qemu/hw/input/pckbd.c

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/*
* QEMU PC keyboard emulation
*
* Copyright (c) 2003 Fabrice Bellard
*
* Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
* of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
* in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
* to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
* copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
* furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
*
* The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
* all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
*
* THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
* IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
* FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL
* THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
* LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
* OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN
* THE SOFTWARE.
*/
#include "qemu/osdep.h"
#include "qemu/error-report.h"
#include "qemu/log.h"
#include "qemu/timer.h"
#include "qapi/error.h"
#include "hw/isa/isa.h"
#include "migration/vmstate.h"
#include "hw/acpi/acpi_aml_interface.h"
#include "hw/input/ps2.h"
#include "hw/irq.h"
#include "hw/input/i8042.h"
pckbd: don't update OBF flags if KBD_STAT_OBF is set Don't update the OBF flags in the status register and the cor- responding IRQ lines if KBD_STAT_OBF is set. Otherwise this may change the PS/2 event type. If the guest ISR was already scheduled, the changed event type will be rather surprising for the guest. This fixes a mouse event stream corruption. To reproduce the problem start a FreeDOS 1.2 guest with -machine pc,accel=kvm and -display gtk. The KVM in-kernel irqchip has to be enabled. Now open a text file with edit.exe in the guest and hold down the cursor right key and at the same time move the mouse around. You will quickly notice erratic mouse movements and unexpected mouse clicks. A trace file shows the mouse event stream corruption. Guest rip 0xce93 (f000:ce93) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios mouse ISR, guest rip 0xceca (f000:ceca) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios keyboard ISR. qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971116: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 # gtk queues a mouse event qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971121: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971122: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971123: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971124: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971126: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971176: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x3d # KBD_STAT_OBF and KBD_STAT_MOUSE_OBF set, the mouse ISR will # read data from the PS/2 controller. qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971180: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971191: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x110c8d info 0 800000f6 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971191: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971193: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xce93 info 600048 0 # the mouse ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971231: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971238: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # gtk queues a keyboard event 0xe0 0x4d (key right) qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971257: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971262: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # ps2_read_data() deasserts and reasserts the keyboard IRQ qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971266: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0xe0 kbd # -> the mouse ISR receives keyboard data qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971268: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xce95 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971269: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe828 info a00040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971270: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC slave pin 12 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971270: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82a qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe82a info 200040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC master pin 2 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971271: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82c qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971272: kvm_exit: reason PENDING_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971273: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971274: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971275: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x1d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971276: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971277: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xceca info 600048 0 # the keyboard ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971279: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971282: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0x4d kbd # the keyboard ISR receives the second byte of the keyboard event Signed-off-by: Volker Rümelin <vr_qemu@t-online.de> Message-Id: <20210525181441.27768-5-vr_qemu@t-online.de> [ kraxel: add missing include ] Signed-off-by: Gerd Hoffmann <kraxel@redhat.com>
2021-05-25 21:14:34 +03:00
#include "hw/qdev-properties.h"
#include "sysemu/reset.h"
#include "sysemu/runstate.h"
#include "trace.h"
/* Keyboard Controller Commands */
/* Read mode bits */
#define KBD_CCMD_READ_MODE 0x20
/* Write mode bits */
#define KBD_CCMD_WRITE_MODE 0x60
/* Get controller version */
#define KBD_CCMD_GET_VERSION 0xA1
/* Disable mouse interface */
#define KBD_CCMD_MOUSE_DISABLE 0xA7
/* Enable mouse interface */
#define KBD_CCMD_MOUSE_ENABLE 0xA8
/* Mouse interface test */
#define KBD_CCMD_TEST_MOUSE 0xA9
/* Controller self test */
#define KBD_CCMD_SELF_TEST 0xAA
/* Keyboard interface test */
#define KBD_CCMD_KBD_TEST 0xAB
/* Keyboard interface disable */
#define KBD_CCMD_KBD_DISABLE 0xAD
/* Keyboard interface enable */
#define KBD_CCMD_KBD_ENABLE 0xAE
/* read input port */
#define KBD_CCMD_READ_INPORT 0xC0
/* read output port */
#define KBD_CCMD_READ_OUTPORT 0xD0
/* write output port */
#define KBD_CCMD_WRITE_OUTPORT 0xD1
#define KBD_CCMD_WRITE_OBUF 0xD2
/* Write to output buffer as if initiated by the auxiliary device */
#define KBD_CCMD_WRITE_AUX_OBUF 0xD3
/* Write the following byte to the mouse */
#define KBD_CCMD_WRITE_MOUSE 0xD4
/* HP vectra only ? */
#define KBD_CCMD_DISABLE_A20 0xDD
/* HP vectra only ? */
#define KBD_CCMD_ENABLE_A20 0xDF
/* Pulse bits 3-0 of the output port P2. */
#define KBD_CCMD_PULSE_BITS_3_0 0xF0
/* Pulse bit 0 of the output port P2 = CPU reset. */
#define KBD_CCMD_RESET 0xFE
/* Pulse no bits of the output port P2. */
#define KBD_CCMD_NO_OP 0xFF
/* Status Register Bits */
/* Keyboard output buffer full */
#define KBD_STAT_OBF 0x01
/* Keyboard input buffer full */
#define KBD_STAT_IBF 0x02
/* Self test successful */
#define KBD_STAT_SELFTEST 0x04
/* Last write was a command write (0=data) */
#define KBD_STAT_CMD 0x08
/* Zero if keyboard locked */
#define KBD_STAT_UNLOCKED 0x10
/* Mouse output buffer full */
#define KBD_STAT_MOUSE_OBF 0x20
/* General receive/xmit timeout */
#define KBD_STAT_GTO 0x40
/* Parity error */
#define KBD_STAT_PERR 0x80
/* Controller Mode Register Bits */
/* Keyboard data generate IRQ1 */
#define KBD_MODE_KBD_INT 0x01
/* Mouse data generate IRQ12 */
#define KBD_MODE_MOUSE_INT 0x02
/* The system flag (?) */
#define KBD_MODE_SYS 0x04
/* The keylock doesn't affect the keyboard if set */
#define KBD_MODE_NO_KEYLOCK 0x08
/* Disable keyboard interface */
#define KBD_MODE_DISABLE_KBD 0x10
/* Disable mouse interface */
#define KBD_MODE_DISABLE_MOUSE 0x20
/* Scan code conversion to PC format */
#define KBD_MODE_KCC 0x40
#define KBD_MODE_RFU 0x80
/* Output Port Bits */
#define KBD_OUT_RESET 0x01 /* 1=normal mode, 0=reset */
#define KBD_OUT_A20 0x02 /* x86 only */
#define KBD_OUT_OBF 0x10 /* Keyboard output buffer full */
#define KBD_OUT_MOUSE_OBF 0x20 /* Mouse output buffer full */
/*
* OSes typically write 0xdd/0xdf to turn the A20 line off and on.
* We make the default value of the outport include these four bits,
* so that the subsection is rarely necessary.
*/
#define KBD_OUT_ONES 0xcc
#define KBD_PENDING_KBD_COMPAT 0x01
#define KBD_PENDING_AUX_COMPAT 0x02
#define KBD_PENDING_CTRL_KBD 0x04
#define KBD_PENDING_CTRL_AUX 0x08
#define KBD_PENDING_KBD KBD_MODE_DISABLE_KBD /* 0x10 */
#define KBD_PENDING_AUX KBD_MODE_DISABLE_MOUSE /* 0x20 */
#define KBD_MIGR_TIMER_PENDING 0x1
#define KBD_OBSRC_KBD 0x01
#define KBD_OBSRC_MOUSE 0x02
#define KBD_OBSRC_CTRL 0x04
/*
* XXX: not generating the irqs if KBD_MODE_DISABLE_KBD is set may be
* incorrect, but it avoids having to simulate exact delays
*/
static void kbd_update_irq_lines(KBDState *s)
{
int irq_kbd_level, irq_mouse_level;
irq_kbd_level = 0;
irq_mouse_level = 0;
if (s->status & KBD_STAT_OBF) {
if (s->status & KBD_STAT_MOUSE_OBF) {
if (s->mode & KBD_MODE_MOUSE_INT) {
irq_mouse_level = 1;
}
} else {
if ((s->mode & KBD_MODE_KBD_INT) &&
!(s->mode & KBD_MODE_DISABLE_KBD)) {
irq_kbd_level = 1;
}
}
}
qemu_set_irq(s->irq_kbd, irq_kbd_level);
qemu_set_irq(s->irq_mouse, irq_mouse_level);
}
pckbd: don't update OBF flags if KBD_STAT_OBF is set Don't update the OBF flags in the status register and the cor- responding IRQ lines if KBD_STAT_OBF is set. Otherwise this may change the PS/2 event type. If the guest ISR was already scheduled, the changed event type will be rather surprising for the guest. This fixes a mouse event stream corruption. To reproduce the problem start a FreeDOS 1.2 guest with -machine pc,accel=kvm and -display gtk. The KVM in-kernel irqchip has to be enabled. Now open a text file with edit.exe in the guest and hold down the cursor right key and at the same time move the mouse around. You will quickly notice erratic mouse movements and unexpected mouse clicks. A trace file shows the mouse event stream corruption. Guest rip 0xce93 (f000:ce93) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios mouse ISR, guest rip 0xceca (f000:ceca) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios keyboard ISR. qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971116: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 # gtk queues a mouse event qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971121: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971122: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971123: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971124: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971126: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971176: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x3d # KBD_STAT_OBF and KBD_STAT_MOUSE_OBF set, the mouse ISR will # read data from the PS/2 controller. qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971180: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971191: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x110c8d info 0 800000f6 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971191: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971193: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xce93 info 600048 0 # the mouse ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971231: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971238: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # gtk queues a keyboard event 0xe0 0x4d (key right) qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971257: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971262: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # ps2_read_data() deasserts and reasserts the keyboard IRQ qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971266: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0xe0 kbd # -> the mouse ISR receives keyboard data qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971268: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xce95 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971269: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe828 info a00040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971270: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC slave pin 12 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971270: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82a qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe82a info 200040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC master pin 2 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971271: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82c qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971272: kvm_exit: reason PENDING_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971273: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971274: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971275: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x1d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971276: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971277: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xceca info 600048 0 # the keyboard ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971279: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971282: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0x4d kbd # the keyboard ISR receives the second byte of the keyboard event Signed-off-by: Volker Rümelin <vr_qemu@t-online.de> Message-Id: <20210525181441.27768-5-vr_qemu@t-online.de> [ kraxel: add missing include ] Signed-off-by: Gerd Hoffmann <kraxel@redhat.com>
2021-05-25 21:14:34 +03:00
static void kbd_deassert_irq(KBDState *s)
{
s->status &= ~(KBD_STAT_OBF | KBD_STAT_MOUSE_OBF);
s->outport &= ~(KBD_OUT_OBF | KBD_OUT_MOUSE_OBF);
kbd_update_irq_lines(s);
}
static uint8_t kbd_pending(KBDState *s)
{
if (s->extended_state) {
return s->pending & (~s->mode | ~(KBD_PENDING_KBD | KBD_PENDING_AUX));
} else {
return s->pending;
}
}
/* update irq and KBD_STAT_[MOUSE_]OBF */
static void kbd_update_irq(KBDState *s)
{
uint8_t pending = kbd_pending(s);
s->status &= ~(KBD_STAT_OBF | KBD_STAT_MOUSE_OBF);
s->outport &= ~(KBD_OUT_OBF | KBD_OUT_MOUSE_OBF);
if (pending) {
s->status |= KBD_STAT_OBF;
s->outport |= KBD_OUT_OBF;
if (pending & KBD_PENDING_CTRL_KBD) {
s->obsrc = KBD_OBSRC_CTRL;
} else if (pending & KBD_PENDING_CTRL_AUX) {
s->status |= KBD_STAT_MOUSE_OBF;
s->outport |= KBD_OUT_MOUSE_OBF;
s->obsrc = KBD_OBSRC_CTRL;
} else if (pending & KBD_PENDING_KBD) {
s->obsrc = KBD_OBSRC_KBD;
} else {
s->status |= KBD_STAT_MOUSE_OBF;
s->outport |= KBD_OUT_MOUSE_OBF;
s->obsrc = KBD_OBSRC_MOUSE;
}
}
kbd_update_irq_lines(s);
}
pckbd: don't update OBF flags if KBD_STAT_OBF is set Don't update the OBF flags in the status register and the cor- responding IRQ lines if KBD_STAT_OBF is set. Otherwise this may change the PS/2 event type. If the guest ISR was already scheduled, the changed event type will be rather surprising for the guest. This fixes a mouse event stream corruption. To reproduce the problem start a FreeDOS 1.2 guest with -machine pc,accel=kvm and -display gtk. The KVM in-kernel irqchip has to be enabled. Now open a text file with edit.exe in the guest and hold down the cursor right key and at the same time move the mouse around. You will quickly notice erratic mouse movements and unexpected mouse clicks. A trace file shows the mouse event stream corruption. Guest rip 0xce93 (f000:ce93) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios mouse ISR, guest rip 0xceca (f000:ceca) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios keyboard ISR. qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971116: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 # gtk queues a mouse event qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971121: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971122: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971123: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971124: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971126: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971176: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x3d # KBD_STAT_OBF and KBD_STAT_MOUSE_OBF set, the mouse ISR will # read data from the PS/2 controller. qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971180: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971191: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x110c8d info 0 800000f6 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971191: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971193: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xce93 info 600048 0 # the mouse ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971231: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971238: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # gtk queues a keyboard event 0xe0 0x4d (key right) qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971257: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971262: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # ps2_read_data() deasserts and reasserts the keyboard IRQ qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971266: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0xe0 kbd # -> the mouse ISR receives keyboard data qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971268: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xce95 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971269: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe828 info a00040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971270: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC slave pin 12 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971270: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82a qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe82a info 200040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC master pin 2 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971271: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82c qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971272: kvm_exit: reason PENDING_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971273: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971274: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971275: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x1d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971276: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971277: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xceca info 600048 0 # the keyboard ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971279: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971282: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0x4d kbd # the keyboard ISR receives the second byte of the keyboard event Signed-off-by: Volker Rümelin <vr_qemu@t-online.de> Message-Id: <20210525181441.27768-5-vr_qemu@t-online.de> [ kraxel: add missing include ] Signed-off-by: Gerd Hoffmann <kraxel@redhat.com>
2021-05-25 21:14:34 +03:00
static void kbd_safe_update_irq(KBDState *s)
{
/*
* with KBD_STAT_OBF set, a call to kbd_read_data() will eventually call
* kbd_update_irq()
*/
if (s->status & KBD_STAT_OBF) {
return;
}
/* the throttle timer is pending and will call kbd_update_irq() */
if (s->throttle_timer && timer_pending(s->throttle_timer)) {
return;
}
if (kbd_pending(s)) {
