On Mon, 2024-03-18 at 17:41 +0000, Marc Zyngier wrote: > On Mon, 18 Mar 2024 17:26:07 +0000, > David Woodhouse <dwmw2@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > [1 <text/plain; UTF-8 (quoted-printable)>] > > On Mon, 2024-03-18 at 16:57 +0000, Marc Zyngier wrote: > > > > > > > > > > > There *is* a way for a VMM to opt *out* of newer PSCI versions... by > > > > setting a per-vCPU "special" register that actually ends up setting the > > > > PSCI version KVM-wide. Quite why this isn't just a simple KVM_CAP, I > > > > have no idea. > > > > > > Because the expectations are that the VMM can blindly save/restore the > > > guest's state, including the PSCI version, and restore that blindly. > > > KVM CAPs are just a really bad design pattern for this sort of things. > > > > Hm, am I missing something here? Does the *guest* get to set the PSCI > > version somehow, and opt into the latest version that it understands > > regardless of what the firmware/host can support? > > No. The *VMM* sets the PSCI version by writing to a pseudo register. > It means that when the guest migrates, the VMM saves and restores that > version, and the guest doesn't see any change. And when you boot a guest image which has been working for years under a new kernel+KVM, your guest suddenly experiences a new PSCI version. As I said that's not just new optional functions; it's potentially even returning new error codes to the functions that said guest was already using. And when you *hibernate* a guest and then launch it again under a newer kernel+KVM, it experiences the same incompatibility. Unless the VMM realises this problem and opts *out* of the newer KVM behaviour, of course. This is very much unlike how we *normally* expose new KVM capabilities. > > I don't think we ever aspired to be able to hand an arbitrary KVM fd to > > a userspace VMM and have the VMM be able to drive that VM without > > having any a priori context, did we? > > Arbitrary? No. This is actually very specific and pretty well > documented. > > Also, to answer your question about why we treat 0.1 differently from > 0.2+: 0.1 didn't specify the PSCI SMC/HCR encoding, meaning that KVM > implemented something that was never fully specified. The VMM has to > provide firmware tables that describe that. With 0.2+, there is a > standard encoding for all functions, and the VMM doesn't have to > provide the encoding to the guest. Gotcha. So for that case we were *forced* to do things correctly and allow userspace to opt-in to the capability. While for 0.2 onwards we got away with this awfulness of silently upgrading the version without VMM consent. I was hoping to just follow the existing model of SYSTEM_RESET2 and not have to touch this awfulness with a barge-pole, but sure, whatever you want.
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