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Add documentation on how hibernation works in a guest VM on Hyper-V. Describe how VMBus devices and the VMBus itself are hibernated and resumed, along with various limitations. Signed-off-by: Michael Kelley <mhklinux@outlook.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20250113145645.1320942-1-mhklinux@outlook.com Signed-off-by: Wei Liu <wei.liu@kernel.org> Message-ID: <20250113145645.1320942-1-mhklinux@outlook.com>
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336 lines
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.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
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Hibernating Guest VMs
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=====================
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Background
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----------
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Linux supports the ability to hibernate itself in order to save power.
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Hibernation is sometimes called suspend-to-disk, as it writes a memory
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image to disk and puts the hardware into the lowest possible power
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state. Upon resume from hibernation, the hardware is restarted and the
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memory image is restored from disk so that it can resume execution
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where it left off. See the "Hibernation" section of
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Documentation/admin-guide/pm/sleep-states.rst.
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Hibernation is usually done on devices with a single user, such as a
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personal laptop. For example, the laptop goes into hibernation when
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the cover is closed, and resumes when the cover is opened again.
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Hibernation and resume happen on the same hardware, and Linux kernel
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code orchestrating the hibernation steps assumes that the hardware
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configuration is not changed while in the hibernated state.
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Hibernation can be initiated within Linux by writing "disk" to
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/sys/power/state or by invoking the reboot system call with the
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appropriate arguments. This functionality may be wrapped by user space
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commands such "systemctl hibernate" that are run directly from a
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command line or in response to events such as the laptop lid closing.
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Considerations for Guest VM Hibernation
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---------------------------------------
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Linux guests on Hyper-V can also be hibernated, in which case the
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hardware is the virtual hardware provided by Hyper-V to the guest VM.
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Only the targeted guest VM is hibernated, while other guest VMs and
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the underlying Hyper-V host continue to run normally. While the
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underlying Windows Hyper-V and physical hardware on which it is
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running might also be hibernated using hibernation functionality in
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the Windows host, host hibernation and its impact on guest VMs is not
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in scope for this documentation.
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Resuming a hibernated guest VM can be more challenging than with
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physical hardware because VMs make it very easy to change the hardware
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configuration between the hibernation and resume. Even when the resume
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is done on the same VM that hibernated, the memory size might be
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changed, or virtual NICs or SCSI controllers might be added or
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removed. Virtual PCI devices assigned to the VM might be added or
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removed. Most such changes cause the resume steps to fail, though
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adding a new virtual NIC, SCSI controller, or vPCI device should work.
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Additional complexity can ensue because the disks of the hibernated VM
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can be moved to another newly created VM that otherwise has the same
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virtual hardware configuration. While it is desirable for resume from
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hibernation to succeed after such a move, there are challenges. See
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details on this scenario and its limitations in the "Resuming on a
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Different VM" section below.
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Hyper-V also provides ways to move a VM from one Hyper-V host to
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another. Hyper-V tries to ensure processor model and Hyper-V version
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compatibility using VM Configuration Versions, and prevents moves to
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a host that isn't compatible. Linux adapts to host and processor
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differences by detecting them at boot time, but such detection is not
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done when resuming execution in the hibernation image. If a VM is
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hibernated on one host, then resumed on a host with a different processor
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model or Hyper-V version, settings recorded in the hibernation image
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may not match the new host. Because Linux does not detect such
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mismatches when resuming the hibernation image, undefined behavior
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and failures could result.
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Enabling Guest VM Hibernation
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-----------------------------
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Hibernation of a Hyper-V guest VM is disabled by default because
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hibernation is incompatible with memory hot-add, as provided by the
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Hyper-V balloon driver. If hot-add is used and the VM hibernates, it
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hibernates with more memory than it started with. But when the VM
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resumes from hibernation, Hyper-V gives the VM only the originally
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assigned memory, and the memory size mismatch causes resume to fail.
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To enable a Hyper-V VM for hibernation, the Hyper-V administrator must
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enable the ACPI virtual S4 sleep state in the ACPI configuration that
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Hyper-V provides to the guest VM. Such enablement is accomplished by
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modifying a WMI property of the VM, the steps for which are outside
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the scope of this documentation but are available on the web.
