PCI(e) Passthrough: Difference between revisions
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But, if you pass through a device to a virtual machine, you cannot use that | But, if you pass through a device to a virtual machine, you cannot use that | ||
device anymore on the host or in any other VM. | device anymore on the host or in any other VM. | ||
Note that, while PCI passthrough is available for i440fx and q35 machines, PCIe | |||
passthrough is only available on q35 machines. This does not mean that | |||
PCIe capable devices that are passed through as PCI devices will only run at | |||
PCI speeds. Passing through devices as PCIe just sets a flag for the guest to | |||
tell it that the device is a PCIe device instead of a "really fast legacy PCI | |||
device". Some guest applications benefit from this. | |||
General Requirements | General Requirements | ||
Since passthrough is | Since passthrough is performed on real hardware, it needs to fulfill some | ||
requirements. A brief overview of these requirements is given below, for more | |||
information on specific devices, see | |||
PCI Passthrough Examples. | |||
Hardware | Hardware | ||
Your hardware needs to support IOMMU (I/O Memory Management | Your hardware needs to support IOMMU (I/O Memory Management | ||
Unit) interrupt remapping, this includes the CPU and the | Unit) interrupt remapping, this includes the CPU and the motherboard. | ||
Generally, Intel systems with VT-d | Generally, Intel systems with VT-d and AMD systems with AMD-Vi support this. | ||
But it is not guaranteed that everything will work out of the box, due | But it is not guaranteed that everything will work out of the box, due | ||
to bad hardware implementation and missing or low quality drivers. | to bad hardware implementation and missing or low quality drivers. | ||
Line 23: | Line 31: | ||
Please refer to your hardware vendor to check if they support this feature | Please refer to your hardware vendor to check if they support this feature | ||
under Linux for your specific setup. | under Linux for your specific setup. | ||
Determining PCI Card Address | |||
The easiest way is to use the GUI to add a device of type "Host PCI" in the VM’s | |||
hardware tab. Alternatively, you can use the command line. | |||
You can locate your card using | |||
lspci | |||
Configuration | Configuration | ||
Once you ensured that your hardware supports passthrough, you will need to do | Once you ensured that your hardware supports passthrough, you will need to do | ||
some configuration to enable PCI(e) passthrough. | some configuration to enable PCI(e) passthrough. | ||
IOMMU | IOMMU | ||
You will have to enable IOMMU support in your BIOS/UEFI. Usually the | |||
corresponding setting is called IOMMU or VT-d, but you should find the exact | |||
option name in the manual of your motherboard. | |||
for Intel CPUs: | With AMD CPUs IOMMU is enabled by default. With recent kernels (6.8 or newer), | ||
this is also true for Intel CPUs. On older kernels, it is necessary to enable | |||
it on Intel CPUs via the | |||
kernel command line by adding: | |||
intel_iommu=on | intel_iommu=on | ||
IOMMU Passthrough Mode | |||
If your hardware supports IOMMU passthrough mode, enabling this mode might | |||
increase performance. | |||
This is because VMs then bypass the (default) DMA translation normally | |||
performed by the hyper-visor and instead pass DMA requests directly to the | |||
hardware IOMMU. To enable these options, add: | |||
iommu=pt | |||
to the kernel commandline. | |||
Kernel Modules | Kernel Modules | ||
You have to make sure the following modules are loaded. This can be achieved by | You have to make sure the following modules are loaded. This can be achieved by | ||
adding them to ‘/etc/modules’ | adding them to ‘/etc/modules’. | ||
Mediated devices passthrough | |||
If passing through mediated devices (e.g. vGPUs), the following is not needed. | |||
In these cases, the device will be owned by the appropriate host-driver | |||
directly. | |||
vfio | vfio | ||
vfio_iommu_type1 | vfio_iommu_type1 | ||
vfio_pci | vfio_pci | ||
After changing anything modules related, you need to refresh your | After changing anything modules related, you need to refresh your | ||
initramfs. On Proxmox VE this can be done by executing: | initramfs. On Proxmox VE this can be done by executing: | ||
