audk/OvmfPkg/VirtioGpuDxe/DriverBinding.c

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OvmfPkg/VirtioGpuDxe: introduce with Component Name 2 and Driver Binding This patch adds the skeleton of the driver: it implements the Component Name 2 Protocol and the Driver Binding Protocol, in accordance with the generic and GOP-specific requirements set forth in the UEFI spec and the Driver Writers' Guide. The basic idea is that VGPU_DEV abstracts the virtio GPU device, while the single VGPU_GOP that we intend to support at this point stands for "head" (aka "scanout") #0. For now, the Virtio Device Protocol is only used for driver binding; no actual virtio operations are done yet. Similarly, we use a "dummy" GOP GUID and protocol structure (a plain UINT8 object) for now, so that GOP-consuming drivers don't look at what we produce just yet. The driver is a bit different from the other virtio device drivers written thus far: - It implements the GetControllerName() member of the Component Name 2 Protocol. (Formatting helpful names is recommended by UEFI.) As a "best effort", we format the PCI BDF into the name (a PCI backend is not guaranteed by VIRTIO_DEVICE_PROTOCOL). It should provide a more friendly experience in the shell and elsewhere. - This driver seeks to support all RemainingDevicePath cases: - NULL: produce all (= one) child handles (= VGPU_GOP heads) at once, - End of Device Path Node: produce no child handles, - specific ACPI ADR Node: check if it's supportable, and produce it (only one specific child controller is supported). This is one of the reasons for separating VGPU_GOP from VGPU_DEV. The driver is a hybrid driver: it produces both child handles (one, to be exact), but also installs a structure (VGPU_DEV) directly on the VirtIo controller handle, using gEfiCallerIdGuid as protocol GUID. This is a trick I've seen elsewhere in edk2 (for example, TerminalDxe), and it is necessary for the following reason: In EFI_COMPONENT_NAME2_PROTOCOL.GetControllerName(), we must be able to "cast down" a VirtIo ControllerHandle to our own private data structure (VGPU_DEV). That's only possible if we install the structure directly on the VirtIo ControllerHandle (thereby rendering the driver a hybrid driver), because a child controller with our GOP implementation on it may not exist / be passed in there. Cc: Ard Biesheuvel <ard.biesheuvel@linaro.org> Cc: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com> Ref: https://tianocore.acgmultimedia.com/show_bug.cgi?id=66 Contributed-under: TianoCore Contribution Agreement 1.0 Signed-off-by: Laszlo Ersek <lersek@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
2016-08-15 15:34:32 +02:00
/** @file
Implement the Driver Binding Protocol and the Component Name 2 Protocol for
the Virtio GPU hybrid driver.
Copyright (C) 2016, Red Hat, Inc.
This program and the accompanying materials are licensed and made available
under the terms and conditions of the BSD License which accompanies this
distribution. The full text of the license may be found at
http://opensource.org/licenses/bsd-license.php
THE PROGRAM IS DISTRIBUTED UNDER THE BSD LICENSE ON AN "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT
WARRANTIES OR REPRESENTATIONS OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED.
**/
#include <Library/BaseMemoryLib.h>
#include <Library/DevicePathLib.h>
#include <Library/MemoryAllocationLib.h>
#include <Library/PrintLib.h>
#include <Library/UefiBootServicesTableLib.h>
#include <Library/UefiLib.h>
#include <Protocol/ComponentName2.h>
#include <Protocol/DevicePath.h>
#include <Protocol/DriverBinding.h>
#include <Protocol/PciIo.h>
#include "VirtioGpu.h"
//
// The device path node that describes the Video Output Device Attributes for
// the single head (UEFI child handle) that we support.
//
// The ACPI_DISPLAY_ADR() macro corresponds to Table B-2, section "B.4.2 _DOD"
// in the ACPI 3.0b spec, or more recently, to Table B-379, section "B.3.2
// _DOD" in the ACPI 6.0 spec.
//
STATIC CONST ACPI_ADR_DEVICE_PATH mAcpiAdr = {
{ // Header
ACPI_DEVICE_PATH, // Type
ACPI_ADR_DP, // SubType
{ sizeof mAcpiAdr, 0 }, // Length
},
ACPI_DISPLAY_ADR ( // ADR
1, // DeviceIdScheme: use the ACPI
// bit-field definitions
0, // HeadId
0, // NonVgaOutput
1, // BiosCanDetect
0, // VendorInfo
ACPI_ADR_DISPLAY_TYPE_EXTERNAL_DIGITAL, // Type
0, // Port
0 // Index
)
};
//
// Component Name 2 Protocol implementation.
//
STATIC CONST EFI_UNICODE_STRING_TABLE mDriverNameTable[] = {
{ "en", L"Virtio GPU Driver" },
{ NULL, NULL }
};
STATIC
EFI_STATUS
EFIAPI
VirtioGpuGetDriverName (
IN EFI_COMPONENT_NAME2_PROTOCOL *This,
IN CHAR8 *Language,
OUT CHAR16 **DriverName
)
{
return LookupUnicodeString2 (Language, This->SupportedLanguages,
mDriverNameTable, DriverName, FALSE /* Iso639Language */);
}
STATIC
EFI_STATUS
EFIAPI
VirtioGpuGetControllerName (
IN EFI_COMPONENT_NAME2_PROTOCOL *This,
IN EFI_HANDLE ControllerHandle,
IN EFI_HANDLE ChildHandle OPTIONAL,
IN CHAR8 *Language,
OUT CHAR16 **ControllerName
)
{
EFI_STATUS Status;
VGPU_DEV *VgpuDev;
//
// Look up the VGPU_DEV "protocol interface" on ControllerHandle.
//
Status = gBS->OpenProtocol (ControllerHandle, &gEfiCallerIdGuid,
(VOID **)&VgpuDev, gImageHandle, ControllerHandle,
EFI_OPEN_PROTOCOL_GET_PROTOCOL);
if (EFI_ERROR (Status)) {
return Status;
}
//
// Sanity check: if we found gEfiCallerIdGuid on ControllerHandle, then we
// keep its Virtio Device Protocol interface open BY_DRIVER.
//
ASSERT_EFI_ERROR (EfiTestManagedDevice (ControllerHandle, gImageHandle,
&gVirtioDeviceProtocolGuid));
if (ChildHandle == NULL) {
//
// The caller is querying the name of the VGPU_DEV controller.
//
return LookupUnicodeString2 (Language, This->SupportedLanguages,
VgpuDev->BusName, ControllerName, FALSE /* Iso639Language */);
}
//
// Otherwise, the caller is looking for the name of the GOP child controller.
// Check if it is asking about the GOP child controller that we manage. (The
// condition below covers the case when we haven't produced the GOP child
// controller yet, or we've destroyed it since.)
//
if (VgpuDev->Child == NULL || ChildHandle != VgpuDev->Child->GopHandle) {
return EFI_UNSUPPORTED;
}
//
// Sanity check: our GOP child controller keeps the VGPU_DEV controller's
// Virtio Device Protocol interface open BY_CHILD_CONTROLLER.
