| Introduction |
| ============ |
| |
| This file documents the 'goldfish' virtual hardware platform used to run some |
| emulated Android systems under QEMU. It serves as a reference for implementers |
| of virtual devices in QEMU, as well as Linux kernel developers who need to |
| maintain the corresponding drivers. |
| |
| The following abbreviations will be used here: |
| |
| $QEMU -> path to the Android AOSP directory, i.e. a git clone of |
| https://android.googlesource.com/platform/external/qemu.git |
| |
| $KERNEL -> path to the Android goldfish kernel source tree, i.e. a git clone of |
| https://android.googlesource.com/kernel/goldfish.git |
| |
| More specifically, to the android-goldfish-2.6.29 branch for now. |
| |
| 'goldfish' is the name of a family of similar virtual hardware platforms, that |
| mostly differ in the virtual CPU they support. 'goldfish' started as an |
| ARM-specific platform, but has now been ported to x86 and MIPS virtual CPUs. |
| |
| Inside of QEMU, goldfish-specific virtual device implementation sources files |
| are in $QEMU/hw/android/goldfish/*.c sources |
| |
| Inside the Linux kernel tree, they are under $KERNEL/arch/$ARCH/mach-goldfish, |
| or $KERNEL/arch/$ARCH/goldfish/, as well as a few arch-independent drivers in |
| different locations (detailed below). |
| |
| Goldfish devices appear to the Linux kernel as 'platform devices'. Read [1] and |
| [2] for an introduction and reference documentation for these. |
| |
| Each device is identified by a name, and an optional unique id (an integer used |
| to distinguish between several identical instances of similar devices, like |
| serial ports, of block devices). When only one instance of a given device can |
| be used, an ID of -1 is used instead. |
| |
| It also communicates with the kernel through: |
| |
| - One or more 32-bit of I/O registers, mapped to physical addresses at |
| specific locations which depend on the architecture. |
| |
| - Zero or more interrupt requests, used to signal to the kernel that an |
| important event occured. |
| |
| Note that IRQ lines are numbered from 0 to 31, and are relative to the |
| goldfish interrupt controller, documented below. |
| |
| |
| [1] http://lwn.net/Articles/448499/ |
| [2] https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/driver-model/platform.txt |
| |
| |
| I. Goldfish platform bus: |
| ========================= |
| |
| The 'platform bus', in Linux kernel speak, is a special device that is capable |
| of enumerating other platform devices found on the system to the kernel. This |
| flexibility allows to customize which virtual devices are available when running |
| a given emulated system configuration. |
| |
| Relevant files: |
| $QEMU/hw/android/goldfish/device.c |
| $KERNEL/arch/arm/mach-goldfish/pdev_bus.c |
| $KERNEL/arch/x86/mach-goldfish/pdev_bus.c |
| $KERNEL/arch/mips/goldfish/pdev_bus.c |
| |
| Device properties: |
| Name: goldfish_device_bus |
| Id: -1 |
| IrqCount: 1 |
| |
| 32-bit I/O registers (offset, name, abstract) |
| |
| 0x00 BUS_OP R: Iterate to next device in enumeration. |
| W: Start device enumeration. |
| |
| 0x04 GET_NAME W: Copy device name to kernel memory. |
| 0x08 NAME_LEN R: Read length of current device's name. |
| 0x0c ID R: Read id of current device. |
| 0x10 IO_BASE R: Read I/O base address of current device. |
| 0x14 IO_SIZE R: Read I/O base size of current device. |
| 0x18 IRQ_BASE R: Read base IRQ of current device. |
| 0x1c IRQ_COUNT R: Read IRQ count of current device. |
| |
| # For 64-bit guest architectures only: |
| 0x20 NAME_ADDR_HIGH W: Write high 32-bit of kernel address of name |
| buffer used by GET_NAME. Must be written to |
| before the GET_NAME write. |
| |
| The kernel iterates over the list of current devices with something like: |
| |
| IO_WRITE(BUS_OP, 0); // Start iteration, any value other than 0 is invalid. |
| for (;;) { |
| int ret = IO_READ(BUS_OP); |
| if (ret == 0 /* OP_DONE */) { |
| // no more devices. |
| break; |
| } |
| else if (ret == 8 /* OP_ADD_DEV */) { |
| // Read device properties. |
| Device dev; |
| dev.name_len = IO_READ(NAME_LEN); |
| dev.id = IO_READ(ID); |
| dev.io_base = IO_READ(IO_BASE); |
| dev.io_size = IO_READ(IO_SIZE); |
| dev.irq_base = IO_READ(IRQ_BASE); |
| dev.irq_count = IO_READ(IRQ_COUNT); |
| |
| dev.name = kalloc(dev.name_len + 1); // allocate room for device name. |
| #if 64BIT_GUEST_CPU |
| IO_WRITE(NAME_ADDR_HIGH, (uint32_t)(dev.name >> 32)); |
| #endif |
| IO_WRITE(GET_NAME, (uint32_t)dev.name); // copy to kernel memory. |
