diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'arch/x86/kvm/svm/svm.c')
-rw-r--r-- | arch/x86/kvm/svm/svm.c | 177 |
1 files changed, 122 insertions, 55 deletions
diff --git a/arch/x86/kvm/svm/svm.c b/arch/x86/kvm/svm/svm.c index 2c99b18d76c0..6d97629655e3 100644 --- a/arch/x86/kvm/svm/svm.c +++ b/arch/x86/kvm/svm/svm.c @@ -290,7 +290,7 @@ int svm_set_efer(struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu, u64 efer) if ((old_efer & EFER_SVME) != (efer & EFER_SVME)) { if (!(efer & EFER_SVME)) { - svm_leave_nested(svm); + svm_leave_nested(vcpu); svm_set_gif(svm, true); /* #GP intercept is still needed for vmware backdoor */ if (!enable_vmware_backdoor) @@ -312,7 +312,11 @@ int svm_set_efer(struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu, u64 efer) return ret; } - if (svm_gp_erratum_intercept) + /* + * Never intercept #GP for SEV guests, KVM can't + * decrypt guest memory to workaround the erratum. + */ + if (svm_gp_erratum_intercept && !sev_guest(vcpu->kvm)) set_exception_intercept(svm, GP_VECTOR); } } @@ -1010,9 +1014,10 @@ static void init_vmcb(struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu) * Guest access to VMware backdoor ports could legitimately * trigger #GP because of TSS I/O permission bitmap. * We intercept those #GP and allow access to them anyway - * as VMware does. + * as VMware does. Don't intercept #GP for SEV guests as KVM can't + * decrypt guest memory to decode the faulting instruction. */ - if (enable_vmware_backdoor) + if (enable_vmware_backdoor && !sev_guest(vcpu->kvm)) set_exception_intercept(svm, GP_VECTOR); svm_set_intercept(svm, INTERCEPT_INTR); @@ -2091,10 +2096,6 @@ static int gp_interception(struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu) if (error_code) goto reinject; - /* All SVM instructions expect page aligned RAX */ - if (svm->vmcb->save.rax & ~PAGE_MASK) - goto reinject; - /* Decode the instruction for usage later */ if (x86_decode_emulated_instruction(vcpu, 0, NULL, 0) != EMULATION_OK) goto reinject; @@ -2112,8 +2113,13 @@ static int gp_interception(struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu) if (!is_guest_mode(vcpu)) return kvm_emulate_instruction(vcpu, EMULTYPE_VMWARE_GP | EMULTYPE_NO_DECODE); - } else + } else { + /* All SVM instructions expect page aligned RAX */ + if (svm->vmcb->save.rax & ~PAGE_MASK) + goto reinject; + return emulate_svm_instr(vcpu, opcode); + } reinject: kvm_queue_exception_e(vcpu, GP_VECTOR, error_code); @@ -4252,79 +4258,140 @@ static void svm_enable_smi_window(struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu) } } -static bool svm_can_emulate_instruction(struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu, void *insn, int insn_len) +static bool svm_can_emulate_instruction(struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu, int emul_type, + void *insn, int insn_len) { bool smep, smap, is_user; unsigned long cr4; + u64 error_code; + + /* Emulation is always possible when KVM has access to all guest state. */ + if (!sev_guest(vcpu->kvm)) + return true; + + /* #UD and #GP should never be intercepted for SEV guests. */ + WARN_ON_ONCE(emul_type & (EMULTYPE_TRAP_UD | + EMULTYPE_TRAP_UD_FORCED | + EMULTYPE_VMWARE_GP)); /* - * When the guest is an SEV-ES guest, emulation is not possible. + * Emulation is impossible for SEV-ES guests as KVM doesn't have access + * to guest register state. */ if (sev_es_guest(vcpu->kvm)) return false; /* + * Emulation is possible if the instruction is already decoded, e.g. + * when completing I/O after returning from userspace. + */ + if (emul_type & EMULTYPE_NO_DECODE) + return true; + + /* + * Emulation is possible for SEV guests if and only if a prefilled + * buffer containing the bytes of the intercepted instruction is + * available. SEV guest memory is encrypted with a guest specific key + * and cannot be decrypted by KVM, i.e. KVM would read cyphertext and + * decode garbage. + * + * Inject #UD if KVM reached this point without an instruction buffer. + * In practice, this path should never be hit by a well-behaved guest, + * e.g. KVM doesn't intercept #UD or #GP for SEV guests, but this path + * is still theoretically reachable, e.g. via unaccelerated fault-like + * AVIC access, and needs to be handled by KVM to avoid putting the + * guest into an infinite loop. Injecting #UD is somewhat arbitrary, + * but its the least awful option given lack of insight into the guest. + */ + if (unlikely(!insn)) { + kvm_queue_exception(vcpu, UD_VECTOR); + return false; + } + + /* + * Emulate for SEV guests if the insn buffer is not empty. The buffer + * will be empty if the DecodeAssist microcode cannot fetch bytes for + * the faulting instruction because the code fetch itself faulted, e.g. + * the guest attempted to fetch from emulated MMIO or a guest page + * table used to translate CS:RIP resides in emulated MMIO. + */ + if (likely(insn_len)) + return true; + + /* * Detect and workaround Errata 1096 Fam_17h_00_0Fh. * * Errata: - * When CPU raise #NPF on guest data access and vCPU CR4.SMAP=1, it is - * possible that CPU microcode implementing DecodeAssist will fail - * to read bytes of instruction which caused #NPF. In this case, - * GuestIntrBytes