# update-initramfs -u -k all | # update-initramfs -u -k all | ||
To check if the modules are being loaded, the output of | |||
# lsmod | grep vfio | |||
should include the four modules from above. | |||
Finish Configuration | Finish Configuration | ||
Finally reboot to bring the changes into effect and check that it is indeed | Finally reboot to bring the changes into effect and check that it is indeed | ||
Line 52: | Line 78: | ||
should display that IOMMU, Directed I/O or Interrupt Remapping is | should display that IOMMU, Directed I/O or Interrupt Remapping is | ||
enabled, depending on hardware and kernel the exact message can vary. | enabled, depending on hardware and kernel the exact message can vary. | ||
For notes on how to troubleshoot or verify if IOMMU is working as intended, please | |||
see the Verifying IOMMU Parameters | |||
section in our wiki. | |||
It is also important that the device(s) you want to pass through | It is also important that the device(s) you want to pass through | ||
are in a separate IOMMU group. This can be checked with: | are in a separate IOMMU group. This can be checked with a call to the Proxmox VE | ||
# | API: | ||
# pvesh get /nodes/{nodename}/hardware/pci --pci-class-blacklist "" | |||
It is okay if the device is in an IOMMU group together with its functions | It is okay if the device is in an IOMMU group together with its functions | ||
(e.g. a GPU with the HDMI Audio device) or with its root port or PCI(e) bridge. | (e.g. a GPU with the HDMI Audio device) or with its root port or PCI(e) bridge. | ||
Line 79: | Line 109: | ||
PCI(e) card, for example a GPU or a network card. | PCI(e) card, for example a GPU or a network card. | ||
Host Configuration | Host Configuration | ||
Proxmox VE tries to automatically make the PCI(e) device unavailable for the host. | |||
However, if this doesn’t work, there are two things that can be done: | |||
pass the device IDs to the options of the vfio-pci modules by adding | pass the device IDs to the options of the vfio-pci modules by adding | ||
options vfio-pci ids=1234:5678,4321:8765 | options vfio-pci ids=1234:5678,4321:8765 | ||
to a .conf file in /etc/modprobe.d/ where 1234:5678 and 4321:8765 are | to a .conf file in /etc/modprobe.d/ where 1234:5678 and 4321:8765 are | ||
the vendor and device IDs obtained by: | the vendor and device IDs obtained by: | ||
# | # lspci -nn | ||
blacklist the driver | blacklist the driver on the host completely, ensuring that it is free to bind | ||
for passthrough, with | for passthrough, with | ||
blacklist DRIVERNAME | blacklist DRIVERNAME | ||
in a .conf file in /etc/modprobe.d/. | in a .conf file in /etc/modprobe.d/. | ||
To find the drivername, execute | |||
# lspci -k | |||
for example: | |||
# lspci -k | grep -A 3 "VGA" | |||
will output something similar to | |||
01:00.0 VGA compatible controller: NVIDIA Corporation GP108 [GeForce GT 1030] (rev a1) | |||
Subsystem: Micro-Star International Co., Ltd. [MSI] GP108 [GeForce GT 1030] | |||
Kernel driver in use: <some-module> | |||
Kernel modules: <some-module> | |||
Now we can blacklist the drivers by writing them into a .conf file: | |||
echo "blacklist <some-module>" >> /etc/modprobe.d/blacklist.conf | |||
For both methods you need to | For both methods you need to | ||
update the initramfs again and | update the initramfs again and | ||
reboot after that. | reboot after that. | ||
Should this not work, you might need to set a soft dependency to load the gpu | |||
modules before loading vfio-pci. This can be done with the softdep flag, see | |||
also the manpages on modprobe.d for more information. | |||
For example, if you are using drivers named <some-module>: | |||
# echo "softdep <some-module> pre: vfio-pci" >> /etc/modprobe.d/<some-module>.conf | |||
Verify Configuration | |||
To check if your changes were successful, you can use | |||
# lspci -nnk | |||
and check your device entry. If it says | |||
Kernel driver in use: vfio-pci | |||
or the in use line is missing entirely, the device is ready to be used for | |||
passthrough. | |||
Mediated devices | |||
For mediated devices this line will differ as the device will be owned as the | |||
host driver directly, not vfio-pci. | |||
VM Configuration | VM Configuration | ||
To | When passing through a GPU, the best compatibility is reached when using | ||
