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Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH RFC] tools/libxc, xen/x86: Added xc_set_mem_access_sparse()



>>> On 29.08.16 at 18:02, <rcojocaru@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> On 08/29/16 18:42, Jan Beulich wrote:
>>>>> On 29.08.16 at 17:29, <rcojocaru@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>> On 08/26/2016 11:14 AM, Jan Beulich wrote:
>>>>>>> On 26.08.16 at 09:40, <rcojocaru@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>>>> On 08/26/16 10:18, Jan Beulich wrote:
>>>>>>>>> On 26.08.16 at 08:11, <rcojocaru@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>>>>>> @@ -76,6 +76,17 @@ int mem_access_memop(unsigned long cmd,
>>>>>>>          }
>>>>>>>          break;
>>>>>>>  
>>>>>>> +    case XENMEM_access_op_set_access_sparse:
>>>>>>> +    {
>>>>>>> +        xen_pfn_t *arr = xmalloc_bytes(sizeof(xen_pfn_t) * mao.nr);
>>>>>>> +
>>>>>>> +        // copy_from_guest(arr, mao.pfn_list, mao.nr);
>>>>>>
>>>>>> What is this (wrongly C++ style) comment about? I think this really
>>>>>> wasn't meant to be a comment, so RFC or not - how do things work
>>>>>> with this commented out? And where is the error checking for the
>>>>>> allocation (which btw should be xmalloc_array(), but the need for
>>>>>> an allocation here is questionable - the called function would better
>>>>>> retrieve the GFNs one by one).
>>>>>
>>>>> They don't work, I forgot that comment in (the line should not have been
>>>>> commented). I first wrote the patch on Xen 4.6 and there there was no
>>>>> CHECK_mem_access_op, so I was just trying to figure out what went wrong
>>>>> when I first saw the compile errors and tried this, then left it in
>>>>> accidentally.
>>>>>
>>>>> Indeed, there should also be a check for allocation failure.
>>>>>
>>>>> Do you mean that I would do better to just copy_from_guest(&gfn,
>>>>> mao.pfn_list + index, 1) in a for loop that sets mem_access restrictions?
>>>>
>>>> Yes, albeit it is copy_from_guest_offset(&gfn, mao.pfn_list, index, 1).
>>>
>>> Avoiding translation, to the best of my understanding (and tested with
>>> the latest version of the patch I'm working on) would then require
>>> replacing copy_from_guest() with copy_from_user(), which does not have a
>>> copy_from_user_offset() alternative.
>> 
>> I don't follow - where did you see copy_from_user() used in such a
>> case? If you go through the existing examples, you'll find that with
>> some #define-s (re-vectoring to copy_from_compat_offset()) this
>> can easily be taken care of.
> 
> I was looking at xc_mem_paging_memop(), where the buffer parameter is
> being sent via mpo.buffer, which is an uint64_aligned_t, which I thought
> was what you meant. On the HV side, it's being copied_from_user().
> 
> In the interest of preventing furher misunderstanding, could you please
> point out a specific example you have in mind?

Actually, having looked again more closely, I'm not sure you need
to use the compat version of the copying routine; you may need a
thin handler in compat/memory.c. Before going to further search
for a suitable example, would you mind pointing out what it is that
does not work with copy_from_guest_offset()?

Jan


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