xref: /openbmc/qemu/docs/specs/ppc-xive.rst (revision 74433bf0)
1================================
2POWER9 XIVE interrupt controller
3================================
4
5The POWER9 processor comes with a new interrupt controller
6architecture, called XIVE as "eXternal Interrupt Virtualization
7Engine".
8
9Compared to the previous architecture, the main characteristics of
10XIVE are to support a larger number of interrupt sources and to
11deliver interrupts directly to virtual processors without hypervisor
12assistance. This removes the context switches required for the
13delivery process.
14
15
16XIVE architecture
17=================
18
19The XIVE IC is composed of three sub-engines, each taking care of a
20processing layer of external interrupts:
21
22- Interrupt Virtualization Source Engine (IVSE), or Source Controller
23  (SC). These are found in PCI PHBs, in the PSI host bridge
24  controller, but also inside the main controller for the core IPIs
25  and other sub-chips (NX, CAP, NPU) of the chip/processor. They are
26  configured to feed the IVRE with events.
27- Interrupt Virtualization Routing Engine (IVRE) or Virtualization
28  Controller (VC). It handles event coalescing and perform interrupt
29  routing by matching an event source number with an Event
30  Notification Descriptor (END).
31- Interrupt Virtualization Presentation Engine (IVPE) or Presentation
32  Controller (PC). It maintains the interrupt context state of each
33  thread and handles the delivery of the external interrupt to the
34  thread.
35
36::
37
38                XIVE Interrupt Controller
39                +------------------------------------+      IPIs
40                | +---------+ +---------+ +--------+ |    +-------+
41                | |IVRE     | |Common Q | |IVPE    |----> | CORES |
42                | |     esb | |         | |        |----> |       |
43                | |     eas | |  Bridge | |   tctx |----> |       |
44                | |SC   end | |         | |    nvt | |    |       |
45    +------+    | +---------+ +----+----+ +--------+ |    +-+-+-+-+
46    | RAM  |    +------------------|-----------------+      | | |
47    |      |                       |                        | | |
48    |      |                       |                        | | |
49    |      |  +--------------------v------------------------v-v-v--+    other
50    |      <--+                     Power Bus                      +--> chips
51    |  esb |  +---------+-----------------------+------------------+
52    |  eas |            |                       |
53    |  end |         +--|------+                |
54    |  nvt |       +----+----+ |           +----+----+
55    +------+       |IVSE     | |           |IVSE     |
56                   |         | |           |         |
57                   | PQ-bits | |           | PQ-bits |
58                   | local   |-+           |  in VC  |
59                   +---------+             +---------+
60                      PCIe                 NX,NPU,CAPI
61
62
63    PQ-bits: 2 bits source state machine (P:pending Q:queued)
64    esb: Event State Buffer (Array of PQ bits in an IVSE)
65    eas: Event Assignment Structure
66    end: Event Notification Descriptor
67    nvt: Notification Virtual Target
68    tctx: Thread interrupt Context registers
69
70
71
72XIVE internal tables
73--------------------
74
75Each of the sub-engines uses a set of tables to redirect interrupts
76from event sources to CPU threads.
77
78::
79
80                                            +-------+
81    User or O/S                             |  EQ   |
82        or                          +------>|entries|
83    Hypervisor                      |       |  ..   |
84      Memory                        |       +-------+
85                                    |           ^
86                                    |           |
87               +-------------------------------------------------+
88                                    |           |
89    Hypervisor      +------+    +---+--+    +---+--+   +------+
90      Memory        | ESB  |    | EAT  |    | ENDT |   | NVTT |
91     (skiboot)      +----+-+    +----+-+    +----+-+   +------+
92                      ^  |        ^  |        ^  |       ^
93                      |  |        |  |        |  |       |
94               +-------------------------------------------------+
95                      |  |        |  |        |  |       |
96                      |  |        |  |        |  |       |
97                 +----|--|--------|--|--------|--|-+   +-|-----+    +------+
98                 |    |  |        |  |        |  | |   | | tctx|    |Thread|
99     IPI or   ---+    +  v        +  v        +  v |---| +  .. |----->     |
100    HW events    |                                 |   |       |    |      |
101                 |             IVRE                |   | IVPE  |    +------+
102                 +---------------------------------+   +-------+
103
104
105The IVSE have a 2-bits state machine, P for pending and Q for queued,
106for each source that allows events to be triggered. They are stored in
107an Event State Buffer (ESB) array and can be controlled by MMIOs.