q35 as machine type, OVMF (UEFI for VMs) instead of SeaBIOS and PCIe | |||
instead of PCI. Note that if you want to use OVMF for GPU passthrough, the | |||
GPU needs to have an UEFI capable ROM, otherwise use SeaBIOS instead. To check if | |||
the ROM is UEFI capable, see the | |||
PCI Passthrough Examples | |||
wiki. | |||
Furthermore, using OVMF, disabling vga arbitration may be possible, reducing the | |||
amount of legacy code needed to be run during boot. To disable vga arbitration: | |||
echo "options vfio-pci ids=<vendor-id>,<device-id> disable_vga=1" > /etc/modprobe.d/vfio.conf | |||
replacing the <vendor-id> and <device-id> with the ones obtained from: | |||
# lspci -nn | |||
PCI devices can be added in the web interface in the hardware section of the VM. | |||
Alternatively, you can use the command line; set the hostpciX option in the VM | |||
configuration, for example by executing: | configuration, for example by executing: | ||
# qm set VMID -hostpci0 00:02.0 | # qm set VMID -hostpci0 00:02.0 | ||
or by adding a line to the VM configuration file: | |||
hostpci0: 00:02.0 | |||
If your device has multiple functions (e.g., ‘00:02.0’ and ‘00:02.1’ ), | If your device has multiple functions (e.g., ‘00:02.0’ and ‘00:02.1’ ), | ||
you can pass them through all together with the shortened syntax | you can pass them through all together with the shortened syntax ``00:02`. | ||
This is equivalent with checking the ``All Functions` checkbox in the | |||
web interface. | |||
There are some options to which may be necessary, depending on the device | There are some options to which may be necessary, depending on the device | ||
and guest OS: | and guest OS: | ||
Line 113: | Line 186: | ||
An example of PCIe passthrough with a GPU set to primary: | An example of PCIe passthrough with a GPU set to primary: | ||
# qm set VMID -hostpci0 02:00,pcie=on,x-vga=on | # qm set VMID -hostpci0 02:00,pcie=on,x-vga=on | ||
PCI ID overrides | |||
You can override the PCI vendor ID, device ID, and subsystem IDs that will be | |||
seen by the guest. This is useful if your device is a variant with an ID that | |||
your guest’s drivers don’t recognize, but you want to force those drivers to be | |||
loaded anyway (e.g. if you know your device shares the same chipset as a | |||
supported variant). | |||
The available options are vendor-id, device-id, sub-vendor-id, and | |||
sub-device-id. You can set any or all of these to override your device’s | |||
default IDs. | |||
For example: | |||
# qm set VMID -hostpci0 02:00,device-id=0x10f6,sub-vendor-id=0x0000 | |||
SR-IOV | SR-IOV | ||
Another variant for passing through PCI(e) devices | Another variant for passing through PCI(e) devices is to use the hardware | ||
virtualization features of your devices, if available. | virtualization features of your devices, if available. | ||
Enabling SR-IOV | |||
To use SR-IOV, platform support is especially important. It may be necessary | |||
to enable this feature in the BIOS/UEFI first, or to use a specific PCI(e) port | |||
for it to work. In doubt, consult the manual of the platform or contact its | |||
vendor. | |||
SR-IOV (Single-Root Input/Output Virtualization) enables | SR-IOV (Single-Root Input/Output Virtualization) enables | ||
a single device to provide multiple VF (Virtual Functions) to the | a single device to provide multiple VF (Virtual Functions) to the | ||
Line 150: | Line 234: | ||
outputting them with lspci. Get their ID and pass them through like a | outputting them with lspci. Get their ID and pass them through like a | ||
normal PCI(e) device. | normal PCI(e) device. | ||
Mediated Devices (vGPU, GVT-g) | Mediated Devices (vGPU, GVT-g) | ||
Mediated devices are another method to reuse features and performance from | Mediated devices are another method to reuse features and performance from | ||
physical hardware for virtualized hardware. These are found most common in | physical hardware for virtualized hardware. These are found most common in | ||
virtualized GPU setups such as | virtualized GPU setups such as Intel’s GVT-g and NVIDIA’s vGPUs used in their | ||
GRID technology. | GRID technology. | ||
With this, a physical Card is able to create virtual cards, similar to SR-IOV. | With this, a physical Card is able to create virtual cards, similar to SR-IOV. | ||
Line 167: | Line 246: | ||