//
ASSERT_EFI_ERROR (EfiTestChildHandle (ControllerHandle, ChildHandle,
&gVirtioDeviceProtocolGuid));
return LookupUnicodeString2 (Language, This->SupportedLanguages,
VgpuDev->Child->GopName, ControllerName,
FALSE /* Iso639Language */);
}
STATIC CONST EFI_COMPONENT_NAME2_PROTOCOL mComponentName2 = {
VirtioGpuGetDriverName,
VirtioGpuGetControllerName,
"en" // SupportedLanguages (RFC 4646)
};
//
// Helper functions for the Driver Binding Protocol Implementation.
//
/**
Format the VGPU_DEV controller name, to be looked up and returned by
VirtioGpuGetControllerName().
@param[in] ControllerHandle The handle that identifies the VGPU_DEV
controller.
@param[in] AgentHandle The handle of the agent that will attempt to
temporarily open the PciIo protocol. This is the
DriverBindingHandle member of the
EFI_DRIVER_BINDING_PROTOCOL whose Start()
function is calling this function.
@param[in] DevicePath The device path that is installed on
ControllerHandle.
@param[out] ControllerName A dynamically allocated unicode string that
unconditionally says "Virtio GPU Device", with a
PCI Segment:Bus:Device.Function location
optionally appended. The latter part is only
produced if DevicePath contains at least one
PciIo node; in that case, the most specific such
node is used for retrieving the location info.
The caller is responsible for freeing
ControllerName after use.
@retval EFI_SUCCESS ControllerName has been formatted.
@retval EFI_OUT_OF_RESOURCES Failed to allocate memory for ControllerName.
**/
STATIC
EFI_STATUS
FormatVgpuDevName (
IN EFI_HANDLE ControllerHandle,
IN EFI_HANDLE AgentHandle,
IN EFI_DEVICE_PATH_PROTOCOL *DevicePath,
OUT CHAR16 **ControllerName
)
{
EFI_HANDLE PciIoHandle;
EFI_PCI_IO_PROTOCOL *PciIo;
UINTN Segment, Bus, Device, Function;
STATIC CONST CHAR16 ControllerNameStem[] = L"Virtio GPU Device";
UINTN ControllerNameSize;
if (EFI_ERROR (gBS->LocateDevicePath (&gEfiPciIoProtocolGuid, &DevicePath,
&PciIoHandle)) ||
EFI_ERROR (gBS->OpenProtocol (PciIoHandle, &gEfiPciIoProtocolGuid,
(VOID **)&PciIo, AgentHandle, ControllerHandle,
EFI_OPEN_PROTOCOL_GET_PROTOCOL)) ||
EFI_ERROR (PciIo->GetLocation (PciIo, &Segment, &Bus, &Device,
&Function))) {
//
// Failed to retrieve location info, return verbatim copy of static string.
//
*ControllerName = AllocateCopyPool (sizeof ControllerNameStem,
ControllerNameStem);
return (*ControllerName == NULL) ? EFI_OUT_OF_RESOURCES : EFI_SUCCESS;
}
//
// Location info available, format ControllerName dynamically.
//
ControllerNameSize = sizeof ControllerNameStem + // includes L'\0'
sizeof (CHAR16) * (1 + 4 + // Segment
1 + 2 + // Bus
1 + 2 + // Device
1 + 1 // Function
);
*ControllerName = AllocatePool (ControllerNameSize);
if (*ControllerName == NULL) {
return EFI_OUT_OF_RESOURCES;
}
UnicodeSPrintAsciiFormat (*ControllerName, ControllerNameSize,
"%s %04x:%02x:%02x.%x", ControllerNameStem, (UINT32)Segment, (UINT32)Bus,
(UINT32)Device, (UINT32)Function);
return EFI_SUCCESS;
}
/**
Dynamically allocate and initialize the VGPU_GOP child object within an
otherwise configured parent VGPU_DEV object.
This function adds a BY_CHILD_CONTROLLER reference to ParentBusController's
VIRTIO_DEVICE_PROTOCOL interface.
@param[in,out] ParentBus The pre-initialized VGPU_DEV object that the
newly created VGPU_GOP object will be the
child of.
@param[in] ParentDevicePath The device path protocol instance that is
installed on ParentBusController.
@param[in] ParentBusController The UEFI controller handle on which the
ParentBus VGPU_DEV object and the
ParentDevicePath device path protocol are
installed.
@param[in] DriverBindingHandle The DriverBindingHandle member of
EFI_DRIVER_BINDING_PROTOCOL whose Start()
function is calling this function. It is
passed as AgentHandle to gBS->OpenProtocol()
when creating the BY_CHILD_CONTROLLER
reference.
@retval EFI_SUCCESS ParentBus->Child has been created and
populated, and ParentBus->Child->GopHandle now
references ParentBusController->VirtIo
BY_CHILD_CONTROLLER.
@retval EFI_OUT_OF_RESOURCES Memory allocation failed.
@return Error codes from underlying functions.
**/
STATIC
EFI_STATUS
InitVgpuGop (
IN OUT VGPU_DEV *ParentBus,
IN EFI_DEVICE_PATH_PROTOCOL *ParentDevicePath,
IN EFI_HANDLE ParentBusController,
IN EFI_HANDLE DriverBindingHandle
)
{
VGPU_GOP *VgpuGop;
EFI_STATUS Status;
CHAR16 *ParentBusName;
STATIC CONST CHAR16 NameSuffix[] = L" Head #0";
UINTN NameSize;
CHAR16 *Name;
EFI_TPL OldTpl;
VOID *ParentVirtIo;
VgpuGop = AllocateZeroPool (sizeof *VgpuGop);
if (VgpuGop == NULL) {
return EFI_OUT_OF_RESOURCES;
}
VgpuGop->Signature = VGPU_GOP_SIG;
VgpuGop->ParentBus = ParentBus;
//
// Format a human-readable controller name for VGPU_GOP, and stash it for
// VirtioGpuGetControllerName() to look up. We simply append NameSuffix to
// ParentBus->BusName.
//
Status = LookupUnicodeString2 ("en", mComponentName2.SupportedLanguages,
ParentBus->BusName, &ParentBusName, FALSE /* Iso639Language */);
ASSERT_EFI_ERROR (Status);
NameSize = StrSize (ParentBusName) - sizeof (CHAR16) + sizeof NameSuffix;
Name = AllocatePool (NameSize);
if (Name == NULL) {
Status = EFI_OUT_OF_RESOURCES;
goto FreeVgpuGop;
}
UnicodeSPrintAsciiFormat (Name, NameSize, "%s%s", ParentBusName, NameSuffix);
Status = AddUnicodeString2 ("en", mComponentName2.SupportedLanguages,
&VgpuGop->GopName, Name, FALSE /* Iso639Language */);
FreePool (Name);
if (EFI_ERROR (Status)) {
goto FreeVgpuGop;
}
//
// Create the child device path.
//
VgpuGop->GopDevicePath = AppendDevicePathNode (ParentDevicePath,
&mAcpiAdr.Header);
if (VgpuGop->GopDevicePath == NULL) {
Status = EFI_OUT_OF_RESOURCES;
goto FreeVgpuGopName;
}
//
// Mask protocol notify callbacks until we're done.
