On Tue, Nov 09, 2021, Maciej S. Szmigiero wrote: > On 04.11.2021 01:25, Sean Christopherson wrote: > > @@ -1597,6 +1596,26 @@ static int kvm_set_memslot(struct kvm *kvm, > > kvm_copy_memslots(slots, __kvm_memslots(kvm, as_id)); > > } > > + /* > > + * Make a full copy of the old memslot, the pointer will become stale > > + * when the memslots are re-sorted by update_memslots(), and the old > > + * memslot needs to be referenced after calling update_memslots(), e.g. > > + * to free its resources and for arch specific behavior. This needs to > > + * happen *after* (re)acquiring slots_arch_lock. > > + */ > > + slot = id_to_memslot(slots, new->id); > > + if (slot) { > > + old = *slot; > > + } else { > > + WARN_ON_ONCE(change != KVM_MR_CREATE); > > + memset(&old, 0, sizeof(old)); > > + old.id = new->id; > > + old.as_id = as_id; > > + } > > + > > + /* Copy the arch-specific data, again after (re)acquiring slots_arch_lock. */ > > + memcpy(&new->arch, &old.arch, sizeof(old.arch)); > > Had "new" been zero-initialized completely in __kvm_set_memory_region() > for safety (so it does not contain stack garbage - I don't mean just the > new.arch field in the "if (!old.npages)" branch in that function but the > whole struct) this line would be needed only in the "if (slot)" branch > above (as Ben said). > > Also, when patch 7 from this series removes this memcpy(), > kvm_arch_prepare_memory_region() does indeed receive this field > uninitialized - I know only x86 and ppcHV care > and kvm_alloc_memslot_metadata() or kvmppc_core_prepare_memory_region_hv() > then overwrites it unconditionally but it feels a bit wrong. > > I am almost certain that compiler would figure out to only actually > zero the fields that wouldn't be overwritten immediately anyway. > > But on the other hand, this patch is only a fix for code that's going > to be replaced anyway so perfection here probably isn't that important. Yeah, that about sums up my feelings about the existing code. That said, an individual memslot isn't _that_ big, and memslot updates without the scalable implementation are dreadfully slow anyways, so I'm leaning strongly toward your suggestion of zeroing all of new as part of this fix.