pckbd: don't update OBF flags if KBD_STAT_OBF is set Don't update the OBF flags in the status register and the cor- responding IRQ lines if KBD_STAT_OBF is set. Otherwise this may change the PS/2 event type. If the guest ISR was already scheduled, the changed event type will be rather surprising for the guest. This fixes a mouse event stream corruption. To reproduce the problem start a FreeDOS 1.2 guest with -machine pc,accel=kvm and -display gtk. The KVM in-kernel irqchip has to be enabled. Now open a text file with edit.exe in the guest and hold down the cursor right key and at the same time move the mouse around. You will quickly notice erratic mouse movements and unexpected mouse clicks. A trace file shows the mouse event stream corruption. Guest rip 0xce93 (f000:ce93) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios mouse ISR, guest rip 0xceca (f000:ceca) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios keyboard ISR. qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971116: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 # gtk queues a mouse event qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971121: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971122: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971123: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971124: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971126: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971176: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x3d # KBD_STAT_OBF and KBD_STAT_MOUSE_OBF set, the mouse ISR will # read data from the PS/2 controller. qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971180: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971191: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x110c8d info 0 800000f6 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971191: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971193: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xce93 info 600048 0 # the mouse ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971231: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971238: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # gtk queues a keyboard event 0xe0 0x4d (key right) qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971257: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971262: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # ps2_read_data() deasserts and reasserts the keyboard IRQ qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971266: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0xe0 kbd # -> the mouse ISR receives keyboard data qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971268: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xce95 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971269: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe828 info a00040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971270: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC slave pin 12 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971270: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82a qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe82a info 200040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC master pin 2 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971271: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82c qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971272: kvm_exit: reason PENDING_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971273: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971274: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971275: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x1d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971276: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971277: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xceca info 600048 0 # the keyboard ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971279: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971282: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0x4d kbd # the keyboard ISR receives the second byte of the keyboard event Signed-off-by: Volker Rümelin <vr_qemu@t-online.de> Message-Id: <20210525181441.27768-5-vr_qemu@t-online.de> [ kraxel: add missing include ] Signed-off-by: Gerd Hoffmann <kraxel@redhat.com>
2021-05-25 21:14:34 +03:00
kbd_update_irq(s);
}
}
static void kbd_update_kbd_irq(void *opaque, int level)
{
pckbd: don't update OBF flags if KBD_STAT_OBF is set Don't update the OBF flags in the status register and the cor- responding IRQ lines if KBD_STAT_OBF is set. Otherwise this may change the PS/2 event type. If the guest ISR was already scheduled, the changed event type will be rather surprising for the guest. This fixes a mouse event stream corruption. To reproduce the problem start a FreeDOS 1.2 guest with -machine pc,accel=kvm and -display gtk. The KVM in-kernel irqchip has to be enabled. Now open a text file with edit.exe in the guest and hold down the cursor right key and at the same time move the mouse around. You will quickly notice erratic mouse movements and unexpected mouse clicks. A trace file shows the mouse event stream corruption. Guest rip 0xce93 (f000:ce93) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios mouse ISR, guest rip 0xceca (f000:ceca) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios keyboard ISR. qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971116: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 # gtk queues a mouse event qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971121: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971122: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971123: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971124: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971126: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971176: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x3d # KBD_STAT_OBF and KBD_STAT_MOUSE_OBF set, the mouse ISR will # read data from the PS/2 controller. qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971180: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971191: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x110c8d info 0 800000f6 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971191: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971193: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xce93 info 600048 0 # the mouse ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971231: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971238: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # gtk queues a keyboard event 0xe0 0x4d (key right) qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971257: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971262: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # ps2_read_data() deasserts and reasserts the keyboard IRQ qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971266: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0xe0 kbd # -> the mouse ISR receives keyboard data qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971268: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xce95 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971269: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe828 info a00040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971270: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC slave pin 12 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971270: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82a qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe82a info 200040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC master pin 2 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971271: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82c qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971272: kvm_exit: reason PENDING_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971273: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971274: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971275: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x1d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971276: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971277: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xceca info 600048 0 # the keyboard ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971279: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971282: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0x4d kbd # the keyboard ISR receives the second byte of the keyboard event Signed-off-by: Volker Rümelin <vr_qemu@t-online.de> Message-Id: <20210525181441.27768-5-vr_qemu@t-online.de> [ kraxel: add missing include ] Signed-off-by: Gerd Hoffmann <kraxel@redhat.com>
2021-05-25 21:14:34 +03:00
KBDState *s = opaque;
pckbd: don't update OBF flags if KBD_STAT_OBF is set Don't update the OBF flags in the status register and the cor- responding IRQ lines if KBD_STAT_OBF is set. Otherwise this may change the PS/2 event type. If the guest ISR was already scheduled, the changed event type will be rather surprising for the guest. This fixes a mouse event stream corruption. To reproduce the problem start a FreeDOS 1.2 guest with -machine pc,accel=kvm and -display gtk. The KVM in-kernel irqchip has to be enabled. Now open a text file with edit.exe in the guest and hold down the cursor right key and at the same time move the mouse around. You will quickly notice erratic mouse movements and unexpected mouse clicks. A trace file shows the mouse event stream corruption. Guest rip 0xce93 (f000:ce93) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios mouse ISR, guest rip 0xceca (f000:ceca) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios keyboard ISR. qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971116: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 # gtk queues a mouse event qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971121: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971122: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971123: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971124: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971126: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971176: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x3d # KBD_STAT_OBF and KBD_STAT_MOUSE_OBF set, the mouse ISR will # read data from the PS/2 controller. qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971180: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971191: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x110c8d info 0 800000f6 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971191: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971193: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xce93 info 600048 0 # the mouse ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971231: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971238: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # gtk queues a keyboard event 0xe0 0x4d (key right) qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971257: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971262: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # ps2_read_data() deasserts and reasserts the keyboard IRQ qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971266: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0xe0 kbd # -> the mouse ISR receives keyboard data qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971268: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xce95 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971269: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe828 info a00040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971270: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC slave pin 12 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971270: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82a qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe82a info 200040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC master pin 2 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971271: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82c qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971272: kvm_exit: reason PENDING_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971273: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971274: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971275: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x1d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971276: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971277: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xceca info 600048 0 # the keyboard ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971279: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971282: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0x4d kbd # the keyboard ISR receives the second byte of the keyboard event Signed-off-by: Volker Rümelin <vr_qemu@t-online.de> Message-Id: <20210525181441.27768-5-vr_qemu@t-online.de> [ kraxel: add missing include ] Signed-off-by: Gerd Hoffmann <kraxel@redhat.com>
2021-05-25 21:14:34 +03:00
if (level) {
s->pending |= KBD_PENDING_KBD;
pckbd: don't update OBF flags if KBD_STAT_OBF is set Don't update the OBF flags in the status register and the cor- responding IRQ lines if KBD_STAT_OBF is set. Otherwise this may change the PS/2 event type. If the guest ISR was already scheduled, the changed event type will be rather surprising for the guest. This fixes a mouse event stream corruption. To reproduce the problem start a FreeDOS 1.2 guest with -machine pc,accel=kvm and -display gtk. The KVM in-kernel irqchip has to be enabled. Now open a text file with edit.exe in the guest and hold down the cursor right key and at the same time move the mouse around. You will quickly notice erratic mouse movements and unexpected mouse clicks. A trace file shows the mouse event stream corruption. Guest rip 0xce93 (f000:ce93) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios mouse ISR, guest rip 0xceca (f000:ceca) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios keyboard ISR. qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971116: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 # gtk queues a mouse event qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971121: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971122: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971123: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971124: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971126: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971176: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x3d # KBD_STAT_OBF and KBD_STAT_MOUSE_OBF set, the mouse ISR will # read data from the PS/2 controller. qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971180: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971191: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x110c8d info 0 800000f6 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971191: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971193: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xce93 info 600048 0 # the mouse ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971231: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971238: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # gtk queues a keyboard event 0xe0 0x4d (key right) qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971257: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971262: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # ps2_read_data() deasserts and reasserts the keyboard IRQ qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971266: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0xe0 kbd # -> the mouse ISR receives keyboard data qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971268: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xce95 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971269: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe828 info a00040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971270: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC slave pin 12 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971270: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82a qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe82a info 200040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC master pin 2 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971271: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82c qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971272: kvm_exit: reason PENDING_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971273: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971274: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971275: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x1d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971276: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971277: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xceca info 600048 0 # the keyboard ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971279: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971282: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0x4d kbd # the keyboard ISR receives the second byte of the keyboard event Signed-off-by: Volker Rümelin <vr_qemu@t-online.de> Message-Id: <20210525181441.27768-5-vr_qemu@t-online.de> [ kraxel: add missing include ] Signed-off-by: Gerd Hoffmann <kraxel@redhat.com>
2021-05-25 21:14:34 +03:00
} else {
s->pending &= ~KBD_PENDING_KBD;
pckbd: don't update OBF flags if KBD_STAT_OBF is set Don't update the OBF flags in the status register and the cor- responding IRQ lines if KBD_STAT_OBF is set. Otherwise this may change the PS/2 event type. If the guest ISR was already scheduled, the changed event type will be rather surprising for the guest. This fixes a mouse event stream corruption. To reproduce the problem start a FreeDOS 1.2 guest with -machine pc,accel=kvm and -display gtk. The KVM in-kernel irqchip has to be enabled. Now open a text file with edit.exe in the guest and hold down the cursor right key and at the same time move the mouse around. You will quickly notice erratic mouse movements and unexpected mouse clicks. A trace file shows the mouse event stream corruption. Guest rip 0xce93 (f000:ce93) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios mouse ISR, guest rip 0xceca (f000:ceca) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios keyboard ISR. qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971116: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 # gtk queues a mouse event qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971121: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971122: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971123: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971124: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971126: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971176: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x3d # KBD_STAT_OBF and KBD_STAT_MOUSE_OBF set, the mouse ISR will # read data from the PS/2 controller. qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971180: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971191: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x110c8d info 0 800000f6 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971191: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971193: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xce93 info 600048 0 # the mouse ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971231: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971238: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # gtk queues a keyboard event 0xe0 0x4d (key right) qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971257: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971262: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # ps2_read_data() deasserts and reasserts the keyboard IRQ qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971266: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0xe0 kbd # -> the mouse ISR receives keyboard data qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971268: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xce95 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971269: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe828 info a00040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971270: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC slave pin 12 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971270: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82a qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe82a info 200040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC master pin 2 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971271: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82c qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971272: kvm_exit: reason PENDING_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971273: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971274: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971275: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x1d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971276: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971277: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xceca info 600048 0 # the keyboard ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971279: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971282: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0x4d kbd # the keyboard ISR receives the second byte of the keyboard event Signed-off-by: Volker Rümelin <vr_qemu@t-online.de> Message-Id: <20210525181441.27768-5-vr_qemu@t-online.de> [ kraxel: add missing include ] Signed-off-by: Gerd Hoffmann <kraxel@redhat.com>
