On January 22, 2024 4:04:33 PM PST, Alexey Makhalov <alexey.makhalov@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > >On 1/22/24 10:28 AM, H. Peter Anvin wrote: >> On January 22, 2024 8:32:22 AM PST, Dave Hansen <dave.hansen@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>> On 1/9/24 00:40, Alexey Makhalov wrote: >>>> +#ifdef CONFIG_INTEL_TDX_GUEST >>>> +unsigned long vmware_tdx_hypercall(unsigned long cmd, >>>> + struct tdx_module_args *args) >>>> +{ >>>> + if (!hypervisor_is_type(X86_HYPER_VMWARE)) >>>> + return ULONG_MAX; >>>> + >>>> + if (cmd & ~VMWARE_CMD_MASK) { >>>> + pr_warn_once("Out of range command %lx\n", cmd); >>>> + return ULONG_MAX; >>>> + } >>>> + >>>> + args->r10 = VMWARE_TDX_VENDOR_LEAF; >>>> + args->r11 = VMWARE_TDX_HCALL_FUNC; >>>> + args->r12 = VMWARE_HYPERVISOR_MAGIC; >>>> + args->r13 = cmd; >>>> + args->r15 = 0; /* CPL */ >>>> + >>>> + __tdx_hypercall(args); >>>> + >>>> + return args->r12; >>>> +} >>>> +EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(vmware_tdx_hypercall); >>>> +#endif >>> >>> This is the kind of wrapper that I was hoping for. Thanks. >>> >>> Acked-by: Dave Hansen <dave.hansen@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> >>> >> >> I'm slightly confused by this TBH. >> >> Why are the arguments passed in as a structure, which is modified by the wrapper to boot? This is analogous to a system call interface. >> >> Furthermore, this is an out-of-line function; it should never be called with !X86_HYPER_VMWARE or you are introducing overhead for other hypervisors; I believe a pr_warn_once() is in order at least, just as you have for the out-of-range test. >> > >This patch series introduces vmware_hypercall family of functions similar to kvm_hypercall. Similarity: both vmware and kvm implementations are static inline functions and both of them use __tdx_hypercall (global not exported symbol). Difference: kvm_hypercall functions are used _only_ within the kernel, but vmware_hypercall are also used by modules. >Exporting __tdx_hypercall function is an original Dave's concern. >So we ended up with exporting wrapper, not generic, but VMware specific with added checks against arbitrary use. >vmware_tdx_hypercall is not designed for !X86_HYPER_VMWARE callers. But such a calls are not forbidden. >Arguments in a structure is an API for __tdx_hypercall(). Input and output argument handling are done by vmware_hypercall callers, while VMware specific dress up is inside the wrapper. > >Peter, do you think code comments are required to make it clear for the reader? > > TBH that explanation didn't make much sense to me...