Documentation/Platforms/S390X: Difference between revisions
(virtio-net-pci is a better example, as it actually has a chance of working.) |
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When using kvm, you should be able to use any recent distribution that you would be able to run on your host as well (RHEL, SLES, Ubuntu, Debian, Fedora). Older versions may not yet support virtio-ccw. | When using kvm, you should be able to use any recent distribution that you would be able to run on your host as well (RHEL, SLES, Ubuntu, Debian, Fedora). Older versions may not yet support virtio-ccw. | ||
When using tcg, the machine emulated is at an older level not supported on any of the recent enterprise distributions. Your best bet is probably using Debian. | When using tcg with version 2.11 or before, the machine emulated is at an older level not supported on any of the recent enterprise distributions. Your best bet is probably using Debian. | ||
When using tcg with version 2.12 or newer, the machine emulated should be good enough to run kernel 4.x based distributions. At least Fedora 26/27 and Ubuntu 18.04 (current build) have been reported to work. | |||
== Build Directions == | == Build Directions == |
Revision as of 13:14, 19 December 2017
QEMU s390x Guest Support
QEMU supports running s390x (aka zSystems aka mainframe) guests via the s390-virtio-ccw machine, with kvm or tcg acceleration.
Supported Devices
The s390-virtio-ccw machine emulates a virtual channel subsystem. Currently, only virtio-ccw proxy devices (for most virtio device types) are supported.
As a console device, supported types are SCLP VT220-compatible (preferred), SCLP line-mode or virtio-serial console.
Guest Operating Systems
Currently, the only supported guest operation system is Linux.
When using kvm, you should be able to use any recent distribution that you would be able to run on your host as well (RHEL, SLES, Ubuntu, Debian, Fedora). Older versions may not yet support virtio-ccw.
When using tcg with version 2.11 or before, the machine emulated is at an older level not supported on any of the recent enterprise distributions. Your best bet is probably using Debian.
When using tcg with version 2.12 or newer, the machine emulated should be good enough to run kernel 4.x based distributions. At least Fedora 26/27 and Ubuntu 18.04 (current build) have been reported to work.
Build Directions
./configure --target-list=s390x-softmmu && make
Minimal command-line
qemu-system-s390x -M s390-ccw-virtio -kernel <kernel file name> -initrd <initrd file name> -m 512 -nographic
This command line will start a machine with the default SCLP VT220-compatible console. If you want any actual I/O devices, you need to add the respective virtio-*-ccw devices.
If you do not have a kernel and initrd image yet, you can have a try with the latest version from Debian stable for example: http://ftp.debian.org/debian/dists/stable/main/installer-s390x/current/images/generic/
I/O devices
The virtio-ccw transport provides access to paravirtualized virtio devices. They are configured in a similar way to virtio-pci devices. For example,
-drive file=/dev/dasdb,if=none,id=drive-virtio-disk0,format=raw,serial=ccwdasd1,cache=none \ -device virtio-blk-ccw,devno=fe.0.0001,drive=drive-virtio-disk0,id=virtio-disk0,bootindex=1,scsi=off
will add a virtio-blk device that uses the host disk /dev/dasdb as backing and is seen in the guest as the channel device 0.0.0001.
Multiple subchannel sets are supported. For example,
-device virtio-balloon-ccw,devno=fe.1.0101
will add a virtio-ballon device that the guest sees as the channel device 0.1.0101.
A note on PCI support
PCI devices are available on s390x, but they are not quite what you know from other platforms.
- PCI devices on s390x are not accessed via memory mapped I/O, but via special instructions that require kernel mode.
- No PCI topology; PCI functions are instead identified via a fid (function identifier) and a uid (unique identifier).
- Any topology information you provide on the command line is basically invisible to the guest, as the device discovery instructions only return fid and uid.
- You can specify fid and uid as properties of a zpci device that needs to be linked to the pci device.
As of 2.10, only devices passed through via vfio-pci have a chance of working. Prior to 2.10 (this includes compat machines), you may be able to add devices, but Linux guests will not use them.
PCI feature bits
PCI support is indicated as a cpu feature; Linux guests also test for the AIS cpu feature (which requires support in the KVM kernel module; 4.12 or later). The emulated machine needs to be a zEC12 or later; for machines prior to z14, the bits need to be explicitly enabled. For example,
-cpu zEC12-base,zpci=on,aen=on,ais=on
turns on the PCI support, adapter-event notification and adapter interrupt suppression bits.
If you try to specify a PCI device for a machine without the PCI feature bit, for example
-cpu zEC12-base,zpci=off (...) -device virtio-net-pci
qemu (2.11 or later) will fail with
qemu-system-s390x: -device virtio-net-pci: No 'PCI' bus found for device 'virtio-net-pci'
This can be a bit confusing; but the root cause is the missing PCI feature bit.
Maintainers
TCG (non-KVM)
Richard Henderson rth@twiddle.net
Alexander Graf agraf@suse.de
KVM and virtio-ccw
Christian Borntraeger borntraeger@de.ibm.com
Cornelia Huck cohuck@redhat.com
Alexander Graf agraf@suse.de
Links
Wikipedia page for the System 390
Installing Ubuntu Linux
Installing SUSE Linux
Installing s390x emulator for Ubuntu
Debian S/390 port
Fedora s390x port