2021-05-25 21:14:34 +03:00
}
kbd_safe_update_irq(s);
}
static void kbd_update_aux_irq(void *opaque, int level)
{
pckbd: don't update OBF flags if KBD_STAT_OBF is set Don't update the OBF flags in the status register and the cor- responding IRQ lines if KBD_STAT_OBF is set. Otherwise this may change the PS/2 event type. If the guest ISR was already scheduled, the changed event type will be rather surprising for the guest. This fixes a mouse event stream corruption. To reproduce the problem start a FreeDOS 1.2 guest with -machine pc,accel=kvm and -display gtk. The KVM in-kernel irqchip has to be enabled. Now open a text file with edit.exe in the guest and hold down the cursor right key and at the same time move the mouse around. You will quickly notice erratic mouse movements and unexpected mouse clicks. A trace file shows the mouse event stream corruption. Guest rip 0xce93 (f000:ce93) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios mouse ISR, guest rip 0xceca (f000:ceca) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios keyboard ISR. qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971116: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 # gtk queues a mouse event qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971121: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971122: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971123: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971124: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971126: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971176: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x3d # KBD_STAT_OBF and KBD_STAT_MOUSE_OBF set, the mouse ISR will # read data from the PS/2 controller. qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971180: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971191: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x110c8d info 0 800000f6 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971191: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971193: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xce93 info 600048 0 # the mouse ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971231: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971238: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # gtk queues a keyboard event 0xe0 0x4d (key right) qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971257: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971262: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # ps2_read_data() deasserts and reasserts the keyboard IRQ qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971266: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0xe0 kbd # -> the mouse ISR receives keyboard data qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971268: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xce95 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971269: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe828 info a00040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971270: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC slave pin 12 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971270: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82a qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe82a info 200040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC master pin 2 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971271: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82c qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971272: kvm_exit: reason PENDING_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971273: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971274: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971275: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x1d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971276: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971277: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xceca info 600048 0 # the keyboard ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971279: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971282: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0x4d kbd # the keyboard ISR receives the second byte of the keyboard event Signed-off-by: Volker Rümelin <vr_qemu@t-online.de> Message-Id: <20210525181441.27768-5-vr_qemu@t-online.de> [ kraxel: add missing include ] Signed-off-by: Gerd Hoffmann <kraxel@redhat.com>
2021-05-25 21:14:34 +03:00
KBDState *s = opaque;
pckbd: don't update OBF flags if KBD_STAT_OBF is set Don't update the OBF flags in the status register and the cor- responding IRQ lines if KBD_STAT_OBF is set. Otherwise this may change the PS/2 event type. If the guest ISR was already scheduled, the changed event type will be rather surprising for the guest. This fixes a mouse event stream corruption. To reproduce the problem start a FreeDOS 1.2 guest with -machine pc,accel=kvm and -display gtk. The KVM in-kernel irqchip has to be enabled. Now open a text file with edit.exe in the guest and hold down the cursor right key and at the same time move the mouse around. You will quickly notice erratic mouse movements and unexpected mouse clicks. A trace file shows the mouse event stream corruption. Guest rip 0xce93 (f000:ce93) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios mouse ISR, guest rip 0xceca (f000:ceca) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios keyboard ISR. qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971116: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 # gtk queues a mouse event qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971121: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971122: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971123: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971124: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971126: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971176: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x3d # KBD_STAT_OBF and KBD_STAT_MOUSE_OBF set, the mouse ISR will # read data from the PS/2 controller. qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971180: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971191: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x110c8d info 0 800000f6 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971191: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971193: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xce93 info 600048 0 # the mouse ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971231: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971238: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # gtk queues a keyboard event 0xe0 0x4d (key right) qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971257: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971262: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # ps2_read_data() deasserts and reasserts the keyboard IRQ qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971266: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0xe0 kbd # -> the mouse ISR receives keyboard data qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971268: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xce95 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971269: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe828 info a00040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971270: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC slave pin 12 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971270: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82a qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe82a info 200040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC master pin 2 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971271: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82c qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971272: kvm_exit: reason PENDING_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971273: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971274: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971275: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x1d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971276: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971277: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xceca info 600048 0 # the keyboard ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971279: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971282: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0x4d kbd # the keyboard ISR receives the second byte of the keyboard event Signed-off-by: Volker Rümelin <vr_qemu@t-online.de> Message-Id: <20210525181441.27768-5-vr_qemu@t-online.de> [ kraxel: add missing include ] Signed-off-by: Gerd Hoffmann <kraxel@redhat.com>
2021-05-25 21:14:34 +03:00
if (level) {
s->pending |= KBD_PENDING_AUX;
pckbd: don't update OBF flags if KBD_STAT_OBF is set Don't update the OBF flags in the status register and the cor- responding IRQ lines if KBD_STAT_OBF is set. Otherwise this may change the PS/2 event type. If the guest ISR was already scheduled, the changed event type will be rather surprising for the guest. This fixes a mouse event stream corruption. To reproduce the problem start a FreeDOS 1.2 guest with -machine pc,accel=kvm and -display gtk. The KVM in-kernel irqchip has to be enabled. Now open a text file with edit.exe in the guest and hold down the cursor right key and at the same time move the mouse around. You will quickly notice erratic mouse movements and unexpected mouse clicks. A trace file shows the mouse event stream corruption. Guest rip 0xce93 (f000:ce93) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios mouse ISR, guest rip 0xceca (f000:ceca) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios keyboard ISR. qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971116: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 # gtk queues a mouse event qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971121: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971122: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971123: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971124: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971126: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971176: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x3d # KBD_STAT_OBF and KBD_STAT_MOUSE_OBF set, the mouse ISR will # read data from the PS/2 controller. qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971180: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971191: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x110c8d info 0 800000f6 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971191: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971193: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xce93 info 600048 0 # the mouse ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971231: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971238: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # gtk queues a keyboard event 0xe0 0x4d (key right) qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971257: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971262: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # ps2_read_data() deasserts and reasserts the keyboard IRQ qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971266: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0xe0 kbd # -> the mouse ISR receives keyboard data qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971268: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xce95 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971269: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe828 info a00040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971270: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC slave pin 12 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971270: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82a qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe82a info 200040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC master pin 2 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971271: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82c qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971272: kvm_exit: reason PENDING_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971273: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971274: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971275: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x1d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971276: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971277: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xceca info 600048 0 # the keyboard ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971279: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971282: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0x4d kbd # the keyboard ISR receives the second byte of the keyboard event Signed-off-by: Volker Rümelin <vr_qemu@t-online.de> Message-Id: <20210525181441.27768-5-vr_qemu@t-online.de> [ kraxel: add missing include ] Signed-off-by: Gerd Hoffmann <kraxel@redhat.com>
2021-05-25 21:14:34 +03:00
} else {
s->pending &= ~KBD_PENDING_AUX;
pckbd: don't update OBF flags if KBD_STAT_OBF is set Don't update the OBF flags in the status register and the cor- responding IRQ lines if KBD_STAT_OBF is set. Otherwise this may change the PS/2 event type. If the guest ISR was already scheduled, the changed event type will be rather surprising for the guest. This fixes a mouse event stream corruption. To reproduce the problem start a FreeDOS 1.2 guest with -machine pc,accel=kvm and -display gtk. The KVM in-kernel irqchip has to be enabled. Now open a text file with edit.exe in the guest and hold down the cursor right key and at the same time move the mouse around. You will quickly notice erratic mouse movements and unexpected mouse clicks. A trace file shows the mouse event stream corruption. Guest rip 0xce93 (f000:ce93) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios mouse ISR, guest rip 0xceca (f000:ceca) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios keyboard ISR. qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971116: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 # gtk queues a mouse event qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971121: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971122: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971123: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971124: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971126: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971176: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x3d # KBD_STAT_OBF and KBD_STAT_MOUSE_OBF set, the mouse ISR will # read data from the PS/2 controller. qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971180: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971191: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x110c8d info 0 800000f6 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971191: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971193: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xce93 info 600048 0 # the mouse ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971231: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971238: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # gtk queues a keyboard event 0xe0 0x4d (key right) qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971257: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971262: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # ps2_read_data() deasserts and reasserts the keyboard IRQ qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971266: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0xe0 kbd # -> the mouse ISR receives keyboard data qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971268: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xce95 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971269: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe828 info a00040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971270: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC slave pin 12 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971270: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82a qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe82a info 200040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC master pin 2 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971271: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82c qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971272: kvm_exit: reason PENDING_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971273: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971274: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971275: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x1d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971276: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971277: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xceca info 600048 0 # the keyboard ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971279: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971282: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0x4d kbd # the keyboard ISR receives the second byte of the keyboard event Signed-off-by: Volker Rümelin <vr_qemu@t-online.de> Message-Id: <20210525181441.27768-5-vr_qemu@t-online.de> [ kraxel: add missing include ] Signed-off-by: Gerd Hoffmann <kraxel@redhat.com>
2021-05-25 21:14:34 +03:00
}
kbd_safe_update_irq(s);
}
static void kbd_throttle_timeout(void *opaque)
{
KBDState *s = opaque;
if (kbd_pending(s)) {
kbd_update_irq(s);
}
}
static uint64_t kbd_read_status(void *opaque, hwaddr addr,
unsigned size)
{
KBDState *s = opaque;
int val;
val = s->status;
trace_pckbd_kbd_read_status(val);
return val;
}
static void kbd_queue(KBDState *s, int b, int aux)
{
if (s->extended_state) {
s->cbdata = b;
s->pending &= ~KBD_PENDING_CTRL_KBD & ~KBD_PENDING_CTRL_AUX;
s->pending |= aux ? KBD_PENDING_CTRL_AUX : KBD_PENDING_CTRL_KBD;
kbd_safe_update_irq(s);
} else {
ps2_queue(aux ? s->mouse : s->kbd, b);
}
}
static uint8_t kbd_dequeue(KBDState *s)
{
uint8_t b = s->cbdata;
s->pending &= ~KBD_PENDING_CTRL_KBD & ~KBD_PENDING_CTRL_AUX;
if (kbd_pending(s)) {
kbd_update_irq(s);
}
return b;
}
static void outport_write(KBDState *s, uint32_t val)
{
trace_pckbd_outport_write(val);
s->outport = val;
qemu_set_irq(s->a20_out, (val >> 1) & 1);
if (!(val & 1)) {
qemu_system_reset_request(SHUTDOWN_CAUSE_GUEST_RESET);
}
}
static void kbd_write_command(void *opaque, hwaddr addr,
uint64_t val, unsigned size)
{
KBDState *s = opaque;
trace_pckbd_kbd_write_command(val);
/*
* Bits 3-0 of the output port P2 of the keyboard controller may be pulsed
* low for approximately 6 micro seconds. Bits 3-0 of the KBD_CCMD_PULSE
* command specify the output port bits to be pulsed.
