1Intel Graphics Device (IGD) assignment with vfio-pci 2==================================================== 3 4IGD has two different modes for assignment using vfio-pci: 5 61) Universal Pass-Through (UPT) mode: 7 8 In this mode the IGD device is added as a *secondary* (ie. non-primary) 9 graphics device in combination with an emulated primary graphics device. 10 This mode *requires* guest driver support to remove the external 11 dependencies generally associated with IGD (see below). Those guest 12 drivers only support this mode for Broadwell and newer IGD, according to 13 Intel. Additionally, this mode by default, and as officially supported 14 by Intel, does not support direct video output. The intention is to use 15 this mode either to provide hardware acceleration to the emulated graphics 16 or to use this mode in combination with guest-based remote access software, 17 for example VNC (see below for optional output support). This mode 18 theoretically has no device specific handling dependencies on vfio-pci or 19 the VM firmware. 20 212) "Legacy" mode: 22 23 In this mode the IGD device is intended to be the primary and exclusive 24 graphics device in the VM[1], as such QEMU does not facilitate any sort 25 of remote graphics to the VM in this mode. A connected physical monitor 26 is the intended output device for IGD. This mode includes several 27 requirements and restrictions: 28 29 * IGD must be given address 02.0 on the PCI root bus in the VM 30 * The host kernel must support vfio extensions for IGD (v4.6) 31 * vfio VGA support very likely needs to be enabled in the host kernel 32 * The VM firmware must support specific fw_cfg enablers for IGD 33 * The VM machine type must support a PCI host bridge at 00.0 (standard) 34 * The VM machine type must provide or allow to be created a special 35 ISA/LPC bridge device (vfio-pci-igd-lpc-bridge) on the root bus at 36 PCI address 1f.0. 37 * The IGD device must have a VGA ROM, either provided via the romfile 38 option or loaded automatically through vfio (standard). rombar=0 39 will disable legacy mode support. 40 * Hotplug of the IGD device is not supported. 41 * The IGD device must be a SandyBridge or newer model device. 42 43For either mode, depending on the host kernel, the i915 driver in the host 44may generate faults and errors upon re-binding to an IGD device after it 45has been assigned to a VM. It's therefore generally recommended to prevent 46such driver binding unless the host driver is known to work well for this. 47There are numerous ways to do this, i915 can be blacklisted on the host, 48the driver_override option can be used to ensure that only vfio-pci can bind 49to the device on the host[2], virsh nodedev-detach can be used to bind the 50device to vfio drivers and then managed='no' set in the VM xml to prevent 51re-binding to i915, etc. Also note that IGD is also typically the primary 52graphics in the host and special options may be required beyond simply 53blacklisting i915 or using pci-stub/vfio-pci to take ownership of IGD as a 54PCI class device. Lower level drivers exist that may still claim the device. 55It may therefore be necessary to use kernel boot options video=vesafb:off or 56video=efifb:off (depending on host BIOS/UEFI) or these can be combined to 57a catch-all, video=vesafb:off,efifb:off. Error messages such as: 58 59 Failed to mmap 0000:00:02.0 BAR <>. Performance may be slow 60 61are a good indicator that such a problem exists. The host files /proc/iomem 62and /proc/ioports are often useful for identifying drivers consuming ranges 63of the device to cause such conflicts. 64 65Additionally, IGD device are known to generate small numbers of DMAR faults 66when initially assigned. It is believed that this is simply the IGD attempting 67to access the reserved GTT space after reset, which it no longer has access to 68when accessed from userspace. So long as the DMAR faults are small in number 69and most importantly, not ongoing, these are not an indication of an error. 70 71Additionally++, analog VGA output (as opposed to digital outputs like HDMI, 72DVI, or DisplayPort) may be unsupported in some use cases. In the author's 73experience, even DP to VGA adapters can be troublesome while adapters between 74digital formats work well. 75 76Usage 77===== 78The intention is for IGD assignment to be transparent for users and thus for 79management tools like libvirt. To make use of legacy mode, simply remove all 80other graphics options and use "-nographic" and either "-vga none" or 81"-nodefaults", along with adding the device using vfio-pci: 82 83 -device vfio-pci,host=00:02.0,id=hostdev0,bus=pci.0,addr=0x2 84 85For UPT mode, retain the default emulated graphics and simply add the vfio-pci 86device making use of any other bus address other than 02.0. libvirt will 87default to assigning the device a UPT compatible address while legacy mode 88users will need to manually edit the XML if using a tool like virt-manager 89where the VM device address is not expressly specified. 90 91An experimental vfio-pci option also exists to enable OpRegion, and thus 92external monitor support, for UPT mode. This can be enabled by adding 93"x-igd-opregion=on" to the vfio-pci device options for the IGD device. As 94with legacy mode, this requires the host to support features introduced in 95the v4.6 kernel. If Intel chooses to embrace this support, the option may 96be made non-experimental in the future, opening it to libvirt support. 97 98Developer ABI 99============= 100Legacy mode IGD support imposes two fw_cfg requirements on the VM firmware: 101 1021) "etc/igd-opregion" 103 104 This fw_cfg file exposes the OpRegion for the IGD device. A reserved 105 region should be created below 4GB (recommended 4KB alignment), sized 106 sufficient for the fw_cfg file size, and the content of this file copied 107 to it. The dword based address of this reserved memory region must also 108 be written to the ASLS register at offset 0xFC on the IGD device. It is 109 recommended that firmware should make use of this fw_cfg entry for any 110 PCI class VGA device with Intel vendor ID. Multiple of such devices 111 within a VM is undefined. 112 1132) "etc/igd-bdsm-size" 114 115 This fw_cfg file contains an 8-byte, little endian integer indicating 116 the size of the reserved memory region required for IGD stolen memory. 117 Firmware must allocate a reserved memory below 4GB with required 1MB 118 alignment equal to this size. Additionally the base address of this 119 reserved region must be written to the dword BDSM register in PCI config 120 space of the IGD device at offset 0x5C. As this support is related to 121 running the IGD ROM, which has other dependencies on the device appearing 122 at guest address 00:02.0, it's expected that this fw_cfg file is only 123 relevant to a single PCI class VGA device with Intel vendor ID, appearing 124 at PCI bus address 00:02.0. 125 126Footnotes 127========= 128[1] Nothing precludes adding additional emulated or assigned graphics devices 129 as non-primary, other than the combination typically not working. I only 130 intend to set user expectations, others are welcome to find working 131 combinations or fix whatever issues prevent this from working in the common 132 case. 133[2] # echo "vfio-pci" > /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000:00:02.0/driver_override 134