search for: level1_fixmap_pgt

Displaying 8 results from an estimated 8 matches for "level1_fixmap_pgt".

2007 Apr 30
2
[PATCH 0/12] Early USB debug port and i386 boot cleanups
Modern hardware relies primarily on memory mapped I/O which is typically at addresses that are not mapped by the kernels initial page tables, which makes using them currently unusable for early debugging print support. So this patch set digs in and fixes the early page tables on both arch/i386 and arch/x86_64 so that set_fixmap works with our initial boot page tables. All that is needed is that
2007 Apr 30
2
[PATCH 0/12] Early USB debug port and i386 boot cleanups
Modern hardware relies primarily on memory mapped I/O which is typically at addresses that are not mapped by the kernels initial page tables, which makes using them currently unusable for early debugging print support. So this patch set digs in and fixes the early page tables on both arch/i386 and arch/x86_64 so that set_fixmap works with our initial boot page tables. All that is needed is that
2020 Feb 11
83
[RFC PATCH 00/62] Linux as SEV-ES Guest Support
Hi, here is the first public post of the patch-set to enable Linux to run under SEV-ES enabled hypervisors. The code is mostly feature-complete, but there are still a couple of bugs to fix. Nevertheless, given the size of the patch-set, I think it is about time to ask for initial feedback of the changes that come with it. To better understand the code here is a quick explanation of SEV-ES first.
2020 Feb 11
83
[RFC PATCH 00/62] Linux as SEV-ES Guest Support
Hi, here is the first public post of the patch-set to enable Linux to run under SEV-ES enabled hypervisors. The code is mostly feature-complete, but there are still a couple of bugs to fix. Nevertheless, given the size of the patch-set, I think it is about time to ask for initial feedback of the changes that come with it. To better understand the code here is a quick explanation of SEV-ES first.
2020 Jul 14
92
[PATCH v4 00/75] x86: SEV-ES Guest Support
From: Joerg Roedel <jroedel at suse.de> Hi, here is the fourth version of the SEV-ES Guest Support patches. I addressed the review comments sent to me for the previous version and rebased the code v5.8-rc5. The biggest change in this version is the IST handling code for the #VC handler. I adapted the entry code for the #VC handler to the big pile of entry code changes merged into
2020 Jul 14
92
[PATCH v4 00/75] x86: SEV-ES Guest Support
From: Joerg Roedel <jroedel at suse.de> Hi, here is the fourth version of the SEV-ES Guest Support patches. I addressed the review comments sent to me for the previous version and rebased the code v5.8-rc5. The biggest change in this version is the IST handling code for the #VC handler. I adapted the entry code for the #VC handler to the big pile of entry code changes merged into
2020 Apr 28
116
[PATCH v3 00/75] x86: SEV-ES Guest Support
Hi, here is the next version of changes to enable Linux to run as an SEV-ES guest. The code was rebased to v5.7-rc3 and got a fair number of changes since the last version. What is SEV-ES ============== SEV-ES is an acronym for 'Secure Encrypted Virtualization - Encrypted State' and means a hardware feature of AMD processors which hides the register state of VCPUs to the hypervisor by
2020 Apr 28
116
[PATCH v3 00/75] x86: SEV-ES Guest Support
Hi, here is the next version of changes to enable Linux to run as an SEV-ES guest. The code was rebased to v5.7-rc3 and got a fair number of changes since the last version. What is SEV-ES ============== SEV-ES is an acronym for 'Secure Encrypted Virtualization - Encrypted State' and means a hardware feature of AMD processors which hides the register state of VCPUs to the hypervisor by