not work. So please refer to your vendor for compatible drivers and how to | not work. So please refer to your vendor for compatible drivers and how to | ||
configure them. | configure them. | ||
Intel’s drivers for GVT-g are integrated in the Kernel and should work | |||
with 5th, 6th and 7th generation Intel Core Processors, as well as E3 v4, E3 | with 5th, 6th and 7th generation Intel Core Processors, as well as E3 v4, E3 | ||
v5 and E3 v6 Xeon Processors. | v5 and E3 v6 Xeon Processors. | ||
Line 193: | Line 272: | ||
With this set, Proxmox VE automatically creates such a device on VM start, and | With this set, Proxmox VE automatically creates such a device on VM start, and | ||
cleans it up again when the VM stops. | cleans it up again when the VM stops. | ||
Use in Clusters | |||
It is also possible to map devices on a cluster level, so that they can be | |||
properly used with HA and hardware changes are detected and non root users | |||
can configure them. See Resource Mapping | |||
for details on that. | |||
vIOMMU (emulated IOMMU) | |||
vIOMMU is the emulation of a hardware IOMMU within a virtual machine, providing | |||
improved memory access control and security for virtualized I/O devices. Using | |||
the vIOMMU option also allows you to pass through PCI(e) devices to level-2 VMs | |||
in level-1 VMs via | |||
Nested Virtualization. | |||
To pass through physical PCI(e) devices from the host to nested VMs, follow the | |||
PCI(e) passthrough instructions. | |||
There are currently two vIOMMU implementations available: Intel and VirtIO. | |||
Intel vIOMMU | |||
Intel vIOMMU specific VM requirements: | |||
Whether you are using an Intel or AMD CPU on your host, it is important to set | |||
intel_iommu=on in the VMs kernel parameters. | |||
To use Intel vIOMMU you need to set q35 as the machine type. | |||
If all requirements are met, you can add viommu=intel to the machine parameter | |||
in the configuration of the VM that should be able to pass through PCI devices. | |||
# qm set VMID -machine q35,viommu=intel | |||
QEMU documentation for VT-d | |||
VirtIO vIOMMU | |||
This vIOMMU implementation is more recent and does not have as many limitations | |||
as Intel vIOMMU but is currently less used in production and less documentated. | |||
With VirtIO vIOMMU there is no need to set any kernel parameters. It is also | |||
not necessary to use q35 as the machine type, but it is advisable if you want | |||
to use PCIe. | |||
# qm set VMID -machine q35,viommu=virtio | |||
Blog-Post by Michael Zhao explaining virtio-iommu | |||
See Also | See Also | ||
PCI Passthrough Examples | PCI Passthrough Examples | ||
</pvehide> | </pvehide> | ||
<!--PVE_IMPORT_END_MARKER--> | <!--PVE_IMPORT_END_MARKER--> |
Latest revision as of 12:09, 28 November 2024
PCI(e) passthrough is a mechanism to give a virtual machine control over a PCI device from the host. This can have some advantages over using virtualized hardware, for example lower latency, higher performance, or more features (e.g., offloading).
But, if you pass through a device to a virtual machine, you cannot use that device anymore on the host or in any other VM.
Note that, while PCI passthrough is available for i440fx and q35 machines, PCIe passthrough is only available on q35 machines. This does not mean that PCIe capable devices that are passed through as PCI devices will only run at PCI speeds. Passing through devices as PCIe just sets a flag for the guest to tell it that the device is a PCIe device instead of a "really fast legacy PCI device". Some guest applications benefit from this.
General Requirements
Since passthrough is performed on real hardware, it needs to fulfill some requirements. A brief overview of these requirements is given below, for more information on specific devices, see PCI Passthrough Examples.
Hardware
Your hardware needs to support IOMMU (I/O Memory Management Unit) interrupt remapping, this includes the CPU and the motherboard.
Generally, Intel systems with VT-d and AMD systems with AMD-Vi support this. But it is not guaranteed that everything will work out of the box, due to bad hardware implementation and missing or low quality drivers.
Further, server grade hardware has often better support than consumer grade hardware, but even then, many modern system can support this.
Please refer to your hardware vendor to check if they support this feature under Linux for your specific setup.