field of the VMCB on a VMEXIT will incorrectly - * return 0 instead of the correct guest instruction bytes. - * - * This happens because CPU microcode reading instruction bytes - * uses a special opcode which attempts to read data using CPL=0 - * privileges. The microcode reads CS:RIP and if it hits a SMAP - * fault, it gives up and returns no instruction bytes. + * When CPU raises #NPF on guest data access and vCPU CR4.SMAP=1, it is + * possible that CPU microcode implementing DecodeAssist will fail to + * read guest memory at CS:RIP and vmcb.GuestIntrBytes will incorrectly + * be '0'. This happens because microcode reads CS:RIP using a _data_ + * loap uop with CPL=0 privileges. If the load hits a SMAP #PF, ucode + * gives up and does not fill the instruction bytes buffer. * - * Detection: - * We reach here in case CPU supports DecodeAssist, raised #NPF and - * returned 0 in GuestIntrBytes field of the VMCB. - * First, errata can only be triggered in case vCPU CR4.SMAP=1. - * Second, if vCPU CR4.SMEP=1, errata could only be triggered - * in case vCPU CPL==3 (Because otherwise guest would have triggered - * a SMEP fault instead of #NPF). - * Otherwise, vCPU CR4.SMEP=0, errata could be triggered by any vCPU CPL. - * As most guests enable SMAP if they have also enabled SMEP, use above - * logic in order to attempt minimize false-positive of detecting errata - * while still preserving all cases semantic correctness. + * As above, KVM reaches this point iff the VM is an SEV guest, the CPU + * supports DecodeAssist, a #NPF was raised, KVM's page fault handler + * triggered emulation (e.g. for MMIO), and the CPU returned 0 in the + * GuestIntrBytes field of the VMCB. * - * Workaround: - * To determine what instruction the guest was executing, the hypervisor - * will have to decode the instruction at the instruction pointer. + * This does _not_ mean that the erratum has been encountered, as the + * DecodeAssist will also fail if the load for CS:RIP hits a legitimate + * #PF, e.g. if the guest attempt to execute from emulated MMIO and + * encountered a reserved/not-present #PF. * - * In non SEV guest, hypervisor will be able to read the guest - * memory to decode the instruction pointer when insn_len is zero - * so we return true to indicate that decoding is possible. + * To hit the erratum, the following conditions must be true: + * 1. CR4.SMAP=1 (obviously). + * 2. CR4.SMEP=0 || CPL=3. If SMEP=1 and CPL<3, the erratum cannot + * have been hit as the guest would have encountered a SMEP + * violation #PF, not a #NPF. + * 3. The #NPF is not due to a code fetch, in which case failure to + * retrieve the instruction bytes is legitimate (see abvoe). * - * But in the SEV guest, the guest memory is encrypted with the - * guest specific key and hypervisor will not be able to decode the - * instruction pointer so we will not able to workaround it. Lets - * print the error and request to kill the guest. + * In addition, don't apply the erratum workaround if the #NPF occurred + * while translating guest page tables (see below). */ - if (likely(!insn || insn_len)) - return true; - - /* - * If RIP is invalid, go ahead with emulation which will cause an - * internal error exit. - */ - if (!kvm_vcpu_gfn_to_memslot(vcpu, kvm_rip_read(vcpu) >> PAGE_SHIFT)) - return true; + error_code = to_svm(vcpu)->vmcb->control.exit_info_1; + if (error_code & (PFERR_GUEST_PAGE_MASK | PFERR_FETCH_MASK)) + goto resume_guest; cr4 = kvm_read_cr4(vcpu); smep = cr4 & X86_CR4_SMEP; smap = cr4 & X86_CR4_SMAP; is_user = svm_get_cpl(vcpu) == 3; if (smap && (!smep || is_user)) { - if (!sev_guest(vcpu->kvm)) - return true; - pr_err_ratelimited("KVM: SEV Guest triggered AMD Erratum 1096\n"); - kvm_make_request(KVM_REQ_TRIPLE_FAULT, vcpu); + + /* + * If the fault occurred in userspace, arbitrarily inject #GP + * to avoid killing the guest and to hopefully avoid confusing + * the guest kernel too much, e.g. injecting #PF would not be + * coherent with respect to the guest's page tables. Request + * triple fault if the fault occurred in the kernel as there's + * no fault that KVM can inject without confusing the guest. + * In practice, the triple fault is moot as no sane SEV kernel + * will execute from user memory while also running with SMAP=1. + */ + if (is_user) + kvm_inject_gp(vcpu, 0); + else + kvm_make_request(KVM_REQ_TRIPLE_FAULT, vcpu); } +resume_guest: + /* + * If the erratum was not hit, simply resume the guest and let it fault + * again. While awful, e.g. the vCPU may get stuck in an infinite loop + * if the fault is at CPL=0, it's the lesser of all evils. Exiting to + * userspace will kill the guest, and letting the emulator read garbage + * will yield random behavior and potentially corrupt the guest. + * + * Simply resuming the guest is technically not a violation of the SEV + * architecture. AMD's APM states that all code fetches and page table + * accesses for SEV guest are encrypted, regardless of the C-Bit. The + * APM also states that encrypted accesses to MMIO are "ignored", but + * doesn't explicitly define "ignored", i.e. doing nothing and letting + * the guest spin is technically "ignoring" the access. + */ return false; } |