My name is Anthony Perard and I have been working on up-streaming Xen patches to the QEMU mainline. The good news is that the bulk of the changes for Xen are in the QEMU mainline as of yesterday.
Let me begin a year ago, when I started working on this project. The Xen codeline contained a fork of the QEMU code implementing a “xen” target within QEMU. The drawback of using a “xen” specific target within the QEMU source tree, was that lots of QEMU code had to be duplicated, in effect increasing the maintenance burden on the QEMU project. Unsurprisingly the code as it was, wasn’t acceptable.
Thus we embarked on a project to rewrite the Xen QEMU code. The goal was to add Xen support to QEMU with the goal to avoid code duplication. It has taken some time: but after several revisions of the patch series, the code has finally been accepted into the QEMU mainline. A lot of effort has been spent on ensuring the quality of the changes are very high straight from the outset. This is not the end of the road: some additional patches for PCI pass-through and support for VGA dirty bitmaps are still outstanding.
Xen support in QEMU will have advantages for the QEMU as well as the Xen community. First of all, the last year has brought the two communities closer together. Going forward we hope that there will be more collaboration and sharing of ideas. Of course for the Xen community there are also advantages using vanilla QEMU: we will have access to more functionality as it is developed, such as support for the Q35 chipset within QEMU, PCI express support, and others.
I am looking forward to working more on this in the future and also wanted to thank Alexander Graf for feedback and suggestions on QEMU patches.
Read more
New release marks significant enhancements in performance, security, and versatility across various architectures. SAN FRANCISCO – July 31st, 2024 – The Xen Project, an open source project under the Linux Foundation, is proud to announce the release of Xen Project 4.19. This release marks a significant milestone in enhancing performance, security,
Dear Xen Community, We regret to inform you that the Xen Project is currently experiencing unexpected changes due to the sudden shutdown of our colocated (colo) data center facility by Synoptek. This incident is beyond our control and will impact the continuity of OSSTest (the gating Xen Project CI loop)
Hello Xen Community! We have some thrilling news to share with you all. The highly anticipated talks from this year’s Xen Summit are now live on YouTube! Whether you attended the summit in person or couldn’t make it this time, you can now access all the insightful presentations
With less than 2 weeks to go, are you ready? The Xen Project is gearing up for a summit full of discussions, collaboration and innovation. If you haven’t already done so – get involved by submitting a design session topic. Don’t worry if you can’t attend in person,