#ifndef _LINUX_LGUEST_LAUNCHER #define _LINUX_LGUEST_LAUNCHER /* Everything the "lguest" userspace program needs to know. */ #include <linux/types.h> /*D:010 * Drivers * * The Guest needs devices to do anything useful. Since we don't let it touch * real devices (think of the damage it could do!) we provide virtual devices. * We emulate a PCI bus with virtio devices on it; we used to have our own * lguest bus which was far simpler, but this tests the virtio 1.0 standard. * * Virtio devices are also used by kvm, so we can simply reuse their optimized * device drivers. And one day when everyone uses virtio, my plan will be * complete. Bwahahahah! */ /* Write command first word is a request. */ enum lguest_req { LHREQ_INITIALIZE, /* + base, pfnlimit, start */ LHREQ_GETDMA, /* No longer used */ LHREQ_IRQ, /* + irq */ LHREQ_BREAK, /* No longer used */ LHREQ_EVENTFD, /* No longer used. */ LHREQ_GETREG, /* + offset within struct pt_regs (then read value). */ LHREQ_SETREG, /* + offset within struct pt_regs, value. */ LHREQ_TRAP, /* + trap number to deliver to guest. */ }; /* * This is what read() of the lguest fd populates. trap == * LGUEST_TRAP_ENTRY for an LHCALL_NOTIFY (addr is the * argument), 14 for a page fault in the MMIO region (addr is * the trap address, insn is the instruction), or 13 for a GPF * (insn is the instruction). */ struct lguest_pending { __u8 trap; __u8 insn[7]; __u32 addr; }; #endif /* _LINUX_LGUEST_LAUNCHER */ |