1.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
2
3===========================
4Hypercall Op-codes (hcalls)
5===========================
6
7Overview
8=========
9
10Virtualization on 64-bit Power Book3S Platforms is based on the PAPR
11specification [1]_ which describes the run-time environment for a guest
12operating system and how it should interact with the hypervisor for
13privileged operations. Currently there are two PAPR compliant hypervisors:
14
15- **IBM PowerVM (PHYP)**: IBM's proprietary hypervisor that supports AIX,
16  IBM-i and  Linux as supported guests (termed as Logical Partitions
17  or LPARS). It supports the full PAPR specification.
18
19- **Qemu/KVM**: Supports PPC64 linux guests running on a PPC64 linux host.
20  Though it only implements a subset of PAPR specification called LoPAPR [2]_.
21
22On PPC64 arch a guest kernel running on top of a PAPR hypervisor is called
23a *pSeries guest*. A pseries guest runs in a supervisor mode (HV=0) and must
24issue hypercalls to the hypervisor whenever it needs to perform an action
25that is hypervisor priviledged [3]_ or for other services managed by the
26hypervisor.
27
28Hence a Hypercall (hcall) is essentially a request by the pseries guest
29asking hypervisor to perform a privileged operation on behalf of the guest. The
30guest issues a with necessary input operands. The hypervisor after performing
31the privilege operation returns a status code and output operands back to the
32guest.
33
34HCALL ABI
35=========
36The ABI specification for a hcall between a pseries guest and PAPR hypervisor
37is covered in section 14.5.3 of ref [2]_. Switch to the  Hypervisor context is
38done via the instruction **HVCS** that expects the Opcode for hcall is set in *r3*
39and any in-arguments for the hcall are provided in registers *r4-r12*. If values
40have to be passed through a memory buffer, the data stored in that buffer should be
41in Big-endian byte order.
42
43Once control returns back to the guest after hypervisor has serviced the
44'HVCS' instruction the return value of the hcall is available in *r3* and any
45out values are returned in registers *r4-r12*. Again like in case of in-arguments,
46any out values stored in a memory buffer will be in Big-endian byte order.
47
48Powerpc arch code provides convenient wrappers named **plpar_hcall_xxx** defined
49in a arch specific header [4]_ to issue hcalls from the linux kernel
50running as pseries guest.
51
52Register Conventions
53====================
54
55Any hcall should follow same register convention as described in section 2.2.1.1
56of "64-Bit ELF V2 ABI Specification: Power Architecture"[5]_. Table below
57summarizes these conventions:
58
59+----------+----------+-------------------------------------------+
60| Register |Volatile  |  Purpose                                  |
61| Range    |(Y/N)     |                                           |
62+==========+==========+===========================================+
63|   r0     |    Y     |  Optional-usage                           |
64+----------+----------+-------------------------------------------+
65|   r1     |    N     |  Stack Pointer                            |
66+----------+----------+-------------------------------------------+
67|   r2     |    N     |  TOC                                      |
68+----------+----------+-------------------------------------------+
69|   r3     |    Y     |  hcall opcode/return value                |
70+----------+----------+-------------------------------------------+
71|  r4-r10  |    Y     |  in and out values                        |
72+----------+----------+-------------------------------------------+
73|   r11    |    Y     |  Optional-usage/Environmental pointer     |
74+----------+----------+-------------------------------------------+
75|   r12    |    Y     |  Optional-usage/Function entry address at |
76|          |          |  global entry point                       |
77+----------+----------+-------------------------------------------+
78|   r13    |    N     |  Thread-Pointer                           |
79+----------+----------+-------------------------------------------+
80|  r14-r31 |    N     |  Local Variables                          |
81+----------+----------+-------------------------------------------+
82|    LR    |    Y     |  Link Register                            |
83+----------+----------+-------------------------------------------+
84|   CTR    |    Y     |  Loop Counter                             |
85+----------+----------+-------------------------------------------+
86|   XER    |    Y     |  Fixed-point exception register.          |
87+----------+----------+-------------------------------------------+
88|  CR0-1   |    Y     |  Condition register fields.               |
89+----------+----------+-------------------------------------------+
90|  CR2-4   |    N     |  Condition register fields.               |
91+----------+----------+-------------------------------------------+
92|  CR5-7   |    Y     |  Condition register fields.               |
93+----------+----------+-------------------------------------------+
94|  Others  |    N     |                                           |
95+----------+----------+-------------------------------------------+
96
97DRC & DRC Indexes
98=================
99::
100
101     DR1                                  Guest
102     +--+        +------------+         +---------+
103     |  | <----> |            |         |  User   |
104     +--+  DRC1  |            |   DRC   |  Space  |
105                 |    PAPR    |  Index  +---------+
106     DR2         | Hypervisor |         |         |
107     +--+        |            | <-----> |  Kernel |
108     |  | <----> |            |  Hcall  |         |
109     +--+  DRC2  +------------+         +---------+
110
111PAPR hypervisor terms shared hardware resources like PCI devices, NVDIMMs etc
112available for use by LPARs as Dynamic Resource (DR). When a DR is allocated to
113an LPAR, PHYP creates a data-structure called Dynamic Resource Connector (DRC)
114to manage LPAR access. An LPAR refers to a DRC via an opaque 32-bit number
115called DRC-Index. The DRC-index value is provided to the LPAR via device-tree
116where its present as an attribute in the device tree node associated with the
117DR.