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Enablement is treated as the indicator that the administrator
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prioritizes Linux hibernation in the VM over hot-add, so the Hyper-V
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balloon driver in Linux disables hot-add. Enablement is indicated if
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the contents of /sys/power/disk contains "platform" as an option. The
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enablement is also visible in /sys/bus/vmbus/hibernation. See function
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hv_is_hibernation_supported().
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Linux supports ACPI sleep states on x86, but not on arm64. So Linux
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guest VM hibernation is not available on Hyper-V for arm64.
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Initiating Guest VM Hibernation
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-------------------------------
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Guest VMs can self-initiate hibernation using the standard Linux
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methods of writing "disk" to /sys/power/state or the reboot system
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call. As an additional layer, Linux guests on Hyper-V support the
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"Shutdown" integration service, via which a Hyper-V administrator can
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tell a Linux VM to hibernate using a command outside the VM. The
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command generates a request to the Hyper-V shutdown driver in Linux,
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which sends the uevent "EVENT=hibernate". See kernel functions
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shutdown_onchannelcallback() and send_hibernate_uevent(). A udev rule
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must be provided in the VM that handles this event and initiates
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hibernation.
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Handling VMBus Devices During Hibernation & Resume
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--------------------------------------------------
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The VMBus bus driver, and the individual VMBus device drivers,
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implement suspend and resume functions that are called as part of the
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Linux orchestration of hibernation and of resuming from hibernation.
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The overall approach is to leave in place the data structures for the
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primary VMBus channels and their associated Linux devices, such as
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SCSI controllers and others, so that they are captured in the
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hibernation image. This approach allows any state associated with the
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device to be persisted across the hibernation/resume. When the VM
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resumes, the devices are re-offered by Hyper-V and are connected to
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the data structures that already exist in the resumed hibernation
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image.
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VMBus devices are identified by class and instance GUID. (See section
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"VMBus device creation/deletion" in
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Documentation/virt/hyperv/vmbus.rst.) Upon resume from hibernation,
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the resume functions expect that the devices offered by Hyper-V have
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the same class/instance GUIDs as the devices present at the time of
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hibernation. Having the same class/instance GUIDs allows the offered
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devices to be matched to the primary VMBus channel data structures in
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the memory of the now resumed hibernation image. If any devices are
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offered that don't match primary VMBus channel data structures that
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already exist, they are processed normally as newly added devices. If
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primary VMBus channels that exist in the resumed hibernation image are
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not matched with a device offered in the resumed VM, the resume
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sequence waits for 10 seconds, then proceeds. But the unmatched device
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is likely to cause errors in the resumed VM.
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When resuming existing primary VMBus channels, the newly offered
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relids might be different because relids can change on each VM boot,
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even if the VM configuration hasn't changed. The VMBus bus driver
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resume function matches the class/instance GUIDs, and updates the
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relids in case they have changed.
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VMBus sub-channels are not persisted in the hibernation image. Each
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VMBus device driver's suspend function must close any sub-channels
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prior to hibernation. Closing a sub-channel causes Hyper-V to send a
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RESCIND_CHANNELOFFER message, which Linux processes by freeing the
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channel data structures so that all vestiges of the sub-channel are
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removed. By contrast, primary channels are marked closed and their
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ring buffers are freed, but Hyper-V does not send a rescind message,
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so the channel data structure continues to exist. Upon resume, the
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device driver's resume function re-allocates the ring buffer and
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re-opens the existing channel. It then communicates with Hyper-V to
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re-open sub-channels from scratch.
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The Linux ends of Hyper-V sockets are forced closed at the time of
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hibernation. The guest can't force closing the host end of the socket,
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but any host-side actions on the host end will produce an error.
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VMBus devices use the same suspend function for the "freeze" and the
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"poweroff" phases, and the same resume function for the "thaw" and
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"restore" phases. See the "Entering Hibernation" section of
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Documentation/driver-api/pm/devices.rst for the sequencing of the
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phases.
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Detailed Hibernation Sequence
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-----------------------------
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1. The Linux power management (PM) subsystem prepares for
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hibernation by freezing user space processes and allocating
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memory to hold the hibernation image.
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2. As part of the "freeze" phase, Linux PM calls the "suspend"
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function for each VMBus device in turn. As described above, this
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function removes sub-channels, and leaves the primary channel in
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a closed state.