108
109If the event is let through, the IVRE looks up in the Event Assignment
110Structure (EAS) table for an Event Notification Descriptor (END)
111configured for the source. Each Event Notification Descriptor defines
112a notification path to a CPU and an in-memory Event Queue, in which
113will be enqueued an EQ data for the O/S to pull.
114
115The IVPE determines if a Notification Virtual Target (NVT) can handle
116the event by scanning the thread contexts of the VCPUs dispatched on
117the processor HW threads. It maintains the interrupt context state of
118each thread in a NVT table.
119
120XIVE thread interrupt context
121-----------------------------
122
123The XIVE presenter can generate four different exceptions to its
124HW threads:
125
126- hypervisor exception
127- O/S exception
128- Event-Based Branch (user level)
129- msgsnd (doorbell)
130
131Each exception has a state independent from the others called a Thread
132Interrupt Management context. This context is a set of registers which
133lets the thread handle priority management and interrupt
134acknowledgment among other things. The most important ones being :
135
136- Interrupt Priority Register  (PIPR)
137- Interrupt Pending Buffer     (IPB)
138- Current Processor Priority   (CPPR)
139- Notification Source Register (NSR)
140
141TIMA
142~~~~
143
144The Thread Interrupt Management registers are accessible through a
145specific MMIO region, called the Thread Interrupt Management Area
146(TIMA), four aligned pages, each exposing a different view of the
147registers. First page (page address ending in ``0b00``) gives access
148to the entire context and is reserved for the ring 0 view for the
149physical thread context. The second (page address ending in ``0b01``)
150is for the hypervisor, ring 1 view. The third (page address ending in
151``0b10``) is for the operating system, ring 2 view. The fourth (page
152address ending in ``0b11``) is for user level, ring 3 view.
153
154Interrupt flow from an O/S perspective
155~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
156
157After an event data has been enqueued in the O/S Event Queue, the IVPE
158raises the bit corresponding to the priority of the pending interrupt
159in the register IBP (Interrupt Pending Buffer) to indicate that an
160event is pending in one of the 8 priority queues. The Pending
161Interrupt Priority Register (PIPR) is also updated using the IPB. This
162register represent the priority of the most favored pending
163notification.
164
165The PIPR is then compared to the the Current Processor Priority
166Register (CPPR). If it is more favored (numerically less than), the
167CPU interrupt line is raised and the EO bit of the Notification Source
168Register (NSR) is updated to notify the presence of an exception for
169the O/S. The O/S acknowledges the interrupt with a special load in the
170Thread Interrupt Management Area.
171
172The O/S handles the interrupt and when done, performs an EOI using a
173MMIO operation on the ESB management page of the associate source.
174
175Overview of the QEMU models for XIVE
176====================================
177
178The XiveSource models the IVSE in general, internal and external. It
179handles the source ESBs and the MMIO interface to control them.
180
181The XiveNotifier is a small helper interface interconnecting the
182XiveSource to the XiveRouter.
183
184The XiveRouter is an abstract model acting as a combined IVRE and
185IVPE. It routes event notifications using the EAS and END tables to
186the IVPE sub-engine which does a CAM scan to find a CPU to deliver the
187exception. Storage should be provided by the inheriting classes.
188
189XiveEnDSource is a special source object. It exposes the END ESB MMIOs
190of the Event Queues which are used for coalescing event notifications
191and for escalation. Not used on the field, only to sync the EQ cache
192in OPAL.
193
194Finally, the XiveTCTX contains the interrupt state context of a thread,
195four sets of registers, one for each exception that can be delivered
196to a CPU. These contexts are scanned by the IVPE to find a matching VP
197when a notification is triggered. It also models the Thread Interrupt
198Management Area (TIMA), which exposes the thread context registers to
199the CPU for interrupt management.
200