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259 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
= Device Specification for Inter-VM shared memory device =
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The Inter-VM shared memory device (ivshmem) is designed to share a
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memory region between multiple QEMU processes running different guests
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and the host. In order for all guests to be able to pick up the
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shared memory area, it is modeled by QEMU as a PCI device exposing
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said memory to the guest as a PCI BAR.
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The device can use a shared memory object on the host directly, or it
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can obtain one from an ivshmem server.
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In the latter case, the device can additionally interrupt its peers, and
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get interrupted by its peers.
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== Configuring the ivshmem PCI device ==
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There are two basic configurations:
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- Just shared memory:
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-device ivshmem-plain,memdev=HMB,...
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This uses host memory backend HMB. It should have option "share"
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set.
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- Shared memory plus interrupts:
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-device ivshmem-doorbell,chardev=CHR,vectors=N,...
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An ivshmem server must already be running on the host. The device
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connects to the server's UNIX domain socket via character device
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CHR.
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Each peer gets assigned a unique ID by the server. IDs must be
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between 0 and 65535.
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Interrupts are message-signaled (MSI-X). vectors=N configures the
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number of vectors to use.
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For more details on ivshmem device properties, see the QEMU Emulator
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user documentation.
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== The ivshmem PCI device's guest interface ==
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The device has vendor ID 1af4, device ID 1110, revision 1. Before
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QEMU 2.6.0, it had revision 0.
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=== PCI BARs ===
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The ivshmem PCI device has two or three BARs:
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- BAR0 holds device registers (256 Byte MMIO)
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- BAR1 holds MSI-X table and PBA (only ivshmem-doorbell)
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- BAR2 maps the shared memory object
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There are two ways to use this device:
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- If you only need the shared memory part, BAR2 suffices. This way,
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you have access to the shared memory in the guest and can use it as
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you see fit. Memnic, for example, uses ivshmem this way from guest
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user space (see http://dpdk.org/browse/memnic).
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- If you additionally need the capability for peers to interrupt each
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other, you need BAR0 and BAR1. You will most likely want to write a
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kernel driver to handle interrupts. Requires the device to be
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configured for interrupts, obviously.
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Before QEMU 2.6.0, BAR2 can initially be invalid if the device is
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configured for interrupts. It becomes safely accessible only after
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the ivshmem server provided the shared memory. These devices have PCI
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revision 0 rather than 1. Guest software should wait for the
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IVPosition register (described below) to become non-negative before
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accessing BAR2.
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Revision 0 of the device is not capable to tell guest software whether
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it is configured for interrupts.
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=== PCI device registers ===
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BAR 0 contains the following registers:
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Offset Size Access On reset Function
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0 4 read/write 0 Interrupt Mask
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bit 0: peer interrupt (rev 0)
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reserved (rev 1)
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bit 1..31: reserved
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4 4 read/write 0 Interrupt Status
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bit 0: peer interrupt (rev 0)
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reserved (rev 1)
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bit 1..31: reserved
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8 4 read-only 0 or ID IVPosition
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12 4 write-only N/A Doorbell
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bit 0..15: vector
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bit 16..31: peer ID
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16 240 none N/A reserved
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Software should only access the registers as specified in column
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"Access". Reserved bits should be ignored on read, and preserved on
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write.
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In revision 0 of the device, Interrupt Status and Mask Register
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together control the legacy INTx interrupt when the device has no
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MSI-X capability: INTx is asserted when the bit-wise AND of Status and
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Mask is non-zero and the device has no MSI-X capability. Interrupt
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Status Register bit 0 becomes 1 when an interrupt request from a peer
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is received. Reading the register clears it.
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IVPosition Register: if the device is not configured for interrupts,
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this is zero. Else, it is the device's ID (between 0 and 65535).
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Before QEMU 2.6.0, the register may read -1 for a short while after
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reset. These devices have PCI revision 0 rather than 1.
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There is no good way for software to find out whether the device is
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configured for interrupts. A positive IVPosition means interrupts,
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but zero could be either.
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Doorbell Register: writing this register requests to interrupt a peer.
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The written value's high 16 bits are the ID of the peer to interrupt,
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and its low 16 bits select an interrupt vector.
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If the device is not configured for interrupts, the write is ignored.
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If the interrupt hasn't completed setup, the write is ignored. The
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device is not capable to tell guest software whether setup is
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complete. Interrupts can regress to this state on migration.
