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KVMGFX
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======
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Purpose
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-------
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To provide a low latency KVM Guest client that relies on video capture rather
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than the output of a virtual VGA device. The goal of this project is to allow
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lossless zero latency display of a guest on the host on the local host.
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The Problem
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-----------
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Exising solutions such as Spice are designed to work with a virtual VGA
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adaptor, but when a physical VGA device is passed into the guest VM the
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display can not be presented to the host, instead a physical monitor must be
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attached to the physcal VGA device. While this may be acceptible to some it
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requires a physical switch between the host and guest VM preventing the VM
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from being inlined into the host window manager.
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Existing Solutions
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------------------
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Some have reported that they are able to stream using Steam InHouse Streaming
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to stream the desktop back to the host by launching a program such as notepad
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in the guest, and then tabbing to desktop. While this works Steam is designed
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to stream this over a local area network and as such employs technologies such
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as compression and packetization for network transmission, there are several
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issues with this solution:
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* Latency from guest to client is generally no less then 50-80ms, this is
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very noticable when using a cursor input or running games that demand high
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precision and fast input.
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* Compressing the stream adds additional CPU/GPU overhead that can degrade
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performance.
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* Compressing converts to the YUV422P colorspace which degrades quality
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quite substantially.
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* The stream is tuned for transmission over a network which not only adds
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additional overheads, it also adds additional buffers that increase
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latency.
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Our Solution
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------------
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Qemu contains a virtual device that allows mapping of shared memory between
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host and guest called 'ivshmem'. This device has been used for very specific
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cases where extremely high bandwidth low latency networking/firewalls have
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been required and as such a windows driver was never written for this device.
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We developed a Windows driver for this device and have worked with Red Hat to
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have it included into the official [VirtIO windows driver repository][1].
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The shared memory segment is intialized by the guest with a strcture that
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describes the format of the frame and the current mouse coordinates. Frame data
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is appended to the buffer after this header.
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### Video Transfer
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The guest runs a program that uses the ivshmem device as a direct transfer
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between the guest and host. This application uses accelerated capture methods
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such as NvFBC or DXGI to capture the guests framebuffer. This captured frame is
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then copied into the shared memory region. After the frame has been copied a
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doorbell is set in ivshmem which the host client application is waiting on,
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after which the client application waits for an IRQ from the host to state
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that the frame has been processed.
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After the host client application is notified there is a new frame it maps the
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frame to the host video card by means of a SDL streaming texture. Once a copy
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of the frame has been completed the host client then notifies the guest by means
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of raising the IRQ the guest is waiting on.
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At this time the guest still requires a monitor or dummy device attached that
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presents valid EDID information for the resolutions that are desired. There
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may be a way around this but that is not the goal of this project at this time
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and is thus out of scope. This author found it easiest to just use the
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secondary input to one of his monitors to present the EDID information.
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### Keyboard and Mouse Input
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The host client implements the Spice protocol and is able to send mouse and
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keyboard events over the existing communications channels provided by qemu.
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If using libvirt the virtual tablet device must be removed from the host as
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this application expects to and requires to use relative positioning for all
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interactions. If the tablet device exists qemu will give priority to it for
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click events which are unreliable when used in this way.
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There are also some issues with the qemu PS2 controller that will cause mouse
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input lockups when keyboard events and mouse events occur at the same time.
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The virtual USB keyboard and mouse inputs while are somewhat more reliable also
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suffer random dropouts at high rates due to USB hub emulation timing issues.
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At the time of writing this we have found the best solution is to use the PS2
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mouse and the VirtIO Keyboard device.
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The guest program returns the current mouse position as part of each frame,
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this is so that it is possible to syncronise the host mouse position in the
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window to that reported by the guest.
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We recommend that the guest have the [mouse acceleration disabled][2] so that
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the guest's mouse position is 1:1 with the host. This makes for a seemless
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experience when the cursor is moved inside and outside of the client
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application on the host.
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### Audio
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This client doesn't implement any form of audio, the guest needs to be
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configured to use the hosts for audio directly. At this time we recommend using
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pulseaudio as the ALSA implementation seems to be problematic and requires
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some attention.
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Testing
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-------
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Our test scenario involved running a physical monitor along side the guest
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client, at this time we have only tested NvFBC as the capture technology on the
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guest.
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### Hardware
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|-----------|------------------------------------------------------------|
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| MB | Asrock AB350 Pro4 |
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| CPU | AMD Ryzen 7 1700 @ 3.8GHz |
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| RAM | 16GB DDR4 |
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| Host GPU | NVidia GTX 1080 Ti running 4 monitors @ 1920x1200 |
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| Guest GPU | NVidia GTX 680 [modified to a Quadro K5000][2] @ 1920x1200 |
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### Software
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|-------|----------------------------------------------------|
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| Host | Debian 9 + [NPT patch][2] |
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| Guest | Windows 10 running in KVM on the i440 device tree. |
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Results
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Latency has not been measured but it is sufficient to say that it would be
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difficult to obtain an accurate measurement. In practice to this author it is
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impossible to see any latency between the physical display and host client
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output.
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At this time we are waiting for a signed ivshmem driver by Red Hat to be
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released but since this may take quite some time we are currently in the
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process of obtaining a driver signing certificate.
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Status
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------
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The guest software at current needs to be rewritten, in it's current state it
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is simply proof of concept.
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The host software is considered 90% complete, features such as copy & paste
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between client and guest are missing and it would be nice if it could also
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serve as the ivshmem-server.
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This project has not been written with security of the shared memory in mind,
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it is certainly possible at this time for the client to abuse the headers and
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input invalid information that could be used to compromise the host system.
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At this time this is not a concern as our use case of this application at this
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time is in a completely trusted environment, but before it is more widely put
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into use this will need to be addressed.
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[1]: https://github.com/virtio-win/kvm-guest-drivers-windows/tree/master/ivshmem
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[2]: http://donewmouseaccel.blogspot.com.au/2010/03/markc-windows-7-mouse-acceleration-fix.html
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[3]: http://www.eevblog.com/forum/chat/hacking-nvidia-cards-into-their-professional-counterparts/
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[4]: https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/10027525/
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