[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH v2 09/16] x86: don't setup PV hypercall stubs and entries when !CONFIG_PV
>>> On 02.11.18 at 13:57, <wei.liu2@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Wed, Oct 31, 2018 at 02:58:59AM -0600, Jan Beulich wrote: >> >>> On 30.10.18 at 19:08, <andrew.cooper3@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> > On 29/10/18 14:37, Jan Beulich wrote: >> >>>>> On 19.10.18 at 17:59, <andrew.cooper3@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >>> On 19/10/18 15:28, Wei Liu wrote: >> >>>> @@ -347,6 +352,7 @@ void subarch_percpu_traps_init(void) >> >>>> /* Common SYSCALL parameters. */ >> >>>> wrmsrl(MSR_STAR, XEN_MSR_STAR); >> >>>> wrmsrl(MSR_SYSCALL_MASK, XEN_SYSCALL_MASK); >> >>>> +#endif >> >>> It would be a wise precaution to initialise these MSRs to 0 in the !PV >> >>> case, so we don't retain stale values. >> >> If anything, EFER.SCE needs to be kept clear, as that's what >> >> controls whether SYSCALL would raise #GP(0). >> > >> > I toyed with suggesting this, but I'm not entirely certain. >> > >> > SVM unilaterally switches EFER between host and guest context, so will >> > preserve whatever value Xen had at VMRUN time. >> > >> > Gen 2 VT-x has host/guest load/save support, so can be configured to >> > exit in whichever configuration we would like. >> > >> > Gen 1 VT-x uses MSR load-save lists, with an optimisation in the case >> > that guest == host. By clearing SCE in Xen context, we miss the >> > optimisation in the common case for 64bit guests. >> > >> >> But without a >> >> PV domain around, nothing can access the host values of >> >> these MSRs in the first place, so instead we could simplify >> >> some context switching by never restoring host values, and >> >> only ever loading guest ones. Except that, of course, VMLOAD >> >> is an all-or-nothing insn, and we need to use to get TR loaded. >> > >> > The VMLOAD path is a bit of a special case, in that we need to do it, >> > and its rather faster than the other available options. Conditionally >> > feeding zeros into this would be fine. >> > >> > That said, overall, we may want to leave some poisoned values around. >> > In the case that SCE is enabled and we do hit a spurious SYSCALL/SYSRET >> > instruction, it would be better to definitely crash. >> >> I'd be fine with poisoned (but not zero) values, if indeed we mean >> to allow for a hypervisor crash in that case (which ought to be >> fine, since we're talking about unreachable code anyway). Ideally >> "poisoned" would be "non-canonical", but the MSRs don't allow for >> non-canonical addresses to be loaded into them, so we'd need to >> think of different poisoning values. > > How about putting in a function which calls panic? That seems to be the > least intrusive option? Fine with me. Jan _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.xenproject.org/mailman/listinfo/xen-devel
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