Re: [PATCH v2 02/12] x86/ioapic: Gate decrypted mapping on cc_platform_has() attribute

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



On 11/11/22 20:48, Michael Kelley (LINUX) wrote:
> From: Dave Hansen <dave.hansen@xxxxxxxxx> Sent: Friday, November 11, 2022 4:22 PM
>> On 11/10/22 22:21, Michael Kelley wrote:
>>>  	 * Ensure fixmaps for IOAPIC MMIO respect memory encryption pgprot
>>>  	 * bits, just like normal ioremap():
>>>  	 */
>>> -	flags = pgprot_decrypted(flags);
>>> +	if (!cc_platform_has(CC_ATTR_HAS_PARAVISOR))
>>> +		flags = pgprot_decrypted(flags);
>> This begs the question whether *all* paravisors will want to avoid a
>> decrypted ioapic mapping.  Is this _fundamental_ to paravisors, or it is
>> an implementation detail of this _individual_ paravisor?
> Hard to say.  The paravisor that Hyper-V provides for use with the vTOM
> option in a SEV SNP VM is the only paravisor I've seen.  At least as defined
> by Hyper-V and AMD SNP Virtual Machine Privilege Levels (VMPLs), the
> paravisor resides within the VM trust boundary.  Anything that a paravisor
> emulates would be in the "private" (i.e., encrypted) memory so it can be
> accessed by both the guest OS and the paravisor.  But nothing fundamental
> says that IOAPIC emulation *must* be done in the paravisor.

Please just make this check more specific.  Either make this a specific
Hyper-V+SVM check, or rename it HAS_EMULATED_IOAPIC, like you were
thinking.  If paravisors catch on and we end up with ten more of these
things across five different paravisors and see a pattern, *then* a
paravisor-specific one makes sense.



[Index of Archives]     [Linux Samsung SoC]     [Linux Rockchip SoC]     [Linux Actions SoC]     [Linux for Synopsys ARC Processors]     [Linux NFS]     [Linux NILFS]     [Linux USB Devel]     [Video for Linux]     [Linux Audio Users]     [Yosemite News]     [Linux Kernel]     [Linux SCSI]


  Powered by Linux