Hi James, Thanks a lot for the review. On 2017/11/15 0:00, James Morse wrote: > Hi Dongjiu Geng, > > On 10/11/17 19:54, Dongjiu Geng wrote: >> If it is not RAS SError, directly inject virtual SError, >> which will keep the old way. If it is RAS SError, firstly >> let host ACPI module to handle it. > >> For the ACPI handling, >> if the error address is invalid, APEI driver will not >> identify the address to hwpoison memory and can not notify >> guest to do the recovery. > > The guest can't do any recover either. There is no recovery you can do without > some information about what the error is. > > This is your memory corruption at an unknown address? We should reboot. > > (I agree memory_failure.c's::me_kernel() is ignoring kernel errors, we should > try and fix this. It makes some sense for polled or irq notifications, but not > SEA/SEI). > > >> In order to safe, KVM continues >> categorizing errors and handle it separately. > >> If the RAS error is not propagated, let host user space to >> handle it. > > No. Host user space should not know anything about the kernel or platform RAS > support. Doing so creates an ABI link between EL3 firmware and Qemu. This is > totally unmaintainable. Here I have two question: (1) If the AET(Asynchronous Error Type) is Recoverable error (UER), do you mean we also reboot or panic? (2) what is the chance to set guest ESR for Qemu? here I return a error code to Qemu. when Qemu get this error return, it will specify guest ESR and inject the abort. here if KVM does not return error to Qemu, Qemu will do not know when to set the guest ESR value and inject abort. > > This thing needs to be portable. The kernel should handle the error, and report > any symptoms to user-space. e.g. 'this memory is gone'. > > We shouldn't special case KVM. > > >> The reason is that sometimes we can only kill the >> guest effected application instead of panic whose guest OS. >> Host user space specifies a valid ESR and inject virtual >> SError, guest can just kill the current application if the >> non-consumed error coming from guest application. >> >> Signed-off-by: Dongjiu Geng <gengdongjiu@xxxxxxxxxx> >> Signed-off-by: Quanming Wu <wuquanming@xxxxxxxxxx> > > The last Signed-off-by should match the person posting the patch. It's a chain > of custody for GPL-signoff purposes, not a 'partially-written-by'. If you want > to credit Quanming Wu you can add CC and they can Ack/Review your patch. Ok, got it. thanks a lot for your suggestion. > > >> diff --git a/arch/arm64/kvm/handle_exit.c b/arch/arm64/kvm/handle_exit.c >> index 7debb74..1afdc87 100644 >> --- a/arch/arm64/kvm/handle_exit.c >> +++ b/arch/arm64/kvm/handle_exit.c >> @@ -178,6 +179,66 @@ static exit_handle_fn kvm_get_exit_handler(struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu) >> return arm_exit_handlers[hsr_ec]; >> } >> >> +/** >> + * kvm_handle_guest_sei - handles SError interrupt or asynchronous aborts >> + * @vcpu: the VCPU pointer >> + * >> + * For RAS SError interrupt, firstly let host kernel handle it. >> + * If the AET is [ESR_ELx_AET_UER], then let user space handle it, >> + */ >> +static int kvm_handle_guest_sei(struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu, struct kvm_run *run) >> +{ >> + unsigned int esr = kvm_vcpu_get_hsr(vcpu); >> + bool impdef_syndrome = esr & ESR_ELx_ISV; /* aka IDS */ >> + unsigned int aet = esr & ESR_ELx_AET; >> + >> + /* >> + * This is not RAS SError >> + */ >> + if (!cpus_have_const_cap(ARM64_HAS_RAS_EXTN)) { >> + kvm_inject_vabt(vcpu); >> + return 1; >> + } > >> + /* The host kernel may handle this abort. */ >> + handle_guest_sei(); > > This has to claim the SError as a notification. If APEI claims the error, KVM > doesn't need to do anything more. You ignore its return code. Thanks for the pointing out. I will check the return code, if it return success, KVM doesn't need to do anything more, otherwise, continue run. > > >> + >> + /* >> + * In below two conditions, it will directly inject the >> + * virtual SError: >> + * 1. The Syndrome is IMPLEMENTATION DEFINED >> + * 2. It is Uncategorized SEI >> + */ >> + if (impdef_syndrome || >> + ((esr & ESR_ELx_FSC) != ESR_ELx_FSC_SERROR)) { >> + kvm_inject_vabt(vcpu); >> + return 1; >> + } >> + >> + switch (aet) { >> + case ESR_ELx_AET_CE: /* corrected error */ >> + case ESR_ELx_AET_UEO: /* restartable error, not yet consumed */ >> + return 1; /* continue processing the guest exit */ > >> + case ESR_ELx_AET_UER: /* The error has not been propagated */ >> + /* >> + * Userspace only handle the guest SError Interrupt(SEI) if the >> + * error has not been propagated >> + */ >> + run->exit_reason = KVM_EXIT_EXCEPTION; >> + run->ex.exception = ESR_ELx_EC_SERROR; >> + run->ex.error_code = KVM_SEI_SEV_RECOVERABLE; >> + return 0; > > We should not pass RAS notifications to user space. The kernel either handles > them, or it panics(). User space shouldn't even know if the kernel supports RAS > until it gets an MCEERR signal. Now I rely on this error return to let Qemu set guest ESR, otherwise user space will do not know when to set the guest ESR. If so, how and when we told user space(Qemu) to set the guest ESR and inject abort? > > You're making your firmware-first notification an EL3->EL0 signal, bypassing the OS. > > If we get a RAS SError and there are no CPER records or values in the ERR nodes, > we should panic as it looks like the CPU/firmware is broken. (spurious RAS errors) > > >> + default: >> + /* >> + * Until now, the CPU supports RAS and SEI is fatal, or host >> + * does not support to handle the SError. >> + */ >> + panic("This Asynchronous SError interrupt is dangerous, panic"); >> + } >> + >> + return 0; >> +} >> + >> /* >> * Return > 0 to return to guest, < 0 on error, 0 (and set exit_reason) on >> * proper exit to userspace. > > > > James > > . >