| dev.name[dev.name_len] = 0; |
| |
| .. add device to kernel's list. |
| } |
| else { |
| // Not returned by current goldfish implementation. |
| } |
| } |
| |
| The device also uses a single IRQ, which it will raise to indicate to the kernel |
| that new devices are available, or that some of them have been removed. The |
| kernel will then start a new enumeration. The IRQ is lowered by the device only |
| when a IO_READ(BUS_OP) returns 0 (OP_DONE). |
| |
| NOTE: The kernel hard-codes a platform_device definition with the name |
| "goldfish_pdev_bus" for the platform bus (e.g. see |
| $KERNEL/arch/arm/mach-goldfish/board-goldfish.c), however, the bus itself |
| will appear during enumeration as a device named "goldfish_device_bus" |
| |
| The kernel driver for the platform bus only matches the "goldfish_pdev_bus" |
| name, and will ignore any device named "goldfish_device_bus". |
| |
| |
| II. Goldfish interrupt controller: |
| ================================== |
| |
| IMPORTANT: The controller IS NOT USED IN EMULATED X86 SYSTEMS. |
| TODO(digit): Indicate which virtual PIC is used on x86 systems. |
| |
| Relevant files: |
| $QEMU/hw/android/goldfish/interrupt.c |
| $KERNEL/arch/arm/mach-goldfish/board-goldfish.c |
| $KERNEL/arch/mips/goldfish/goldfish-interrupt.c |
| |
| Device properties: |
| Name: goldfish_interrupt_controller |
| Id: -1 |
| IrqCount: 0 (uses parent CPU IRQ instead). |
| |
| 32-bit I/O registers (offset, name, abtract): |
| 0x00 STATUS R: Read the number of pending interrupts (0 to 32). |
| 0x04 NUMBER R: Read the lowest pending interrupt index, or 0 if none. |
| 0x08 DISABLE_ALL W: Clear all pending interrupts (does not disable them!) |
| 0x0c DISABLE W: Disable a given interrupt, value must be in [0..31]. |
| 0x10 ENABLE W: Enable a given interrupt, value must be in [0..31]. |
| |
| Goldfish provides its own interrupt controller that can manage up to 32 distinct |
| maskable interrupt request lines. The controller itself is cascaded from a |
| parent CPU IRQ. |
| |
| What this means in practice: |
| |
| - Each IRQ has a 'level' that is either 'high' (1) or 'low' (0). |
| |
| - Each IRQ also has a binary 'enable' flag. |
| |
| - Whenever (level == 1 && enabled == 1) is reached due to a state change, the |
| controller raises its parent IRQ. This typically interrupts the CPU and |
| forces the kernel to deal with the interrupt request. |
| |
| - Raised/Enabled interrupts that have not been serviced yet are called |
| "pending". Raised/Disabled interrupts are called "masked" and are |
| essentially silent until enabled. |
| |
| When the interrupt controller triggers the parent IRQ, the kernel should do |
| the following: |
| |
| num_pending = IO_READ(STATUS); // Read number of pending interrupts. |
| for (int n = 0; n < num_pending; ++n) { |
| int irq_index = IO_READ(NUMBER); // Read n-th interrupt index. |
| .. service interrupt request with the proper driver. |
| } |
| |
| IO_WRITE(DISABLE, <num>) or IO_WRITE(ENABLE, <num>) can change the 'enable' flag |
| of a given IRQ. <num> must be a value in the [0..31] range. Note that enabling |
| an IRQ which has already been raised will make it active, i.e. it will raise |
| the parent IRQ. |
| |
| IO_WRITE(DISABLE_ALL, 0) can be used to lower all interrupt levels at once (even |
| disabled one). Note that this constant is probably mis-named since it does not |
| change the 'enable' flag of any IRQ. |
| |
| Note that this is the only way for the kernel to lower an IRQ level through |
| this device. Generally speaking, Goldfish devices are responsible for lowering |
| their own IRQ, which is performed either when a specific condition is met, or |
| when the kernel reads from or writes to a device-specific I/O register. |
| |
| |
| III. Godlfish timer: |
| ==================== |
| |
| NOTE: This is not used on x86 emulated platforms. |
| |
| Relevant files: |
| $QEMU/hw/android/goldfish/timer.c |
| $KERNEL/arch/arm/mach-goldfish/timer.c |
| $KERNEL/arch/mips/goldfish/goldfish-time.c |
| |
| Device properties: |
| Name: goldfish_timer |
| Id: -1 |
| IrqCount: 1 |
| |
| 32-bit I/O registers (offset, name, abstract) |
| 0x00 TIME_LOW R: Get current time, then return low-order 32-bits. |
| 0x04 TIME_HIGH R: Return high 32-bits from previous TIME_LOW read. |
| 0x08 ALARM_LOW W: Set low 32-bit value of alarm, then arm it. |
| 0x0c ALARM_HIGH W: Set high 32-bit value of alarm. |
| 0x10 CLEAR_INTERRUPT W: Lower device's irq level. |
| 0x14 CLEAR_ALARM |
| |
| This device is used to return the current host time to the kernel, as a |