//
OldTpl = gBS->RaiseTPL (TPL_CALLBACK);
//
// Create the child handle with the child device path.
//
Status = gBS->InstallProtocolInterface (&VgpuGop->GopHandle,
&gEfiDevicePathProtocolGuid, EFI_NATIVE_INTERFACE,
VgpuGop->GopDevicePath);
if (EFI_ERROR (Status)) {
goto FreeDevicePath;
}
//
// The child handle must present a reference to the parent handle's Virtio
// Device Protocol interface.
//
Status = gBS->OpenProtocol (ParentBusController, &gVirtioDeviceProtocolGuid,
&ParentVirtIo, DriverBindingHandle, VgpuGop->GopHandle,
EFI_OPEN_PROTOCOL_BY_CHILD_CONTROLLER);
if (EFI_ERROR (Status)) {
goto UninstallDevicePath;
}
ASSERT (ParentVirtIo == ParentBus->VirtIo);
//
// Initialize our Graphics Output Protocol.
//
// Fill in the function members of VgpuGop->Gop from the template, then set
// up the rest of the GOP infrastructure by calling SetMode() right now.
OvmfPkg/VirtioGpuDxe: introduce with Component Name 2 and Driver Binding This patch adds the skeleton of the driver: it implements the Component Name 2 Protocol and the Driver Binding Protocol, in accordance with the generic and GOP-specific requirements set forth in the UEFI spec and the Driver Writers' Guide. The basic idea is that VGPU_DEV abstracts the virtio GPU device, while the single VGPU_GOP that we intend to support at this point stands for "head" (aka "scanout") #0. For now, the Virtio Device Protocol is only used for driver binding; no actual virtio operations are done yet. Similarly, we use a "dummy" GOP GUID and protocol structure (a plain UINT8 object) for now, so that GOP-consuming drivers don't look at what we produce just yet. The driver is a bit different from the other virtio device drivers written thus far: - It implements the GetControllerName() member of the Component Name 2 Protocol. (Formatting helpful names is recommended by UEFI.) As a "best effort", we format the PCI BDF into the name (a PCI backend is not guaranteed by VIRTIO_DEVICE_PROTOCOL). It should provide a more friendly experience in the shell and elsewhere. - This driver seeks to support all RemainingDevicePath cases: - NULL: produce all (= one) child handles (= VGPU_GOP heads) at once, - End of Device Path Node: produce no child handles, - specific ACPI ADR Node: check if it's supportable, and produce it (only one specific child controller is supported). This is one of the reasons for separating VGPU_GOP from VGPU_DEV. The driver is a hybrid driver: it produces both child handles (one, to be exact), but also installs a structure (VGPU_DEV) directly on the VirtIo controller handle, using gEfiCallerIdGuid as protocol GUID. This is a trick I've seen elsewhere in edk2 (for example, TerminalDxe), and it is necessary for the following reason: In EFI_COMPONENT_NAME2_PROTOCOL.GetControllerName(), we must be able to "cast down" a VirtIo ControllerHandle to our own private data structure (VGPU_DEV). That's only possible if we install the structure directly on the VirtIo ControllerHandle (thereby rendering the driver a hybrid driver), because a child controller with our GOP implementation on it may not exist / be passed in there. Cc: Ard Biesheuvel <ard.biesheuvel@linaro.org> Cc: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com> Ref: https://tianocore.acgmultimedia.com/show_bug.cgi?id=66 Contributed-under: TianoCore Contribution Agreement 1.0 Signed-off-by: Laszlo Ersek <lersek@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
2016-08-15 15:34:32 +02:00
//
CopyMem (&VgpuGop->Gop, &mGopTemplate, sizeof mGopTemplate);
Status = VgpuGop->Gop.SetMode (&VgpuGop->Gop, 0);
OvmfPkg/VirtioGpuDxe: introduce with Component Name 2 and Driver Binding This patch adds the skeleton of the driver: it implements the Component Name 2 Protocol and the Driver Binding Protocol, in accordance with the generic and GOP-specific requirements set forth in the UEFI spec and the Driver Writers' Guide. The basic idea is that VGPU_DEV abstracts the virtio GPU device, while the single VGPU_GOP that we intend to support at this point stands for "head" (aka "scanout") #0. For now, the Virtio Device Protocol is only used for driver binding; no actual virtio operations are done yet. Similarly, we use a "dummy" GOP GUID and protocol structure (a plain UINT8 object) for now, so that GOP-consuming drivers don't look at what we produce just yet. The driver is a bit different from the other virtio device drivers written thus far: - It implements the GetControllerName() member of the Component Name 2 Protocol. (Formatting helpful names is recommended by UEFI.) As a "best effort", we format the PCI BDF into the name (a PCI backend is not guaranteed by VIRTIO_DEVICE_PROTOCOL). It should provide a more friendly experience in the shell and elsewhere. - This driver seeks to support all RemainingDevicePath cases: - NULL: produce all (= one) child handles (= VGPU_GOP heads) at once, - End of Device Path Node: produce no child handles, - specific ACPI ADR Node: check if it's supportable, and produce it (only one specific child controller is supported). This is one of the reasons for separating VGPU_GOP from VGPU_DEV. The driver is a hybrid driver: it produces both child handles (one, to be exact), but also installs a structure (VGPU_DEV) directly on the VirtIo controller handle, using gEfiCallerIdGuid as protocol GUID. This is a trick I've seen elsewhere in edk2 (for example, TerminalDxe), and it is necessary for the following reason: In EFI_COMPONENT_NAME2_PROTOCOL.GetControllerName(), we must be able to "cast down" a VirtIo ControllerHandle to our own private data structure (VGPU_DEV). That's only possible if we install the structure directly on the VirtIo ControllerHandle (thereby rendering the driver a hybrid driver), because a child controller with our GOP implementation on it may not exist / be passed in there. Cc: Ard Biesheuvel <ard.biesheuvel@linaro.org> Cc: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com> Ref: https://tianocore.acgmultimedia.com/show_bug.cgi?id=66 Contributed-under: TianoCore Contribution Agreement 1.0 Signed-off-by: Laszlo Ersek <lersek@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
2016-08-15 15:34:32 +02:00
if (EFI_ERROR (Status)) {
goto CloseVirtIoByChild;
}
//
// Install the Graphics Output Protocol on the child handle.
