Xen HVM guest support ===================== Description ----------- KVM has support for hosting Xen guests, intercepting Xen hypercalls and event channel (Xen PV interrupt) delivery. This allows guests which expect to be run under Xen to be hosted in QEMU under Linux/KVM instead. Setup ----- Xen mode is enabled by setting the ``xen-version`` property of the KVM accelerator, for example for Xen 4.10: .. parsed-literal:: |qemu_system| --accel kvm,xen-version=0x4000a Additionally, virtual APIC support can be advertised to the guest through the ``xen-vapic`` CPU flag: .. parsed-literal:: |qemu_system| --accel kvm,xen-version=0x4000a --cpu host,+xen_vapic When Xen support is enabled, QEMU changes hypervisor identification (CPUID 0x40000000..0x4000000A) to Xen. The KVM identification and features are not advertised to a Xen guest. If Hyper-V is also enabled, the Xen identification moves to leaves 0x40000100..0x4000010A. The Xen platform device is enabled automatically for a Xen guest. This allows a guest to unplug all emulated devices, in order to use Xen PV block and network drivers instead. Note that until the Xen PV device back ends are enabled to work with Xen mode in QEMU, that is unlikely to cause significant joy. Linux guests can be dissuaded from this by adding 'xen_emul_unplug=never' on their command line, and it can also be noted that AHCI disk controllers are exempt from being unplugged, as are passthrough VFIO PCI devices. Properties ---------- The following properties exist on the KVM accelerator object: ``xen-version`` This property contains the Xen version in ``XENVER_version`` form, with the major version in the top 16 bits and the minor version in the low 16 bits. Setting this property enables the Xen guest support. ``xen-evtchn-max-pirq`` Xen PIRQs represent an emulated physical interrupt, either GSI or MSI, which can be routed to an event channel instead of to the emulated I/O or local APIC. By default, QEMU permits only 256 PIRQs because this allows maximum compatibility with 32-bit MSI where the higher bits of the PIRQ# would need to be in the upper 64 bits of the MSI message. For guests with large numbers of PCI devices (and none which are limited to 32-bit addressing) it may be desirable to increase this value. ``xen-gnttab-max-frames`` Xen grant tables are the means by which a Xen guest grants access to its memory for PV back ends (disk, network, etc.). Since QEMU only supports v1 grant tables which are 8 bytes in size, each page (each frame) of the grant table can reference 512 pages of guest memory. The default number of frames is 64, allowing for 32768 pages of guest memory to be accessed by PV backends through simultaneous grants. For guests with large numbers of PV devices and high throughput, it may be desirable to increase this value. OS requirements --------------- The minimal Xen support in the KVM accelerator requires the host to be running Linux v5.12 or newer. Later versions add optimisations: Linux v5.17 added acceleration of interrupt delivery via the Xen PIRQ mechanism, and Linux v5.19 accelerated Xen PV timers and inter-processor interrupts (IPIs).