Determining PCI Card Address
The easiest way is to use the GUI to add a device of type "Host PCI" in the VM’s hardware tab. Alternatively, you can use the command line.
You can locate your card using
lspci
Configuration
Once you ensured that your hardware supports passthrough, you will need to do some configuration to enable PCI(e) passthrough.
IOMMU
You will have to enable IOMMU support in your BIOS/UEFI. Usually the corresponding setting is called IOMMU or VT-d, but you should find the exact option name in the manual of your motherboard.
With AMD CPUs IOMMU is enabled by default. With recent kernels (6.8 or newer), this is also true for Intel CPUs. On older kernels, it is necessary to enable it on Intel CPUs via the kernel command line by adding:
intel_iommu=on
IOMMU Passthrough Mode
If your hardware supports IOMMU passthrough mode, enabling this mode might increase performance. This is because VMs then bypass the (default) DMA translation normally performed by the hyper-visor and instead pass DMA requests directly to the hardware IOMMU. To enable these options, add:
iommu=pt
to the kernel commandline.
Kernel Modules
You have to make sure the following modules are loaded. This can be achieved by adding them to ‘/etc/modules’.
Mediated devices passthrough
If passing through mediated devices (e.g. vGPUs), the following is not needed. In these cases, the device will be owned by the appropriate host-driver directly. |
vfio vfio_iommu_type1 vfio_pci
After changing anything modules related, you need to refresh your initramfs. On Proxmox VE this can be done by executing:
# update-initramfs -u -k all
To check if the modules are being loaded, the output of
# lsmod | grep vfio
should include the four modules from above.
Finish Configuration
Finally reboot to bring the changes into effect and check that it is indeed enabled.
# dmesg | grep -e DMAR -e IOMMU -e AMD-Vi
should display that IOMMU, Directed I/O or Interrupt Remapping is enabled, depending on hardware and kernel the exact message can vary.
For notes on how to troubleshoot or verify if IOMMU is working as intended, please see the Verifying IOMMU Parameters section in our wiki.
It is also important that the device(s) you want to pass through are in a separate IOMMU group. This can be checked with a call to the Proxmox VE API:
# pvesh get /nodes/{nodename}/hardware/pci --pci-class-blacklist ""
It is okay if the device is in an IOMMU group together with its functions (e.g. a GPU with the HDMI Audio device) or with its root port or PCI(e) bridge.
PCI(e) slots
Some platforms handle their physical PCI(e) slots differently. So, sometimes it can help to put the card in a another PCI(e) slot, if you do not get the desired IOMMU group separation. |
Unsafe interrupts
For some platforms, it may be necessary to allow unsafe interrupts. For this add the following line in a file ending with ‘.conf’ file in /etc/modprobe.d/: options vfio_iommu_type1 allow_unsafe_interrupts=1 Please be aware that this option can make your system unstable. |
GPU Passthrough Notes
It is not possible to display the frame buffer of the GPU via NoVNC or SPICE on the Proxmox VE web interface.
When passing through a whole GPU or a vGPU and graphic output is wanted, one has to either physically connect a monitor to the card, or configure a remote desktop software (for example, VNC or RDP) inside the guest.
If you want to use the GPU as a hardware accelerator, for example, for programs using OpenCL or CUDA, this is not required.
Host Device Passthrough
The most used variant of PCI(e) passthrough is to pass through a whole PCI(e) card, for example a GPU or a network card.
Host Configuration
Proxmox VE tries to automatically make the PCI(e) device unavailable for the host. However, if this doesn’t work, there are two things that can be done:
-
pass the device IDs to the options of the vfio-pci modules by adding
options vfio-pci ids=1234:5678,4321:8765
to a .conf file in /etc/modprobe.d/ where 1234:5678 and 4321:8765 are the vendor and device IDs obtained by:
# lspci -nn
-
blacklist the driver on the host completely, ensuring that it is free to bind for passthrough, with
blacklist DRIVERNAME
in a .conf file in /etc/modprobe.d/.
