On Fri, Nov 10, 2023, Xin3 Li wrote: > > > >+ if (cpu_feature_enabled(X86_FEATURE_FRED) && > > > >+ !(_vmentry_control & VM_ENTRY_LOAD_IA32_FRED)) { > > > >+ pr_warn_once("FRED enabled but no VMX VM-Entry > > LOAD_IA32_FRED control: %x\n", > > > >+ _vmentry_control); > > > > > > Can we just hide FRED from guests like what KVM does for other > > > features which have similar dependencies? see vmx_set_cpu_caps(). > > > > Both of these warnings should simply be dropped. The > > error_on_inconsistent_vmcs_config stuff is for inconsistencies within the allowed > > VMCS fields. Having a feature that is supported in bare metal but not virtualized > > is perfectly legal, if uncommon. > > I deliberately keep it, at least for now, because these checks are helpful > during the development of nVMX FRED. It will be helpful for other VMMs > being developed/tested on KVM. No, remove it. It's architecturally legal for a CPU to support a feature in bare metal but not provide virtualization support. > > What *is* needed is for KVM to refuse to virtualize FRED if the entry/exit controls > > aren't consistent. E.g. if at least one control is present, and at least one > > control is missing. I.e. KVM needs a version of vmcs_entry_exit_pairs that can > > deal with SECONDAY_VM_EXIT controls. > > I agree there are better ways. But maybe after or before VMX FRED. Uh, no. This is not optional. FRED is the first feature that uses SECONDAY_VM_EXIT controls, so FRED gets the honor of adding the necessary infrastructure support.