On Tue, Aug 18, 2020 at 07:21:14PM +0200, Roger Pau Monné wrote: > > Let me draw the picture from the beginning. > > Thanks, greatly appreciated. > > > EFI memory map contains various memory regions. Some of them are marked > > as not needed after ExitBootServices() call (done in Xen before > > launching dom0). This includes EFI_BOOT_SERVICES_DATA and > > EFI_BOOT_SERVICES_CODE. > > > > EFI SystemTable contains pointers to various ConfigurationTables - > > physical addresses (at least in this case). Xen does interpret some of > > them, but not ESRT. Xen pass the whole (address of) SystemTable to Linux > > dom0 (at least in PV case). Xen doesn't do anything about tables it > > doesn't understand. > > > > Now, the code in Linux takes the (ESRT) table address early and checks > > the memory map for it. We have 3 cases: > > - it points at area marked as neither EFI_*_SERVICES_DATA, nor with > > EFI_MEMORY_RUNTIME attribute -> Linux refuse to use it > > - it points to EFI_RUNTIME_SERVICES_DATA or with EFI_MEMORY_RUNTIME > > attribute - Linux uses the table; memory map already says the area > > belongs to EFI and the OS should not use it for something else > > - it points to EFI_BOOT_SERVICES_DATA - Linux mark the area as reserved > > to not release it after calling ExitBootServices() > > > > The problematic is the third case - at the time when Linux dom0 is run, > > ExitBootServices() was already called and EFI_BOOT_SERVICES_* memory was > > already released. It could be already used for something else (for > > example Xen could overwrite it while loading dom0). > > > > Note the problematic case should be the most common - UEFI specification > > says "The ESRT shall be stored in memory of type EfiBootServicesData" > > (chapter 22.3 of UEFI Spec v2.6). > > > > For this reason, to use ESRT in dom0, Xen should do something about it > > before ExitBootServices() call. While analyzing all the EFI tables is > > probably not a viable option, it can do some simple action: > > - retains all the EFI_BOOT_SERVICES_* areas - there is already code > > for that, controlled with /mapbs boot switch (to xen.efi, would need > > another option for multiboot2+efi) > > - have a list of tables to retain - since Xen already do analyze some > > of the ConfigurationTables, it can also have a list of those to > > preserve even if they live in EFI_BOOT_SERVICES_DATA. In this case, > > while Xen doesn't need to parse the whole table, it need to parse it's > > header to get the table size - to reserve that memory and not reuse > > it after ExitBootServices(). > > Xen seems to already contain skeleton > XEN_EFI_query_capsule_capabilities and XEN_EFI_update_capsule > hypercalls which is what should be used in order to perform the > updates? I think those covers only runtime service calls similarly named. But you need also ESRT table to collect info about devices that you can even attempt to update. TBH, I'm not sure if those runtime services are really needed. I think Norbert succeeded UEFI update from within Xen PV dom0 with just access to the ESRT table, but without those services. > So yes, I agree Xen should make sure the region of the table is not > freed when exiting boot services, and that dom0 can access it. I > guess we should move the checks done by Linux to Xen, and then only > provide the ESRT table to dom0 if the checks (now done by Xen) pass. Yes, something like this. But note currently in the (PV) dom0 case, Xen provides dom0 with a pointer to the whole SystemTable, not individual ConfigurationTables. Making it filter what dom0 gets would require Xen to re-construct the whole thing with just those elements that are desired. Not exactly sure if worth the effort given the privilege dom0 has. BTW How does it look in PVH dom0 case? Does it also get unmodified host EFI SystemTable? In that case, it would be more tricky, because (IIUC) physical addresses (like the one for ESRT table) are not meaningful to PVH dom0. > It might be helpful to see the whole picture here with the hooks to > perform the updates also implemented, as those are missing in Xen (and > Linux?). That would give a clearer view of what you are trying to > achieve IMO. Norbert, can you shed some light on this process? While those two runtime services seems relevant, I see also an update process involving simply dropping some file into ESP (/boot/efi). I'm not sure if some runtime services were involved. -- Best Regards, Marek Marczykowski-Górecki Invisible Things Lab A: Because it messes up the order in which people normally read text. Q: Why is top-posting such a bad thing?
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