Sean Christopherson <sean.j.christopherson@xxxxxxxxx> writes: > On Mon, May 25, 2020 at 06:15:25PM +0300, Kirill A. Shutemov wrote: >> On Mon, May 25, 2020 at 04:58:51PM +0200, Vitaly Kuznetsov wrote: >> > > @@ -727,6 +734,15 @@ static void __init kvm_init_platform(void) >> > > { >> > > kvmclock_init(); >> > > x86_platform.apic_post_init = kvm_apic_init; >> > > + >> > > + if (kvm_para_has_feature(KVM_FEATURE_MEM_PROTECTED)) { >> > > + if (kvm_hypercall0(KVM_HC_ENABLE_MEM_PROTECTED)) { >> > > + pr_err("Failed to enable KVM memory protection\n"); >> > > + return; >> > > + } >> > > + >> > > + mem_protected = true; >> > > + } >> > > } >> > >> > Personally, I'd prefer to do this via setting a bit in a KVM-specific >> > MSR instead. The benefit is that the guest doesn't need to remember if >> > it enabled the feature or not, it can always read the config msr. May >> > come handy for e.g. kexec/kdump. >> >> I think we would need to remember it anyway. Accessing MSR is somewhat >> expensive. But, okay, I can rework it MSR if needed. > > I think Vitaly is talking about the case where the kernel can't easily get > at its cached state, e.g. after booting into a new kernel. The kernel would > still have an X86_FEATURE bit or whatever, providing a virtual MSR would be > purely for rare slow paths. > > That being said, a hypercall plus CPUID bit might be better, e.g. that'd > allow the guest to query the state without risking a #GP. We have rdmsr_safe() for that! :-) MSR (and hypercall to that matter) should have an associated CPUID feature bit of course. Yes, hypercall + CPUID would do but normally we treat CPUID data as static and in this case we'll make it a dynamically flipping bit. Especially if we introduce 'KVM_HC_DISABLE_MEM_PROTECTED' later. > >> Note, that we can avoid the enabling algother, if we modify BIOS to deal >> with private/shared memory. Currently BIOS get system crash if we enable >> the feature from time zero. > > Which would mesh better with a CPUID feature bit. > And maybe even help us to resolve 'reboot' problem. -- Vitaly