//
Status = gBS->InstallProtocolInterface (&VgpuGop->GopHandle,
&gEfiGraphicsOutputProtocolGuid, EFI_NATIVE_INTERFACE,
OvmfPkg/VirtioGpuDxe: introduce with Component Name 2 and Driver Binding This patch adds the skeleton of the driver: it implements the Component Name 2 Protocol and the Driver Binding Protocol, in accordance with the generic and GOP-specific requirements set forth in the UEFI spec and the Driver Writers' Guide. The basic idea is that VGPU_DEV abstracts the virtio GPU device, while the single VGPU_GOP that we intend to support at this point stands for "head" (aka "scanout") #0. For now, the Virtio Device Protocol is only used for driver binding; no actual virtio operations are done yet. Similarly, we use a "dummy" GOP GUID and protocol structure (a plain UINT8 object) for now, so that GOP-consuming drivers don't look at what we produce just yet. The driver is a bit different from the other virtio device drivers written thus far: - It implements the GetControllerName() member of the Component Name 2 Protocol. (Formatting helpful names is recommended by UEFI.) As a "best effort", we format the PCI BDF into the name (a PCI backend is not guaranteed by VIRTIO_DEVICE_PROTOCOL). It should provide a more friendly experience in the shell and elsewhere. - This driver seeks to support all RemainingDevicePath cases: - NULL: produce all (= one) child handles (= VGPU_GOP heads) at once, - End of Device Path Node: produce no child handles, - specific ACPI ADR Node: check if it's supportable, and produce it (only one specific child controller is supported). This is one of the reasons for separating VGPU_GOP from VGPU_DEV. The driver is a hybrid driver: it produces both child handles (one, to be exact), but also installs a structure (VGPU_DEV) directly on the VirtIo controller handle, using gEfiCallerIdGuid as protocol GUID. This is a trick I've seen elsewhere in edk2 (for example, TerminalDxe), and it is necessary for the following reason: In EFI_COMPONENT_NAME2_PROTOCOL.GetControllerName(), we must be able to "cast down" a VirtIo ControllerHandle to our own private data structure (VGPU_DEV). That's only possible if we install the structure directly on the VirtIo ControllerHandle (thereby rendering the driver a hybrid driver), because a child controller with our GOP implementation on it may not exist / be passed in there. Cc: Ard Biesheuvel <ard.biesheuvel@linaro.org> Cc: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com> Ref: https://tianocore.acgmultimedia.com/show_bug.cgi?id=66 Contributed-under: TianoCore Contribution Agreement 1.0 Signed-off-by: Laszlo Ersek <lersek@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
2016-08-15 15:34:32 +02:00
&VgpuGop->Gop);
if (EFI_ERROR (Status)) {
goto UninitGop;
}
//
// We're done.
//
gBS->RestoreTPL (OldTpl);
ParentBus->Child = VgpuGop;
return EFI_SUCCESS;
UninitGop:
ReleaseGopResources (VgpuGop, TRUE /* DisableHead */);
OvmfPkg/VirtioGpuDxe: introduce with Component Name 2 and Driver Binding This patch adds the skeleton of the driver: it implements the Component Name 2 Protocol and the Driver Binding Protocol, in accordance with the generic and GOP-specific requirements set forth in the UEFI spec and the Driver Writers' Guide. The basic idea is that VGPU_DEV abstracts the virtio GPU device, while the single VGPU_GOP that we intend to support at this point stands for "head" (aka "scanout") #0. For now, the Virtio Device Protocol is only used for driver binding; no actual virtio operations are done yet. Similarly, we use a "dummy" GOP GUID and protocol structure (a plain UINT8 object) for now, so that GOP-consuming drivers don't look at what we produce just yet. The driver is a bit different from the other virtio device drivers written thus far: - It implements the GetControllerName() member of the Component Name 2 Protocol. (Formatting helpful names is recommended by UEFI.) As a "best effort", we format the PCI BDF into the name (a PCI backend is not guaranteed by VIRTIO_DEVICE_PROTOCOL). It should provide a more friendly experience in the shell and elsewhere. - This driver seeks to support all RemainingDevicePath cases: - NULL: produce all (= one) child handles (= VGPU_GOP heads) at once, - End of Device Path Node: produce no child handles, - specific ACPI ADR Node: check if it's supportable, and produce it (only one specific child controller is supported). This is one of the reasons for separating VGPU_GOP from VGPU_DEV. The driver is a hybrid driver: it produces both child handles (one, to be exact), but also installs a structure (VGPU_DEV) directly on the VirtIo controller handle, using gEfiCallerIdGuid as protocol GUID. This is a trick I've seen elsewhere in edk2 (for example, TerminalDxe), and it is necessary for the following reason: In EFI_COMPONENT_NAME2_PROTOCOL.GetControllerName(), we must be able to "cast down" a VirtIo ControllerHandle to our own private data structure (VGPU_DEV). That's only possible if we install the structure directly on the VirtIo ControllerHandle (thereby rendering the driver a hybrid driver), because a child controller with our GOP implementation on it may not exist / be passed in there. Cc: Ard Biesheuvel <ard.biesheuvel@linaro.org> Cc: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com> Ref: https://tianocore.acgmultimedia.com/show_bug.cgi?id=66 Contributed-under: TianoCore Contribution Agreement 1.0 Signed-off-by: Laszlo Ersek <lersek@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
2016-08-15 15:34:32 +02:00
CloseVirtIoByChild:
gBS->CloseProtocol (ParentBusController, &gVirtioDeviceProtocolGuid,
DriverBindingHandle, VgpuGop->GopHandle);
UninstallDevicePath:
gBS->UninstallProtocolInterface (VgpuGop->GopHandle,
&gEfiDevicePathProtocolGuid, VgpuGop->GopDevicePath);
FreeDevicePath:
gBS->RestoreTPL (OldTpl);
FreePool (VgpuGop->GopDevicePath);
FreeVgpuGopName:
FreeUnicodeStringTable (VgpuGop->GopName);
FreeVgpuGop:
FreePool (VgpuGop);
return Status;
}
/**
Tear down and release the VGPU_GOP child object within the VGPU_DEV parent
object.
This function removes the BY_CHILD_CONTROLLER reference from
ParentBusController's VIRTIO_DEVICE_PROTOCOL interface.
@param[in,out] ParentBus The VGPU_DEV object that the VGPU_GOP child
object will be removed from.
@param[in] ParentBusController The UEFI controller handle on which the
ParentBus VGPU_DEV object is installed.
@param[in] DriverBindingHandle The DriverBindingHandle member of
EFI_DRIVER_BINDING_PROTOCOL whose Stop()
function is calling this function. It is
passed as AgentHandle to gBS->CloseProtocol()
when removing the BY_CHILD_CONTROLLER
reference.