118
119HCALL Return-values
120===================
121
122After servicing the hcall, hypervisor sets the return-value in *r3* indicating
123success or failure of the hcall. In case of a failure an error code indicates
124the cause for error. These codes are defined and documented in arch specific
125header [4]_.
126
127In some cases a hcall can potentially take a long time and need to be issued
128multiple times in order to be completely serviced. These hcalls will usually
129accept an opaque value *continue-token* within there argument list and a
130return value of *H_CONTINUE* indicates that hypervisor hasn't still finished
131servicing the hcall yet.
132
133To make such hcalls the guest need to set *continue-token == 0* for the
134initial call and use the hypervisor returned value of *continue-token*
135for each subsequent hcall until hypervisor returns a non *H_CONTINUE*
136return value.
137
138HCALL Op-codes
139==============
140
141Below is a partial list of HCALLs that are supported by PHYP. For the
142corresponding opcode values please look into the arch specific header [4]_:
143
144**H_SCM_READ_METADATA**
145
146| Input: *drcIndex, offset, buffer-address, numBytesToRead*
147| Out: *numBytesRead*
148| Return Value: *H_Success, H_Parameter, H_P2, H_P3, H_Hardware*
149
150Given a DRC Index of an NVDIMM, read N-bytes from the metadata area
151associated with it, at a specified offset and copy it to provided buffer.
152The metadata area stores configuration information such as label information,
153bad-blocks etc. The metadata area is located out-of-band of NVDIMM storage
154area hence a separate access semantics is provided.
155
156**H_SCM_WRITE_METADATA**
157
158| Input: *drcIndex, offset, data, numBytesToWrite*
159| Out: *None*
160| Return Value: *H_Success, H_Parameter, H_P2, H_P4, H_Hardware*
161
162Given a DRC Index of an NVDIMM, write N-bytes to the metadata area
163associated with it, at the specified offset and from the provided buffer.
164
165**H_SCM_BIND_MEM**
166
167| Input: *drcIndex, startingScmBlockIndex, numScmBlocksToBind,*
168| *targetLogicalMemoryAddress, continue-token*
169| Out: *continue-token, targetLogicalMemoryAddress, numScmBlocksToBound*
170| Return Value: *H_Success, H_Parameter, H_P2, H_P3, H_P4, H_Overlap,*
171| *H_Too_Big, H_P5, H_Busy*
172
173Given a DRC-Index of an NVDIMM, map a continuous SCM blocks range
174*(startingScmBlockIndex, startingScmBlockIndex+numScmBlocksToBind)* to the guest
175at *targetLogicalMemoryAddress* within guest physical address space. In
176case *targetLogicalMemoryAddress == 0xFFFFFFFF_FFFFFFFF* then hypervisor
177assigns a target address to the guest. The HCALL can fail if the Guest has
178an active PTE entry to the SCM block being bound.
179
180**H_SCM_UNBIND_MEM**
181| Input: drcIndex, startingScmLogicalMemoryAddress, numScmBlocksToUnbind
182| Out: numScmBlocksUnbound
183| Return Value: *H_Success, H_Parameter, H_P2, H_P3, H_In_Use, H_Overlap,*
184| *H_Busy, H_LongBusyOrder1mSec, H_LongBusyOrder10mSec*
185
186Given a DRC-Index of an NVDimm, unmap *numScmBlocksToUnbind* SCM blocks starting
187at *startingScmLogicalMemoryAddress* from guest physical address space. The
188HCALL can fail if the Guest has an active PTE entry to the SCM block being
189unbound.
190
191**H_SCM_QUERY_BLOCK_MEM_BINDING**
192
193| Input: *drcIndex, scmBlockIndex*
194| Out: *Guest-Physical-Address*
195| Return Value: *H_Success, H_Parameter, H_P2, H_NotFound*
196
197Given a DRC-Index and an SCM Block index return the guest physical address to
198which the SCM block is mapped to.