| high-precision signed 64-bit nanoseconds value, starting from a liberal point |
| in time. This value should correspond to the QEMU "vm_clock", i.e. it should |
| not be updated when the emulated system does _not_ run, and hence cannot be |
| based directly on a host clock. |
| |
| To read the value, the kernel must perform an IO_READ(TIME_LOW), which returns |
| an unsigned 32-bit value, before an IO_READ(TIME_HIGH), which returns a signed |
| 32-bit value, corresponding to the higher half of the full value. |
| |
| The device can also be used to program an alarm, with something like: |
| |
| IO_WRITE(ALARM_HIGH, <high-value>) // Must happen first. |
| IO_WRITE(ALARM_LOW, <low-value>) // Must happen second. |
| |
| When the corresponding value is reached, the device will raise its IRQ. Note |
| that the IRQ is raised as soon as the second IO_WRITE() if the alarm value is |
| already older than the current time. |
| |
| IO_WRITE(CLEAR_INTERRUPT, <any>) can be used to lower the IRQ level once the |
| alarm has been handled by the kernel. |
| |
| IO_WRITE(CLEAR_ALARM, <any>) can be used to disarm an existing alarm, if any. |
| |
| Note: At the moment, the alarm is only used on ARM-based system. MIPS based |
| systems only use TIME_LOW / TIME_HIGH on this device. |
| |
| |
| III. Goldfish real-time clock (RTC): |
| ==================================== |
| |
| Relevant files: |
| $QEMU/hw/android/goldfish/timer.c |
| $KERNEL/drivers/rtc/rtc-goldfish.c |
| |
| Device properties: |
| Name: goldfish_rtc |
| Id: -1 |
| IrqCount: 1 |
| I/O Registers: |
| 0x00 TIME_LOW R: Get current time, then return low-order 32-bits. |
| 0x04 TIME_HIGH R: Return high 32-bits, from previous TIME_LOW read. |
| 0x08 ALARM_LOW W: Set low 32-bit value or alarm, then arm it. |
| 0x0c ALARM_HIGH W: Set high 32-bit value of alarm. |
| 0x10 CLEAR_INTERRUPT W: Lower device's irq level. |
| |
| This device is _very_ similar to the Goldfish timer one, with the following |
| important differences: |
| |
| - Values reported are still 64-bit nanoseconds, but they have a granularity |
| of 1 second, and represent host-specific values (really 'time() * 1e9') |
| |
| - The alarm is non-functioning, i.e. writing to ALARM_LOW / ALARM_HIGH will |
| work, but will never arm any alarm. |
| |
| To support old Goldfish kernels, make sure to support writing to |
| ALARM_LOW / ALARM_HIGH / CLEAR_INTERRUPT, even if the device never raises its |
| IRQ. |
| |
| |
| IV. Goldfish serial port (tty): |
| =============================== |
| |
| Relevant files: |
| $QEMU/hw/android/goldfish/tty.c |
| $KERNEL/drivers/char/goldfish_tty.c |
| $KERNEL/arch/arm/mach-goldfish/include/debug-macro.S |
| |
| Device properties: |
| Name: goldfish_tty |
| Id: 0 to N |
| IrqCount: |
| I/O Registers: |
| 0x00 PUT_CHAR W: Write a single 8-bit value to the serial port. |
| 0x04 BYTES_READY R: Read the number of available buffered input bytes. |
| 0x08 CMD W: Send command (see below). |
| 0x10 DATA_PTR W: Write kernel buffer address. |
| 0x14 DATA_LEN W: Write kernel buffer size. |
| |
| # For 64-bit guest CPUs only: |
| 0x18 DATA_PTR_HIGH W: Write high 32 bits of kernel buffer address. |
| |
| This is the first case of a multi-instance goldfish device in this document. |
| Each instance implements a virtual serial port that contains a small internal |
| buffer where incoming data is stored until the kernel fetches it. |
| |
| The CMD I/O register is used to send various commands to the device, identified |
| by the following values: |
| |
| 0x00 CMD_INT_DISABLE Disable device. |
| 0x01 CMD_INT_ENABLE Enable device. |
| 0x02 CMD_WRITE_BUFFER Write buffer from kernel to device. |
| 0x03 CMD_READ_BUFFER Read buffer from device to kernel. |
| |
| Each device instance uses one IRQ that is raised to indicate that there is |
| incoming/buffered data to read. To read such data, the kernel should do the |
| following: |
| |
| len = IO_READ(PUT_CHAR); // Read length of incoming data. |
| if (len == 0) return; // Nothing to do. |
| |
| available = get_buffer(len, &buffer); // Get address of buffer and its size. |
| #if 64BIT_GUEST_CPU |
| IO_WRITE(DATA_PTR_HIGH, buffer >> 32); |
| #endif |
| IO_WRITE(DATA_PTR, buffer); // Write buffer address to device. |
| IO_WRITE(DATA_LEN, available); // Write buffer length to device. |
| IO_WRITE(CMD, CMD_READ_BUFFER); // Read the data into kernel buffer. |
| |
| The device will automatically lower its IRQ when there is no more input data |
| in its buffer. However, the kernel can also temporarily disable device interrupts |
