Re: [RFC PATCH 13/21] KVM: X86: Handle private MMIO as shared

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On 9/9/24 20:07, Xu Yilun wrote:
On Fri, Sep 06, 2024 at 01:31:48PM +1000, Alexey Kardashevskiy wrote:


On 3/9/24 15:13, Xu Yilun wrote:
On Mon, Sep 02, 2024 at 12:22:56PM +1000, Alexey Kardashevskiy wrote:


On 31/8/24 02:57, Xu Yilun wrote:
On Fri, Aug 23, 2024 at 11:21:27PM +1000, Alexey Kardashevskiy wrote:
Currently private MMIO nested page faults are not expected so when such
fault occurs, KVM tries moving the faulted page from private to shared
which is not going to work as private MMIO is not backed by memfd.

Handle private MMIO as shared: skip page state change and memfd

This means host keeps the mapping for private MMIO, which is different
from private memory. Not sure if it is expected, and I want to get
some directions here.

There is no other translation table on AMD though, the same NPT. The

Sorry for not being clear, when I say "host mapping" I mean host
userspace mapping (host CR3 mapping). By using guest_memfd, there is no
host CR3 mapping for private memory. I'm wondering if we could keep host
CR3 mapping for private MMIO.
security is enforced by the RMP table. A device says "bar#x is
private" so
the host + firmware ensure the each corresponding RMP entry is "assigned" +
"validated" and has a correct IDE stream ID and ASID, and the VM's kernel
maps it with the Cbit set.

   From HW perspective, private MMIO is not intended to be accessed by
host, but the consequence may varies. According to TDISP spec 11.2,
my understanding is private device (known as TDI) should reject the
TLP and transition to TDISP ERROR state. But no further error
reporting or logging is mandated. So the impact to the host system
is specific to each device. In my test environment, an AER
NonFatalErr is reported and nothing more, much better than host
accessing private memory.

afair I get an non-fatal RMP fault so the device does not even notice.

On SW side, my concern is how to deal with mmu_notifier. In theory, if
we get pfn from hva we should follow the userspace mapping change. But
that makes no sense. Especially for TDX TEE-IO, private MMIO mapping
in SEPT cannot be changed or invalidated as long as TDI is running.

Another concern may be specific for TDX TEE-IO. Allowing both userspace
mapping and SEPT mapping may be safe for private MMIO, but on
KVM_SET_USER_MEMORY_REGION2,  KVM cannot actually tell if a userspace
addr is really for private MMIO. I.e. user could provide shared memory
addr to KVM but declare it is for private MMIO. The shared memory then
could be mapped in SEPT and cause problem.

I am missing lots of context here. When you are starting a guest with a
passed through device, until the TDISP machinery transitions the TDI into
RUN, this TDI's MMIO is shared and mapped everywhere. And after

Yes, that's the situation nowadays. I think if we need to eliminate
host CR3 mapping for private MMIO, a simple way is we don't allow host
CR3 mapping at the first place, even for shared pass through. It is
doable cause:

   1. IIUC, host CR3 mapping for assigned MMIO is only used for pfn
      finding, i.e. host doesn't really (or shouldn't?) access them.

Well, the host userspace might also want to access MMIO via mmap'ed region
if it is, say, DPDK.

Yes for DPDK. But I mean for virtualization cases, host doesn't access
assigned MMIO.

I'm not suggesting we remove the entire mmap functionality in VFIO, but
may have a user-optional no-mmap mode for private capable device.
>

   2. The hint from guest_memfd shows KVM doesn't have to rely on host
      CR3 mapping to find pfn.

True.

transitioning to RUN you move mappings from EPT to SEPT?

Mostly correct, TDX move mapping from EPT to SEPT after LOCKED and
right before RUN.


So personally I prefer no host mapping for private MMIO.

Nah, cannot skip this step on AMD. Thanks,

Not sure if we are on the same page.

With the above explanation, we are.

I assume from HW perspective, host
CR3 mapping is not necessary for NPT/RMP build?

Yeah, the hw does not require that afaik. But the existing code continues
working for AMD, and I am guessing it is still true for your case too,

It works for TDX with some minor changes similar as this patch does. But
still see some concerns on my side, E.g. mmu_notifier. Unlike SEV-SNP,
TDX firmware controls private MMIO accessing by building private S2 page
table. If I still follow the HVA based page fault routine, then I should
also follow the mmu_notifier, i.e. change private S2 mapping when HVA
mapping changes. But private MMIO accessing is part of the private dev
configuration and enforced (by firmware) not to be changed when TDI is
RUNning. My effort for this issue is that, don't use HVA based page
fault routine, switch to do like guest_memfd does.

ah I see, thanks.

I see SEV-SNP prebuilds RMP to control private MMIO accessing, S2 page
table modification is allowed at anytime. mmu_notifier only makes
private access dis-functional. I assume that could also be nice to
avoid.

right? Unless the host userspace tries accessing the private MMIO and some
horrible stuff happens? Thanks,

The common part for all vendors is, the private device will be
disturbed and enter TDISP ERROR state. I'm not sure if this is OK or can
also be nice to avoid.

For this instance, on AMD, I expect an RMP fault and no device disturbance, no TDISP ERROR. Thanks,



Thanks,
Yilun

--
Alexey





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