Thomas Gleixner <tglx@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: > Andy Lutomirski <luto@xxxxxxxxxx> writes: >> On Sat, Mar 7, 2020 at 7:47 AM Thomas Gleixner <tglx@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>> The host knows exactly when it injects a async PF and it can store CR2 >>> and reason of that async PF in flight. >>> >>> On the next VMEXIT it checks whether apf_reason is 0. If apf_reason is 0 >>> then it knows that the guest has read CR2 and apf_reason. All good >>> nothing to worry about. >>> >>> If not it needs to be careful. >>> >>> As long as the apf_reason of the last async #PF is not cleared by the >>> guest no new async #PF can be injected. That's already correct because >>> in that case IF==0 which prevents a nested async #PF. >>> >>> If MCE, NMI trigger a real pagefault then the #PF injection needs to >>> clear apf_reason and set the correct CR2. When that #PF returns then the >>> old CR2 and apf_reason need to be restored. >> >> How is the host supposed to know when the #PF returns? Intercepting >> IRET sounds like a bad idea and, in any case, is not actually a >> reliable indication that #PF returned. > > The host does not care about the IRET. It solely has to check whether > apf_reason is 0 or not. That way it knows that the guest has read CR2 > and apf_reason. Bah. I'm a moron. Of course it needs to trap the IRET of the #PF in order to restore CR2 and apf_reason. Alternatively it could trap the CR2 read of #PF, but yes that's all nasty. Thanks, tglx