| with CMD_INT_DISABLE / CMD_INT_ENABLE. |
| |
| Note that disabling interrupts does not flush the buffer, nor prevent it from |
| buffering further data from external inputs. |
| |
| To write to the serial port, the device can either send a single byte at a time |
| with: |
| |
| IO_WRITE(PUT_CHAR, <value>) // Send the lower 8 bits of <value>. |
| |
| Or use the mode efficient sequence: |
| |
| #if 64BIT_GUEST_CPU |
| IO_WRITE(DATA_PTR_HIGH, buffer >> 32) |
| #endif |
| IO_WRITE(DATA_PTR, buffer) |
| IO_WRITE(DATA_LEN, buffer_len) |
| IO_WRITE(CMD, CMD_WRITE_BUFFER) |
| |
| The former is less efficient but simpler, and is typically used by the kernel |
| to send debug messages only. |
| |
| Note that the Android emulator always reserves the first two virtual serial |
| ports: |
| |
| - The first one is used to receive kernel messages, this is done by adding |
| the 'console=ttyS0' parameter to the kernel command line in |
| $QEMU/vl-android.c |
| |
| - The second one is used to setup the legacy "qemud" channel, used on older |
| Android platform revisions. This is done by adding 'android.qemud=ttyS1' |
| on the kernel command line in $QEMU/vl-android.c |
| |
| Read docs/ANDROID-QEMUD.TXT for more details about the data that passes |
| through this serial port. In a nutshell, this is required to emulate older |
| Android releases (e.g. cupcake). It provides a direct communication channel |
| between the guest system and the emulator. |
| |
| More recent Android platforms do not use QEMUD anymore, but instead rely |
| on the much faster "QEMU pipe" device, described later in this document as |
| well as in docs/ANDROID-QEMU-PIPE.TXT. |
| |
| |
| V. Goldfish framebuffer: |
| ======================== |
| |
| Relevant files: |
| $QEMU/hw/android/goldfish/fb.c |
| $KERNEL/drivers/video/goldfish_fb.c |
| |
| Device properties: |
| Name: goldfish_fb |
| Id: 0 to N (only one used in practice). |
| IrqCount: 0 |
| I/O Registers: |
| 0x00 GET_WIDTH R: Read framebuffer width in pixels. |
| 0x04 GET_HEIGHT R: Read framebuffer height in pixels. |
| 0x08 INT_STATUS |
| 0x0c INT_ENABLE |
| 0x10 SET_BASE |
| 0x14 SET_ROTATION |
| 0x18 SET_BLANK W: Set 'blank' flag. |
| 0x1c GET_PHYS_WIDTH R: Read framebuffer width in millimeters. |
| 0x20 GET_PHYS_HEIGHT R: Read framebuffer height in millimeters. |
| 0x24 GET_FORMAT R: Read framebuffer pixel format. |
| |
| The framebuffer device is a bit peculiar, because it uses, in addition to the |
| typical I/O registers and IRQs, a large area of physical memory, allocated by |
| the kernel, but visible to the emulator, to store a large pixel buffer. |
| |
| The emulator is responsible for displaying the framebuffer content in its UI |
| window, which can be rotated, as instructed by the kernel. |
| |
| IMPORTANT NOTE: When GPU emulation is enabled, the framebuffer will typically |
| only be used during boot. Note that GPU emulation doesn't rely on a specific |
| virtual GPU device, however, it uses the "QEMU Pipe" device described below. |
| For more information, please read: |
| |
| https://android.googlesource.com/platform/sdk/+/master/emulator/opengl/DESIGN |
| |
| On boot, the kernel will read various properties of the framebuffer: |
| |
| IO_READ(GET_WIDTH) and IO_READ(GET_HEIGHT) return the width and height of |
| the framebuffer in pixels. Note that a 'row' corresponds to consecutive bytes |
| in memory, but doesn't necessarily to an horizontal line on the final display, |
| due to possible rotation (see SET_ROTATION below). |
| |
| IO_READ(GET_PHYS_WIDTH) and IO_READ(GET_PHYS_HEIGHT) return the emulated |
| physical width and height in millimeters, this is later used by the kernel |
| and the platform to determine the device's emulated density. |
| |
| IO_READ(GET_FORMAT) returns a value matching the format of pixels in the |
| framebuffer. Note that these values are specified by the Android hardware |
| abstraction layer (HAL) and cannot change: |
| |
| 0x01 HAL_PIXEL_FORMAT_BRGA_8888 |
| 0x02 HAL_PIXEL_FORMAT_RGBX_8888 |
| 0x03 HAL_PIXEL_FORMAT_RGB_888 |
| 0x04 HAL_PIXEL_FORMAT_RGB_565 |
| 0x05 HAL_PIXEL_FORMAT_BGRA_8888 |
| 0x06 HAL_PIXEL_FORMAT_RGBA_5551 |
| 0x08 HAL_PIXEL_FORMAT_RGBA_4444 |
| |
| HOWEVER, the kernel driver only expects a value of HAL_PIXEL_FORMAT_RGB_565 |
| at the moment. Until this is fixed, the virtual device should always return |
| the value 0x04 here. Rows are not padded, so the size in bytes of a single |
| framebuffer will always be exactly 'width * heigth * 2'. |
| |
| Note that GPU emulation doesn't have this limitation and can use and display |
