virtual GIC implementation, this must be done after initializing the in-kernel
irqchip.
+1.3 ATTRIBUTE: KVM_ARM_VCPU_PMU_V3_FILTER
+-----------------------------------------
+
+:Parameters: in kvm_device_attr.addr the address for a PMU event filter is a
+ pointer to a struct kvm_pmu_event_filter
+
+:Returns:
+
+ ======= ======================================================
+ -ENODEV: PMUv3 not supported or GIC not initialized
+ -ENXIO: PMUv3 not properly configured or in-kernel irqchip not
+ configured as required prior to calling this attribute
+ -EBUSY: PMUv3 already initialized
+ -EINVAL: Invalid filter range
+ ======= ======================================================
+
+Request the installation of a PMU event filter described as follows:
+
+struct kvm_pmu_event_filter {
+ __u16 base_event;
+ __u16 nevents;
+
+#define KVM_PMU_EVENT_ALLOW 0
+#define KVM_PMU_EVENT_DENY 1
+
+ __u8 action;
+ __u8 pad[3];
+};
+
+A filter range is defined as the range [@base_event, @base_event + @nevents),
+together with an @action (KVM_PMU_EVENT_ALLOW or KVM_PMU_EVENT_DENY). The
+first registered range defines the global policy (global ALLOW if the first
+@action is DENY, global DENY if the first @action is ALLOW). Multiple ranges
+can be programmed, and must fit within the event space defined by the PMU
+architecture (10 bits on ARMv8.0, 16 bits from ARMv8.1 onwards).
+
+Note: "Cancelling" a filter by registering the opposite action for the same
+range doesn't change the default action. For example, installing an ALLOW
+filter for event range [0:10) as the first filter and then applying a DENY
+action for the same range will leave the whole range as disabled.
+
+Restrictions: Event 0 (SW_INCR) is never filtered, as it doesn't count a
+hardware event. Filtering event 0x1E (CHAIN) has no effect either, as it
+isn't strictly speaking an event. Filtering the cycle counter is possible
+using event 0x11 (CPU_CYCLES).
+
2. GROUP: KVM_ARM_VCPU_TIMER_CTRL
=================================