david/ipxe
Archived
1
0
My fork of git://git.ipxe.org/ipxe.git, it is used for my netboot environment at home.
This repository has been archived on 2020-12-06. You can view files and clone it, but cannot push or open issues or pull requests.
Go to file
Michael Brown 5a08b63cb7 [librm] Speed up protected-to-real mode transition under KVM
On an Intel CPU supporting VMX, KVM will emulate instructions while
the CPU state remains "invalid".  In real mode, the CPU state is
defined to be "invalid" if any segment register has a base which is
not equal to (sreg<<4) or a limit which is not equal to 64kB.

We don't actually use the base stored in the REAL_DS descriptor for
any significant purpose.  Change the base stored in this descriptor to
be equal to (REAL_DS<<4).  A segment register loaded with REAL_DS is
then automatically valid in both real and protected modes.  This
allows KVM to stop emulating instructions much sooner.

The only use of REAL_DS for memory accesses currently occurs in the
indirect ljmp within prot_to_real.  Change this to a direct ljmp,
storing rm_cs in .text16 as part of the ljmp instruction.  This
removes the only memory access via REAL_DS (thereby allowing for the
above descriptor base address hack), and also simplifies the ljmp
instruction (which will still have to be emulated).

Load the real-mode interrupt descriptor table register before
switching to real mode, since this avoids triggering an EXCEPTION_NMI
and corresponding VM exit.

This reduces the time taken by prot_to_real under KVM by around 65%.

Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
2014-05-02 15:23:20 +01:00
contrib [errdb] Strip platform error code for non-platform-generated errors 2013-04-29 15:36:32 +01:00
src [librm] Speed up protected-to-real mode transition under KVM 2014-05-02 15:23:20 +01:00
COPYING Initial revision 2005-05-17 16:44:57 +00:00
COPYRIGHTS [build] Rename gPXE to iPXE 2010-04-19 23:43:39 +01:00
README [doc] Re-add README file 2010-05-28 00:03:47 +01:00

iPXE README File

Quick start guide:

   cd src
   make

For any more detailed instructions, see http://ipxe.org