**/
STATIC
VOID
UninitVgpuGop (
IN OUT VGPU_DEV *ParentBus,
IN EFI_HANDLE ParentBusController,
IN EFI_HANDLE DriverBindingHandle
)
{
VGPU_GOP *VgpuGop;
EFI_STATUS Status;
VgpuGop = ParentBus->Child;
Status = gBS->UninstallProtocolInterface (VgpuGop->GopHandle,
&gEfiGraphicsOutputProtocolGuid, &VgpuGop->Gop);
OvmfPkg/VirtioGpuDxe: introduce with Component Name 2 and Driver Binding This patch adds the skeleton of the driver: it implements the Component Name 2 Protocol and the Driver Binding Protocol, in accordance with the generic and GOP-specific requirements set forth in the UEFI spec and the Driver Writers' Guide. The basic idea is that VGPU_DEV abstracts the virtio GPU device, while the single VGPU_GOP that we intend to support at this point stands for "head" (aka "scanout") #0. For now, the Virtio Device Protocol is only used for driver binding; no actual virtio operations are done yet. Similarly, we use a "dummy" GOP GUID and protocol structure (a plain UINT8 object) for now, so that GOP-consuming drivers don't look at what we produce just yet. The driver is a bit different from the other virtio device drivers written thus far: - It implements the GetControllerName() member of the Component Name 2 Protocol. (Formatting helpful names is recommended by UEFI.) As a "best effort", we format the PCI BDF into the name (a PCI backend is not guaranteed by VIRTIO_DEVICE_PROTOCOL). It should provide a more friendly experience in the shell and elsewhere. - This driver seeks to support all RemainingDevicePath cases: - NULL: produce all (= one) child handles (= VGPU_GOP heads) at once, - End of Device Path Node: produce no child handles, - specific ACPI ADR Node: check if it's supportable, and produce it (only one specific child controller is supported). This is one of the reasons for separating VGPU_GOP from VGPU_DEV. The driver is a hybrid driver: it produces both child handles (one, to be exact), but also installs a structure (VGPU_DEV) directly on the VirtIo controller handle, using gEfiCallerIdGuid as protocol GUID. This is a trick I've seen elsewhere in edk2 (for example, TerminalDxe), and it is necessary for the following reason: In EFI_COMPONENT_NAME2_PROTOCOL.GetControllerName(), we must be able to "cast down" a VirtIo ControllerHandle to our own private data structure (VGPU_DEV). That's only possible if we install the structure directly on the VirtIo ControllerHandle (thereby rendering the driver a hybrid driver), because a child controller with our GOP implementation on it may not exist / be passed in there. Cc: Ard Biesheuvel <ard.biesheuvel@linaro.org> Cc: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com> Ref: https://tianocore.acgmultimedia.com/show_bug.cgi?id=66 Contributed-under: TianoCore Contribution Agreement 1.0 Signed-off-by: Laszlo Ersek <lersek@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
2016-08-15 15:34:32 +02:00
ASSERT_EFI_ERROR (Status);
//
// Uninitialize VgpuGop->Gop.
//
ReleaseGopResources (VgpuGop, TRUE /* DisableHead */);
OvmfPkg/VirtioGpuDxe: introduce with Component Name 2 and Driver Binding This patch adds the skeleton of the driver: it implements the Component Name 2 Protocol and the Driver Binding Protocol, in accordance with the generic and GOP-specific requirements set forth in the UEFI spec and the Driver Writers' Guide. The basic idea is that VGPU_DEV abstracts the virtio GPU device, while the single VGPU_GOP that we intend to support at this point stands for "head" (aka "scanout") #0. For now, the Virtio Device Protocol is only used for driver binding; no actual virtio operations are done yet. Similarly, we use a "dummy" GOP GUID and protocol structure (a plain UINT8 object) for now, so that GOP-consuming drivers don't look at what we produce just yet. The driver is a bit different from the other virtio device drivers written thus far: - It implements the GetControllerName() member of the Component Name 2 Protocol. (Formatting helpful names is recommended by UEFI.) As a "best effort", we format the PCI BDF into the name (a PCI backend is not guaranteed by VIRTIO_DEVICE_PROTOCOL). It should provide a more friendly experience in the shell and elsewhere. - This driver seeks to support all RemainingDevicePath cases: - NULL: produce all (= one) child handles (= VGPU_GOP heads) at once, - End of Device Path Node: produce no child handles, - specific ACPI ADR Node: check if it's supportable, and produce it (only one specific child controller is supported). This is one of the reasons for separating VGPU_GOP from VGPU_DEV. The driver is a hybrid driver: it produces both child handles (one, to be exact), but also installs a structure (VGPU_DEV) directly on the VirtIo controller handle, using gEfiCallerIdGuid as protocol GUID. This is a trick I've seen elsewhere in edk2 (for example, TerminalDxe), and it is necessary for the following reason: In EFI_COMPONENT_NAME2_PROTOCOL.GetControllerName(), we must be able to "cast down" a VirtIo ControllerHandle to our own private data structure (VGPU_DEV). That's only possible if we install the structure directly on the VirtIo ControllerHandle (thereby rendering the driver a hybrid driver), because a child controller with our GOP implementation on it may not exist / be passed in there. Cc: Ard Biesheuvel <ard.biesheuvel@linaro.org> Cc: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com> Ref: https://tianocore.acgmultimedia.com/show_bug.cgi?id=66 Contributed-under: TianoCore Contribution Agreement 1.0 Signed-off-by: Laszlo Ersek <lersek@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
2016-08-15 15:34:32 +02:00
Status = gBS->CloseProtocol (ParentBusController, &gVirtioDeviceProtocolGuid,
DriverBindingHandle, VgpuGop->GopHandle);
ASSERT_EFI_ERROR (Status);
Status = gBS->UninstallProtocolInterface (VgpuGop->GopHandle,
&gEfiDevicePathProtocolGuid, VgpuGop->GopDevicePath);
ASSERT_EFI_ERROR (Status);
FreePool (VgpuGop->GopDevicePath);
FreeUnicodeStringTable (VgpuGop->GopName);
FreePool (VgpuGop);
ParentBus->Child = NULL;
}
//
// Driver Binding Protocol Implementation.
//
STATIC
EFI_STATUS
EFIAPI
VirtioGpuDriverBindingSupported (
IN EFI_DRIVER_BINDING_PROTOCOL *This,
IN EFI_HANDLE ControllerHandle,
IN EFI_DEVICE_PATH_PROTOCOL *RemainingDevicePath OPTIONAL
)
{
EFI_STATUS Status;
VIRTIO_DEVICE_PROTOCOL *VirtIo;
//
// - If RemainingDevicePath is NULL: the caller is interested in creating all
// child handles.
// - If RemainingDevicePath points to an end node: the caller is not
// interested in creating any child handle.
// - Otherwise, the caller would like to create the one child handle
// specified in RemainingDevicePath. In this case we have to see if the
// requested device path is supportable.
//
if (RemainingDevicePath != NULL &&
!IsDevicePathEnd (RemainingDevicePath) &&
(DevicePathNodeLength (RemainingDevicePath) != sizeof mAcpiAdr ||
CompareMem (RemainingDevicePath, &mAcpiAdr, sizeof mAcpiAdr) != 0)) {
return EFI_UNSUPPORTED;
}
//
// Open the Virtio Device Protocol interface on the controller, BY_DRIVER.
//
Status = gBS->OpenProtocol (ControllerHandle, &gVirtioDeviceProtocolGuid,
(VOID **)&VirtIo, This->DriverBindingHandle,
ControllerHandle, EFI_OPEN_PROTOCOL_BY_DRIVER);
if (EFI_ERROR (Status)) {
//
// If this fails, then by default we cannot support ControllerHandle. There
// is one exception: we've already bound the device, have not produced any
// GOP child controller, and now the caller wants us to produce the child
// controller (either specifically or as part of "all children"). That's
// allowed.
//
if (Status == EFI_ALREADY_STARTED) {
EFI_STATUS Status2;
VGPU_DEV *VgpuDev;
Status2 = gBS->OpenProtocol (ControllerHandle, &gEfiCallerIdGuid,
(VOID **)&VgpuDev, This->DriverBindingHandle,
ControllerHandle, EFI_OPEN_PROTOCOL_GET_PROTOCOL);
ASSERT_EFI_ERROR (Status2);
if (VgpuDev->Child == NULL &&
(RemainingDevicePath == NULL ||
!IsDevicePathEnd (RemainingDevicePath))) {
Status = EFI_SUCCESS;
}
}
return Status;
}
//
// First BY_DRIVER open; check the VirtIo revision and subsystem.