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3. Linux PM calls the "suspend" function for the VMBus bus, which
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closes any Hyper-V socket channels and unloads the top-level
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VMBus connection with the Hyper-V host.
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4. Linux PM disables non-boot CPUs, creates the hibernation image in
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the previously allocated memory, then re-enables non-boot CPUs.
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The hibernation image contains the memory data structures for the
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closed primary channels, but no sub-channels.
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5. As part of the "thaw" phase, Linux PM calls the "resume" function
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for the VMBus bus, which re-establishes the top-level VMBus
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connection and requests that Hyper-V re-offer the VMBus devices.
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As offers are received for the primary channels, the relids are
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updated as previously described.
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6. Linux PM calls the "resume" function for each VMBus device. Each
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device re-opens its primary channel, and communicates with Hyper-V
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to re-establish sub-channels if appropriate. The sub-channels
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are re-created as new channels since they were previously removed
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entirely in Step 2.
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7. With VMBus devices now working again, Linux PM writes the
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hibernation image from memory to disk.
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8. Linux PM repeats Steps 2 and 3 above as part of the "poweroff"
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phase. VMBus channels are closed and the top-level VMBus
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connection is unloaded.
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9. Linux PM disables non-boot CPUs, and then enters ACPI sleep state
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S4. Hibernation is now complete.
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Detailed Resume Sequence
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------------------------
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1. The guest VM boots into a fresh Linux OS instance. During boot,
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the top-level VMBus connection is established, and synthetic
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devices are enabled. This happens via the normal paths that don't
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involve hibernation.
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2. Linux PM hibernation code reads swap space is to find and read
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the hibernation image into memory. If there is no hibernation
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image, then this boot becomes a normal boot.
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3. If this is a resume from hibernation, the "freeze" phase is used
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to shutdown VMBus devices and unload the top-level VMBus
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connection in the running fresh OS instance, just like Steps 2
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and 3 in the hibernation sequence.
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4. Linux PM disables non-boot CPUs, and transfers control to the
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read-in hibernation image. In the now-running hibernation image,
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non-boot CPUs are restarted.
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5. As part of the "resume" phase, Linux PM repeats Steps 5 and 6
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from the hibernation sequence. The top-level VMBus connection is
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re-established, and offers are received and matched to primary
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channels in the image. Relids are updated. VMBus device resume
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functions re-open primary channels and re-create sub-channels.
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6. Linux PM exits the hibernation resume sequence and the VM is now
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running normally from the hibernation image.
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Key-Value Pair (KVP) Pseudo-Device Anomalies
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--------------------------------------------
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The VMBus KVP device behaves differently from other pseudo-devices
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offered by Hyper-V. When the KVP primary channel is closed, Hyper-V
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sends a rescind message, which causes all vestiges of the device to be
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removed. But Hyper-V then re-offers the device, causing it to be newly
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re-created. The removal and re-creation occurs during the "freeze"
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phase of hibernation, so the hibernation image contains the re-created
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KVP device. Similar behavior occurs during the "freeze" phase of the
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resume sequence while still in the fresh OS instance. But in both
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cases, the top-level VMBus connection is subsequently unloaded, which
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causes the device to be discarded on the Hyper-V side. So no harm is
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done and everything still works.
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Virtual PCI devices
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-------------------
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Virtual PCI devices are physical PCI devices that are mapped directly
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into the VM's physical address space so the VM can interact directly
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with the hardware. vPCI devices include those accessed via what Hyper-V
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calls "Discrete Device Assignment" (DDA), as well as SR-IOV NIC
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Virtual Functions (VF) devices. See Documentation/virt/hyperv/vpci.rst.
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Hyper-V DDA devices are offered to guest VMs after the top-level VMBus
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connection is established, just like VMBus synthetic devices. They are
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statically assigned to the VM, and their instance GUIDs don't change
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unless the Hyper-V administrator makes changes to the configuration.
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DDA devices are represented in Linux as virtual PCI devices that have
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a VMBus identity as well as a PCI identity. Consequently, Linux guest
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hibernation first handles DDA devices as VMBus devices in order to
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manage the VMBus channel. But then they are also handled as PCI
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devices using the hibernation functions implemented by their native
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PCI driver.