* 0: Bit should be pulsed. 1: Bit should not be modified.
* The only useful version of this command is pulsing bit 0,
* which does a CPU reset.
*/
if ((val & KBD_CCMD_PULSE_BITS_3_0) == KBD_CCMD_PULSE_BITS_3_0) {
if (!(val & 1)) {
val = KBD_CCMD_RESET;
} else {
val = KBD_CCMD_NO_OP;
}
}
switch (val) {
case KBD_CCMD_READ_MODE:
kbd_queue(s, s->mode, 0);
break;
case KBD_CCMD_WRITE_MODE:
case KBD_CCMD_WRITE_OBUF:
case KBD_CCMD_WRITE_AUX_OBUF:
case KBD_CCMD_WRITE_MOUSE:
case KBD_CCMD_WRITE_OUTPORT:
s->write_cmd = val;
break;
case KBD_CCMD_MOUSE_DISABLE:
s->mode |= KBD_MODE_DISABLE_MOUSE;
break;
case KBD_CCMD_MOUSE_ENABLE:
s->mode &= ~KBD_MODE_DISABLE_MOUSE;
kbd_safe_update_irq(s);
break;
case KBD_CCMD_TEST_MOUSE:
kbd_queue(s, 0x00, 0);
break;
case KBD_CCMD_SELF_TEST:
s->status |= KBD_STAT_SELFTEST;
kbd_queue(s, 0x55, 0);
break;
case KBD_CCMD_KBD_TEST:
kbd_queue(s, 0x00, 0);
break;
case KBD_CCMD_KBD_DISABLE:
s->mode |= KBD_MODE_DISABLE_KBD;
break;
case KBD_CCMD_KBD_ENABLE:
s->mode &= ~KBD_MODE_DISABLE_KBD;
pckbd: don't update OBF flags if KBD_STAT_OBF is set Don't update the OBF flags in the status register and the cor- responding IRQ lines if KBD_STAT_OBF is set. Otherwise this may change the PS/2 event type. If the guest ISR was already scheduled, the changed event type will be rather surprising for the guest. This fixes a mouse event stream corruption. To reproduce the problem start a FreeDOS 1.2 guest with -machine pc,accel=kvm and -display gtk. The KVM in-kernel irqchip has to be enabled. Now open a text file with edit.exe in the guest and hold down the cursor right key and at the same time move the mouse around. You will quickly notice erratic mouse movements and unexpected mouse clicks. A trace file shows the mouse event stream corruption. Guest rip 0xce93 (f000:ce93) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios mouse ISR, guest rip 0xceca (f000:ceca) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios keyboard ISR. qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971116: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 # gtk queues a mouse event qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971121: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971122: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971123: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971124: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971126: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971176: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x3d # KBD_STAT_OBF and KBD_STAT_MOUSE_OBF set, the mouse ISR will # read data from the PS/2 controller. qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971180: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971191: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x110c8d info 0 800000f6 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971191: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971193: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xce93 info 600048 0 # the mouse ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971231: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971238: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # gtk queues a keyboard event 0xe0 0x4d (key right) qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971257: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971262: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # ps2_read_data() deasserts and reasserts the keyboard IRQ qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971266: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0xe0 kbd # -> the mouse ISR receives keyboard data qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971268: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xce95 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971269: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe828 info a00040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971270: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC slave pin 12 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971270: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82a qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe82a info 200040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC master pin 2 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971271: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82c qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971272: kvm_exit: reason PENDING_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971273: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971274: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971275: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x1d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971276: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971277: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xceca info 600048 0 # the keyboard ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971279: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971282: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0x4d kbd # the keyboard ISR receives the second byte of the keyboard event Signed-off-by: Volker Rümelin <vr_qemu@t-online.de> Message-Id: <20210525181441.27768-5-vr_qemu@t-online.de> [ kraxel: add missing include ] Signed-off-by: Gerd Hoffmann <kraxel@redhat.com>
2021-05-25 21:14:34 +03:00
kbd_safe_update_irq(s);
break;
case KBD_CCMD_READ_INPORT:
kbd_queue(s, 0x80, 0);
break;
case KBD_CCMD_READ_OUTPORT:
kbd_queue(s, s->outport, 0);
break;
case KBD_CCMD_ENABLE_A20:
qemu_irq_raise(s->a20_out);
s->outport |= KBD_OUT_A20;
break;
case KBD_CCMD_DISABLE_A20:
qemu_irq_lower(s->a20_out);
s->outport &= ~KBD_OUT_A20;
break;
case KBD_CCMD_RESET:
qemu_system_reset_request(SHUTDOWN_CAUSE_GUEST_RESET);
break;
case KBD_CCMD_NO_OP:
/* ignore that */
break;
default:
qemu_log_mask(LOG_GUEST_ERROR,
"unsupported keyboard cmd=0x%02" PRIx64 "\n", val);
break;
}
}
static uint64_t kbd_read_data(void *opaque, hwaddr addr,
unsigned size)
{
KBDState *s = opaque;
if (s->status & KBD_STAT_OBF) {
pckbd: don't update OBF flags if KBD_STAT_OBF is set Don't update the OBF flags in the status register and the cor- responding IRQ lines if KBD_STAT_OBF is set. Otherwise this may change the PS/2 event type. If the guest ISR was already scheduled, the changed event type will be rather surprising for the guest. This fixes a mouse event stream corruption. To reproduce the problem start a FreeDOS 1.2 guest with -machine pc,accel=kvm and -display gtk. The KVM in-kernel irqchip has to be enabled. Now open a text file with edit.exe in the guest and hold down the cursor right key and at the same time move the mouse around. You will quickly notice erratic mouse movements and unexpected mouse clicks. A trace file shows the mouse event stream corruption. Guest rip 0xce93 (f000:ce93) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios mouse ISR, guest rip 0xceca (f000:ceca) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios keyboard ISR. qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971116: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 # gtk queues a mouse event qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971121: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971122: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971123: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971124: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971126: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971176: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x3d # KBD_STAT_OBF and KBD_STAT_MOUSE_OBF set, the mouse ISR will # read data from the PS/2 controller. qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971180: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971191: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x110c8d info 0 800000f6 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971191: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971193: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xce93 info 600048 0 # the mouse ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971231: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971238: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # gtk queues a keyboard event 0xe0 0x4d (key right) qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971257: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971262: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # ps2_read_data() deasserts and reasserts the keyboard IRQ qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971266: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0xe0 kbd # -> the mouse ISR receives keyboard data qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971268: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xce95 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971269: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe828 info a00040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971270: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC slave pin 12 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971270: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82a qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe82a info 200040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC master pin 2 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971271: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82c qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971272: kvm_exit: reason PENDING_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971273: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971274: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971275: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x1d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971276: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971277: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xceca info 600048 0 # the keyboard ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971279: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971282: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0x4d kbd # the keyboard ISR receives the second byte of the keyboard event Signed-off-by: Volker Rümelin <vr_qemu@t-online.de> Message-Id: <20210525181441.27768-5-vr_qemu@t-online.de> [ kraxel: add missing include ] Signed-off-by: Gerd Hoffmann <kraxel@redhat.com>
2021-05-25 21:14:34 +03:00
kbd_deassert_irq(s);
if (s->obsrc & KBD_OBSRC_KBD) {
if (s->throttle_timer) {
timer_mod(s->throttle_timer,
qemu_clock_get_us(QEMU_CLOCK_VIRTUAL) + 1000);
}
pckbd: don't update OBF flags if KBD_STAT_OBF is set Don't update the OBF flags in the status register and the cor- responding IRQ lines if KBD_STAT_OBF is set. Otherwise this may change the PS/2 event type. If the guest ISR was already scheduled, the changed event type will be rather surprising for the guest. This fixes a mouse event stream corruption. To reproduce the problem start a FreeDOS 1.2 guest with -machine pc,accel=kvm and -display gtk. The KVM in-kernel irqchip has to be enabled. Now open a text file with edit.exe in the guest and hold down the cursor right key and at the same time move the mouse around. You will quickly notice erratic mouse movements and unexpected mouse clicks. A trace file shows the mouse event stream corruption. Guest rip 0xce93 (f000:ce93) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios mouse ISR, guest rip 0xceca (f000:ceca) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios keyboard ISR. qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971116: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 # gtk queues a mouse event qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971121: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971122: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971123: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971124: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971126: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971176: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x3d # KBD_STAT_OBF and KBD_STAT_MOUSE_OBF set, the mouse ISR will # read data from the PS/2 controller. qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971180: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971191: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x110c8d info 0 800000f6 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971191: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971193: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xce93 info 600048 0 # the mouse ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971231: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971238: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # gtk queues a keyboard event 0xe0 0x4d (key right) qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971257: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971262: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # ps2_read_data() deasserts and reasserts the keyboard IRQ qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971266: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0xe0 kbd # -> the mouse ISR receives keyboard data qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971268: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xce95 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971269: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe828 info a00040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971270: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC slave pin 12 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971270: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82a qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe82a info 200040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC master pin 2 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971271: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82c qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971272: kvm_exit: reason PENDING_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971273: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971274: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971275: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x1d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971276: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971277: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xceca info 600048 0 # the keyboard ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971279: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971282: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0x4d kbd # the keyboard ISR receives the second byte of the keyboard event Signed-off-by: Volker Rümelin <vr_qemu@t-online.de> Message-Id: <20210525181441.27768-5-vr_qemu@t-online.de> [ kraxel: add missing include ] Signed-off-by: Gerd Hoffmann <kraxel@redhat.com>