//
if (VirtIo->Revision < VIRTIO_SPEC_REVISION (1, 0, 0) ||
VirtIo->SubSystemDeviceId != VIRTIO_SUBSYSTEM_GPU_DEVICE) {
Status = EFI_UNSUPPORTED;
goto CloseVirtIo;
}
//
// We'll need the device path of the VirtIo device both for formatting
// VGPU_DEV.BusName and for populating VGPU_GOP.GopDevicePath.
//
Status = gBS->OpenProtocol (ControllerHandle, &gEfiDevicePathProtocolGuid,
NULL, This->DriverBindingHandle, ControllerHandle,
EFI_OPEN_PROTOCOL_TEST_PROTOCOL);
CloseVirtIo:
gBS->CloseProtocol (ControllerHandle, &gVirtioDeviceProtocolGuid,
This->DriverBindingHandle, ControllerHandle);
return Status;
}
STATIC
EFI_STATUS
EFIAPI
VirtioGpuDriverBindingStart (
IN EFI_DRIVER_BINDING_PROTOCOL *This,
IN EFI_HANDLE ControllerHandle,
IN EFI_DEVICE_PATH_PROTOCOL *RemainingDevicePath OPTIONAL
)
{
EFI_STATUS Status;
VIRTIO_DEVICE_PROTOCOL *VirtIo;
BOOLEAN VirtIoBoundJustNow;
VGPU_DEV *VgpuDev;
EFI_DEVICE_PATH_PROTOCOL *DevicePath;
//
// Open the Virtio Device Protocol.
//
// The result of this operation, combined with the checks in
// VirtioGpuDriverBindingSupported(), uniquely tells us whether we are
// binding the VirtIo controller on this call (with or without creating child
// controllers), or else we're *only* creating child controllers.
//
Status = gBS->OpenProtocol (ControllerHandle, &gVirtioDeviceProtocolGuid,
(VOID **)&VirtIo, This->DriverBindingHandle,
ControllerHandle, EFI_OPEN_PROTOCOL_BY_DRIVER);
if (EFI_ERROR (Status)) {
//
// The assertions below are based on the success of
// VirtioGpuDriverBindingSupported(): we bound ControllerHandle earlier,
// without producing child handles, and now we're producing the GOP child
// handle only.
//
ASSERT (Status == EFI_ALREADY_STARTED);
Status = gBS->OpenProtocol (ControllerHandle, &gEfiCallerIdGuid,
(VOID **)&VgpuDev, This->DriverBindingHandle,
ControllerHandle, EFI_OPEN_PROTOCOL_GET_PROTOCOL);
ASSERT_EFI_ERROR (Status);
ASSERT (VgpuDev->Child == NULL);
ASSERT (
RemainingDevicePath == NULL || !IsDevicePathEnd (RemainingDevicePath));
VirtIoBoundJustNow = FALSE;
} else {
VirtIoBoundJustNow = TRUE;
//
// Allocate the private structure.
//
VgpuDev = AllocateZeroPool (sizeof *VgpuDev);
if (VgpuDev == NULL) {
Status = EFI_OUT_OF_RESOURCES;
goto CloseVirtIo;
}
VgpuDev->VirtIo = VirtIo;
}
//
// Grab the VirtIo controller's device path. This is necessary regardless of
// VirtIoBoundJustNow.
//
Status = gBS->OpenProtocol (ControllerHandle, &gEfiDevicePathProtocolGuid,
(VOID **)&DevicePath, This->DriverBindingHandle,
ControllerHandle, EFI_OPEN_PROTOCOL_GET_PROTOCOL);
if (EFI_ERROR (Status)) {
goto FreeVgpuDev;
}
//
// Create VGPU_DEV if we've bound the VirtIo controller right now (that is,
// if we aren't *only* creating child handles).
//
if (VirtIoBoundJustNow) {
CHAR16 *VgpuDevName;
//
// Format a human-readable controller name for VGPU_DEV, and stash it for
// VirtioGpuGetControllerName() to look up.
//
Status = FormatVgpuDevName (ControllerHandle, This->DriverBindingHandle,
DevicePath, &VgpuDevName);
if (EFI_ERROR (Status)) {
goto FreeVgpuDev;
}
Status = AddUnicodeString2 ("en", mComponentName2.SupportedLanguages,
&VgpuDev->BusName, VgpuDevName, FALSE /* Iso639Language */);
FreePool (VgpuDevName);
if (EFI_ERROR (Status)) {
goto FreeVgpuDev;
}
Status = VirtioGpuInit (VgpuDev);
if (EFI_ERROR (Status)) {
goto FreeVgpuDevBusName;
}
Status = gBS->CreateEvent (EVT_SIGNAL_EXIT_BOOT_SERVICES, TPL_CALLBACK,
VirtioGpuExitBoot, VgpuDev /* NotifyContext */,
&VgpuDev->ExitBoot);
if (EFI_ERROR (Status)) {
goto UninitGpu;
}
OvmfPkg/VirtioGpuDxe: introduce with Component Name 2 and Driver Binding This patch adds the skeleton of the driver: it implements the Component Name 2 Protocol and the Driver Binding Protocol, in accordance with the generic and GOP-specific requirements set forth in the UEFI spec and the Driver Writers' Guide. The basic idea is that VGPU_DEV abstracts the virtio GPU device, while the single VGPU_GOP that we intend to support at this point stands for "head" (aka "scanout") #0. For now, the Virtio Device Protocol is only used for driver binding; no actual virtio operations are done yet. Similarly, we use a "dummy" GOP GUID and protocol structure (a plain UINT8 object) for now, so that GOP-consuming drivers don't look at what we produce just yet. The driver is a bit different from the other virtio device drivers written thus far: - It implements the GetControllerName() member of the Component Name 2 Protocol. (Formatting helpful names is recommended by UEFI.) As a "best effort", we format the PCI BDF into the name (a PCI backend is not guaranteed by VIRTIO_DEVICE_PROTOCOL). It should provide a more friendly experience in the shell and elsewhere. - This driver seeks to support all RemainingDevicePath cases: - NULL: produce all (= one) child handles (= VGPU_GOP heads) at once, - End of Device Path Node: produce no child handles, - specific ACPI ADR Node: check if it's supportable, and produce it (only one specific child controller is supported). This is one of the reasons for separating VGPU_GOP from VGPU_DEV. The driver is a hybrid driver: it produces both child handles (one, to be exact), but also installs a structure (VGPU_DEV) directly on the VirtIo controller handle, using gEfiCallerIdGuid as protocol GUID. This is a trick I've seen elsewhere in edk2 (for example, TerminalDxe), and it is necessary for the following reason: In EFI_COMPONENT_NAME2_PROTOCOL.GetControllerName(), we must be able to "cast down" a VirtIo ControllerHandle to our own private data structure (VGPU_DEV). That's only possible if we install the structure directly on the VirtIo ControllerHandle (thereby rendering the driver a hybrid driver), because a child controller with our GOP implementation on it may not exist / be passed in there. Cc: Ard Biesheuvel <ard.biesheuvel@linaro.org> Cc: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com> Ref: https://tianocore.acgmultimedia.com/show_bug.cgi?id=66 Contributed-under: TianoCore Contribution Agreement 1.0 Signed-off-by: Laszlo Ersek <lersek@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
2016-08-15 15:34:32 +02:00
//
// Install the VGPU_DEV "protocol interface" on ControllerHandle.
