On Fri, Jul 12, 2019 at 6:45 AM Alexandre Chartre <alexandre.chartre@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > On 7/12/19 2:50 PM, Peter Zijlstra wrote: > > On Fri, Jul 12, 2019 at 01:56:44PM +0200, Alexandre Chartre wrote: > > > >> I think that's precisely what makes ASI and PTI different and independent. > >> PTI is just about switching between userland and kernel page-tables, while > >> ASI is about switching page-table inside the kernel. You can have ASI without > >> having PTI. You can also use ASI for kernel threads so for code that won't > >> be triggered from userland and so which won't involve PTI. > > > > PTI is not mapping kernel space to avoid speculation crap (meltdown). > > ASI is not mapping part of kernel space to avoid (different) speculation crap (MDS). > > > > See how very similar they are? > > > > > > Furthermore, to recover SMT for userspace (under MDS) we not only need > > core-scheduling but core-scheduling per address space. And ASI was > > specifically designed to help mitigate the trainwreck just described. > > > > By explicitly exposing (hopefully harmless) part of the kernel to MDS, > > we reduce the part that needs core-scheduling and thus reduce the rate > > the SMT siblngs need to sync up/schedule. > > > > But looking at it that way, it makes no sense to retain 3 address > > spaces, namely: > > > > user / kernel exposed / kernel private. > > > > Specifically, it makes no sense to expose part of the kernel through MDS > > but not through Meltdow. Therefore we can merge the user and kernel > > exposed address spaces. > > The goal of ASI is to provide a reduced address space which exclude sensitive > data. A user process (for example a database daemon, a web server, or a vmm > like qemu) will likely have sensitive data mapped in its user address space. > Such data shouldn't be mapped with ASI because it can potentially leak to the > sibling hyperthread. For example, if an hyperthread is running a VM then the > VM could potentially access user sensitive data if they are mapped on the > sibling hyperthread with ASI. So I've proposed the following slightly hackish thing: Add a mechanism (call it /dev/xpfo). When you open /dev/xpfo and fallocate it to some size, you allocate that amount of memory and kick it out of the kernel direct map. (And pay the IPI cost unless there were already cached non-direct-mapped pages ready.) Then you map *that* into your VMs. Now, for a dedicated VM host, you map *all* the VM private memory from /dev/xpfo. Pretend it's SEV if you want to determine which pages can be set up like this. Does this get enough of the benefit at a negligible fraction of the code complexity cost? (This plus core scheduling, anyway.) --Andy