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List: linux-kernel
Subject: Re: [PATCH 3/5] KVM: nSVM: Don't forget about L1-injected events
From: "Maciej S. Szmigiero" <mail () maciej ! szmigiero ! name>
Date: 2022-03-31 23:09:48
Message-ID: f4cdaf45-c869-f3bb-2ba2-3c0a4da12a6d () maciej ! szmigiero ! name
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On 31.03.2022 01:20, Sean Christopherson wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 31, 2022, Maciej S. Szmigiero wrote:
>> On 30.03.2022 23:59, Sean Christopherson wrote:
>>> On Thu, Mar 10, 2022, Maciej S. Szmigiero wrote:
>>>> @@ -3627,6 +3632,14 @@ static void svm_complete_interrupts(struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu)
>>>> if (!(exitintinfo & SVM_EXITINTINFO_VALID))
>>>> return;
>>>> + /* L1 -> L2 event re-injection needs a different handling */
>>>> + if (is_guest_mode(vcpu) &&
>>>> + exit_during_event_injection(svm, svm->nested.ctl.event_inj,
>>>> + svm->nested.ctl.event_inj_err)) {
>>>> + nested_svm_maybe_reinject(vcpu);
>>>
>>> Why is this manually re-injecting? More specifically, why does the below (out of
>>> sight in the diff) code that re-queues the exception/interrupt not work? The
>>> re-queued event should be picked up by nested_save_pending_event_to_vmcb12() and
>>> propagatred to vmcb12.
>>
>> A L1 -> L2 injected event should either be re-injected until successfully
>> injected into L2 or propagated to VMCB12 if there is a nested VMEXIT
>> during its delivery.
>>
>> svm_complete_interrupts() does not do such re-injection in some cases
>> (soft interrupts, soft exceptions, #VC) - it is trying to resort to
>> emulation instead, which is incorrect in this case.
>>
>> I think it's better to split out this L1 -> L2 nested case to a
>> separate function in nested.c rather than to fill
>> svm_complete_interrupts() in already very large svm.c with "if" blocks
>> here and there.
>
> Ah, I see it now. WTF.
>
> Ugh, commit 66fd3f7f901f ("KVM: Do not re-execute INTn instruction.") fixed VMX,
> but left SVM broken.
>
> Re-executing the INTn is wrong, the instruction has already completed decode and
> execution. E.g. if there's there's a code breakpoint on the INTn, rewinding will
> cause a spurious #DB.
>
> KVM's INT3 shenanigans are bonkers, but I guess there's no better option given
> that the APM says "Software interrupts cannot be properly injected if the processor
> does not support the NextRIP field.". What a mess.
Note that KVM currently always tries to re-execute the current instruction
when asked to re-inject a #BP or a #OF, even when nrips are enabled.
Also, #BP (and #OF, too) is returned as type SVM_EXITINTINFO_TYPE_EXEPT,
not as SVM_EXITINTINFO_TYPE_SOFT (soft interrupt), so it should be
re-injected accordingly.
> Anyways, for the common nrips=true case, I strongly prefer that we properly fix
> the non-nested case and re-inject software interrupts, which should in turn
> naturally fix this nested case.
This would also need making the #BP or #OF current instruction
re-execution conditional on (at least) nrips support.
I am not sure, however, whether this won't introduce any regressions.
That's why this patch set changed the behavior here only for the
L1 -> L2 case.
Another issue is whether a L1 hypervisor can legally inject a #VC
into its L2 (since these are never re-injected).
We still need L1 -> L2 event injection detection to restore the NextRIP
field when re-injecting an event that uses it.
> And for nrips=false, my vote is to either punt
> and document it as a "KVM erratum", or straight up make nested require nrips.
A quick Internet search shows that the first CPUs with NextRIP were the
second-generation Family 10h CPUs (Phenom II, Athlon II, etc.).
They started being released in early 2009, so we probably don't need to
worry about the non-nrips case too much.
For the nested case, orthodox reading of the aforementioned APM sentence
would mean that a L1 hypervisor is not allowed either to make use of such
event injection in the non-nrips case.
> Note, that also requires updating svm_queue_exception(), which assumes it will
> only be handed hardware exceptions, i.e. hardcodes type EXEPT. That's blatantly
> wrong, e.g. if userspace injects a software exception via KVM_SET_VCPU_EVENTS.
svm_queue_exception() uses SVM_EVTINJ_TYPE_EXEPT, which is correct even
for software exceptions (#BP or #OF).
It does work indeed, as the self test included in this patch set
demonstrates.
Thanks,
Maciej
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