class=C,vectors=V
+
+ This lets you control PCI device class and MSI-X vectors.
+
+ As for all PCI devices, you can add bus=PCI-BUS,addr=DEVFN to
+ control the PCI device address.
+
+* if=pflash, if=mtd, if=sd, if=xen are not yet available with -device
+
+For USB devices, the old way is actually different:
+
+ -usbdevice disk:format=FMT:FILENAME
+
+Provides much less control than -drive's HOST-OPTS... The new way
+fixes that:
+
+ -device usb-storage,drive=DRIVE-ID
+
+=== Character Devices ===
+
+A QEMU character device has a host and a guest part.
+
+The old ways to define character devices define host and guest part
+together.
+
+The new way keeps the parts separate: you create the host part with
+-chardev, and the guest device with -device.
+
+The various old ways to define a character device are all of the
+general form
+
+ -FOO FOO-OPTS...,LEGACY-CHARDEV
+
+where FOO-OPTS... is specific to -FOO, and the host part
+LEGACY-CHARDEV is the same everywhere.
+
+In the new way, this becomes
+
+ -chardev HOST-OPTS...,id=CHR-ID
+ -device DEVNAME,chardev=CHR-ID,DEV-OPTS...
+
+The appropriate DEVNAME depends on the machine type. For type "pc":
+
+* -serial becomes -device isa-serial,iobase=IOADDR,irq=IRQ,index=IDX
+
+ This lets you control I/O ports and IRQs.
+
+* -parallel becomes -device isa-parallel,iobase=IOADDR,irq=IRQ,index=IDX
+
+ This lets you control I/O ports and IRQs.
+
+* -usbdevice serial:vendorid=VID,productid=PRID becomes
+ -device usb-serial,vendorid=VID,productid=PRID
+
+* -usbdevice braille doesn't support LEGACY-CHARDEV syntax. It always
+ uses "braille". With -device, this useful default is gone, so you
+ have to use something like
+
+ -device usb-braille,chardev=braille,vendorid=VID,productid=PRID
+ -chardev braille,id=braille
+
+* -virtioconsole is still being worked on
+
+LEGACY-CHARDEV translates to -chardev HOST-OPTS... as follows:
+
+* null becomes -chardev null
+
+* pty, msmouse, braille, stdio likewise
+
+* vc:WIDTHxHEIGHT becomes -chardev vc,width=WIDTH,height=HEIGHT
+
+* vc:<COLS>Cx<ROWS>C becomes -chardev vc,cols=<COLS>,rows=<ROWS>
+
+* con: becomes -chardev console
+
+* COM<NUM> becomes -chardev serial,path=<NUM>
+
+* file:FNAME becomes -chardev file,path=FNAME
+
+* pipe:FNAME becomes -chardev pipe,path=FNAME
+
+* tcp:HOST:PORT,OPTS... becomes -chardev socket,host=HOST,port=PORT,OPTS...
+
+* telnet:HOST:PORT,OPTS... becomes
+ -chardev socket,host=HOST,port=PORT,OPTS...,telnet=on
+
+* udp:HOST:PORT@LOCALADDR:LOCALPORT becomes
+ -chardev udp,host=HOST,port=PORT,localaddr=LOCALADDR,localport=LOCALPORT
+
+* unix:FNAME becomes -chardev socket,path=FNAME
+
+* /dev/parportN becomes -chardev parport,file=/dev/parportN
+
+* /dev/ppiN likewise
+
+* Any other /dev/FNAME becomes -chardev tty,path=/dev/FNAME
+
+* mon:LEGACY-CHARDEV is special: it multiplexes the monitor onto the
+ character device defined by LEGACY-CHARDEV. -chardev provides more
+ general multiplexing instead: you can connect up to four users to a
+ single host part. You need to pass mux=on to -chardev to enable
+ switching the input focus.
+
+QEMU uses LEGACY-CHARDEV syntax not just to set up guest devices, but
+also in various other places such as -monitor or -net
+user,guestfwd=... You can use chardev:CHR-ID in place of
+LEGACY-CHARDEV to refer to a host part defined with -chardev.
+
+=== Network Devices ===
+
+A QEMU network device (NIC) has a host and a guest part.
+
+The old ways to define NICs define host and guest part together. It
+looks like this:
+
+ -net nic,vlan=VLAN,macaddr=MACADDR,model=MODEL,name=ID,addr=STR,vectors=V
+
+Except for USB it looks like this:
+
+ -usbdevice net:vlan=VLAN,macaddr=MACADDR,name=ID,addr=STR,vectors=V
+
+The new way keeps the parts separate: you create the host part with
+-netdev, and the guest device with -device, like this:
+
+ -netdev type=TYPE,id=NET-ID
+ -device DEVNAME,netdev=NET-ID,mac=MACADDR,DEV-OPTS...
