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Commit | Line | Data |
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1 | = How to convert to -device & friends = | |
2 | ||
3 | === Specifying Bus and Address on Bus === | |
4 | ||
5 | In qdev, each device has a parent bus. Some devices provide one or | |
6 | more buses for children. You can specify a device's parent bus with | |
7 | -device parameter bus. | |
8 | ||
9 | A device typically has a device address on its parent bus. For buses | |
10 | where this address can be configured, devices provide a bus-specific | |
11 | property. Examples: | |
12 | ||
13 | bus property name value format | |
14 | PCI addr %x.%x (dev.fn, .fn optional) | |
15 | I2C address %u | |
16 | SCSI scsi-id %u | |
17 | IDE unit %u | |
18 | HDA cad %u | |
19 | virtio-serial-bus nr %u | |
20 | ccid-bus slot %u | |
21 | USB port %d(.%d)* (port.port...) | |
22 | ||
23 | Example: device i440FX-pcihost is on the root bus, and provides a PCI | |
24 | bus named pci.0. To put a FOO device into its slot 4, use -device | |
25 | FOO,bus=/i440FX-pcihost/pci.0,addr=4. The abbreviated form bus=pci.0 | |
26 | also works as long as the bus name is unique. | |
27 | ||
28 | === Block Devices === | |
29 | ||
30 | A QEMU block device (drive) has a host and a guest part. | |
31 | ||
32 | In the general case, the guest device is connected to a controller | |
33 | device. For instance, the IDE controller provides two IDE buses, each | |
34 | of which can have up to two devices, and each device is a guest part, | |
35 | and is connected to a host part. | |
36 | ||
37 | Except we sometimes lump controller, bus(es) and drive device(s) all | |
38 | together into a single device. For instance, the ISA floppy | |
39 | controller is connected to up to two host drives. | |
40 | ||
41 | The old ways to define block devices define host and guest part | |
42 | together. Sometimes, they can even define a controller device in | |
43 | addition to the block device. | |
44 | ||
45 | The new way keeps the parts separate: you create the host part with | |
46 | -drive, and guest device(s) with -device. | |
47 | ||
48 | The various old ways to define drives all boil down to the common form | |
49 | ||
50 | -drive if=TYPE,bus=BUS,unit=UNIT,OPTS... | |
51 | ||
52 | TYPE, BUS and UNIT identify the controller device, which of its buses | |
53 | to use, and the drive's address on that bus. Details depend on TYPE. | |
54 | ||
55 | Instead of bus=BUS,unit=UNIT, you can also say index=IDX. | |
56 | ||
57 | In the new way, this becomes something like | |
58 | ||
59 | -drive if=none,id=DRIVE-ID,HOST-OPTS... | |
60 | -device DEVNAME,drive=DRIVE-ID,DEV-OPTS... | |
61 | ||
62 | The old OPTS get split into HOST-OPTS and DEV-OPTS as follows: | |
63 | ||
64 | * file, format, snapshot, cache, aio, readonly, rerror, werror go into | |
65 | HOST-OPTS. | |
66 | ||
67 | * cyls, head, secs and trans go into HOST-OPTS. Future work: they | |
68 | should go into DEV-OPTS instead. | |
69 | ||
70 | * serial goes into DEV-OPTS, for devices supporting serial numbers. | |
71 | For other devices, it goes nowhere. | |
72 | ||
73 | * media is special. In the old way, it selects disk vs. CD-ROM with | |
74 | if=ide, if=scsi and if=xen. The new way uses DEVNAME for that. | |
75 | Additionally, readonly=on goes into HOST-OPTS. | |
76 | ||
77 | * addr is special, see if=virtio below. | |
78 | ||
79 | The -device argument differs in detail for each type of drive: | |
80 | ||
81 | * if=ide | |
82 | ||
83 | -device DEVNAME,drive=DRIVE-ID,bus=IDE-BUS,unit=UNIT | |
84 | ||
85 | where DEVNAME is either ide-hd or ide-cd, IDE-BUS identifies an IDE | |
86 | bus, normally either ide.0 or ide.1, and UNIT is either 0 or 1. | |
87 | ||
88 | * if=scsi | |
89 | ||
90 | The old way implicitly creates SCSI controllers as needed. The new | |
91 | way makes that explicit: | |
92 | ||
93 | -device lsi53c895a,id=ID | |
94 | ||
95 | As for all PCI devices, you can add bus=PCI-BUS,addr=DEVFN to | |
96 | control the PCI device address. | |
97 | ||
98 | This SCSI controller provides a single SCSI bus, named ID.0. Put a | |
