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authorPrefetch2020-04-06 21:32:18 +0200
committerPrefetch2020-04-06 21:32:18 +0200
commit6ff9af5490bf782534201bb91f58dcb77577e1a1 (patch)
tree2da100dd35c3657bb282c5f63220b4874b4976a5
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+#!/bin/sh
+
+
+# This is the script I used to use to launch QEMU, emulating
+# Windows 8 with direct physical access to a powerful GPU
+# and the Intel audio controller. This isn't a complete guide,
+# more a collection of tips for any other brave people mad
+# enough to try this. Look up "{VFIO,VGA,GPU,PCI} passthrough"
+# if you want to get proper guidance for this.
+
+# This was working on QEMU 2.12, but note that I'm not updating it anymore.
+
+
+# Create hugepage FS. Don't forget to actually populate it
+# with available RAM using kernel boot arguments or sysctl.
+# The user you run QEMU under (not root!) must be in the kvm group.
+sudo mkdir /dev/hugepages
+sudo mount -t hugetlbfs hugetlbfs /dev/hugepages
+sudo chown root:kvm /dev/hugepages
+sudo chmod 1777 /dev/hugepages # Necessary apparently
+
+
+# The block devices you use for the VM are up to you;
+# mine are at /dev/mapper/win{dows,data}.
+# I recommend refreshing udev after you've created them:
+udevadm trigger
+
+
+### USEFUL KERNEL ARGUMENTS
+# intel_iommu=on : VFIO won't work otherwise. I don't have an AMD CPU,
+# but there should be a similar option for that.
+# vfio-pci.ids=XXXX:YYYY,.. : Only available if VFIO is built into the kernel
+# (requires custom kernel build). Reserves devices at boot.
+# hugepages=X hugepagesz=Y : Create X hugepages at boot of size Y ("2M" or "1G").
+# nohugeiomap : This fixed something, but I can't remember what.
+# intremap=no_x2apic_optout : Some UEFIs don't support the x2apic and disable it.
+# This force-enables it. Had no negative consequences for me.
+# pci=pcie_bus_peer2peer : This was the silver bullet for me, but YMMV.
+# isolcpus=X-Y nohz_full=X-Y rcu_nocbs=X-Y : You MUST use CPU pinning if you add this.
+# X-Y is an inclusive range of CPU cores to
+# to reserve for the vCPUs.
+
+
+### MACHINE OPTIONS
+QEMU="-name debug-threads=on -enable-kvm -machine q35,accel=kvm,kernel_irqchip=on,vmport=off,mem-merge=off"
+# -debug-threads=on : name the vCPU threads, useful for CPU pinning.
+# -enable-kvm : enable KVM acceleration.
+# -machine q35 : emulate the Q35 chipset, which is closer to a modern PC.
+# accel=kvm : probably identical to -enable-kvm, but just in case.
+# kernel_irqchip=on : emulate an IRQ chip in the kernel instead of in QEMU.
+# vmport=off : don't emulate a VMWare I/O port.
+# mem-merge=off : disable KSM, since there is only one VM.
+
+### CPU OPTIONS
+QEMU="$QEMU -cpu host,kvm=off,hv_time,hv_relaxed,hv_spinlocks=0x1fff,hv_vpindex,hv_reset,hv_runtime,hv_crash,hv_vendor_id=NvidiaFix"
+# -cpu host : use the host CPU instead of emulating one.
+# kvm=off : don't declare self as KVM to the guest, as Windows doesn't care.
+# hv_* : pretend to be Hyper-V, so Windows can optimize itself for running as a guest.
+# https://www.reddit.com/r/VFIO/comments/479xnx/guests_with_nvidia_gpus_can_enable_hyperv/
+QEMU="$QEMU -smp sockets=1,cores=4,threads=1"
+# -smp ... : processor layout to emulate.
+
+### RAM OPTIONS
+QEMU="$QEMU -m 12G -mem-path /dev/hugepages -mem-prealloc"
+# -m x : amount of guest RAM.
+# -mem-path ... : allocate memory from this pool. Can be a file or "hugepages" (mount -t hugetlbfs).
+# -mem-prealloc : allocate all memory from -mem-path at startup rather than on demand.
+
+### EMULATION OPTIONS
+QEMU="$QEMU -vga none -nodefaults -rtc base=utc,clock=host,driftfix=none"
+# -vga none : don't emulate a graphics card, since we're using a physical one.
+# -nodefaults : don't emulate any of the default devices.
+# -rtc base=utc : emulate an RTC starting at host's local time.