| 32-bit surfaces properly, because it doesn't use the framebuffer. |
| |
| The device has a 'blank' flag. When set to 1, the UI should only display an |
| empty/blank framebuffer, ignoring the content of the framebuffer memory. |
| It is set with IO_WRITE(SET_BLANK, <value>), where value can be 1 or 0. This is |
| used when simulating suspend/resume. |
| |
| IMPORTANT: The framebuffer memory is allocated by the kernel, which will send |
| its physical address to the device by using IO_WRITE(SET_BASE, <address>). |
| |
| The kernel really allocates a memory buffer large enough to hold *two* |
| framebuffers, in order to implement panning / double-buffering. This also means |
| that calls to IO_WRITE(SET_BASE, <address>) will be frequent. |
| |
| The allocation happens with dma_alloc_writecombine() on ARM, which can only |
| allocate a maximum of 4 MB, this limits the size of each framebuffer to 2 MB, |
| which may not be enough to emulate high-density devices :-( |
| |
| For other architectures, dma_alloc_coherent() is used instead, and has the same |
| upper limit / limitation. |
| |
| TODO(digit): Explain how it's possible to raise this limit by modifyinf |
| CONSISTENT_DMA_SIZE and/or MAX_ORDER in the kernel configuration. |
| |
| The device uses a single IRQ to notify the kernel of several events. When it |
| is raised, the kernel IRQ handler must IO_READ(INT_STATUS), which will return |
| a value containing the following bit flags: |
| |
| bit 0: Set to 1 to indicate a VSYNC event. |
| |
| bit 1: Set to 1 to indicate that the content of a previous SET_BASE has |
| been properly displayed. |
| |
| Note that reading this register also lowers the device's IRQ level. |
| |
| The second flag is essentially a way to notify the kernel that an |
| IO_WRITE(SET_BASE, <address>) operation has been succesfully processed by |
| the emulator, i.e. that the new content has been displayed to the user. |
| |
| The kernel can control which flags should raise an IRQ by using |
| IO_WRITE(INT_ENABLE, <flags>), where <flags> has the same format as the |
| result of IO_READ(INT_STATUS). If the corresponding bit is 0, the an IRQ |
| for the corresponding event will never be generated, |
| |
| |
| VI. Goldfish audio device: |
| ========================== |
| |
| Relevant files: |
| $QEMU/hw/android/goldfish/audio.c |
| $KERNEL/drivers/misc/goldfish_audio.c |
| |
| Device properties: |
| Name: goldfish_audio |
| Id: -1 |
| IrqCount: 1 |
| I/O Registers: |
| 0x00 INT_STATUS |
| 0x04 INT_ENABLE |
| 0x08 SET_WRITE_BUFFER_1 W: Set address of first kernel output buffer. |
| 0x0c SET_WRITE_BUFFER_2 W: Set address of second kernel output buffer. |
| 0x10 WRITE_BUFFER_1 W: Send first kernel buffer samples to output. |
| 0x14 WRITE_BUFFER_2 W: Send second kernel buffer samples to output. |
| 0x18 READ_SUPPORTED R: Reads 1 if input is supported, 0 otherwise. |
| 0x1c SET_READ_BUFFER |
| 0x20 START_READ |
| 0x24 READ_BUFFER_AVAILABLE |
| |
| # For 64-bit guest CPUs |
| 0x28 SET_WRITE_BUFFER_1_HIGH W: Set high 32 bits of 1st kernel output buffer address. |
| 0x30 SET_WRITE_BUFFER_2_HIGH W: Set high 32 bits of 2nd kernel output buffer address. |
| 0x34 SET_READ_BUFFER_HIGH W: Set high 32 bits of kernel input buffer address. |
| |
| This device implements a virtual sound card with the following properties: |
| |
| - Stereo output at fixed 44.1 kHz frequency, using signed 16-bit samples. |
| Mandatory. |
| |
| - Mono input at fixed 8 kHz frequency, using signed 16-bit samples. |
| Optional. |
| |
| For output, the kernel driver allocates two internal buffers to hold output |
| samples, and passes their physical address to the emulator as follows: |
| |
| #if 64BIT_GUEST_CPU |
| IO_WRITE(SET_WRITE_BUFFER_1_HIGH, (uint32_t)(buffer1 >> 32)); |
| IO_WRITE(SET_WRITE_BUFFER_2_HIGH, (uint32_t)(buffer2 >> 32)); |
| #endif |
| IO_WRITE(SET_WRITE_BUFFER_1, (uint32_t)buffer1); |
| IO_WRITE(SET_WRITE_BUFFER_2, (uint32_t)buffer2); |
| |
| After this, samples will be sent from the driver to the virtual device by |
| using one of IO_WRITE(WRITE_BUFFER_1, <length1>) or |
| IO_WRITE(WRITE_BUFFER_2, <length2>), depending on which sample buffer to use. |
| NOTE: Each length is in bytes. |
| |
| Note however that the driver should wait, before doing this, until the device |
| gives permission by raising its IRQ and setting the appropriate 'status' flags. |
| |
| The virtual device has an internal 'int_status' field made of 3 bit flags: |
| |
| bit0: 1 iff the device is ready to receive data from the first buffer. |
