1.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 2 3.. _writing_virtio_drivers: 4 5====================== 6Writing Virtio Drivers 7====================== 8 9Introduction 10============ 11 12This document serves as a basic guideline for driver programmers that 13need to hack a new virtio driver or understand the essentials of the 14existing ones. See :ref:`Virtio on Linux <virtio>` for a general 15overview of virtio. 16 17 18Driver boilerplate 19================== 20 21As a bare minimum, a virtio driver needs to register in the virtio bus 22and configure the virtqueues for the device according to its spec, the 23configuration of the virtqueues in the driver side must match the 24virtqueue definitions in the device. A basic driver skeleton could look 25like this:: 26 27 #include <linux/virtio.h> 28 #include <linux/virtio_ids.h> 29 #include <linux/virtio_config.h> 30 #include <linux/module.h> 31 32 /* device private data (one per device) */ 33 struct virtio_dummy_dev { 34 struct virtqueue *vq; 35 }; 36 37 static void virtio_dummy_recv_cb(struct virtqueue *vq) 38 { 39 struct virtio_dummy_dev *dev = vq->vdev->priv; 40 char *buf; 41 unsigned int len; 42 43 while ((buf = virtqueue_get_buf(dev->vq, &len)) != NULL) { 44 /* process the received data */ 45 } 46 } 47 48 static int virtio_dummy_probe(struct virtio_device *vdev) 49 { 50 struct virtio_dummy_dev *dev = NULL; 51 52 /* initialize device data */ 53 dev = kzalloc(sizeof(struct virtio_dummy_dev), GFP_KERNEL); 54 if (!dev) 55 return -ENOMEM; 56 57 /* the device has a single virtqueue */ 58 dev->vq = virtio_find_single_vq(vdev, virtio_dummy_recv_cb, "input"); 59 if (IS_ERR(dev->vq)) { 60 kfree(dev); 61 return PTR_ERR(dev->vq); 62 63 } 64 vdev->priv = dev; 65 66 /* from this point on, the device can notify and get callbacks */ 67 virtio_device_ready(vdev); 68 69 return 0; 70 } 71 72 static void virtio_dummy_remove(struct virtio_device *vdev) 73 { 74 struct virtio_dummy_dev *dev = vdev->priv; 75 76 /* 77 * disable vq interrupts: equivalent to 78 * vdev->config->reset(vdev) 79 */ 80 virtio_reset_device(vdev); 81 82 /* detach unused buffers */ 83 while ((buf = virtqueue_detach_unused_buf(dev->vq)) != NULL) { 84 kfree(buf); 85 } 86 87 /* remove virtqueues */ 88 vdev->config->del_vqs(vdev); 89 90 kfree(dev); 91 } 92 93 static const struct virtio_device_id id_table[] = { 94 { VIRTIO_ID_DUMMY, VIRTIO_DEV_ANY_ID }, 95 { 0 }, 96 }; 97 98 static struct virtio_driver virtio_dummy_driver = { 99 .driver.name = KBUILD_MODNAME, 100 .id_table = id_table, 101 .probe = virtio_dummy_probe, 102 .remove = virtio_dummy_remove, 103 }; 104 105 module_virtio_driver(virtio_dummy_driver); 106 MODULE_DEVICE_TABLE(virtio, id_table); 107 MODULE_DESCRIPTION("Dummy virtio driver"); 108 MODULE_LICENSE("GPL"); 109 110The device id ``VIRTIO_ID_DUMMY`` here is a placeholder, virtio drivers 111should be added only for devices that are defined in the spec, see 112include/uapi/linux/virtio_ids.h. Device ids need to be at least reserved 113in the virtio spec before being added to that file. 114 115If your driver doesn't have to do anything special in its ``init`` and 116``exit`` methods, you can use the module_virtio_driver() helper to 117reduce the amount of boilerplate code. 118 119The ``probe`` method does the minimum driver setup in this case 120(memory allocation for the device data) and initializes the 121virtqueue. virtio_device_ready() is used to enable the virtqueue and to 122notify the device that the driver is ready to manage the device 123("DRIVER_OK"). The virtqueues are anyway enabled automatically by the 124core after ``probe`` returns. 125 126.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/virtio_config.h 127 :identifiers: virtio_device_ready 128 129In any case, the virtqueues need to be enabled before adding buffers to 130them. 131 132Sending and receiving data 133========================== 134 135The virtio_dummy_recv_cb() callback in the code above will be triggered 136when the device notifies the driver after it finishes processing a 137descriptor or descriptor chain, either for reading or writing. However, 138that's only the second half of the virtio device-driver communication 139process, as the communication is always started by the driver regardless 140of the direction of the data transfer. 141 142To configure a buffer transfer from the driver to the device, first you 143have to add the buffers -- packed as `scatterlists` -- to the 144appropriate virtqueue using any of the virtqueue_add_inbuf(), 145virtqueue_add_outbuf() or virtqueue_add_sgs(), depending on whether you 146need to add one input `scatterlist` (for the device to fill in), one 147output `scatterlist` (for the device to consume) or multiple 148`scatterlists`, respectively. Then, once the virtqueue is set up, a call 149to virtqueue_kick() sends a notification that will be serviced by the 150hypervisor that implements the device:: 151 152 struct scatterlist sg[1]; 153 sg_init_one(sg, buffer, BUFLEN); 154 virtqueue_add_inbuf(dev->vq, sg, 1, buffer, GFP_ATOMIC); 155 virtqueue_kick(dev->vq); 156 157.. kernel-doc:: drivers/virtio/virtio_ring.c 158 :identifiers: virtqueue_add_inbuf 159 160.. kernel-doc:: drivers/virtio/virtio_ring.c 161 :identifiers: virtqueue_add_outbuf 162 163.. kernel-doc:: drivers/virtio/virtio_ring.c 164 :identifiers: virtqueue_add_sgs 165 166Then, after the device has read or written the buffers prepared by the 167driver and notifies it back, the driver can call virtqueue_get_buf() to 168read the data produced by the device (if the virtqueue was set up with 169input buffers) or simply to reclaim the buffers if they were already 170consumed by the device: 171 172.. kernel-doc:: drivers/virtio/virtio_ring.c 173 :identifiers: virtqueue_get_buf_ctx 174 175The virtqueue callbacks can be disabled and re-enabled using the 176virtqueue_disable_cb() and the family of virtqueue_enable_cb() functions 177respectively. See drivers/virtio/virtio_ring.c for more details: 178 179.. kernel-doc:: drivers/virtio/virtio_ring.c 180 :identifiers: virtqueue_disable_cb 181 182.. kernel-doc:: drivers/virtio/virtio_ring.c 183 :identifiers: virtqueue_enable_cb 184 185But note that some spurious callbacks can still be triggered under 186certain scenarios. The way to disable callbacks reliably is to reset the 187device or the virtqueue (virtio_reset_device()). 188 189 190References 191========== 192 193_`[1]` Virtio Spec v1.2: 194https://docs.oasis-open.org/virtio/virtio/v1.2/virtio-v1.2.html 195 196Check for later versions of the spec as well. 197