On Fri, Jan 24, 2020 at 1:01 AM Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On 23/01/20 19:04, Ben Gardon wrote: > > KVM creates internal memslots between 3 and 4 GiB paddrs on the first > > vCPU creation. If memslot 0 is large enough it collides with these > > memslots an causes vCPU creation to fail. Instead of creating memslot 0 > > at paddr 0, start it 4G into the guest physical address space. > > > > Signed-off-by: Ben Gardon <bgardon@xxxxxxxxxx> > > --- > > tools/testing/selftests/kvm/lib/kvm_util.c | 11 +++++++---- > > 1 file changed, 7 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) > > This breaks all tests for me: > > $ ./state_test > Testing guest mode: PA-bits:ANY, VA-bits:48, 4K pages > Guest physical address width detected: 46 > ==== Test Assertion Failure ==== > lib/x86_64/processor.c:580: false > pid=4873 tid=4873 - Success > 1 0x0000000000409996: addr_gva2gpa at processor.c:579 > 2 0x0000000000406a38: addr_gva2hva at kvm_util.c:1636 > 3 0x000000000041036c: kvm_vm_elf_load at elf.c:192 > 4 0x0000000000409ea9: vm_create_default at processor.c:829 > 5 0x0000000000400f6f: main at state_test.c:132 > 6 0x00007f21bdf90494: ?? ??:0 > 7 0x0000000000401287: _start at ??:? > No mapping for vm virtual address, gva: 0x400000 Uh oh, I obviously did not test this patch adequately. My apologies. I'll send another version of this patch after I've had time to test it better. The memslots between 3G and 4G are also somewhat x86 specific, so maybe this code should be elsewhere. > > Memslot 0 should not be too large, so this patch should not be needed. I found that 3GB was not sufficient for memslot zero in my testing because it needs to contain both the stack for every vCPU and the page tables for the VM. When I ran with 416 vCPUs and of 1.6TB of total ram, memslot zero needed to be substantially larger than 3G. Just the 4K guest PTEs required to map 4G per-vCPU for 416 vCPUs require (((416 * (4<<30)) / 4096) * 8) / (1<<30) = 3.25GB of memory. I suppose another slot could be used for the page tables, but that would complicate the implementation of any tests that want to run large VMs substantially. > > Paolo >