99 | disk on it: | |
100 | ||
101 | -device DEVNAME,drive=DRIVE-ID,bus=ID.0,scsi-id=UNIT | |
102 | ||
103 | where DEVNAME is either scsi-hd, scsi-cd or scsi-generic. | |
104 | ||
105 | * if=floppy | |
106 | ||
107 | -global isa-fdc.driveA=DRIVE-ID | |
108 | -global isa-fdc.driveB=DRIVE-ID | |
109 | ||
110 | This is -global instead of -device, because the floppy controller is | |
111 | created automatically, and we want to configure that one, not create | |
112 | a second one (which isn't possible anyway). | |
113 | ||
114 | Without any -global isa-fdc,... you get an empty driveA and no | |
115 | driveB. You can use -nodefaults to suppress the default driveA, see | |
116 | "Default Devices". | |
117 | ||
118 | * if=virtio | |
119 | ||
120 | -device virtio-blk-pci,drive=DRIVE-ID,class=C,vectors=V,ioeventfd=IOEVENTFD | |
121 | ||
122 | This lets you control PCI device class and MSI-X vectors. | |
123 | ||
124 | IOEVENTFD controls whether or not ioeventfd is used for virtqueue | |
125 | notify. It can be set to on (default) or off. | |
126 | ||
127 | As for all PCI devices, you can add bus=PCI-BUS,addr=DEVFN to | |
128 | control the PCI device address. This replaces option addr available | |
129 | with -drive if=virtio. | |
130 | ||
131 | * if=pflash, if=mtd, if=sd, if=xen are not yet available with -device | |
132 | ||
133 | For USB devices, the old way is actually different: | |
134 | ||
135 | -usbdevice disk:format=FMT:FILENAME | |
136 | ||
137 | Provides much less control than -drive's OPTS... The new way fixes | |
138 | that: | |
139 | ||
140 | -device usb-storage,drive=DRIVE-ID,removable=RMB | |
141 | ||
142 | The removable parameter gives control over the SCSI INQUIRY removable | |
143 | (RMB) bit. USB thumbdrives usually set removable=on, while USB hard | |
144 | disks set removable=off. | |
145 | ||
146 | Bug: usb-storage pretends to be a block device, but it's really a SCSI | |
147 | controller that can serve only a single device, which it creates | |
148 | automatically. The automatic creation guesses what kind of guest part | |
149 | to create from the host part, like -drive if=scsi. Host and guest | |
150 | part are not cleanly separated. | |
151 | ||
152 | === Character Devices === | |
153 | ||
154 | A QEMU character device has a host and a guest part. | |
155 | ||
156 | The old ways to define character devices define host and guest part | |
157 | together. | |
158 | ||
159 | The new way keeps the parts separate: you create the host part with | |
160 | -chardev, and the guest device with -device. | |
161 | ||
162 | The various old ways to define a character device are all of the | |
163 | general form | |
164 | ||
165 | -FOO FOO-OPTS...,LEGACY-CHARDEV | |
166 | ||
167 | where FOO-OPTS... is specific to -FOO, and the host part | |
168 | LEGACY-CHARDEV is the same everywhere. | |
169 | ||
170 | In the new way, this becomes | |
171 | ||
172 | -chardev HOST-OPTS...,id=CHR-ID | |
173 | -device DEVNAME,chardev=CHR-ID,DEV-OPTS... | |
174 | ||
175 | The appropriate DEVNAME depends on the machine type. For type "pc": | |
176 | ||
177 | * -serial becomes -device isa-serial,iobase=IOADDR,irq=IRQ,index=IDX | |
178 | ||
179 | This lets you control I/O ports and IRQs. | |
180 | ||
181 | * -parallel becomes -device isa-parallel,iobase=IOADDR,irq=IRQ,index=IDX | |
182 | ||
183 | This lets you control I/O ports and IRQs. | |
184 | ||
185 | * -usbdevice serial::chardev becomes -device usb-serial,chardev=dev. | |
186 | ||
187 | * -usbdevice braille doesn't support LEGACY-CHARDEV syntax. It always | |
188 | uses "braille". With -device, this useful default is gone, so you | |
189 | have to use something like | |
190 | ||
191 | -device usb-braille,chardev=braille -chardev braille,id=braille | |
192 | ||
193 | LEGACY-CHARDEV translates to -chardev HOST-OPTS... as follows: | |
194 | ||
195 | * null becomes -chardev null | |
196 | ||
197 | * pty, msmouse, wctablet, braille, stdio likewise | |
198 | ||
199 | * vc:WIDTHxHEIGHT becomes -chardev vc,width=WIDTH,height=HEIGHT | |
200 | ||
