[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH] x86/emul: Adjustments to exception error code handling
On 05/02/18 13:32, Jan Beulich wrote: >>>> On 05.02.18 at 11:59, <andrew.cooper3@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> --- a/xen/arch/x86/x86_emulate/x86_emulate.c >> +++ b/xen/arch/x86/x86_emulate/x86_emulate.c >> @@ -877,14 +877,12 @@ do { >> \ >> if ( rc ) goto done; \ >> } while (0) >> >> -static inline int mkec(uint8_t e, int32_t ec, ...) >> -{ >> - return (e < 32 && ((1u << e) & EXC_HAS_EC)) ? ec : X86_EVENT_NO_EC; >> -} >> +/* CPP magic. Chooses ec if not empty, otherwise X86_EVENT_NO_EC. */ >> +#define mkec(ignore, x, ...) x >> >> #define generate_exception_if(p, e, ec...) \ >> ({ if ( (p) ) { \ >> - x86_emul_hw_exception(e, mkec(e, ##ec, 0), ctxt); \ >> + x86_emul_hw_exception(e, mkec(X, ##ec, X86_EVENT_NO_EC), ctxt); \ >> rc = X86EMUL_EXCEPTION; \ >> goto done; \ >> } \ > This orphans EXC_HAS_EC, which makes me wonder what assertion > you're talking about in the description. {pv,hvm}_inject_event() > The way things are before > your change means that at least an exception with error code will > be delivered properly (the error code will be zero then) if it wasn't > specified in the invocation (which, as you may recall, I actually > consider useful, but you did object to making this an "officially" > allowed mechanism). It also meant that programming errors go completely unnoticed, which is worse. > With your change in place, an assertion will > supposedly trigger (wherever that is), killing the host or (in a > release build) leading to some other behavior that's likely fatal to > a guest. Would the guest perhaps get to see an error code of all > ones? In a release builds, it depends how vicious the vmentry checks are. > If, otoh, we could know at build time that something is wrong, > I would be quite a bit more in agreement with doing such a change, > most importantly because those exception raising paths are rarely > hit, and are mostly (if not entirely) untested by the test harness. I was originally aiming for a build time check, but the check_fpu_exn() and protmode_load_seg() paths at least have non-constant exceptions. We could force a constant exception by BUILD_BUG_ON(e >= 32), and opencode the result of check_fpu_exn() (which is the only case which can't be converted to a constant exception) to use x86_emul_hw_exception() directly with suitable auditing. ~Andrew _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.xenproject.org/mailman/listinfo/xen-devel
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