2021-05-25 21:14:34 +03:00
s->obdata = ps2_read_data(s->kbd);
} else if (s->obsrc & KBD_OBSRC_MOUSE) {
s->obdata = ps2_read_data(s->mouse);
} else if (s->obsrc & KBD_OBSRC_CTRL) {
s->obdata = kbd_dequeue(s);
pckbd: don't update OBF flags if KBD_STAT_OBF is set Don't update the OBF flags in the status register and the cor- responding IRQ lines if KBD_STAT_OBF is set. Otherwise this may change the PS/2 event type. If the guest ISR was already scheduled, the changed event type will be rather surprising for the guest. This fixes a mouse event stream corruption. To reproduce the problem start a FreeDOS 1.2 guest with -machine pc,accel=kvm and -display gtk. The KVM in-kernel irqchip has to be enabled. Now open a text file with edit.exe in the guest and hold down the cursor right key and at the same time move the mouse around. You will quickly notice erratic mouse movements and unexpected mouse clicks. A trace file shows the mouse event stream corruption. Guest rip 0xce93 (f000:ce93) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios mouse ISR, guest rip 0xceca (f000:ceca) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios keyboard ISR. qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971116: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 # gtk queues a mouse event qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971121: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971122: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971123: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971124: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971126: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971176: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x3d # KBD_STAT_OBF and KBD_STAT_MOUSE_OBF set, the mouse ISR will # read data from the PS/2 controller. qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971180: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971191: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x110c8d info 0 800000f6 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971191: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971193: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xce93 info 600048 0 # the mouse ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971231: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971238: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # gtk queues a keyboard event 0xe0 0x4d (key right) qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971257: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971262: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # ps2_read_data() deasserts and reasserts the keyboard IRQ qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971266: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0xe0 kbd # -> the mouse ISR receives keyboard data qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971268: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xce95 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971269: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe828 info a00040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971270: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC slave pin 12 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971270: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82a qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe82a info 200040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC master pin 2 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971271: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82c qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971272: kvm_exit: reason PENDING_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971273: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971274: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971275: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x1d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971276: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971277: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xceca info 600048 0 # the keyboard ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971279: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971282: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0x4d kbd # the keyboard ISR receives the second byte of the keyboard event Signed-off-by: Volker Rümelin <vr_qemu@t-online.de> Message-Id: <20210525181441.27768-5-vr_qemu@t-online.de> [ kraxel: add missing include ] Signed-off-by: Gerd Hoffmann <kraxel@redhat.com>
2021-05-25 21:14:34 +03:00
}
}
pckbd: don't update OBF flags if KBD_STAT_OBF is set Don't update the OBF flags in the status register and the cor- responding IRQ lines if KBD_STAT_OBF is set. Otherwise this may change the PS/2 event type. If the guest ISR was already scheduled, the changed event type will be rather surprising for the guest. This fixes a mouse event stream corruption. To reproduce the problem start a FreeDOS 1.2 guest with -machine pc,accel=kvm and -display gtk. The KVM in-kernel irqchip has to be enabled. Now open a text file with edit.exe in the guest and hold down the cursor right key and at the same time move the mouse around. You will quickly notice erratic mouse movements and unexpected mouse clicks. A trace file shows the mouse event stream corruption. Guest rip 0xce93 (f000:ce93) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios mouse ISR, guest rip 0xceca (f000:ceca) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios keyboard ISR. qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971116: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 # gtk queues a mouse event qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971121: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971122: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971123: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971124: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971126: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971176: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x3d # KBD_STAT_OBF and KBD_STAT_MOUSE_OBF set, the mouse ISR will # read data from the PS/2 controller. qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971180: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971191: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x110c8d info 0 800000f6 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971191: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971193: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xce93 info 600048 0 # the mouse ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971231: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971238: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # gtk queues a keyboard event 0xe0 0x4d (key right) qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971257: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971262: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # ps2_read_data() deasserts and reasserts the keyboard IRQ qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971266: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0xe0 kbd # -> the mouse ISR receives keyboard data qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971268: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xce95 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971269: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe828 info a00040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971270: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC slave pin 12 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971270: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82a qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe82a info 200040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC master pin 2 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971271: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82c qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971272: kvm_exit: reason PENDING_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971273: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971274: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971275: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x1d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971276: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971277: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xceca info 600048 0 # the keyboard ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971279: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971282: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0x4d kbd # the keyboard ISR receives the second byte of the keyboard event Signed-off-by: Volker Rümelin <vr_qemu@t-online.de> Message-Id: <20210525181441.27768-5-vr_qemu@t-online.de> [ kraxel: add missing include ] Signed-off-by: Gerd Hoffmann <kraxel@redhat.com>
2021-05-25 21:14:34 +03:00
trace_pckbd_kbd_read_data(s->obdata);
return s->obdata;
}
static void kbd_write_data(void *opaque, hwaddr addr,
uint64_t val, unsigned size)
{
KBDState *s = opaque;
trace_pckbd_kbd_write_data(val);
switch (s->write_cmd) {
case 0:
ps2_write_keyboard(s->kbd, val);
/* sending data to the keyboard reenables PS/2 communication */
s->mode &= ~KBD_MODE_DISABLE_KBD;
kbd_safe_update_irq(s);
break;
case KBD_CCMD_WRITE_MODE:
s->mode = val;
ps2_keyboard_set_translation(s->kbd, (s->mode & KBD_MODE_KCC) != 0);
pckbd: don't update OBF flags if KBD_STAT_OBF is set Don't update the OBF flags in the status register and the cor- responding IRQ lines if KBD_STAT_OBF is set. Otherwise this may change the PS/2 event type. If the guest ISR was already scheduled, the changed event type will be rather surprising for the guest. This fixes a mouse event stream corruption. To reproduce the problem start a FreeDOS 1.2 guest with -machine pc,accel=kvm and -display gtk. The KVM in-kernel irqchip has to be enabled. Now open a text file with edit.exe in the guest and hold down the cursor right key and at the same time move the mouse around. You will quickly notice erratic mouse movements and unexpected mouse clicks. A trace file shows the mouse event stream corruption. Guest rip 0xce93 (f000:ce93) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios mouse ISR, guest rip 0xceca (f000:ceca) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios keyboard ISR. qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971116: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 # gtk queues a mouse event qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971121: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971122: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971123: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971124: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971126: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971176: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x3d # KBD_STAT_OBF and KBD_STAT_MOUSE_OBF set, the mouse ISR will # read data from the PS/2 controller. qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971180: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971191: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x110c8d info 0 800000f6 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971191: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971193: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xce93 info 600048 0 # the mouse ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971231: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971238: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # gtk queues a keyboard event 0xe0 0x4d (key right) qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971257: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971262: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # ps2_read_data() deasserts and reasserts the keyboard IRQ qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971266: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0xe0 kbd # -> the mouse ISR receives keyboard data qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971268: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xce95 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971269: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe828 info a00040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971270: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC slave pin 12 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971270: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82a qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe82a info 200040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC master pin 2 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971271: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82c qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971272: kvm_exit: reason PENDING_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971273: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971274: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971275: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x1d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971276: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971277: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xceca info 600048 0 # the keyboard ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971279: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971282: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0x4d kbd # the keyboard ISR receives the second byte of the keyboard event Signed-off-by: Volker Rümelin <vr_qemu@t-online.de> Message-Id: <20210525181441.27768-5-vr_qemu@t-online.de> [ kraxel: add missing include ] Signed-off-by: Gerd Hoffmann <kraxel@redhat.com>
2021-05-25 21:14:34 +03:00
/*
* a write to the mode byte interrupt enable flags directly updates
* the irq lines
*/
kbd_update_irq_lines(s);
/*
* a write to the mode byte disable interface flags may raise
* an irq if there is pending data in the PS/2 queues.
