| .. _device-emulation: |
| |
| Device Emulation |
| ---------------- |
| |
| QEMU supports the emulation of a large number of devices from |
| peripherals such network cards and USB devices to integrated systems |
| on a chip (SoCs). Configuration of these is often a source of |
| confusion so it helps to have an understanding of some of the terms |
| used to describes devices within QEMU. |
| |
| Common Terms |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Device Front End |
| ================ |
| |
| A device front end is how a device is presented to the guest. The type |
| of device presented should match the hardware that the guest operating |
| system is expecting to see. All devices can be specified with the |
| ``--device`` command line option. Running QEMU with the command line |
| options ``--device help`` will list all devices it is aware of. Using |
| the command line ``--device foo,help`` will list the additional |
| configuration options available for that device. |
| |
| A front end is often paired with a back end, which describes how the |
| host's resources are used in the emulation. |
| |
| Device Buses |
| ============ |
| |
| Most devices will exist on a BUS of some sort. Depending on the |
| machine model you choose (``-M foo``) a number of buses will have been |
| automatically created. In most cases the BUS a device is attached to |
| can be inferred, for example PCI devices are generally automatically |
| allocated to the next free address of first PCI bus found. However in |
| complicated configurations you can explicitly specify what bus |
| (``bus=ID``) a device is attached to along with its address |
| (``addr=N``). |
| |
| Some devices, for example a PCI SCSI host controller, will add an |
| additional buses to the system that other devices can be attached to. |
| A hypothetical chain of devices might look like: |
| |
| --device foo,bus=pci.0,addr=0,id=foo |
| --device bar,bus=foo.0,addr=1,id=baz |
| |
| which would be a bar device (with the ID of baz) which is attached to |
| the first foo bus (foo.0) at address 1. The foo device which provides |
| that bus is itself is attached to the first PCI bus (pci.0). |
| |
| |
| Device Back End |
| =============== |
| |
| The back end describes how the data from the emulated device will be |
| processed by QEMU. The configuration of the back end is usually |
| specific to the class of device being emulated. For example serial |
| devices will be backed by a ``--chardev`` which can redirect the data |
| to a file or socket or some other system. Storage devices are handled |
| by ``--blockdev`` which will specify how blocks are handled, for |
| example being stored in a qcow2 file or accessing a raw host disk |
| partition. Back ends can sometimes be stacked to implement features |
| like snapshots. |
| |
| While the choice of back end is generally transparent to the guest, |
| there are cases where features will not be reported to the guest if |
| the back end is unable to support it. |
| |
| Device Pass Through |
| =================== |
| |
| Device pass through is where the device is actually given access to |
| the underlying hardware. This can be as simple as exposing a single |
| USB device on the host system to the guest or dedicating a video card |
| in a PCI slot to the exclusive use of the guest. |
| |
| |
| Emulated Devices |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| .. toctree:: |
| :maxdepth: 1 |
| |
| devices/ivshmem.rst |
| devices/net.rst |
| devices/nvme.rst |
| devices/usb.rst |
| devices/vhost-user.rst |
| devices/virtio-pmem.rst |
| devices/vhost-user-rng.rst |