+
+/* Our random number generator device reads from /dev/random into the Guest's
+ * input buffers. The usual case is that the Guest doesn't want random numbers
+ * and so has no buffers although /dev/random is still readable, whereas
+ * console is the reverse.
+ *
+ * The same logic applies, however. */
+static bool handle_rng_input(int fd, struct device *dev)
+{
+ int len;
+ unsigned int head, in_num, out_num, totlen = 0;
+ struct iovec iov[dev->vq->vring.num];
+
+ /* First we need a buffer from the Guests's virtqueue. */
+ head = get_vq_desc(dev->vq, iov, &out_num, &in_num);
+
+ /* If they're not ready for input, stop listening to this file
+ * descriptor. We'll start again once they add an input buffer. */
+ if (head == dev->vq->vring.num)
+ return false;
+
+ if (out_num)
+ errx(1, "Output buffers in rng?");
+
+ /* This is why we convert to iovecs: the readv() call uses them, and so
+ * it reads straight into the Guest's buffer. We loop to make sure we
+ * fill it. */
+ while (!iov_empty(iov, in_num)) {
+ len = readv(dev->fd, iov, in_num);
+ if (len <= 0)
+ err(1, "Read from /dev/random gave %i", len);
+ iov_consume(iov, in_num, len);
+ totlen += len;
+ }
+
+ /* Tell the Guest about the new input. */
+ add_used_and_trigger(fd, dev->vq, head, totlen);
+
+ /* Everything went OK! */
+ return true;
+}
+
+/* And this creates a "hardware" random number device for the Guest. */
+static void setup_rng(void)
+{
+ struct device *dev;
+ int fd;
+
+ fd = open_or_die("/dev/random", O_RDONLY);
+
+ /* The device responds to return from I/O thread. */
+ dev = new_device("rng", VIRTIO_ID_RNG, fd, handle_rng_input);
+
+ /* The device has one virtqueue, where the Guest places inbufs. */
+ add_virtqueue(dev, VIRTQUEUE_NUM, enable_fd);
+
+ verbose("device %u: rng\n", devices.device_num++);
+}