| bit1: 1 iff the device is ready to receive data from the second buffer. |
| bit2: 1 iff the device has input samples for the kernel to read. |
| |
| Note that an IO_READ(INT_STATUS) also automatically lowers the IRQ level, |
| except if the read value is 0 (which should not happen, since it should not |
| raise the IRQ). |
| |
| The corresponding interrupts can be masked by using IO_WRITE(INT_ENABLE, <mask>), |
| where <mask> has the same format as 'int_status'. A 1 bit in the mask enables the |
| IRQ raise when the corresponding status bit is also set to 1. |
| |
| For input, the driver should first IO_READ(READ_SUPPORTED), which will return 1 |
| if the virtual device supports input, or 0 otherwise. If it does support it, |
| the driver must allocate an internal buffer and send its physical address with |
| IO_WRITE(SET_READ_BUFFER, <read-buffer>) (with a previous write to |
| SET_READ_BUFFER_HIGH on 64-bit guest CPUS), then perform |
| IO_WRITE(START_READ, <read-buffer-length>) to start recording and |
| specify the kernel's buffer length. |
| |
| Later, the device will raise its IRQ and set bit2 of 'int_status' to indicate |
| there are incoming samples to the driver. In its interrupt handler, the latter |
| should IO_READ(READ_BUFFER_AVAILABLE), which triggers the transfer (from the |
| device to the kernel), as well as return the size in bytes of the samples. |
| |
| |
| VII. Goldfish battery: |
| ====================== |
| |
| Relevant files: |
| $QEMU/hw/android/goldfish/battery.c |
| $QEMU/hw/power_supply.h |
| $KERNEL/drivers/power/goldfish_battery.c |
| |
| Device properties: |
| Name: goldfish_battery |
| Id: -1 |
| IrqCount: 1 |
| I/O Registers: |
| 0x00 INT_STATUS R: Read battery and A/C status change bits. |
| 0x04 INT_ENABLE W: Enable or disable IRQ on status change. |
| 0x08 AC_ONLINE R: Read 0 if AC power disconnected, 1 otherwise. |
| 0x0c STATUS R: Read battery status (charging/full/... see below). |
| 0x10 HEALTH R: Read battery health (good/overheat/... see below). |
| 0x14 PRESENT R: Read 1 if battery is present, 0 otherwise. |
| 0x18 CAPACITY R: Read battery charge percentage in [0..100] range. |
| |
| A simple device used to report the state of the virtual device's battery, and |
| whether the device is powered through a USB or A/C adapter. |
| |
| The device uses a single IRQ to notify the kernel that the battery or A/C status |
| changed. When this happens, the kernel should perform an IO_READ(INT_STATUS) |
| which returns a 2-bit value containing flags: |
| |
| bit 0: Set to 1 to indicate a change in battery status. |
| bit 1: Set to 1 to indicate a change in A/C status. |
| |
| Note that reading this register also lowers the IRQ level. |
| |
| The A/C status can be read with IO_READ(AC_ONLINE), which returns 1 if the |
| device is powered, or 0 otherwise. |
| |
| The battery status is spread over multiple I/O registers: |
| |
| IO_READ(PRESENT) returns 1 if the battery is present in the virtual device, |
| or 0 otherwise. |
| |
| IO_READ(CAPACITY) returns the battery's charge percentage, as an integer |
| between 0 and 100, inclusive. NOTE: This register is probably misnamed since |
| it does not represent the battery's capacity, but it's current charge level. |
| |
| IO_READ(STATUS) returns one of the following values: |
| |
| 0x00 UNKNOWN Battery state is unknown. |
| 0x01 CHARGING Battery is charging. |
| 0x02 DISCHARGING Battery is discharging. |
| 0x03 NOT_CHARGING Battery is not charging (e.g. full or dead). |
| |
| IO_READ(HEALTH) returns one of the following values: |
| |
| 0x00 UNKNOWN Battery health unknown. |
| 0x01 GOOD Battery is in good condition. |
| 0x02 OVERHEATING Battery is over-heating. |
| 0x03 DEAD Battery is dead. |
| 0x04 OVERVOLTAGE Battery generates too much voltage. |
| 0x05 UNSPEC_FAILURE Battery has unspecified failure. |
| |
| The kernel can use IO_WRITE(INT_ENABLE, <flags>) to select which condition |
| changes should trigger an IRQ. <flags> is a 2-bit value using the same format |
| as INT_STATUS. |
| |
| |
| VIII. Goldfish events device (user input): |
| ========================================== |
| |
| Relevant files: |
| $QEMU/hw/android/goldfish/events_device.c |
| $KERNEL/drivers/input/keyboard/goldfish_events.c |
| |
| Device properties: |
| Name: goldfish_events |
| Id: -1 |
| IrqCount: 1 |
| I/O Registers: |
| 0x00 READ R: Read next event type, code or value. |
| 0x00 SET_PAGE W: Set page index. |
| 0x04 LEN R: Read length of page data. |
| 0x08 DATA R: Read page data. |
| .... R: Read additional page data (see below). |
