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[Qemu-devel] [PATCHv3 0/2] Fix virtio-serial migration on bi-endian targ
From: |
David Gibson |
Subject: |
[Qemu-devel] [PATCHv3 0/2] Fix virtio-serial migration on bi-endian targets |
Date: |
Fri, 19 Dec 2014 14:57:25 +1100 |
On a bi-endian target, with a guest in the non-default endian mode,
attempting to migrate twice in a row with a virtio-serial device wil
cause a qemu SEGV on the second outgoing migration.
The problem is that virtio_serial_save_device() (and other places) expect
VirtIOSerial->config to be in current guest endianness. On a fresh boot,
virtio_serial_device_realize() will initialize VirtIOSerial->config in
default endianness. It's assumed the guest OS will make its true
endianness known before the device is reset and initialized, then
vser_reset adjusts VirtIOSerial->config into the new endianness.
But on an incoming migration, the device isn't reset (after all the guest
has a running driver as far as it's concerned), which means that
VirtIOSerial->config retains its default endianness value from
virtio_serial_device_realize().
On a subsequent outgoing migration, virtio_serial_save_device() attempts
to interpret VirtIOSerial->config.max_nr_ports in current endianness when
its actually in default endianness and then runs off the end of the
ports_map array in the loop immediately afterwards.
We could fix this by adjusting VirtIOSerial->config into the correct
current endianness after an incoming migration. But in fact we
already have a host endian copy of the max number of ports readily
available, so it's simpler to just use that instead. Patch 1/2 does
that.
Once that's done, it becomes clear that there's really no reason to
keep the guest-endian copy of the config space around persistently
(config accesses aren't a fast path, so it can be constructed when
necessary). Patch 2/2 makes that cleanup.
- [Qemu-devel] [PATCHv3 0/2] Fix virtio-serial migration on bi-endian targets,
David Gibson <=