//
Status = gBS->InstallProtocolInterface (&ControllerHandle,
&gEfiCallerIdGuid, EFI_NATIVE_INTERFACE, VgpuDev);
if (EFI_ERROR (Status)) {
goto CloseExitBoot;
OvmfPkg/VirtioGpuDxe: introduce with Component Name 2 and Driver Binding This patch adds the skeleton of the driver: it implements the Component Name 2 Protocol and the Driver Binding Protocol, in accordance with the generic and GOP-specific requirements set forth in the UEFI spec and the Driver Writers' Guide. The basic idea is that VGPU_DEV abstracts the virtio GPU device, while the single VGPU_GOP that we intend to support at this point stands for "head" (aka "scanout") #0. For now, the Virtio Device Protocol is only used for driver binding; no actual virtio operations are done yet. Similarly, we use a "dummy" GOP GUID and protocol structure (a plain UINT8 object) for now, so that GOP-consuming drivers don't look at what we produce just yet. The driver is a bit different from the other virtio device drivers written thus far: - It implements the GetControllerName() member of the Component Name 2 Protocol. (Formatting helpful names is recommended by UEFI.) As a "best effort", we format the PCI BDF into the name (a PCI backend is not guaranteed by VIRTIO_DEVICE_PROTOCOL). It should provide a more friendly experience in the shell and elsewhere. - This driver seeks to support all RemainingDevicePath cases: - NULL: produce all (= one) child handles (= VGPU_GOP heads) at once, - End of Device Path Node: produce no child handles, - specific ACPI ADR Node: check if it's supportable, and produce it (only one specific child controller is supported). This is one of the reasons for separating VGPU_GOP from VGPU_DEV. The driver is a hybrid driver: it produces both child handles (one, to be exact), but also installs a structure (VGPU_DEV) directly on the VirtIo controller handle, using gEfiCallerIdGuid as protocol GUID. This is a trick I've seen elsewhere in edk2 (for example, TerminalDxe), and it is necessary for the following reason: In EFI_COMPONENT_NAME2_PROTOCOL.GetControllerName(), we must be able to "cast down" a VirtIo ControllerHandle to our own private data structure (VGPU_DEV). That's only possible if we install the structure directly on the VirtIo ControllerHandle (thereby rendering the driver a hybrid driver), because a child controller with our GOP implementation on it may not exist / be passed in there. Cc: Ard Biesheuvel <ard.biesheuvel@linaro.org> Cc: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com> Ref: https://tianocore.acgmultimedia.com/show_bug.cgi?id=66 Contributed-under: TianoCore Contribution Agreement 1.0 Signed-off-by: Laszlo Ersek <lersek@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
2016-08-15 15:34:32 +02:00
}
if (RemainingDevicePath != NULL && IsDevicePathEnd (RemainingDevicePath)) {
//
// No child handle should be produced; we're done.
//
DEBUG ((EFI_D_INFO, "%a: bound VirtIo=%p without producing GOP\n",
__FUNCTION__, (VOID *)VgpuDev->VirtIo));
return EFI_SUCCESS;
}
}
//
// Below we'll produce our single child handle: the caller requested it
// either specifically, or as part of all child handles.
//
ASSERT (VgpuDev->Child == NULL);
ASSERT (
RemainingDevicePath == NULL || !IsDevicePathEnd (RemainingDevicePath));
Status = InitVgpuGop (VgpuDev, DevicePath, ControllerHandle,
This->DriverBindingHandle);
if (EFI_ERROR (Status)) {
goto UninstallVgpuDev;
}
//
// We're done.
//
DEBUG ((EFI_D_INFO, "%a: produced GOP %a VirtIo=%p\n", __FUNCTION__,
VirtIoBoundJustNow ? "while binding" : "for pre-bound",
(VOID *)VgpuDev->VirtIo));
return EFI_SUCCESS;
UninstallVgpuDev:
if (VirtIoBoundJustNow) {
gBS->UninstallProtocolInterface (ControllerHandle, &gEfiCallerIdGuid,
VgpuDev);
}
CloseExitBoot:
if (VirtIoBoundJustNow) {
gBS->CloseEvent (VgpuDev->ExitBoot);
}
UninitGpu:
if (VirtIoBoundJustNow) {
VirtioGpuUninit (VgpuDev);
}
OvmfPkg/VirtioGpuDxe: introduce with Component Name 2 and Driver Binding This patch adds the skeleton of the driver: it implements the Component Name 2 Protocol and the Driver Binding Protocol, in accordance with the generic and GOP-specific requirements set forth in the UEFI spec and the Driver Writers' Guide. The basic idea is that VGPU_DEV abstracts the virtio GPU device, while the single VGPU_GOP that we intend to support at this point stands for "head" (aka "scanout") #0. For now, the Virtio Device Protocol is only used for driver binding; no actual virtio operations are done yet. Similarly, we use a "dummy" GOP GUID and protocol structure (a plain UINT8 object) for now, so that GOP-consuming drivers don't look at what we produce just yet. The driver is a bit different from the other virtio device drivers written thus far: - It implements the GetControllerName() member of the Component Name 2 Protocol. (Formatting helpful names is recommended by UEFI.) As a "best effort", we format the PCI BDF into the name (a PCI backend is not guaranteed by VIRTIO_DEVICE_PROTOCOL). It should provide a more friendly experience in the shell and elsewhere. - This driver seeks to support all RemainingDevicePath cases: - NULL: produce all (= one) child handles (= VGPU_GOP heads) at once, - End of Device Path Node: produce no child handles, - specific ACPI ADR Node: check if it's supportable, and produce it (only one specific child controller is supported). This is one of the reasons for separating VGPU_GOP from VGPU_DEV. The driver is a hybrid driver: it produces both child handles (one, to be exact), but also installs a structure (VGPU_DEV) directly on the VirtIo controller handle, using gEfiCallerIdGuid as protocol GUID. This is a trick I've seen elsewhere in edk2 (for example, TerminalDxe), and it is necessary for the following reason: In EFI_COMPONENT_NAME2_PROTOCOL.GetControllerName(), we must be able to "cast down" a VirtIo ControllerHandle to our own private data structure (VGPU_DEV). That's only possible if we install the structure directly on the VirtIo ControllerHandle (thereby rendering the driver a hybrid driver), because a child controller with our GOP implementation on it may not exist / be passed in there. Cc: Ard Biesheuvel <ard.biesheuvel@linaro.org> Cc: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com> Ref: https://tianocore.acgmultimedia.com/show_bug.cgi?id=66 Contributed-under: TianoCore Contribution Agreement 1.0 Signed-off-by: Laszlo Ersek <lersek@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
2016-08-15 15:34:32 +02:00
FreeVgpuDevBusName:
if (VirtIoBoundJustNow) {
FreeUnicodeStringTable (VgpuDev->BusName);
}
FreeVgpuDev:
if (VirtIoBoundJustNow) {
FreePool (VgpuDev);
}
CloseVirtIo:
if (VirtIoBoundJustNow) {
gBS->CloseProtocol (ControllerHandle, &gVirtioDeviceProtocolGuid,
This->DriverBindingHandle, ControllerHandle);
}
return Status;
}
STATIC
EFI_STATUS
EFIAPI
VirtioGpuDriverBindingStop (
IN EFI_DRIVER_BINDING_PROTOCOL *This,
IN EFI_HANDLE ControllerHandle,
IN UINTN NumberOfChildren,
IN EFI_HANDLE *ChildHandleBuffer OPTIONAL
)
{
EFI_STATUS Status;
VGPU_DEV *VgpuDev;
//
// Look up the VGPU_DEV "protocol interface" on ControllerHandle.