| |
| This device is responsible for sending several kinds of user input events to |
| the kernel, i.e. emulated device buttons, hardware keyboard, touch screen, |
| trackball and lid events. |
| |
| NOTE: Android supports other input devices like mice or game controllers |
| through USB or Bluetooth, these are not supported by this virtual |
| Goldfish device. |
| |
| NOTE: The 'lid event' is useful for devices with a clamshell of foldable |
| keyboard design, and is used to report when it is opened or closed. |
| |
| As per Linux conventions, each 'emulated event' is sent to the kernel as a |
| series of (<type>,<code>,<value>) triplets or 32-bit values. For more |
| information, see: |
| |
| https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/input/input.txt |
| |
| As well as the <linux/input.h> kernel header. |
| |
| Note that in the context of goldfish: |
| |
| - Button and keyboard events are reported with: |
| (EV_KEY, <code>, <press>) |
| |
| Where <code> is a 9-bit keycode, as defined by <linux/input.h>, and |
| <press> is 1 for key/button presses, and 0 for releases. |
| |
| - For touchscreen events, a single-touch event is reported with: |
| (EV_ABS, ABS_X, <x-position>) + |
| (EV_ABS, ABS_Y, <y-position>) + |
| (EV_ABS, ABS_Z, 0) + |
| (EV_KEY, BTN_TOUCH, <button-state>) + |
| (EV_SYN, 0, 0) |
| |
| where <x-position> and <y-position> are the horizontal and vertical position |
| of the touch event, respectfully, and <button-state> is either 1 or 0 and |
| indicates the start/end of the touch gesture, respectively. |
| |
| - For multi-touch events, things are much more complicated. In a nutshell, |
| these events are reported through (EV_ABS, ABS_MT_XXXXX, YYY) triplets, |
| as documented at: |
| |
| https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/input/multi-touch-protocol.txt |
| |
| TODO(digit): There may be bugs in either the virtual device or driver code |
| when it comes to multi-touch. Iron out the situation and better |
| explain what's required to support all Android platforms. |
| |
| - For trackball events: |
| (EV_REL, REL_X, <x-delta>) + |
| (EV_REL, REL_Y, <y-delta>) + |
| (EV_SYN, 0, 0) |
| |
| Where <x-delta> and <y-delta> are the signed relative trackball displacement |
| in the horizontal and vertical directions, respectively. |
| |
| - For lid events: |
| (EV_SW, 0, 1) + (EV_SYN, 0, 0) // When lid is closed. |
| (EV_SW, 0, 0) + (EV_SYN, 0, 0) // When lid is opened. |
| |
| When the kernel driver starts, it will probe the device to know what kind |
| of events are supported by the emulated configuration. There are several |
| categories of queries: |
| |
| - Asking for the current physical keyboard 'charmap' name, used by the system |
| to translate keycodes in actual characters. In practice, this will nearly |
| always be 'goldfish' for emulated systems, but this out of spec for this |
| document. |
| |
| - Asking which event codes are supported for a given event type |
| (e.g. all the possible KEY_XXX values generated for EV_KEY typed triplets). |
| |
| - Asking for various minimum or maximum values for each supported EV_ABS |
| event code. For example the min/max values of (EV_ABS, ABS_X, ...) triplets, |
| to know the bounds of the input touch panel. |
| |
| The kernel driver first select which kind of query it wants by using |
| IO_WRITE(SET_PAGE, <page>), where <page> is one of the following values: |
| |
| PAGE_NAME 0x0000 Keyboard charmap name. |
| PAGE_EVBITS 0x10000 Event code supported sets. |
| PAGE_ABSDATA 0x20003 (really 0x20000 + EV_ABS) EV_ABS min/max values. |
| |
| Once a 'page' has been selected, it is possible to read from it with |
| IO_READ(LEN) and IO_READ(DATA). In practice: |
| |
| - To read the name of the keyboard charmap, the kernel will do: |
| |
| IO_WRITE(SET_PAGE, PAGE_NAME); # Ind |
| |
| charmap_name_len = IO_READ(LEN); |
| charmap_name = kalloc(charmap_name_len + 1); |
| for (int n = 0; n < charmap_name_len; ++n) |
| charmap_name[n] = (char) IO_READ(DATA); |
| charmap_name[n] = 0; |
| |
| - To read which codes a given event type (here EV_KEY) supports: |
| |
| IO_WRITE(SET_PAGE, PAGE_EVBITS + EV_KEY); // Or EV_REL, EV_ABS, etc... |
| |
| bitmask_len = IO_READ(LEN); |
| for (int offset = 0; offset < bitmask_len; ++offset) { |
| uint8_t mask = (uint8_t) IO_READ(DATA): |
| for (int bit = 0; bit < 8; ++bit) { |
| int code = (offset * 8) + bit; |
| if ((mask & (1 << bit)) != 0) { |
| ... record that keycode |code| is supported. |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| - To read the range values of absolute event values: |
