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author | Sam Eiderman | 2019-10-16 18:41:44 +0200 |
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committer | John Snow | 2019-10-31 16:47:38 +0100 |
commit | aea60a13b9d43bb4c5748a1216af954a0e9d22d4 (patch) | |
tree | 8b8a8e2439331639633636a48136604f9dc65720 /target/arm/cpu.c | |
parent | bootdevice: Refactor get_boot_devices_list (diff) | |
download | qemu-aea60a13b9d43bb4c5748a1216af954a0e9d22d4.tar.gz qemu-aea60a13b9d43bb4c5748a1216af954a0e9d22d4.tar.xz qemu-aea60a13b9d43bb4c5748a1216af954a0e9d22d4.zip |
bootdevice: FW_CFG interface for LCHS values
Using fw_cfg, supply logical CHS values directly from QEMU to the BIOS.
Non-standard logical geometries break under QEMU.
A virtual disk which contains an operating system which depends on
logical geometries (consistent values being reported from BIOS INT13
AH=08) will most likely break under QEMU/SeaBIOS if it has non-standard
logical geometries - for example 56 SPT (sectors per track).
No matter what QEMU will report - SeaBIOS, for large enough disks - will
use LBA translation, which will report 63 SPT instead.
In addition we cannot force SeaBIOS to rely on physical geometries at
all. A virtio-blk-pci virtual disk with 255 phyiscal heads cannot
report more than 16 physical heads when moved to an IDE controller,
since the ATA spec allows a maximum of 16 heads - this is an artifact of
virtualization.
By supplying the logical geometries directly we are able to support such
"exotic" disks.
We serialize this information in a similar way to the "bootorder"
interface.
The new fw_cfg entry is "bios-geometry".
Reviewed-by: Karl Heubaum <karl.heubaum@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Arbel Moshe <arbel.moshe@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Philippe Mathieu-Daudé <philmd@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Sam Eiderman <shmuel.eiderman@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Sam Eiderman <sameid@google.com>
Tested-by: Philippe Mathieu-Daudé <philmd@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: John Snow <jsnow@redhat.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'target/arm/cpu.c')
0 files changed, 0 insertions, 0 deletions