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If the peer with the requested ID isn't connected, or it has fewer
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interrupt vectors connected, the write is ignored. The device is not
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capable to tell guest software what peers are connected, or how many
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interrupt vectors are connected.
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The peer's interrupt for this vector then becomes pending. There is
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no way for software to clear the pending bit, and a polling mode of
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operation is therefore impossible.
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If the peer is a revision 0 device without MSI-X capability, its
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Interrupt Status register is set to 1. This asserts INTx unless
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masked by the Interrupt Mask register. The device is not capable to
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communicate the interrupt vector to guest software then.
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With multiple MSI-X vectors, different vectors can be used to indicate
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different events have occurred. The semantics of interrupt vectors
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are left to the application.
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== Interrupt infrastructure ==
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When configured for interrupts, the peers share eventfd objects in
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addition to shared memory. The shared resources are managed by an
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ivshmem server.
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=== The ivshmem server ===
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The server listens on a UNIX domain socket.
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For each new client that connects to the server, the server
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- picks an ID,
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- creates eventfd file descriptors for the interrupt vectors,
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- sends the ID and the file descriptor for the shared memory to the
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new client,
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- sends connect notifications for the new client to the other clients
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(these contain file descriptors for sending interrupts),
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- sends connect notifications for the other clients to the new client,
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and
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- sends interrupt setup messages to the new client (these contain file
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descriptors for receiving interrupts).
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The first client to connect to the server receives ID zero.
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When a client disconnects from the server, the server sends disconnect
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notifications to the other clients.
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The next section describes the protocol in detail.
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If the server terminates without sending disconnect notifications for
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its connected clients, the clients can elect to continue. They can
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communicate with each other normally, but won't receive disconnect
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notification on disconnect, and no new clients can connect. There is
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no way for the clients to connect to a restarted server. The device
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is not capable to tell guest software whether the server is still up.
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Example server code is in contrib/ivshmem-server/. Not to be used in
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production. It assumes all clients use the same number of interrupt
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vectors.
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A standalone client is in contrib/ivshmem-client/. It can be useful
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for debugging.
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=== The ivshmem Client-Server Protocol ===
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An ivshmem device configured for interrupts connects to an ivshmem
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server. This section details the protocol between the two.
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The connection is one-way: the server sends messages to the client.
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Each message consists of a single 8 byte little-endian signed number,
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and may be accompanied by a file descriptor via SCM_RIGHTS. Both
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client and server close the connection on error.
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Note: QEMU currently doesn't close the connection right on error, but
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only when the character device is destroyed.
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On connect, the server sends the following messages in order:
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1. The protocol version number, currently zero. The client should
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close the connection on receipt of versions it can't handle.
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2. The client's ID. This is unique among all clients of this server.
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IDs must be between 0 and 65535, because the Doorbell register
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provides only 16 bits for them.
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3. The number -1, accompanied by the file descriptor for the shared
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memory.
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4. Connect notifications for existing other clients, if any. This is
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a peer ID (number between 0 and 65535 other than the client's ID),
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repeated N times. Each repetition is accompanied by one file
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descriptor. These are for interrupting the peer with that ID using
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vector 0,..,N-1, in order. If the client is configured for fewer
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vectors, it closes the extra file descriptors. If it is configured
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for more, the extra vectors remain unconnected.
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5. Interrupt setup. This is the client's own ID, repeated N times.
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Each repetition is accompanied by one file descriptor. These are
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for receiving interrupts from peers using vector 0,..,N-1, in
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order. If the client is configured for fewer vectors, it closes
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the extra file descriptors. If it is configured for more, the
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extra vectors remain unconnected.
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From then on, the server sends these kinds of messages:
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6. Connection / disconnection notification. This is a peer ID.
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- If the number comes with a file descriptor, it's a connection
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notification, exactly like in step 4.
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- Else, it's a disconnection notification for the peer with that ID.
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Known bugs:
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* The protocol changed incompatibly in QEMU 2.5. Before, messages
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were native endian long, and there was no version number.
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* The protocol is poorly designed.
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=== The ivshmem Client-Client Protocol ===
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An ivshmem device configured for interrupts receives eventfd file
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descriptors for interrupting peers and getting interrupted by peers
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from the server, as explained in the previous section.
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To interrupt a peer, the device writes the 8-byte integer 1 in native
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byte order to the respective file descriptor.
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To receive an interrupt, the device reads and discards as many 8-byte
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integers as it can.
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