+# clock=host : use the host's accurate clock for VM timekeeping.
+# driftfix=none : don't fix Windows' clock drifting, as that involves injecting interrupts.
+QEMU="$QEMU -drive if=pflash,format=raw,file=/usr/share/edk2-ovmf/OVMF_CODE.fd,readonly"
+QEMU="$QEMU -drive if=pflash,format=raw,file=/usr/share/edk2-ovmf/OVMF_VARS.fd"
+# These options enable using the OVMF virtual UEFI instead of SeaBIOS.
+# The exact file locations might vary; this is for Gentoo.
+
+### PCI PASSTHROUGH
+QEMU="$QEMU -device ioh3420,chassis=1,port=1,multifunction=on,bus=pcie.0,addr=1c.0,id=pcie.1"
+# -device ioh3420 : emulate a PCIe I/O hub to attach the GPU to.
+# chassis=1,port=1 : ?
+# bus=pcie.0,addr=1c.0 : place it at 00:1c.0 on the guest.
+# id=pcie.1 : refer to this device as "pcie.1" below.
+QEMU="$QEMU -device vfio-pci,host=04:00.0,multifunction=on,bus=pcie.1,addr=00.0"
+# GPU VGA controller.
+# multifunction=on : this device isn't just a VGA controller.
+# bus=pcie.1,addr=00.0 : attach it to the I/O hub as function 0.
+QEMU="$QEMU -device vfio-pci,host=04:00.1,bus=pcie.1,addr=00.1"
+# GPU HDMI audio controller.
+# bus=pcie.1,addr=00.1 : attach it to the I/O hub as function 1.
+QEMU="$QEMU -device vfio-pci,host=00:1b.0,bus=pcie.0,addr=1b.0"
+# Intel HDA audio controller.
+# bus=pcie.0,addr=1b.0 : place the device where Intel usually puts its HDA controller.
+
+#QEMU="$QEMU -device intel-iommu,intremap=on"
+# Expose the IOMMU to the guest too. Probably useless in this case.
+
+### USB PASSTHROUGH
+QEMU="$QEMU -usb"
+# Enable USB support.
+QEMU="$QEMU -device usb-host,vendorid=0xXXXX,productid=0xYYYY"
+# If one of these can't be found, it's simply ignored. Use lsusb to find the IDs.
+
+### STORAGE OPTIONS
+QEMU="$QEMU -drive if=ide,format=raw,discard=unmap,detect-zeroes=unmap,file=/dev/mapper/windows"
+QEMU="$QEMU -drive if=ide,format=raw,discard=unmap,detect-zeroes=unmap,file=/dev/mapper/windata"
+# if=ide : emulate an IDE (SATA) drive. NVMe is possible too, but more of a hassle.
+# format=raw : talk directly to the drive. Take care: your guest GPT might end up inside a partition.
+# discard=unmap,detect-zeroes=unmap : send discards to the physical device if the guest asks for it.
+# file=x : backing physical block device.
+
+#QEMU="$QEMU -cdrom ~/Windows.iso"
+# For recovery purposes. I strongly recommend keeping the ISO around.
+
+### NETWORK OPTIONS
+QEMU="$QEMU -netdev user,id=usermode"
+# -netdev user : emulate a user-mode NIC, which is more than fast enough in my experience.
+# id=usermode : call the interface "usermode"
+QEMU="$QEMU -device e1000,netdev=usermode,mac=88:88:88:88:88:88,bus=pcie.0,addr=19.0"
+# -device e1000 : emulate a gigabit ethernet device.
+# netdev=usermode : use "usermode" as the host backend.
+# mac=x : set the MAC address as seen by the guest.
+# bus=pcie.0,addr=19.0 : place the device where Intel usually puts its NIC.
+
+
+# GERONIMO!
+qemu-system-x86_64 $QEMU -daemonize
+# -daemonize : fork once the VM has been initialized.
+
+QEMU_PID=`pidof qemu-system-x86_64`
+echo -e "\033[37;1mQEMU started at PID $QEMU_PID, emulating Windows in Hyper-V mode.\033[m"
+
+sleep 2 # Make sure the VM threads have been spawned.
+
+# Move kernel processes to the housekeeping core (core 0 here).
+#echo 00001 > /sys/bus/workqueue/devices/writeback/cpumask
+#echo 00001 > /sys/bus/workqueue/devices/nvme-wq/cpumask
+
+# Do CPU pinning using "taskset -pc X Y" here,
+# using /proc/$QEMU_PID/task/*/stat to find the thread name.
+# Sorry, my old script for this was so horrible that I don't want to share it.