*/
kbd_safe_update_irq(s);
break;
case KBD_CCMD_WRITE_OBUF:
kbd_queue(s, val, 0);
break;
case KBD_CCMD_WRITE_AUX_OBUF:
kbd_queue(s, val, 1);
break;
case KBD_CCMD_WRITE_OUTPORT:
outport_write(s, val);
break;
case KBD_CCMD_WRITE_MOUSE:
ps2_write_mouse(s->mouse, val);
/* sending data to the mouse reenables PS/2 communication */
s->mode &= ~KBD_MODE_DISABLE_MOUSE;
kbd_safe_update_irq(s);
break;
default:
break;
}
s->write_cmd = 0;
}
static void kbd_reset(void *opaque)
{
KBDState *s = opaque;
s->mode = KBD_MODE_KBD_INT | KBD_MODE_MOUSE_INT;
s->status = KBD_STAT_CMD | KBD_STAT_UNLOCKED;
s->outport = KBD_OUT_RESET | KBD_OUT_A20 | KBD_OUT_ONES;
pckbd: don't update OBF flags if KBD_STAT_OBF is set Don't update the OBF flags in the status register and the cor- responding IRQ lines if KBD_STAT_OBF is set. Otherwise this may change the PS/2 event type. If the guest ISR was already scheduled, the changed event type will be rather surprising for the guest. This fixes a mouse event stream corruption. To reproduce the problem start a FreeDOS 1.2 guest with -machine pc,accel=kvm and -display gtk. The KVM in-kernel irqchip has to be enabled. Now open a text file with edit.exe in the guest and hold down the cursor right key and at the same time move the mouse around. You will quickly notice erratic mouse movements and unexpected mouse clicks. A trace file shows the mouse event stream corruption. Guest rip 0xce93 (f000:ce93) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios mouse ISR, guest rip 0xceca (f000:ceca) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios keyboard ISR. qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971116: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 # gtk queues a mouse event qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971121: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971122: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971123: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971124: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971126: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971176: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x3d # KBD_STAT_OBF and KBD_STAT_MOUSE_OBF set, the mouse ISR will # read data from the PS/2 controller. qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971180: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971191: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x110c8d info 0 800000f6 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971191: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971193: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xce93 info 600048 0 # the mouse ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971231: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971238: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # gtk queues a keyboard event 0xe0 0x4d (key right) qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971257: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971262: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # ps2_read_data() deasserts and reasserts the keyboard IRQ qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971266: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0xe0 kbd # -> the mouse ISR receives keyboard data qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971268: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xce95 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971269: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe828 info a00040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971270: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC slave pin 12 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971270: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82a qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe82a info 200040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC master pin 2 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971271: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82c qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971272: kvm_exit: reason PENDING_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971273: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971274: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971275: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x1d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971276: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971277: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xceca info 600048 0 # the keyboard ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971279: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971282: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0x4d kbd # the keyboard ISR receives the second byte of the keyboard event Signed-off-by: Volker Rümelin <vr_qemu@t-online.de> Message-Id: <20210525181441.27768-5-vr_qemu@t-online.de> [ kraxel: add missing include ] Signed-off-by: Gerd Hoffmann <kraxel@redhat.com>
2021-05-25 21:14:34 +03:00
s->pending = 0;
kbd_deassert_irq(s);
if (s->throttle_timer) {
timer_del(s->throttle_timer);
}
}
static uint8_t kbd_outport_default(KBDState *s)
{
return KBD_OUT_RESET | KBD_OUT_A20 | KBD_OUT_ONES
| (s->status & KBD_STAT_OBF ? KBD_OUT_OBF : 0)
| (s->status & KBD_STAT_MOUSE_OBF ? KBD_OUT_MOUSE_OBF : 0);
}
static int kbd_outport_post_load(void *opaque, int version_id)
{
KBDState *s = opaque;
s->outport_present = true;
return 0;
}
static bool kbd_outport_needed(void *opaque)
{
KBDState *s = opaque;
return s->outport != kbd_outport_default(s);
}
static const VMStateDescription vmstate_kbd_outport = {
.name = "pckbd_outport",
.version_id = 1,
.minimum_version_id = 1,
.post_load = kbd_outport_post_load,
.needed = kbd_outport_needed,
.fields = (VMStateField[]) {
VMSTATE_UINT8(outport, KBDState),
VMSTATE_END_OF_LIST()
}
};
static int kbd_extended_state_pre_save(void *opaque)
{
KBDState *s = opaque;
s->migration_flags = 0;
if (s->throttle_timer && timer_pending(s->throttle_timer)) {
s->migration_flags |= KBD_MIGR_TIMER_PENDING;
}
return 0;
}
static int kbd_extended_state_post_load(void *opaque, int version_id)
{
KBDState *s = opaque;
if (s->migration_flags & KBD_MIGR_TIMER_PENDING) {
kbd_throttle_timeout(s);
}
s->extended_state_loaded = true;
return 0;
}
pckbd: don't update OBF flags if KBD_STAT_OBF is set Don't update the OBF flags in the status register and the cor- responding IRQ lines if KBD_STAT_OBF is set. Otherwise this may change the PS/2 event type. If the guest ISR was already scheduled, the changed event type will be rather surprising for the guest. This fixes a mouse event stream corruption. To reproduce the problem start a FreeDOS 1.2 guest with -machine pc,accel=kvm and -display gtk. The KVM in-kernel irqchip has to be enabled. Now open a text file with edit.exe in the guest and hold down the cursor right key and at the same time move the mouse around. You will quickly notice erratic mouse movements and unexpected mouse clicks. A trace file shows the mouse event stream corruption. Guest rip 0xce93 (f000:ce93) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios mouse ISR, guest rip 0xceca (f000:ceca) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios keyboard ISR. qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971116: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 # gtk queues a mouse event qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971121: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971122: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971123: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971124: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971126: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971176: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x3d # KBD_STAT_OBF and KBD_STAT_MOUSE_OBF set, the mouse ISR will # read data from the PS/2 controller. qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971180: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971191: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x110c8d info 0 800000f6 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971191: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971193: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xce93 info 600048 0 # the mouse ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971231: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971238: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # gtk queues a keyboard event 0xe0 0x4d (key right) qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971257: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971262: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # ps2_read_data() deasserts and reasserts the keyboard IRQ qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971266: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0xe0 kbd # -> the mouse ISR receives keyboard data qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971268: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xce95 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971269: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe828 info a00040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971270: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC slave pin 12 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971270: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82a qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe82a info 200040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC master pin 2 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971271: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82c qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971272: kvm_exit: reason PENDING_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971273: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971274: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971275: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x1d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971276: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971277: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xceca info 600048 0 # the keyboard ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971279: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971282: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0x4d kbd # the keyboard ISR receives the second byte of the keyboard event Signed-off-by: Volker Rümelin <vr_qemu@t-online.de> Message-Id: <20210525181441.27768-5-vr_qemu@t-online.de> [ kraxel: add missing include ] Signed-off-by: Gerd Hoffmann <kraxel@redhat.com>
2021-05-25 21:14:34 +03:00
static bool kbd_extended_state_needed(void *opaque)
{
KBDState *s = opaque;
return s->extended_state;
}
static const VMStateDescription vmstate_kbd_extended_state = {
.name = "pckbd/extended_state",
.post_load = kbd_extended_state_post_load,
.pre_save = kbd_extended_state_pre_save,
pckbd: don't update OBF flags if KBD_STAT_OBF is set Don't update the OBF flags in the status register and the cor- responding IRQ lines if KBD_STAT_OBF is set. Otherwise this may change the PS/2 event type. If the guest ISR was already scheduled, the changed event type will be rather surprising for the guest. This fixes a mouse event stream corruption. To reproduce the problem start a FreeDOS 1.2 guest with -machine pc,accel=kvm and -display gtk. The KVM in-kernel irqchip has to be enabled. Now open a text file with edit.exe in the guest and hold down the cursor right key and at the same time move the mouse around. You will quickly notice erratic mouse movements and unexpected mouse clicks. A trace file shows the mouse event stream corruption. Guest rip 0xce93 (f000:ce93) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios mouse ISR, guest rip 0xceca (f000:ceca) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios keyboard ISR. qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971116: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 # gtk queues a mouse event qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971121: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971122: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971123: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971124: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971126: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971176: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x3d # KBD_STAT_OBF and KBD_STAT_MOUSE_OBF set, the mouse ISR will # read data from the PS/2 controller. qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971180: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971191: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x110c8d info 0 800000f6 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971191: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971193: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xce93 info 600048 0 # the mouse ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971231: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971238: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # gtk queues a keyboard event 0xe0 0x4d (key right) qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971257: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971262: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # ps2_read_data() deasserts and reasserts the keyboard IRQ qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971266: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0xe0 kbd # -> the mouse ISR receives keyboard data qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971268: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xce95 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971269: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe828 info a00040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971270: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC slave pin 12 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971270: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82a qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe82a info 200040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC master pin 2 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971271: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82c qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971272: kvm_exit: reason PENDING_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971273: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971274: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971275: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x1d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971276: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971277: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xceca info 600048 0 # the keyboard ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971279: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971282: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0x4d kbd # the keyboard ISR receives the second byte of the keyboard event Signed-off-by: Volker Rümelin <vr_qemu@t-online.de> Message-Id: <20210525181441.27768-5-vr_qemu@t-online.de> [ kraxel: add missing include ] Signed-off-by: Gerd Hoffmann <kraxel@redhat.com>
2021-05-25 21:14:34 +03:00
.needed = kbd_extended_state_needed,
.fields = (VMStateField[]) {
VMSTATE_UINT32(migration_flags, KBDState),
VMSTATE_UINT32(obsrc, KBDState),
pckbd: don't update OBF flags if KBD_STAT_OBF is set Don't update the OBF flags in the status register and the cor- responding IRQ lines if KBD_STAT_OBF is set. Otherwise this may change the PS/2 event type. If the guest ISR was already scheduled, the changed event type will be rather surprising for the guest. This fixes a mouse event stream corruption. To reproduce the problem start a FreeDOS 1.2 guest with -machine pc,accel=kvm and -display gtk. The KVM in-kernel irqchip has to be enabled. Now open a text file with edit.exe in the guest and hold down the cursor right key and at the same time move the mouse around. You will quickly notice erratic mouse movements and unexpected mouse clicks. A trace file shows the mouse event stream corruption. Guest rip 0xce93 (f000:ce93) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios mouse ISR, guest rip 0xceca (f000:ceca) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios keyboard ISR. qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971116: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 # gtk queues a mouse event qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971121: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971122: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971123: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971124: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971126: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971176: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x3d # KBD_STAT_OBF and KBD_STAT_MOUSE_OBF set, the mouse ISR will # read data from the PS/2 controller. qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971180: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971191: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x110c8d info 0 800000f6 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971191: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971193: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xce93 info 600048 0 # the mouse ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971231: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971238: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # gtk queues a keyboard event 0xe0 0x4d (key right) qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971257: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971262: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # ps2_read_data() deasserts and reasserts the keyboard IRQ qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971266: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0xe0 kbd # -> the mouse ISR receives keyboard data qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971268: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xce95 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971269: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe828 info a00040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971270: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC slave pin 12 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971270: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82a qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe82a info 200040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC master pin 2 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971271: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82c qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971272: kvm_exit: reason PENDING_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971273: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971274: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971275: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x1d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971276: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971277: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xceca info 600048 0 # the keyboard ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971279: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971282: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0x4d kbd # the keyboard ISR receives the second byte of the keyboard event Signed-off-by: Volker Rümelin <vr_qemu@t-online.de> Message-Id: <20210525181441.27768-5-vr_qemu@t-online.de> [ kraxel: add missing include ] Signed-off-by: Gerd Hoffmann <kraxel@redhat.com>
2021-05-25 21:14:34 +03:00
VMSTATE_UINT8(obdata, KBDState),
VMSTATE_UINT8(cbdata, KBDState),
pckbd: don't update OBF flags if KBD_STAT_OBF is set Don't update the OBF flags in the status register and the cor- responding IRQ lines if KBD_STAT_OBF is set. Otherwise this may change the PS/2 event type. If the guest ISR was already scheduled, the changed event type will be rather surprising for the guest. This fixes a mouse event stream corruption. To reproduce the problem start a FreeDOS 1.2 guest with -machine pc,accel=kvm and -display gtk. The KVM in-kernel irqchip has to be enabled. Now open a text file with edit.exe in the guest and hold down the cursor right key and at the same time move the mouse around. You will quickly notice erratic mouse movements and unexpected mouse clicks. A trace file shows the mouse event stream corruption. Guest rip 0xce93 (f000:ce93) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios mouse ISR, guest rip 0xceca (f000:ceca) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios keyboard ISR. qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971116: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 # gtk queues a mouse event qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971121: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971122: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971123: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971124: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971126: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971176: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x3d # KBD_STAT_OBF and KBD_STAT_MOUSE_OBF set, the mouse ISR will # read data from the PS/2 controller. qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971180: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971191: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x110c8d info 0 800000f6 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971191: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971193: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xce93 info 600048 0 # the mouse ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971231: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971238: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # gtk queues a keyboard event 0xe0 0x4d (key right) qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971257: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971262: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # ps2_read_data() deasserts and reasserts the keyboard IRQ qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971266: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0xe0 kbd # -> the mouse ISR receives keyboard data qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971268: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xce95 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971269: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe828 info a00040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971270: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC slave pin 12 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971270: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82a qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe82a info 200040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC master pin 2 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971271: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82c qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971272: kvm_exit: reason PENDING_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971273: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971274: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971275: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x1d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971276: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971277: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xceca info 600048 0 # the keyboard ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971279: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971282: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0x4d kbd # the keyboard ISR receives the second byte of the keyboard event Signed-off-by: Volker Rümelin <vr_qemu@t-online.de> Message-Id: <20210525181441.27768-5-vr_qemu@t-online.de> [ kraxel: add missing include ] Signed-off-by: Gerd Hoffmann <kraxel@redhat.com>
2021-05-25 21:14:34 +03:00
VMSTATE_END_OF_LIST()
}
};
static int kbd_pre_save(void *opaque)
{
KBDState *s = opaque;
if (s->extended_state) {
s->pending_tmp = s->pending;
} else {
s->pending_tmp = 0;
if (s->pending & KBD_PENDING_KBD) {
s->pending_tmp |= KBD_PENDING_KBD_COMPAT;
}
if (s->pending & KBD_PENDING_AUX) {
s->pending_tmp |= KBD_PENDING_AUX_COMPAT;
}
}
return 0;
}
static int kbd_pre_load(void *opaque)
{
KBDState *s = opaque;
s->outport_present = false;
s->extended_state_loaded = false;
return 0;
}
static int kbd_post_load(void *opaque, int version_id)
{
KBDState *s = opaque;
if (!s->outport_present) {
s->outport = kbd_outport_default(s);
}
s->pending = s->pending_tmp;
if (!s->extended_state_loaded) {
s->obsrc = s->status & KBD_STAT_OBF ?