To find the drivername, execute
# lspci -k
for example:
# lspci -k | grep -A 3 "VGA"
will output something similar to
01:00.0 VGA compatible controller: NVIDIA Corporation GP108 [GeForce GT 1030] (rev a1) Subsystem: Micro-Star International Co., Ltd. [MSI] GP108 [GeForce GT 1030] Kernel driver in use: <some-module> Kernel modules: <some-module>
Now we can blacklist the drivers by writing them into a .conf file:
echo "blacklist <some-module>" >> /etc/modprobe.d/blacklist.conf
For both methods you need to update the initramfs again and reboot after that.
Should this not work, you might need to set a soft dependency to load the gpu modules before loading vfio-pci. This can be done with the softdep flag, see also the manpages on modprobe.d for more information.
For example, if you are using drivers named <some-module>:
# echo "softdep <some-module> pre: vfio-pci" >> /etc/modprobe.d/<some-module>.conf
Verify Configuration
To check if your changes were successful, you can use
# lspci -nnk
and check your device entry. If it says
Kernel driver in use: vfio-pci
or the in use line is missing entirely, the device is ready to be used for passthrough.
Mediated devices
For mediated devices this line will differ as the device will be owned as the host driver directly, not vfio-pci. |
VM Configuration
When passing through a GPU, the best compatibility is reached when using q35 as machine type, OVMF (UEFI for VMs) instead of SeaBIOS and PCIe instead of PCI. Note that if you want to use OVMF for GPU passthrough, the GPU needs to have an UEFI capable ROM, otherwise use SeaBIOS instead. To check if the ROM is UEFI capable, see the PCI Passthrough Examples wiki.
Furthermore, using OVMF, disabling vga arbitration may be possible, reducing the amount of legacy code needed to be run during boot. To disable vga arbitration:
echo "options vfio-pci ids=<vendor-id>,<device-id> disable_vga=1" > /etc/modprobe.d/vfio.conf
replacing the <vendor-id> and <device-id> with the ones obtained from:
# lspci -nn
PCI devices can be added in the web interface in the hardware section of the VM. Alternatively, you can use the command line; set the hostpciX option in the VM configuration, for example by executing:
# qm set VMID -hostpci0 00:02.0
or by adding a line to the VM configuration file:
hostpci0: 00:02.0
If your device has multiple functions (e.g., ‘00:02.0’ and ‘00:02.1’ ), you can pass them through all together with the shortened syntax ``00:02`. This is equivalent with checking the ``All Functions` checkbox in the web interface.
There are some options to which may be necessary, depending on the device and guest OS:
-
x-vga=on|off marks the PCI(e) device as the primary GPU of the VM. With this enabled the vga configuration option will be ignored.
-
pcie=on|off tells Proxmox VE to use a PCIe or PCI port. Some guests/device combination require PCIe rather than PCI. PCIe is only available for q35 machine types.
-
rombar=on|off makes the firmware ROM visible for the guest. Default is on. Some PCI(e) devices need this disabled.
-
romfile=<path>, is an optional path to a ROM file for the device to use. This is a relative path under /usr/share/kvm/.
Example
An example of PCIe passthrough with a GPU set to primary:
# qm set VMID -hostpci0 02:00,pcie=on,x-vga=on
PCI ID overrides
You can override the PCI vendor ID, device ID, and subsystem IDs that will be seen by the guest. This is useful if your device is a variant with an ID that your guest’s drivers don’t recognize, but you want to force those drivers to be loaded anyway (e.g. if you know your device shares the same chipset as a supported variant).
The available options are vendor-id, device-id, sub-vendor-id, and sub-device-id. You can set any or all of these to override your device’s default IDs.
For example:
# qm set VMID -hostpci0 02:00,device-id=0x10f6,sub-vendor-id=0x0000
SR-IOV
Another variant for passing through PCI(e) devices is to use the hardware virtualization features of your devices, if available.
Enabling SR-IOV
To use SR-IOV, platform support is especially important. It may be necessary to enable this feature in the BIOS/UEFI first, or to use a specific PCI(e) port for it to work. In doubt, consult the manual of the platform or contact its vendor. |
SR-IOV (Single-Root Input/Output Virtualization) enables a single device to provide multiple VF (Virtual Functions) to the system. Each of those VF can be used in a different VM, with full hardware features and also better performance and lower latency than software virtualized devices.
Currently, the most common use case for this are NICs (Network Interface Card) with SR-IOV support, which can provide multiple VFs per physical port. This allows using features such as checksum offloading, etc. to be used inside a VM, reducing the (host) CPU overhead.
