On Fri, Oct 1, 2021, at 2:56 AM, Thomas Gleixner wrote: > On Thu, Sep 30 2021 at 21:41, Andy Lutomirski wrote: >> On Thu, Sep 30, 2021, at 5:01 PM, Thomas Gleixner wrote: > >> Now that I read the docs some more, I'm seriously concerned about this >> XSAVE design. XSAVES with UINTR is destructive -- it clears UINV. If >> we actually use this, then the whole last_cpu "preserve the state in >> registers" optimization goes out the window. So does anything that >> happens to assume that merely saving the state doesn't destroy it on >> respectable modern CPUs XRSTORS will #GP if you XRSTORS twice, which >> makes me nervous and would need a serious audit of our XRSTORS paths. > > I have no idea what you are fantasizing about. You can XRSTORS five > times in a row as long as your XSTATE memory image is correct. I'm just reading TFM, which is some kind of dystopian fantasy. 11.8.2.4 XRSTORS Before restoring the user-interrupt state component, XRSTORS verifies that UINV is 0. If it is not, XRSTORS causes a general-protection fault (#GP) before loading any part of the user-interrupt state component. (UINV is IA32_UINTR_MISC[39:32]; XRSTORS does not check the contents of the remainder of that MSR.) So if UINV is set in the memory image and you XRSTORS five times in a row, the first one will work assuming UINV was zero. The second one will #GP. And: 11.8.2.3 XSAVES After saving the user-interrupt state component, XSAVES clears UINV. (UINV is IA32_UINTR_MISC[39:32]; XSAVES does not modify the remainder of that MSR.) So if we're running a UPID-enabled user task and we switch to a kernel thread, we do XSAVES and UINV is cleared. Then we switch back to the same task and don't do XRSTORS (or otherwise write IA32_UINTR_MISC) and UINV is still clear. And we had better clear UINV when running a kernel thread because the UPID might get freed or the kernel thread might do some CPL3 shenanigans (via EFI, perhaps? I don't know if any firmwares actually do this). So all this seems to put UINV into the "independent" category of feature along with LBR. And the 512-byte wastes from extra copies of the legacy area and the loss of the XMODIFIED optimization will just be collateral damage.