| |
| IO_WRITE(SET_PAGE, PAGE_ABSDATA); |
| max_entries = IO_READ(LEN); |
| for (int n = 0; n < max_entries; n += 4) { |
| int32_t min = IO_READ(DATA + n); |
| int32_t max = IO_READ(DATA + n + 4); |
| int32_t fuzz = IO_READ(DATA + n + 8); |
| int32_t flat = IO_READ(DATA + n + 12); |
| int event_code = n/4; |
| |
| // Record (min, max, fuzz, flat) values for EV_ABS 'event_code'. |
| } |
| |
| Note that the 'fuzz' and 'flat' values reported by Goldfish are always 0, |
| refer to the source for more details. |
| |
| At runtime, the device implements a small buffer for incoming event triplets |
| (each one is stored as three 32-bit integers in a circular buffer), and raises |
| its IRQ to signal them to the kernel. |
| |
| When that happens, the kernel driver should use IO_READ(READ) to extract the |
| 32-bit values from the device. Note that three IO_READ() calls are required to |
| extract a single event triplet. |
| |
| There are a few important notes here: |
| |
| - The IRQ should not be raised _before_ the kernel driver is started |
| (otherwise the driver will be confused and ignore all events). |
| |
| I.e. the emulator can buffer events before kernel initialization completes, |
| but should only raise the IRQ, if needed, lazily. Currently this is done |
| on the first IO_READ(LEN) following a IO_WRITE(SET_PAGE, PAGE_ABSDATA). |
| |
| - The IRQ is lowered by the device once all event values have been read, |
| i.e. its buffer is empty. |
| |
| However, on x86, if after an IO_READ(READ), there are still values in the |
| device's buffer, the IRQ should be lowered then re-raised immediately. |
| |
| |
| IX. Goldfish NAND device: |
| ========================= |
| |
| Relevant files: |
| $QEMU/hw/android/goldfish/nand.c |
| $KERNEL/drivers/mtd/devices/goldfish_nand.c |
| |
| Device properties: |
| Name: goldfish_nand |
| Id: -1 |
| IrqCount: 1 |
| I/O Registers: |
| |
| This virtual device can provide access to one or more emulated NAND memory |
| banks [3] (each one being backed by a different host file in the current |
| implementation). |
| |
| These are used to back the following virtual partition files: |
| |
| - system.img |
| - data.img |
| - cache.img |
| |
| TODO(digit): Complete this. |
| |
| |
| [3] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flash_memory#NAND_memories |
| |
| |
| X. Goldfish MMC device: |
| ======================= |
| |
| Relevant files: |
| $QEMU/hw/android/goldfish/mmc.c |
| $KERNEL/drivers/mmc/host/goldfish.c |
| |
| Device properties: |
| Name: goldfish_mmc |
| Id: -1 |
| IrqCount: 1 |
| I/O Registers: |
| |
| Similar to the NAND device, but uses a different, higher-level interface |
| to access the emulated 'flash' memory. This is only used to access the |
| virtual SDCard device with the Android emulator. |
| |
| TODO(digit): Complete this. |
| |
| |
| XIV. QEMU Pipe device: |
| ====================== |
| |
| Relevant files: |
| $QEMU/hw/android/goldfish/pipe.c |
| $KERNEL/drivers/misc/qemupipe/qemu_pipe.c |
| |
| Device properties: |
| Name: qemu_pipe |
| Id: -1 |
| IrqCount: 1 |
| I/O Registers: |
| 0x00 COMMAND W: Write to perform command (see below). |
| 0x04 STATUS R: Read status |
| 0x08 CHANNEL RW: Read or set current channel id. |
| 0x0c SIZE RW: Read or set current buffer size. |
| 0x10 ADDRESS RW: Read or set current buffer physical address. |
| 0x14 WAKES R: Read wake flags. |
| 0x18 PARAMS_ADDR_LOW RW: Read/set low bytes of parameters block address. |
| 0x1c PARAMS_ADDR_HIGH RW: Read/set high bytes of parameters block address. |
| 0x20 ACCESS_PARAMS W: Perform access with parameter block. |
| |
| This is a special device that is totally specific to QEMU, but allows guest |
| processes to communicate directly with the emulator with extremely high |
| performance. This is achieved by avoiding any in-kernel memory copies, relying |
| on the fact that QEMU can access guest memory at runtime (under proper |
| conditions controlled by the kernel). |
| |
| Please refer to $QEMU/docs/ANDROID-QEMU-PIPE.TXT for full details on the |
| device's operations. |
| |
| |
| XIII. QEMU Trace device: |
| ======================== |
| |
| Relevant files: |
| $QEMU/hw/android/goldfish/trace.c |
| $KERNEL/drivers/misc/qemutrace/qemu_trace.c |
| $KERNEL/drivers/misc/qemutrace/qemu_trace_sysfs.c |
| $KERNEL/fs/exec.c |
| $KERNEL/exit.c |
| $KERNEL/fork.c |
| $KERNEL/sched/core.c |
| $KERNEL/mm/mmap.c |
| |
| Device properties: |
| Name: qemu_trace |
| Id: -1 |
| IrqCount: 0 |
| I/O Registers: |
| |
| TODO(digit) |
| |