201 | * vc:<COLS>Cx<ROWS>C becomes -chardev vc,cols=<COLS>,rows=<ROWS> | |
202 | ||
203 | * con: becomes -chardev console | |
204 | ||
205 | * COM<NUM> becomes -chardev serial,path=COM<NUM> | |
206 | ||
207 | * file:FNAME becomes -chardev file,path=FNAME | |
208 | ||
209 | * pipe:FNAME becomes -chardev pipe,path=FNAME | |
210 | ||
211 | * tcp:HOST:PORT,OPTS... becomes -chardev socket,host=HOST,port=PORT,OPTS... | |
212 | ||
213 | * telnet:HOST:PORT,OPTS... becomes | |
214 | -chardev socket,host=HOST,port=PORT,OPTS...,telnet=on | |
215 | ||
216 | * udp:HOST:PORT@LOCALADDR:LOCALPORT becomes | |
217 | -chardev udp,host=HOST,port=PORT,localaddr=LOCALADDR,localport=LOCALPORT | |
218 | ||
219 | * unix:FNAME becomes -chardev socket,path=FNAME | |
220 | ||
221 | * /dev/parportN becomes -chardev parport,file=/dev/parportN | |
222 | ||
223 | * /dev/ppiN likewise | |
224 | ||
225 | * Any other /dev/FNAME becomes -chardev tty,path=/dev/FNAME | |
226 | ||
227 | * mon:LEGACY-CHARDEV is special: it multiplexes the monitor onto the | |
228 | character device defined by LEGACY-CHARDEV. -chardev provides more | |
229 | general multiplexing instead: you can connect up to four users to a | |
230 | single host part. You need to pass mux=on to -chardev to enable | |
231 | switching the input focus. | |
232 | ||
233 | QEMU uses LEGACY-CHARDEV syntax not just to set up guest devices, but | |
234 | also in various other places such as -monitor or -net | |
235 | user,guestfwd=... You can use chardev:CHR-ID in place of | |
236 | LEGACY-CHARDEV to refer to a host part defined with -chardev. | |
237 | ||
238 | === Network Devices === | |
239 | ||
240 | Host and guest part of network devices have always been separate. | |
241 | ||
242 | The old way to define the guest part looks like this: | |
243 | ||
244 | -net nic,netdev=NET-ID,macaddr=MACADDR,model=MODEL,name=ID,addr=STR,vectors=V | |
245 | ||
246 | Except for USB it looks like this: | |
247 | ||
248 | -usbdevice net:netdev=NET-ID,macaddr=MACADDR,name=ID | |
249 | ||
250 | The new way is -device: | |
251 | ||
252 | -device DEVNAME,netdev=NET-ID,mac=MACADDR,DEV-OPTS... | |
253 | ||
254 | DEVNAME equals MODEL, except for virtio you have to name the virtio | |
255 | device appropriate for the bus (virtio-net-pci for PCI), and for USB | |
256 | you have to use usb-net. | |
257 | ||
258 | The old name=ID parameter becomes the usual id=ID with -device. | |
259 | ||
260 | For PCI devices, you can add bus=PCI-BUS,addr=DEVFN to control the PCI | |
261 | device address, as usual. The old -net nic provides parameter addr | |
262 | for that, which is silently ignored when the NIC is not a PCI device. | |
263 | ||
264 | For virtio-net-pci, you can control whether or not ioeventfd is used for | |
265 | virtqueue notify by setting ioeventfd= to on or off (default). | |
266 | ||
267 | -net nic accepts vectors=V for all models, but it's silently ignored | |
268 | except for virtio-net-pci (model=virtio). With -device, only devices | |
269 | that support it accept it. | |
270 | ||
271 | Not all devices are available with -device at this time. All PCI | |
272 | devices and ne2k_isa are. | |
273 | ||
274 | Some PCI devices aren't available with -net nic, e.g. i82558a. | |
275 | ||
276 | === Graphics Devices === | |
277 | ||
278 | Host and guest part of graphics devices have always been separate. | |
279 | ||
280 | The old way to define the guest graphics device is -vga VGA. Not all | |
281 | machines support all -vga options. | |
282 | ||
283 | The new way is -device. The mapping from -vga argument to -device | |
284 | depends on the machine type. For machine "pc", it's: | |
285 | ||
286 | std -device VGA | |
287 | cirrus -device cirrus-vga | |
288 | vmware -device vmware-svga | |
289 | qxl -device qxl-vga | |
290 | none -nodefaults | |
291 | disables more than just VGA, see "Default Devices" | |
292 | ||
293 | As for all PCI devices, you can add bus=PCI-BUS,addr=DEVFN to control | |
294 | the PCI device address. | |
295 | ||
296 | -device VGA supports properties bios-offset and bios-size, but they | |
297 | aren't used with machine type "pc". | |