(s->status & KBD_STAT_MOUSE_OBF ? KBD_OBSRC_MOUSE : KBD_OBSRC_KBD) :
0;
if (s->pending & KBD_PENDING_KBD_COMPAT) {
s->pending |= KBD_PENDING_KBD;
}
if (s->pending & KBD_PENDING_AUX_COMPAT) {
s->pending |= KBD_PENDING_AUX;
}
}
/* clear all unused flags */
s->pending &= KBD_PENDING_CTRL_KBD | KBD_PENDING_CTRL_AUX |
KBD_PENDING_KBD | KBD_PENDING_AUX;
return 0;
}
static const VMStateDescription vmstate_kbd = {
.name = "pckbd",
.version_id = 3,
.minimum_version_id = 3,
.pre_load = kbd_pre_load,
.post_load = kbd_post_load,
.pre_save = kbd_pre_save,
.fields = (VMStateField[]) {
VMSTATE_UINT8(write_cmd, KBDState),
VMSTATE_UINT8(status, KBDState),
VMSTATE_UINT8(mode, KBDState),
VMSTATE_UINT8(pending_tmp, KBDState),
VMSTATE_END_OF_LIST()
},
.subsections = (const VMStateDescription * []) {
&vmstate_kbd_outport,
pckbd: don't update OBF flags if KBD_STAT_OBF is set Don't update the OBF flags in the status register and the cor- responding IRQ lines if KBD_STAT_OBF is set. Otherwise this may change the PS/2 event type. If the guest ISR was already scheduled, the changed event type will be rather surprising for the guest. This fixes a mouse event stream corruption. To reproduce the problem start a FreeDOS 1.2 guest with -machine pc,accel=kvm and -display gtk. The KVM in-kernel irqchip has to be enabled. Now open a text file with edit.exe in the guest and hold down the cursor right key and at the same time move the mouse around. You will quickly notice erratic mouse movements and unexpected mouse clicks. A trace file shows the mouse event stream corruption. Guest rip 0xce93 (f000:ce93) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios mouse ISR, guest rip 0xceca (f000:ceca) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios keyboard ISR. qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971116: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 # gtk queues a mouse event qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971121: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971122: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971123: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971124: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971126: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971176: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x3d # KBD_STAT_OBF and KBD_STAT_MOUSE_OBF set, the mouse ISR will # read data from the PS/2 controller. qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971180: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971191: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x110c8d info 0 800000f6 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971191: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971193: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xce93 info 600048 0 # the mouse ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971231: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971238: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # gtk queues a keyboard event 0xe0 0x4d (key right) qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971257: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971262: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # ps2_read_data() deasserts and reasserts the keyboard IRQ qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971266: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0xe0 kbd # -> the mouse ISR receives keyboard data qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971268: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xce95 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971269: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe828 info a00040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971270: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC slave pin 12 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971270: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82a qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe82a info 200040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC master pin 2 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971271: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82c qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971272: kvm_exit: reason PENDING_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971273: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971274: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971275: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x1d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971276: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971277: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xceca info 600048 0 # the keyboard ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971279: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971282: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0x4d kbd # the keyboard ISR receives the second byte of the keyboard event Signed-off-by: Volker Rümelin <vr_qemu@t-online.de> Message-Id: <20210525181441.27768-5-vr_qemu@t-online.de> [ kraxel: add missing include ] Signed-off-by: Gerd Hoffmann <kraxel@redhat.com>
2021-05-25 21:14:34 +03:00
&vmstate_kbd_extended_state,
NULL
}
};
/* Memory mapped interface */
static uint64_t kbd_mm_readfn(void *opaque, hwaddr addr, unsigned size)
{
KBDState *s = opaque;
if (addr & s->mask) {
return kbd_read_status(s, 0, 1) & 0xff;
} else {
return kbd_read_data(s, 0, 1) & 0xff;
}
}
static void kbd_mm_writefn(void *opaque, hwaddr addr,
uint64_t value, unsigned size)
{
KBDState *s = opaque;
if (addr & s->mask) {
kbd_write_command(s, 0, value & 0xff, 1);
} else {
kbd_write_data(s, 0, value & 0xff, 1);
}
}
static const MemoryRegionOps i8042_mmio_ops = {
.read = kbd_mm_readfn,
.write = kbd_mm_writefn,
.valid.min_access_size = 1,
.valid.max_access_size = 4,
.endianness = DEVICE_NATIVE_ENDIAN,
};
static void i8042_mmio_class_init(ObjectClass *klass, void *data)
{
DeviceClass *dc = DEVICE_CLASS(klass);
set_bit(DEVICE_CATEGORY_INPUT, dc->categories);
}
void i8042_mm_init(qemu_irq kbd_irq, qemu_irq mouse_irq,
MemoryRegion *region, ram_addr_t size,
hwaddr mask)
{
DeviceState *dev;
KBDState *s;
dev = qdev_new(TYPE_I8042_MMIO);
sysbus_realize_and_unref(SYS_BUS_DEVICE(dev), &error_fatal);
s = &I8042_MMIO(dev)->kbd;
s->irq_kbd = kbd_irq;
s->irq_mouse = mouse_irq;
s->mask = mask;
pckbd: don't update OBF flags if KBD_STAT_OBF is set Don't update the OBF flags in the status register and the cor- responding IRQ lines if KBD_STAT_OBF is set. Otherwise this may change the PS/2 event type. If the guest ISR was already scheduled, the changed event type will be rather surprising for the guest. This fixes a mouse event stream corruption. To reproduce the problem start a FreeDOS 1.2 guest with -machine pc,accel=kvm and -display gtk. The KVM in-kernel irqchip has to be enabled. Now open a text file with edit.exe in the guest and hold down the cursor right key and at the same time move the mouse around. You will quickly notice erratic mouse movements and unexpected mouse clicks. A trace file shows the mouse event stream corruption. Guest rip 0xce93 (f000:ce93) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios mouse ISR, guest rip 0xceca (f000:ceca) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios keyboard ISR. qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971116: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 # gtk queues a mouse event qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971121: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971122: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971123: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971124: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971126: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971176: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x3d # KBD_STAT_OBF and KBD_STAT_MOUSE_OBF set, the mouse ISR will # read data from the PS/2 controller. qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971180: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971191: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x110c8d info 0 800000f6 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971191: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971193: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xce93 info 600048 0 # the mouse ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971231: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971238: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # gtk queues a keyboard event 0xe0 0x4d (key right) qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971257: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971262: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # ps2_read_data() deasserts and reasserts the keyboard IRQ qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971266: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0xe0 kbd # -> the mouse ISR receives keyboard data qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971268: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xce95 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971269: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe828 info a00040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971270: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC slave pin 12 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971270: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82a qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe82a info 200040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC master pin 2 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971271: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82c qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971272: kvm_exit: reason PENDING_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971273: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971274: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971275: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x1d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971276: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971277: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xceca info 600048 0 # the keyboard ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971279: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971282: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0x4d kbd # the keyboard ISR receives the second byte of the keyboard event Signed-off-by: Volker Rümelin <vr_qemu@t-online.de> Message-Id: <20210525181441.27768-5-vr_qemu@t-online.de> [ kraxel: add missing include ] Signed-off-by: Gerd Hoffmann <kraxel@redhat.com>
2021-05-25 21:14:34 +03:00
s->extended_state = true;
vmstate_register(NULL, 0, &vmstate_kbd, s);
memory_region_init_io(region, NULL, &i8042_mmio_ops, s, "i8042", size);
s->kbd = ps2_kbd_init(kbd_update_kbd_irq, s);
s->mouse = ps2_mouse_init(kbd_update_aux_irq, s);
qemu_register_reset(kbd_reset, s);
}
static const TypeInfo i8042_mmio_info = {
.name = TYPE_I8042_MMIO,
.parent = TYPE_SYS_BUS_DEVICE,
.instance_size = sizeof(MMIOKBDState),
.class_init = i8042_mmio_class_init
};
void i8042_isa_mouse_fake_event(ISAKBDState *isa)
{
KBDState *s = &isa->kbd;
ps2_mouse_fake_event(s->mouse);
}
void i8042_setup_a20_line(ISADevice *dev, qemu_irq a20_out)
{
qdev_connect_gpio_out_named(DEVICE(dev), I8042_A20_LINE, 0, a20_out);
}
static const VMStateDescription vmstate_kbd_isa = {
.name = "pckbd",
.version_id = 3,
.minimum_version_id = 3,
.fields = (VMStateField[]) {
VMSTATE_STRUCT(kbd, ISAKBDState, 0, vmstate_kbd, KBDState),
VMSTATE_END_OF_LIST()
}
};
static const MemoryRegionOps i8042_data_ops = {
.read = kbd_read_data,
.write = kbd_write_data,
.impl = {
.min_access_size = 1,
.max_access_size = 1,
},
.endianness = DEVICE_LITTLE_ENDIAN,
};
static const MemoryRegionOps i8042_cmd_ops = {
.read = kbd_read_status,
.write = kbd_write_command,
.impl = {
.min_access_size = 1,
.max_access_size = 1,
},
.endianness = DEVICE_LITTLE_ENDIAN,
};
static void i8042_initfn(Object *obj)
{
ISAKBDState *isa_s = I8042(obj);
KBDState *s = &isa_s->kbd;
memory_region_init_io(isa_s->io + 0, obj, &i8042_data_ops, s,
"i8042-data", 1);
memory_region_init_io(isa_s->io + 1, obj, &i8042_cmd_ops, s,
"i8042-cmd", 1);
qdev_init_gpio_out_named(DEVICE(obj), &s->a20_out, I8042_A20_LINE, 1);
}
static void i8042_realizefn(DeviceState *dev, Error **errp)
{
ISADevice *isadev = ISA_DEVICE(dev);
ISAKBDState *isa_s = I8042(dev);
KBDState *s = &isa_s->kbd;
if (isa_s->kbd_irq >= ISA_NUM_IRQS) {
error_setg(errp, "Maximum value for \"kbd-irq\" is: %u",
ISA_NUM_IRQS - 1);
return;
}
if (isa_s->mouse_irq >= ISA_NUM_IRQS) {
error_setg(errp, "Maximum value for \"mouse-irq\" is: %u",
ISA_NUM_IRQS - 1);
return;
}
s->irq_kbd = isa_get_irq(isadev, isa_s->kbd_irq);
s->irq_mouse = isa_get_irq(isadev, isa_s->mouse_irq);
isa_register_ioport(isadev, isa_s->io + 0, 0x60);
isa_register_ioport(isadev, isa_s->io + 1, 0x64);
s->kbd = ps2_kbd_init(kbd_update_kbd_irq, s);
s->mouse = ps2_mouse_init(kbd_update_aux_irq, s);
if (isa_s->kbd_throttle && !isa_s->kbd.extended_state) {
warn_report(TYPE_I8042 ": can't enable kbd-throttle without"
" extended-state, disabling kbd-throttle");
} else if (isa_s->kbd_throttle) {
s->throttle_timer = timer_new_us(QEMU_CLOCK_VIRTUAL,
kbd_throttle_timeout, s);
}
qemu_register_reset(kbd_reset, s);
}
static void i8042_build_aml(AcpiDevAmlIf *adev, Aml *scope)
{
ISAKBDState *isa_s = I8042(adev);
Aml *kbd;
Aml *mou;
Aml *crs;
crs = aml_resource_template();
aml_append(crs, aml_io(AML_DECODE16, 0x0060, 0x0060, 0x01, 0x01));
aml_append(crs, aml_io(AML_DECODE16, 0x0064, 0x0064, 0x01, 0x01));
aml_append(crs, aml_irq_no_flags(isa_s->kbd_irq));
kbd = aml_device("KBD");
aml_append(kbd, aml_name_decl("_HID", aml_eisaid("PNP0303")));
aml_append(kbd, aml_name_decl("_STA", aml_int(0xf)));
aml_append(kbd, aml_name_decl("_CRS", crs));
crs = aml_resource_template();
aml_append(crs, aml_irq_no_flags(isa_s->mouse_irq));
mou = aml_device("MOU");
aml_append(mou, aml_name_decl("_HID", aml_eisaid("PNP0F13")));
aml_append(mou, aml_name_decl("_STA", aml_int(0xf)));
aml_append(mou, aml_name_decl("_CRS", crs));
aml_append(scope, kbd);
aml_append(scope, mou);
}
