@@ -32,11 +32,17 @@ typedef struct MemoryDeviceState {
typedef struct MemoryDeviceClass {
InterfaceClass parent_class;
+ /* required functions that have to be implemented */
uint64_t (*get_addr)(const MemoryDeviceState *md);
+ uint64_t (*set_addr)(MemoryDeviceState *md);
+ MemoryRegion * (*get_memory_region)(MemoryDeviceState *md);
uint64_t (*get_plugged_size)(const MemoryDeviceState *md);
uint64_t (*get_region_size)(const MemoryDeviceState *md);
void (*fill_device_info)(const MemoryDeviceState *md,
MemoryDeviceInfo *info);
+
+ /* optional functions that can be implemented */
+ uint64_t (*get_align)(const MemoryDeviceState *md);
} MemoryDeviceClass;
MemoryDeviceInfoList *qmp_memory_device_list(void);
We will need a handful of new functions: - set_addr(): To set the calculated address - get_memory_region(): To add it to the memory region container - get_addr(): If the device has any specific alignment requirements Using these and the existing functions, we can properly assign resources to memory devices. Signed-off-by: David Hildenbrand <david@redhat.com> --- include/hw/mem/memory-device.h | 6 ++++++ 1 file changed, 6 insertions(+)