+
+Unlike the old way, this creates just a network device, not a VLAN.
+If you really want a VLAN, create it the usual way, then create the
+guest device like this:
+
+ -device DEVNAME,vlan=VLAN,mac=MACADDR,DEV-OPTS...
+
+DEVNAME equals MODEL, except for virtio you have to name the virtio
+device appropriate for the bus (virtio-net-pci for PCI), and for USB
+NIC you have to use usb-net.
+
+The old name=ID parameter becomes the usual id=ID with -device.
+
+For PCI devices, you can add bus=PCI-BUS,addr=DEVFN to control the PCI
+device address, as usual. The old -net nic provides parameter addr
+for that, it is silently ignored when the NIC is not a PCI device.
+
+-net nic accepts vectors=V for all models, but it's silently ignored
+except for virtio-net-pci (model=virtio). With -device, only devices
+that support it accept it.
+
+Not all devices are available with -device at this time. All PCI
+devices and ne2k_isa are.
+
+Some PCI devices aren't available with -net nic, e.g. i82558a.
+
+Bug: usb-net does not work, yet. Patch posted.
+
+=== Graphics Devices ===
+
+Host and guest part of graphics devices have always been separate.
+
+The old way to define the guest graphics device is -vga VGA.
+
+The new way is -device. Map from -vga argument to -device:
+
+ std -device VGA
+ cirrus -device cirrus-vga
+ vmware -device vmware-svga
+ xenfb not yet available with -device
+
+As for all PCI devices, you can add bus=PCI-BUS,addr=DEVFN to control
+the PCI device address.
+
+-device VGA supports properties bios-offset and bios-size, but they
+aren't used with machine type "pc".
+
+Bug: -device cirrus-vga and -device vmware-svga require -nodefaults.
+
+Bug: the new way requires PCI; ISA VGA is not yet available with
+-device.
+
+Bug: the new way doesn't work for machine type "pc", because it
+violates obscure device initialization ordering constraints.
+
+=== Audio Devices ===
+
+Host and guest part of audio devices have always been separate.
+
+The old way to define guest audio devices is -soundhw C1,...
+
+The new way is to define each guest audio device separately with
+-device.
+
+Map from -soundhw sound card name to -device:
+
+ ac97 -device AC97
+ cs4231a -device cs4231a,iobase=IOADDR,irq=IRQ,dma=DMA
+ es1370 -device ES1370
+ gus -device gus,iobase=IOADDR,irq=IRQ,dma=DMA,freq=F
+ sb16 -device sb16,iobase=IOADDR,irq=IRQ,dma=DMA,dma16=DMA16,version=V
+ adlib not yet available with -device
+ pcspk not yet available with -device
+
+For PCI devices, you can add bus=PCI-BUS,addr=DEVFN to control the PCI
+device address, as usual.
+
+=== USB Devices ===
+
+The old way to define a virtual USB device is -usbdevice DRIVER:OPTS...
+
+The new way is -device DEVNAME,DEV-OPTS... Details depend on DRIVER:
+
+* mouse -device usb-mouse
+* tablet -device usb-tablet
+* keyboard -device usb-kdb
+* wacom-tablet -device usb-wacom-tablet
+* host:... See "Host Device Assignment"
+* disk:... See "Block Devices"
+* serial:... See "Character Devices"
+* braille See "Character Devices"
+* net:... See "Network Devices"
+* bt:... not yet available with -device
+
+=== Watchdog Devices ===
+
+Host and guest part of watchdog devices have always been separate.
+
+The old way to define a guest watchdog device is -watchdog DEVNAME.
+The new way is -device DEVNAME. For PCI devices, you can add
+bus=PCI-BUS,addr=DEVFN to control the PCI device address, as usual.
+
+=== Host Device Assignment ===
+
+QEMU supports assigning host PCI devices (qemu-kvm only at this time)
+and host USB devices.
+
+The old way to assign a host PCI device is
+
+ -pcidevice host=ADDR,dma=none,id=ID
+
+The new way is
+
+ -device pci-assign,host=ADDR,iommu=IOMMU,id=ID
+
+The old dma=none becomes iommu=0 with -device.
+
+The old way to assign a host USB device is
+
+ -usbdevice host:auto:BUS.ADDR:VID:PRID
+
+where any of BUS, ADDR, VID, PRID can be the wildcard *.
+
+The new way is
+
+ -device usb-host,hostbus=BUS,hostaddr=ADDR,vendorid=VID,productid=PRID
+
+where left out or zero BUS, ADDR, VID, PRID serve as wildcard.