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SR-IOV NIC VFs also have a VMBus identity as well as a PCI
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identity, and overall are processed similarly to DDA devices. A
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difference is that VFs are not offered to the VM during initial boot
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of the VM. Instead, the VMBus synthetic NIC driver first starts
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operating and communicates to Hyper-V that it is prepared to accept a
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VF, and then the VF offer is made. However, the VMBus connection
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might later be unloaded and then re-established without the VM being
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rebooted, as happens in Steps 3 and 5 in the Detailed Hibernation
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Sequence above and in the Detailed Resume Sequence. In such a case,
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the VFs likely became part of the VM during initial boot, so when the
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VMBus connection is re-established, the VFs are offered on the
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re-established connection without intervention by the synthetic NIC driver.
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UIO Devices
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-----------
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A VMBus device can be exposed to user space using the Hyper-V UIO
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driver (uio_hv_generic.c) so that a user space driver can control and
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operate the device. However, the VMBus UIO driver does not support the
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suspend and resume operations needed for hibernation. If a VMBus
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device is configured to use the UIO driver, hibernating the VM fails
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and Linux continues to run normally. The most common use of the Hyper-V
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UIO driver is for DPDK networking, but there are other uses as well.
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Resuming on a Different VM
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--------------------------
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This scenario occurs in the Azure public cloud in that a hibernated
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customer VM only exists as saved configuration and disks -- the VM no
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longer exists on any Hyper-V host. When the customer VM is resumed, a
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new Hyper-V VM with identical configuration is created, likely on a
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different Hyper-V host. That new Hyper-V VM becomes the resumed
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customer VM, and the steps the Linux kernel takes to resume from the
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hibernation image must work in that new VM.
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While the disks and their contents are preserved from the original VM,
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the Hyper-V-provided VMBus instance GUIDs of the disk controllers and
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other synthetic devices would typically be different. The difference
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would cause the resume from hibernation to fail, so several things are
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done to solve this problem:
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* For VMBus synthetic devices that support only a single instance,
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Hyper-V always assigns the same instance GUIDs. For example, the
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Hyper-V mouse, the shutdown pseudo-device, the time sync pseudo
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device, etc., always have the same instance GUID, both for local
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Hyper-V installs as well as in the Azure cloud.
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* VMBus synthetic SCSI controllers may have multiple instances in a
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VM, and in the general case instance GUIDs vary from VM to VM.
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However, Azure VMs always have exactly two synthetic SCSI
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controllers, and Azure code overrides the normal Hyper-V behavior
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so these controllers are always assigned the same two instance
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GUIDs. Consequently, when a customer VM is resumed on a newly
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created VM, the instance GUIDs match. But this guarantee does not
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hold for local Hyper-V installs.
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* Similarly, VMBus synthetic NICs may have multiple instances in a
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VM, and the instance GUIDs vary from VM to VM. Again, Azure code
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overrides the normal Hyper-V behavior so that the instance GUID
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of a synthetic NIC in a customer VM does not change, even if the
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customer VM is deallocated or hibernated, and then re-constituted
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on a newly created VM. As with SCSI controllers, this behavior
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does not hold for local Hyper-V installs.
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* vPCI devices do not have the same instance GUIDs when resuming
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from hibernation on a newly created VM. Consequently, Azure does
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not support hibernation for VMs that have DDA devices such as
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NVMe controllers or GPUs. For SR-IOV NIC VFs, Azure removes the
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VF from the VM before it hibernates so that the hibernation image
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does not contain a VF device. When the VM is resumed it
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instantiates a new VF, rather than trying to match against a VF
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that is present in the hibernation image. Because Azure must
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remove any VFs before initiating hibernation, Azure VM
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hibernation must be initiated externally from the Azure Portal or
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Azure CLI, which in turn uses the Shutdown integration service to
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tell Linux to do the hibernation. If hibernation is self-initiated
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within the Azure VM, VFs remain in the hibernation image, and are
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not resumed properly.
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In summary, Azure takes special actions to remove VFs and to ensure
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that VMBus device instance GUIDs match on a new/different VM, allowing
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hibernation to work for most general-purpose Azure VMs sizes. While
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similar special actions could be taken when resuming on a different VM
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on a local Hyper-V install, orchestrating such actions is not provided
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out-of-the-box by local Hyper-V and so requires custom scripting.
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