199
200**H_SCM_QUERY_LOGICAL_MEM_BINDING**
201
202| Input: *Guest-Physical-Address*
203| Out: *drcIndex, scmBlockIndex*
204| Return Value: *H_Success, H_Parameter, H_P2, H_NotFound*
205
206Given a guest physical address return which DRC Index and SCM block is mapped
207to that address.
208
209**H_SCM_UNBIND_ALL**
210
211| Input: *scmTargetScope, drcIndex*
212| Out: *None*
213| Return Value: *H_Success, H_Parameter, H_P2, H_P3, H_In_Use, H_Busy,*
214| *H_LongBusyOrder1mSec, H_LongBusyOrder10mSec*
215
216Depending on the Target scope unmap all SCM blocks belonging to all NVDIMMs
217or all SCM blocks belonging to a single NVDIMM identified by its drcIndex
218from the LPAR memory.
219
220**H_SCM_HEALTH**
221
222| Input: drcIndex
223| Out: *health-bitmap (r4), health-bit-valid-bitmap (r5)*
224| Return Value: *H_Success, H_Parameter, H_Hardware*
225
226Given a DRC Index return the info on predictive failure and overall health of
227the PMEM device. The asserted bits in the health-bitmap indicate one or more states
228(described in table below) of the PMEM device and health-bit-valid-bitmap indicate
229which bits in health-bitmap are valid. The bits are reported in
230reverse bit ordering for example a value of 0xC400000000000000
231indicates bits 0, 1, and 5 are valid.
232
233Health Bitmap Flags:
234
235+------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
236|  Bit |               Definition                                              |
237+======+=======================================================================+
238|  00  | PMEM device is unable to persist memory contents.                     |
239|      | If the system is powered down, nothing will be saved.                 |
240+------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
241|  01  | PMEM device failed to persist memory contents. Either contents were   |
242|      | not saved successfully on power down or were not restored properly on |
243|      | power up.                                                             |
244+------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
245|  02  | PMEM device contents are persisted from previous IPL. The data from   |
246|      | the last boot were successfully restored.                             |
247+------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
248|  03  | PMEM device contents are not persisted from previous IPL. There was no|
249|      | data to restore from the last boot.                                   |
250+------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
251|  04  | PMEM device memory life remaining is critically low                   |
252+------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
253|  05  | PMEM device will be garded off next IPL due to failure                |
254+------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
255|  06  | PMEM device contents cannot persist due to current platform health    |
256|      | status. A hardware failure may prevent data from being saved or       |
257|      | restored.                                                             |
258+------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
259|  07  | PMEM device is unable to persist memory contents in certain conditions|
260+------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
261|  08  | PMEM device is encrypted                                              |
262+------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
263|  09  | PMEM device has successfully completed a requested erase or secure    |
264|      | erase procedure.                                                      |
265+------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
266|10:63 | Reserved / Unused                                                     |
267+------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
268
269**H_SCM_PERFORMANCE_STATS**
270
271| Input: drcIndex, resultBuffer Addr
272| Out: None
273| Return Value:  *H_Success, H_Parameter, H_Unsupported, H_Hardware, H_Authority, H_Privilege*
274
275Given a DRC Index collect the performance statistics for NVDIMM and copy them
276to the resultBuffer.
277
278**H_SCM_FLUSH**
279
280| Input: *drcIndex, continue-token*
281| Out: *continue-token*
282| Return Value: *H_SUCCESS, H_Parameter, H_P2, H_BUSY*
283
284Given a DRC Index Flush the data to backend NVDIMM device.
285
286The hcall returns H_BUSY when the flush takes longer time and the hcall needs
287to be issued multiple times in order to be completely serviced. The
288*continue-token* from the output to be passed in the argument list of
289subsequent hcalls to the hypervisor until the hcall is completely serviced
290at which point H_SUCCESS or other error is returned by the hypervisor.
291
292References
293==========
294.. [1] "Power Architecture Platform Reference"
295       https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_Architecture_Platform_Reference
296.. [2] "Linux on Power Architecture Platform Reference"
297       https://members.openpowerfoundation.org/document/dl/469
298.. [3] "Definitions and Notation" Book III-Section 14.5.3
299       https://openpowerfoundation.org/?resource_lib=power-isa-version-3-0
300.. [4] arch/powerpc/include/asm/hvcall.h
301.. [5] "64-Bit ELF V2 ABI Specification: Power Architecture"
302       https://openpowerfoundation.org/?resource_lib=64-bit-elf-v2-abi-specification-power-architecture
303