Host Configuration
Generally, there are two methods for enabling virtual functions on a device.
-
sometimes there is an option for the driver module e.g. for some Intel drivers
max_vfs=4
which could be put file with .conf ending under /etc/modprobe.d/. (Do not forget to update your initramfs after that)
Please refer to your driver module documentation for the exact parameters and options.
-
The second, more generic, approach is using the sysfs. If a device and driver supports this you can change the number of VFs on the fly. For example, to setup 4 VFs on device 0000:01:00.0 execute:
# echo 4 > /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000:01:00.0/sriov_numvfs
To make this change persistent you can use the ‘sysfsutils` Debian package. After installation configure it via /etc/sysfs.conf or a `FILE.conf’ in /etc/sysfs.d/.
VM Configuration
After creating VFs, you should see them as separate PCI(e) devices when outputting them with lspci. Get their ID and pass them through like a normal PCI(e) device.
Mediated Devices (vGPU, GVT-g)
Mediated devices are another method to reuse features and performance from physical hardware for virtualized hardware. These are found most common in virtualized GPU setups such as Intel’s GVT-g and NVIDIA’s vGPUs used in their GRID technology.
With this, a physical Card is able to create virtual cards, similar to SR-IOV. The difference is that mediated devices do not appear as PCI(e) devices in the host, and are such only suited for using in virtual machines.
Host Configuration
In general your card’s driver must support that feature, otherwise it will not work. So please refer to your vendor for compatible drivers and how to configure them.
Intel’s drivers for GVT-g are integrated in the Kernel and should work with 5th, 6th and 7th generation Intel Core Processors, as well as E3 v4, E3 v5 and E3 v6 Xeon Processors.
To enable it for Intel Graphics, you have to make sure to load the module kvmgt (for example via /etc/modules) and to enable it on the Kernel commandline and add the following parameter:
i915.enable_gvt=1
After that remember to update the initramfs, and reboot your host.
VM Configuration
To use a mediated device, simply specify the mdev property on a hostpciX VM configuration option.
You can get the supported devices via the sysfs. For example, to list the supported types for the device 0000:00:02.0 you would simply execute:
# ls /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000:00:02.0/mdev_supported_types
Each entry is a directory which contains the following important files:
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available_instances contains the amount of still available instances of this type, each mdev use in a VM reduces this.
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description contains a short description about the capabilities of the type
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create is the endpoint to create such a device, Proxmox VE does this automatically for you, if a hostpciX option with mdev is configured.
Example configuration with an Intel GVT-g vGPU (Intel Skylake 6700k):
# qm set VMID -hostpci0 00:02.0,mdev=i915-GVTg_V5_4
With this set, Proxmox VE automatically creates such a device on VM start, and cleans it up again when the VM stops.
Use in Clusters
It is also possible to map devices on a cluster level, so that they can be properly used with HA and hardware changes are detected and non root users can configure them. See Resource Mapping for details on that.
vIOMMU (emulated IOMMU)
vIOMMU is the emulation of a hardware IOMMU within a virtual machine, providing improved memory access control and security for virtualized I/O devices. Using the vIOMMU option also allows you to pass through PCI(e) devices to level-2 VMs in level-1 VMs via Nested Virtualization. To pass through physical PCI(e) devices from the host to nested VMs, follow the PCI(e) passthrough instructions.
There are currently two vIOMMU implementations available: Intel and VirtIO.
Intel vIOMMU
Intel vIOMMU specific VM requirements:
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Whether you are using an Intel or AMD CPU on your host, it is important to set intel_iommu=on in the VMs kernel parameters.
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To use Intel vIOMMU you need to set q35 as the machine type.
If all requirements are met, you can add viommu=intel to the machine parameter in the configuration of the VM that should be able to pass through PCI devices.
# qm set VMID -machine q35,viommu=intel
VirtIO vIOMMU
This vIOMMU implementation is more recent and does not have as many limitations as Intel vIOMMU but is currently less used in production and less documentated.
With VirtIO vIOMMU there is no need to set any kernel parameters. It is also not necessary to use q35 as the machine type, but it is advisable if you want to use PCIe.
# qm set VMID -machine q35,viommu=virtio
See Also