vhost-device/vhost-device-gpu
Dorinda Bassey 12667e87b2 vhost-device-gpu: Prepare v0.2.0 release
Update changelog and Cargo.toml to v0.2.0

Closes rust-vmm#917

Signed-off-by: Dorinda Bassey <dbassey@redhat.com>
2025-12-17 17:16:30 +02:00
..
src vhost-device-gpu: Adapt to updated virglrenderer API 2025-12-16 11:25:04 +02:00
Cargo.toml vhost-device-gpu: Prepare v0.2.0 release 2025-12-17 17:16:30 +02:00
CHANGELOG.md vhost-device-gpu: Prepare v0.2.0 release 2025-12-17 17:16:30 +02:00
LICENSE-APACHE gpu: fix links to the license files 2025-02-18 16:00:02 +05:30
LICENSE-BSD-3-Clause gpu: fix links to the license files 2025-02-18 16:00:02 +05:30
README.md vhost-device-gpu: Add null backend and test 2025-11-13 14:48:04 +01:00

vhost-device-gpu - GPU emulation backend daemon

Synopsis

vhost-device-gpu --socket-path <SOCKET> --gpu-mode <GPU_MODE>

Description

A virtio-gpu device using the vhost-user protocol.

Options

  -s, --socket-path <SOCKET>
          vhost-user Unix domain socket

  -g, --gpu-mode <GPU_MODE>
          The mode specifies which backend implementation to use

          [possible values: virglrenderer, gfxstream, null]

  -c, --capset <CAPSET>
          Comma separated list of enabled capsets

          Possible values:
          - virgl:            [virglrenderer] OpenGL implementation, superseded by Virgl2
          - virgl2:           [virglrenderer] OpenGL implementation
          - gfxstream-vulkan: [gfxstream] Vulkan implementation (partial support only)
             NOTE: Can only be used for 2D display output for now, there is no hardware acceleration yet
          - gfxstream-gles:   [gfxstream] OpenGL ES implementation (partial support only)
             NOTE: Can only be used for 2D display output for now, there is no hardware acceleration yet

      --use-egl <USE_EGL>
          Enable backend to use EGL
          
          [default: true]
          [possible values: true, false]

      --use-glx <USE_GLX>
          Enable backend to use GLX
          
          [default: false]
          [possible values: true, false]

      --use-gles <USE_GLES>
          Enable backend to use GLES
          
          [default: true]
          [possible values: true, false]

      --use-surfaceless <USE_SURFACELESS>
          Enable surfaceless backend option
          
          [default: true]
          [possible values: true, false]

  -h, --help
          Print help (see a summary with '-h')

  -V, --version
          Print version

NOTE: Option -g, --gpu-mode can only accept the virglrenderer or gfxstream values if the crate has been built with the backend-virgl or backend-gfxstream features respectively (both are enabled by default). The null mode is always available.

Limitations

This device links native libraries (because of the usage of Rutabaga) compiled with GNU libc, so the CI is setup to not build this device for musl targets. It might be possible to build those libraries using musl and then build the gpu device, but this is not tested.

We are currently only supporting sharing the display output to QEMU through a socket using the transfer_read operation triggered by VIRTIO_GPU_CMD_TRANSFER_FROM_HOST_3D to transfer data from and to virtio-gpu 3D resources. It'll be nice to have support for directly sharing display output resource using dmabuf.

This device does not yet support the VIRTIO_GPU_CMD_RESOURCE_CREATE_BLOB, VIRTIO_GPU_CMD_SET_SCANOUT_BLOB and VIRTIO_GPU_CMD_RESOURCE_ASSIGN_UUID features. This requires https://github.com/rust-vmm/vhost/pull/251, which in turn requires QEMU API stabilization. Because blob resources are not yet supported, some capsets are limited:

  • Venus (Vulkan implementation in virglrenderer project) support is not available at all.
  • gfxstream-vulkan and gfxstream-gles support are exposed, but can practically only be used for display output, there is no hardware acceleration yet.

Features

This crate supports three GPU backends: virglrenderer, gfxstream (both enabled by default), and null.

The virglrenderer backend uses the virglrenderer-rs crate, which provides Rust bindings to the native virglrenderer library. It translates OpenGL API and Vulkan calls to an intermediate representation and allows for OpenGL acceleration on the host.

The gfxstream backend leverages the rutabaga_gfx crate. With gfxstream rendering mode, GLES and Vulkan calls are forwarded to the host with minimal modification.

The null backend is a no-op implementation that accepts all GPU commands but performs no actual rendering. This backend is primarily intended for testing and CI purposes.

Install the development packages for your distro, then build with:

$ cargo build

Both virglrenderer and gfxstream support are compiled by default. The null backend is always available. To build with specific backends:

# Build with only virglrenderer (and null)
$ cargo build --no-default-features --features backend-virgl

# Build with only gfxstream (and null)
$ cargo build --no-default-features --features backend-gfxstream

# Build with null backend only (for testing)
$ cargo build --no-default-features

Examples

First start the daemon on the host machine using one of the available gpu modes:

  1. virglrenderer (if the crate has been compiled with the feature backend-virgl)
  2. gfxstream (if the crate has been compiled with the feature backend-gfxstream)
  3. null (always available, for testing)
host# vhost-device-gpu --socket-path /tmp/gpu.socket --gpu-mode virglrenderer

With QEMU, there are two device front-ends you can use with this device. You can either use vhost-user-gpu-pci or vhost-user-vga, which also implements VGA, that allows you to see boot messages before the guest initializes the GPU. You can also use different display outputs (for example gtk or dbus). By default, QEMU also adds another VGA output, use -vga none to make sure it is disabled.

  1. Using vhost-user-gpu-pci

Start QEMU with the following flags:

-chardev socket,id=vgpu,path=/tmp/gpu.socket \
-device vhost-user-gpu-pci,chardev=vgpu,id=vgpu \
-object memory-backend-memfd,share=on,id=mem0,size=4G, \
-machine q35,memory-backend=mem0,accel=kvm \
-display gtk,gl=on,show-cursor=on \
-vga none
  1. Using vhost-user-vga

Start QEMU with the following flags:

-chardev socket,id=vgpu,path=/tmp/gpu.socket \
-device vhost-user-vga,chardev=vgpu,id=vgpu \
-object memory-backend-memfd,share=on,id=mem0,size=4G, \
-machine q35,memory-backend=mem0,accel=kvm \
-display gtk,gl=on,show-cursor=on \
-vga none

License

This project is licensed under either of