//
Status = gBS->OpenProtocol (ControllerHandle, &gEfiCallerIdGuid,
(VOID **)&VgpuDev, This->DriverBindingHandle,
ControllerHandle, EFI_OPEN_PROTOCOL_GET_PROTOCOL);
if (EFI_ERROR (Status)) {
return Status;
}
//
// Sanity check: if we found gEfiCallerIdGuid on ControllerHandle, then we
// keep its Virtio Device Protocol interface open BY_DRIVER.
//
ASSERT_EFI_ERROR (EfiTestManagedDevice (ControllerHandle,
This->DriverBindingHandle, &gVirtioDeviceProtocolGuid));
switch (NumberOfChildren) {
case 0:
//
// The caller wants us to unbind the VirtIo controller.
//
if (VgpuDev->Child != NULL) {
//
// We still have the GOP child.
//
Status = EFI_DEVICE_ERROR;
break;
}
DEBUG ((EFI_D_INFO, "%a: unbinding GOP-less VirtIo=%p\n", __FUNCTION__,
(VOID *)VgpuDev->VirtIo));
Status = gBS->UninstallProtocolInterface (ControllerHandle,
&gEfiCallerIdGuid, VgpuDev);
ASSERT_EFI_ERROR (Status);
Status = gBS->CloseEvent (VgpuDev->ExitBoot);
ASSERT_EFI_ERROR (Status);
VirtioGpuUninit (VgpuDev);
OvmfPkg/VirtioGpuDxe: introduce with Component Name 2 and Driver Binding This patch adds the skeleton of the driver: it implements the Component Name 2 Protocol and the Driver Binding Protocol, in accordance with the generic and GOP-specific requirements set forth in the UEFI spec and the Driver Writers' Guide. The basic idea is that VGPU_DEV abstracts the virtio GPU device, while the single VGPU_GOP that we intend to support at this point stands for "head" (aka "scanout") #0. For now, the Virtio Device Protocol is only used for driver binding; no actual virtio operations are done yet. Similarly, we use a "dummy" GOP GUID and protocol structure (a plain UINT8 object) for now, so that GOP-consuming drivers don't look at what we produce just yet. The driver is a bit different from the other virtio device drivers written thus far: - It implements the GetControllerName() member of the Component Name 2 Protocol. (Formatting helpful names is recommended by UEFI.) As a "best effort", we format the PCI BDF into the name (a PCI backend is not guaranteed by VIRTIO_DEVICE_PROTOCOL). It should provide a more friendly experience in the shell and elsewhere. - This driver seeks to support all RemainingDevicePath cases: - NULL: produce all (= one) child handles (= VGPU_GOP heads) at once, - End of Device Path Node: produce no child handles, - specific ACPI ADR Node: check if it's supportable, and produce it (only one specific child controller is supported). This is one of the reasons for separating VGPU_GOP from VGPU_DEV. The driver is a hybrid driver: it produces both child handles (one, to be exact), but also installs a structure (VGPU_DEV) directly on the VirtIo controller handle, using gEfiCallerIdGuid as protocol GUID. This is a trick I've seen elsewhere in edk2 (for example, TerminalDxe), and it is necessary for the following reason: In EFI_COMPONENT_NAME2_PROTOCOL.GetControllerName(), we must be able to "cast down" a VirtIo ControllerHandle to our own private data structure (VGPU_DEV). That's only possible if we install the structure directly on the VirtIo ControllerHandle (thereby rendering the driver a hybrid driver), because a child controller with our GOP implementation on it may not exist / be passed in there. Cc: Ard Biesheuvel <ard.biesheuvel@linaro.org> Cc: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com> Ref: https://tianocore.acgmultimedia.com/show_bug.cgi?id=66 Contributed-under: TianoCore Contribution Agreement 1.0 Signed-off-by: Laszlo Ersek <lersek@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
2016-08-15 15:34:32 +02:00
FreeUnicodeStringTable (VgpuDev->BusName);
FreePool (VgpuDev);
Status = gBS->CloseProtocol (ControllerHandle, &gVirtioDeviceProtocolGuid,
This->DriverBindingHandle, ControllerHandle);
ASSERT_EFI_ERROR (Status);
break;
case 1:
//
// The caller wants us to destroy our child GOP controller.
//
if (VgpuDev->Child == NULL ||
ChildHandleBuffer[0] != VgpuDev->Child->GopHandle) {
//
// We have no child controller at the moment, or it differs from the one
// the caller wants us to destroy. I.e., we don't own the child
// controller passed in.
//
Status = EFI_DEVICE_ERROR;
break;
}
//
// Sanity check: our GOP child controller keeps the VGPU_DEV controller's
// Virtio Device Protocol interface open BY_CHILD_CONTROLLER.
//
ASSERT_EFI_ERROR (EfiTestChildHandle (ControllerHandle,
VgpuDev->Child->GopHandle,
&gVirtioDeviceProtocolGuid));
DEBUG ((EFI_D_INFO, "%a: destroying GOP under VirtIo=%p\n", __FUNCTION__,
(VOID *)VgpuDev->VirtIo));
UninitVgpuGop (VgpuDev, ControllerHandle, This->DriverBindingHandle);
break;
default:
//
// Impossible, we never produced more than one child.
//
Status = EFI_DEVICE_ERROR;
break;
}
return Status;
}
STATIC EFI_DRIVER_BINDING_PROTOCOL mDriverBinding = {
VirtioGpuDriverBindingSupported,
VirtioGpuDriverBindingStart,
VirtioGpuDriverBindingStop,
0x10, // Version
NULL, // ImageHandle, overwritten in entry point
NULL // DriverBindingHandle, ditto
};
//
// Entry point of the driver.
//
EFI_STATUS
EFIAPI
VirtioGpuEntryPoint (
IN EFI_HANDLE ImageHandle,
IN EFI_SYSTEM_TABLE *SystemTable
)
{
return EfiLibInstallDriverBindingComponentName2 (ImageHandle, SystemTable,
&mDriverBinding, ImageHandle, NULL /* ComponentName */,
&mComponentName2);
}