On Fri, Jun 17, 2022 at 09:21:31AM +0100, Marc Zyngier wrote: > On Thu, 16 Jun 2022 16:11:34 +0000, Quentin Perret wrote: > > Commit a7259df76702 ("memblock: make memblock_find_in_range method > > private") changed the API using which memory is reserved for the pKVM > > hypervisor. However, it seems that memblock_phys_alloc() differs > > from the original API in terms of kmemleak semantics -- the old one > > excluded the reserved regions from kmemleak scans when the new one > > doesn't seem to. Unfortunately, when protected KVM is enabled, all > > kernel accesses to pKVM-private memory result in a fatal exception, > > which can now happen because of kmemleak scans: > > > > [...] > > Applied to fixes, thanks! > > [1/1] KVM: arm64: Prevent kmemleak from accessing pKVM memory > commit: 9e5afa8a537f742bccc2cd91bc0bef4b6483ee98 I'd really like to update the changelog to this: Commit a7259df76702 ("memblock: make memblock_find_in_range method private") changed the API using which memory is reserved for the pKVM hypervisor. However, memblock_phys_alloc() differs from the original API in terms of kmemleak semantics -- the old one didn't report the reserved regions to kmemleak while the new one does. Unfortunately, when protected KVM is enabled, all kernel accesses to pKVM-private memory result in a fatal exception, which can now happen because of kmemleak scans: $ echo scan > /sys/kernel/debug/kmemleak [ 34.991354] kvm [304]: nVHE hyp BUG at: [<ffff800008fa3750>] __kvm_nvhe_handle_host_mem_abort+0x270/0x290! ... Fix this by explicitly excluding the hypervisor's memory pool from kmemleak like we already do for the hyp BSS. > Cheers, > > M. > -- > Marc Zyngier <maz@xxxxxxxxxx> > -- Sincerely yours, Mike. _______________________________________________ kvmarm mailing list kvmarm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.cs.columbia.edu/mailman/listinfo/kvmarm