pckbd: don't update OBF flags if KBD_STAT_OBF is set Don't update the OBF flags in the status register and the cor- responding IRQ lines if KBD_STAT_OBF is set. Otherwise this may change the PS/2 event type. If the guest ISR was already scheduled, the changed event type will be rather surprising for the guest. This fixes a mouse event stream corruption. To reproduce the problem start a FreeDOS 1.2 guest with -machine pc,accel=kvm and -display gtk. The KVM in-kernel irqchip has to be enabled. Now open a text file with edit.exe in the guest and hold down the cursor right key and at the same time move the mouse around. You will quickly notice erratic mouse movements and unexpected mouse clicks. A trace file shows the mouse event stream corruption. Guest rip 0xce93 (f000:ce93) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios mouse ISR, guest rip 0xceca (f000:ceca) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios keyboard ISR. qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971116: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 # gtk queues a mouse event qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971121: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971122: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971123: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971124: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971126: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971176: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x3d # KBD_STAT_OBF and KBD_STAT_MOUSE_OBF set, the mouse ISR will # read data from the PS/2 controller. qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971180: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971191: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x110c8d info 0 800000f6 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971191: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971193: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xce93 info 600048 0 # the mouse ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971231: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971238: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # gtk queues a keyboard event 0xe0 0x4d (key right) qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971257: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971262: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # ps2_read_data() deasserts and reasserts the keyboard IRQ qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971266: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0xe0 kbd # -> the mouse ISR receives keyboard data qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971268: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xce95 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971269: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe828 info a00040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971270: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC slave pin 12 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971270: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82a qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe82a info 200040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC master pin 2 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971271: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82c qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971272: kvm_exit: reason PENDING_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971273: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971274: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971275: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x1d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971276: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971277: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xceca info 600048 0 # the keyboard ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971279: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971282: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0x4d kbd # the keyboard ISR receives the second byte of the keyboard event Signed-off-by: Volker Rümelin <vr_qemu@t-online.de> Message-Id: <20210525181441.27768-5-vr_qemu@t-online.de> [ kraxel: add missing include ] Signed-off-by: Gerd Hoffmann <kraxel@redhat.com>
2021-05-25 21:14:34 +03:00
static Property i8042_properties[] = {
DEFINE_PROP_BOOL("extended-state", ISAKBDState, kbd.extended_state, true),
DEFINE_PROP_BOOL("kbd-throttle", ISAKBDState, kbd_throttle, false),
DEFINE_PROP_UINT8("kbd-irq", ISAKBDState, kbd_irq, 1),
DEFINE_PROP_UINT8("mouse-irq", ISAKBDState, mouse_irq, 12),
pckbd: don't update OBF flags if KBD_STAT_OBF is set Don't update the OBF flags in the status register and the cor- responding IRQ lines if KBD_STAT_OBF is set. Otherwise this may change the PS/2 event type. If the guest ISR was already scheduled, the changed event type will be rather surprising for the guest. This fixes a mouse event stream corruption. To reproduce the problem start a FreeDOS 1.2 guest with -machine pc,accel=kvm and -display gtk. The KVM in-kernel irqchip has to be enabled. Now open a text file with edit.exe in the guest and hold down the cursor right key and at the same time move the mouse around. You will quickly notice erratic mouse movements and unexpected mouse clicks. A trace file shows the mouse event stream corruption. Guest rip 0xce93 (f000:ce93) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios mouse ISR, guest rip 0xceca (f000:ceca) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios keyboard ISR. qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971116: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 # gtk queues a mouse event qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971121: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971122: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971123: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971124: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971126: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971176: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x3d # KBD_STAT_OBF and KBD_STAT_MOUSE_OBF set, the mouse ISR will # read data from the PS/2 controller. qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971180: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971191: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x110c8d info 0 800000f6 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971191: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971193: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xce93 info 600048 0 # the mouse ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971231: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971238: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # gtk queues a keyboard event 0xe0 0x4d (key right) qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971257: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971262: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # ps2_read_data() deasserts and reasserts the keyboard IRQ qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971266: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0xe0 kbd # -> the mouse ISR receives keyboard data qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971268: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xce95 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971269: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe828 info a00040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971270: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC slave pin 12 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971270: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82a qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe82a info 200040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC master pin 2 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971271: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82c qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971272: kvm_exit: reason PENDING_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971273: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971274: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971275: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x1d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971276: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971277: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xceca info 600048 0 # the keyboard ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971279: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971282: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0x4d kbd # the keyboard ISR receives the second byte of the keyboard event Signed-off-by: Volker Rümelin <vr_qemu@t-online.de> Message-Id: <20210525181441.27768-5-vr_qemu@t-online.de> [ kraxel: add missing include ] Signed-off-by: Gerd Hoffmann <kraxel@redhat.com>
2021-05-25 21:14:34 +03:00
DEFINE_PROP_END_OF_LIST(),
};
static void i8042_class_initfn(ObjectClass *klass, void *data)
{
DeviceClass *dc = DEVICE_CLASS(klass);
AcpiDevAmlIfClass *adevc = ACPI_DEV_AML_IF_CLASS(klass);
pckbd: don't update OBF flags if KBD_STAT_OBF is set Don't update the OBF flags in the status register and the cor- responding IRQ lines if KBD_STAT_OBF is set. Otherwise this may change the PS/2 event type. If the guest ISR was already scheduled, the changed event type will be rather surprising for the guest. This fixes a mouse event stream corruption. To reproduce the problem start a FreeDOS 1.2 guest with -machine pc,accel=kvm and -display gtk. The KVM in-kernel irqchip has to be enabled. Now open a text file with edit.exe in the guest and hold down the cursor right key and at the same time move the mouse around. You will quickly notice erratic mouse movements and unexpected mouse clicks. A trace file shows the mouse event stream corruption. Guest rip 0xce93 (f000:ce93) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios mouse ISR, guest rip 0xceca (f000:ceca) is the in al,0x60 instruction in the seabios keyboard ISR. qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971116: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 # gtk queues a mouse event qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971121: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971122: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971123: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 800000fd qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971124: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971126: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971176: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x3d # KBD_STAT_OBF and KBD_STAT_MOUSE_OBF set, the mouse ISR will # read data from the PS/2 controller. qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971180: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971191: kvm_exit: reason EXTERNAL_INTERRUPT rip 0x110c8d info 0 800000f6 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971191: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971193: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xce93 info 600048 0 # the mouse ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971231: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 qemu-system-x86-5659 [007] .... 280.971238: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # gtk queues a keyboard event 0xe0 0x4d (key right) qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971257: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971262: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=1 aux=0 # ps2_read_data() deasserts and reasserts the keyboard IRQ qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971266: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0xe0 kbd # -> the mouse ISR receives keyboard data qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971268: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xce95 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971269: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe828 info a00040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971270: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC slave pin 12 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971270: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82a qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xe82a info 200040 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971271: kvm_ack_irq: irqchip PIC master pin 2 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971271: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0xe82c qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971272: kvm_exit: reason PENDING_INTERRUPT rip 0x22da info 0 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971273: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x22da qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971274: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0x110c8c info 640008 0 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971275: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_status 0x1d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] d..1 280.971276: kvm_entry: vcpu 0, rip 0x110c8d qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971277: kvm_exit: reason IO_INSTRUCTION rip 0xceca info 600048 0 # the keyboard ISR wants to read data from the PS/2 controller qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971279: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_update_irq kbd=0 aux=1 qemu-system-x86-5665 [000] .... 280.971282: tracing_mark_write: pckbd_kbd_read_data 0x4d kbd # the keyboard ISR receives the second byte of the keyboard event Signed-off-by: Volker Rümelin <vr_qemu@t-online.de> Message-Id: <20210525181441.27768-5-vr_qemu@t-online.de> [ kraxel: add missing include ] Signed-off-by: Gerd Hoffmann <kraxel@redhat.com>
2021-05-25 21:14:34 +03:00
device_class_set_props(dc, i8042_properties);
dc->realize = i8042_realizefn;
dc->vmsd = &vmstate_kbd_isa;
adevc->build_dev_aml = i8042_build_aml;
set_bit(DEVICE_CATEGORY_INPUT, dc->categories);
}
static const TypeInfo i8042_info = {
.name = TYPE_I8042,
.parent = TYPE_ISA_DEVICE,
.instance_size = sizeof(ISAKBDState),
.instance_init = i8042_initfn,
.class_init = i8042_class_initfn,
.interfaces = (InterfaceInfo[]) {
{ TYPE_ACPI_DEV_AML_IF },
{ },
},
};
static void i8042_register_types(void)
{
type_register_static(&i8042_info);
type_register_static(&i8042_mmio_info);
}
type_init(i8042_register_types)