298 | ||
299 | For machine "isapc", it's | |
300 | ||
301 | std -device isa-vga | |
302 | cirrus not yet available with -device | |
303 | none -nodefaults | |
304 | disables more than just VGA, see "Default Devices" | |
305 | ||
306 | Bug: the new way doesn't work for machine types "pc" and "isapc", | |
307 | because it violates obscure device initialization ordering | |
308 | constraints. | |
309 | ||
310 | === Audio Devices === | |
311 | ||
312 | Host and guest part of audio devices have always been separate. | |
313 | ||
314 | The old way to define guest audio devices is -soundhw C1,... | |
315 | ||
316 | The new way is to define each guest audio device separately with | |
317 | -device. | |
318 | ||
319 | Map from -soundhw sound card name to -device: | |
320 | ||
321 | ac97 -device AC97 | |
322 | cs4231a -device cs4231a,iobase=IOADDR,irq=IRQ,dma=DMA | |
323 | es1370 -device ES1370 | |
324 | gus -device gus,iobase=IOADDR,irq=IRQ,dma=DMA,freq=F | |
325 | hda -device intel-hda,msi=MSI -device hda-duplex | |
326 | sb16 -device sb16,iobase=IOADDR,irq=IRQ,dma=DMA,dma16=DMA16,version=V | |
327 | adlib not yet available with -device | |
328 | pcspk not yet available with -device | |
329 | ||
330 | For PCI devices, you can add bus=PCI-BUS,addr=DEVFN to control the PCI | |
331 | device address, as usual. | |
332 | ||
333 | === USB Devices === | |
334 | ||
335 | The old way to define a virtual USB device is -usbdevice DRIVER:OPTS... | |
336 | ||
337 | The new way is -device DEVNAME,DEV-OPTS... Details depend on DRIVER: | |
338 | ||
339 | * ccid -device usb-ccid | |
340 | * keyboard -device usb-kbd | |
341 | * mouse -device usb-mouse | |
342 | * tablet -device usb-tablet | |
343 | * wacom-tablet -device usb-wacom-tablet | |
344 | * host:... See "Host Device Assignment" | |
345 | * disk:... See "Block Devices" | |
346 | * serial:... See "Character Devices" | |
347 | * braille See "Character Devices" | |
348 | * net:... See "Network Devices" | |
349 | * bt:... not yet available with -device | |
350 | ||
351 | === Watchdog Devices === | |
352 | ||
353 | Host and guest part of watchdog devices have always been separate. | |
354 | ||
355 | The old way to define a guest watchdog device is -watchdog DEVNAME. | |
356 | The new way is -device DEVNAME. For PCI devices, you can add | |
357 | bus=PCI-BUS,addr=DEVFN to control the PCI device address, as usual. | |
358 | ||
359 | === Host Device Assignment === | |
360 | ||
361 | QEMU supports assigning host PCI devices (qemu-kvm only at this time) | |
362 | and host USB devices. PCI devices can only be assigned with -device: | |
363 | ||
364 | -device vfio-pci,host=ADDR,id=ID | |
365 | ||
366 | The old way to assign a host USB device is | |
367 | ||
368 | -usbdevice host:auto:BUS.ADDR:VID:PRID | |
369 | ||
370 | where any of BUS, ADDR, VID, PRID can be the wildcard *. | |
371 | ||
372 | The new way is | |
373 | ||
374 | -device usb-host,hostbus=BUS,hostaddr=ADDR,vendorid=VID,productid=PRID | |
375 | ||
376 | Omitted options match anything, just like the old way's wildcard. | |
377 | ||
378 | === Default Devices === | |
379 | ||
380 | QEMU creates a number of devices by default, depending on the machine | |
381 | type. | |
382 | ||
383 | -device DEVNAME... and global DEVNAME... suppress default devices for | |
384 | some DEVNAMEs: | |
385 | ||
386 | default device suppressing DEVNAMEs | |
387 | CD-ROM ide-cd, ide-drive, ide-hd, scsi-cd, scsi-hd | |
388 | isa-fdc's driveA floppy, isa-fdc | |
389 | parallel isa-parallel | |
390 | serial isa-serial | |
391 | VGA VGA, cirrus-vga, isa-vga, isa-cirrus-vga, | |
392 | vmware-svga, qxl-vga, virtio-vga | |
393 | virtioconsole virtio-serial-pci, virtio-serial | |
394 | ||
395 | The default NIC is connected to a default part created along with it. | |
396 | It is *not* suppressed by configuring a NIC with -device (you may call | |
397 | that a bug). -net and -netdev suppress the default NIC. | |
398 | ||
399 | -nodefaults suppresses all the default devices mentioned above, plus a | |
400 | few other things such as default SD-Card drive and default monitor. |