> On Jun 17, 2020, at 10:08 PM, Andersen, John <john.s.andersen@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Wed, Jun 17, 2020 at 08:18:39PM -0700, Nadav Amit wrote: >>> On Jun 17, 2020, at 3:52 PM, Nadav Amit <nadav.amit@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>> >>>> On Jun 17, 2020, at 3:46 PM, John Andersen <john.s.andersen@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>> >>>> Paravirutalized control register pinning adds MSRs guests can use to >>>> discover which bits in CR0/4 they may pin, and MSRs for activating >>>> pinning for any of those bits. >>> >>> [ sni[ >>> >>>> +static void vmx_cr_pin_test_guest(void) >>>> +{ >>>> + unsigned long i, cr0, cr4; >>>> + >>>> + /* Step 1. Skip feature detection to skip handling VMX_CPUID */ >>>> + /* nop */ >>> >>> I do not quite get this comment. Why do you skip checking whether the >>> feature is enabled? What happens if KVM/bare-metal/other-hypervisor that >>> runs this test does not support this feature? >> >> My bad, I was confused between the nested checks and the non-nested ones. >> >> Nevertheless, can we avoid situations in which >> rdmsr(MSR_KVM_CR0_PIN_ALLOWED) causes #GP when the feature is not >> implemented? Is there some protocol for detection that this feature is >> supported by the hypervisor, or do we need something like rdmsr_safe()? > > Ah, yes we can. By checking the CPUID for the feature bit. Thanks for pointing > this out, I was confused about this. I was operating under the assumption that > the unit tests assume the features in the latest kvm/next are present and > available when the unit tests are being run. > > I'm happy to add the check, but I haven't see anywhere else where a > KVM_FEATURE_ was checked for. Which is why it doesn't check in this patch. As > soon as I get an answer from you or anyone else as to if the unit tests assume > that the features in the latest kvm/next are present and available or not when > the unit tests are being run I'll modify if necessary. I would appreciate if you add a check of CPUID and not run the test if the feature is not supported. I run the tests on bare-metal (and other non-KVM environment) from time to time. Doing so allows to find bugs in tests due to wrong assumptions of KVM test developers. Liran runs the tests using QEMU/WHPX (non-KVM). So allowing the tests to run on non-KVM environments is important, at least for some of us, and benefits KVM as well. While I can disable this specific test using the test parameters, I prefer that the test will first check the environment they run on. Debugging test failures on bare-metal is hard enough without the paravirt stuff noise.