/* * This file is part of the Palacios Virtual Machine Monitor developed * by the V3VEE Project with funding from the United States National * Science Foundation and the Department of Energy. * * The V3VEE Project is a joint project between Northwestern University * and the University of New Mexico. You can find out more at * http://www.v3vee.org * * Copyright (c) 2008, Peter Dinda * Copyright (c) 2008, Jack Lange * Copyright (c) 2008, The V3VEE Project * All rights reserved. * * Author: Peter Dinda * Author: Jack Lange * * This is free software. You are permitted to use, * redistribute, and modify it as specified in the file "V3VEE_LICENSE". */ #ifndef __DEVICES_GENERIC_H__ #define __DEVICES_GENERIC_H__ #ifdef __V3VEE__ #include // // The generic device simply hooks ranges of ports, addresses, and irqs // if they are not already hooked // // for each hooked port, it simply executes reads and writes and the same physical port, // for each hooked memory range, it simply executes reads and writes on the same // physical memory addresses // for each hooked irq, it simply injects the irq into the VM // // These operations are also logged to serial (optionaly) // // If you attach a generic device *last*, you can capture all ops that are not // already hooked, and capture a log of VM activity with respect to them. // // The effects of using the generic device should be identical to // doing passthrough I/O, but with logging, and, of course, slower // #define GENERIC_PRINT_AND_PASSTHROUGH 0 #define GENERIC_PRINT_AND_IGNORE 1 int v3_generic_add_port_range(struct vm_device * dev, uint_t start, uint_t end, uint_t type); #endif // ! __V3VEE__ #endif