On Fri, Nov 04, 2022 at 09:19:31PM +0000, Sean Christopherson wrote: > Paolo, any thoughts before I lead things further astray? > > On Fri, Nov 04, 2022, Chao Peng wrote: > > On Thu, Nov 03, 2022 at 11:04:53PM +0000, Sean Christopherson wrote: > > > On Tue, Oct 25, 2022, Chao Peng wrote: > > > > @@ -4708,6 +4802,24 @@ static long kvm_vm_ioctl(struct file *filp, > > > > r = kvm_vm_ioctl_set_memory_region(kvm, &mem); > > > > break; > > > > } > > > > +#ifdef CONFIG_KVM_GENERIC_PRIVATE_MEM > > > > + case KVM_MEMORY_ENCRYPT_REG_REGION: > > > > + case KVM_MEMORY_ENCRYPT_UNREG_REGION: { > > > > > > I'm having second thoughts about usurping KVM_MEMORY_ENCRYPT_(UN)REG_REGION. Aside > > > from the fact that restricted/protected memory may not be encrypted, there are > > > other potential use cases for per-page memory attributes[*], e.g. to make memory > > > read-only (or no-exec, or exec-only, etc...) without having to modify memslots. > > > > > > Any paravirt use case where the attributes of a page are effectively dictated by > > > the guest is going to run into the exact same performance problems with memslots, > > > which isn't suprising in hindsight since shared vs. private is really just an > > > attribute, albeit with extra special semantics. > > > > > > And if we go with a brand new ioctl(), maybe someday in the very distant future > > > we can deprecate and delete KVM_MEMORY_ENCRYPT_(UN)REG_REGION. > > > > > > Switching to a new ioctl() should be a minor change, i.e. shouldn't throw too big > > > of a wrench into things. > > > > > > Something like: > > > > > > KVM_SET_MEMORY_ATTRIBUTES > > > > > > struct kvm_memory_attributes { > > > __u64 address; > > > __u64 size; > > > __u64 flags; > > Oh, this is half-baked. I lost track of which flags were which. What I intended > was a separate, initially-unused flags, e.g. That makes sense. > > struct kvm_memory_attributes { > __u64 address; > __u64 size; > __u64 attributes; > __u64 flags; > } > > so that KVM can tweak behavior and/or extend the effective size of the struct. > > > I like the idea of adding a new ioctl(). But putting all attributes into > > a flags in uAPI sounds not good to me, e.g. forcing userspace to set all > > attributes in one call can cause pain for userspace, probably for KVM > > implementation as well. For private<->shared memory conversion, we > > actually only care the KVM_MEM_ATTR_SHARED or KVM_MEM_ATTR_PRIVATE bit, > > Not necessarily, e.g. I can see pKVM wanting to convert from RW+PRIVATE => RO+SHARED > or even RW+PRIVATE => NONE+SHARED so that the guest can't write/access the memory > while it's accessible from the host. > > And if this does extend beyond shared/private, dropping from RWX=>R, i.e. dropping > WX permissions, would also be a common operation. > > Hmm, typing that out makes me think that if we do end up supporting other "attributes", > i.e. protections, we should go straight to full RWX protections instead of doing > things piecemeal, i.e. add individual protections instead of combinations like > NO_EXEC and READ_ONLY. The protections would have to be inverted for backwards > compatibility, but that's easy enough to handle. The semantics could be like > protection keys, which also have inverted persmissions, where the final protections > are the combination of memslot+attributes, i.e. a read-only memslot couldn't be made > writable via attributes. > > E.g. userspace could do "NO_READ | NO_WRITE | NO_EXEC" to temporarily block access > to memory without needing to delete the memslot. KVM would need to disallow > unsupported combinations, e.g. disallowed effective protections would be: > > - W or WX [unless there's an arch that supports write-only memory] > - R or RW [until KVM plumbs through support for no-exec, or it's unsupported in hardware] > - X [until KVM plumbs through support for exec-only, or it's unsupported in hardware] > > Anyways, that's all future work... > > > but we force userspace to set other irrelevant bits as well if use this > > API. > > They aren't irrelevant though, as the memory attributes are all describing the > allowed protections for a given page. The 'allowed' protections seems answer my concern. But after we enabled "NO_READ | NO_WRITE | NO_EXEC", are we going to check "NO_READ | NO_WRITE | NO_EXEC" are also set together with the PRIVATE bit? I just can't imagine what the semantic would be if we have the PRIVATE bit set but other bits indicate it's actually can READ/WRITE/EXEC from usrspace. > If there's a use case where userspace "can't" > keep track of the attributes for whatever reason, then userspace could do a RMW > to set/clear attributes. Alternatively, the ioctl() could take an "operation" and > support WRITE/OR/AND to allow setting/clearing individual flags, e.g. tweak the > above to be: A getter would be good, it might also be needed for live migration. > > struct kvm_memory_attributes { > __u64 address; > __u64 size; > __u64 attributes; > __u32 operation; > __u32 flags; > } > > > I looked at kvm_device_attr, sounds we can do similar: > > The device attributes deal with isolated, arbitrary values, whereas memory attributes > are flags, i.e. devices are 1:1 whereas memory is 1:MANY. There is no "unset" for > device attributes, because they aren't flags. Device attributes vs. memory attributes > really are two very different things that just happen to use a common name. > > If it helped clarify things without creating naming problems, we could even use > PROTECTIONS instead of ATTRIBUTES. > > > KVM_SET_MEMORY_ATTR > > > > struct kvm_memory_attr { > > __u64 address; > > __u64 size; > > #define KVM_MEM_ATTR_SHARED BIT(0) > > #define KVM_MEM_ATTR_READONLY BIT(1) > > #define KVM_MEM_ATTR_NOEXEC BIT(2) > > __u32 attr; > > As above, letting userspace set only a single attribute would prevent setting > (or clearing) multiple attributes in a single ioctl(). > > > __u32 pad; > > } > > > > I'm not sure if we need KVM_GET_MEMORY_ATTR/KVM_HAS_MEMORY_ATTR as well, > > Definitely would need to communicate to userspace that various attributes are > supported. That doesn't necessarily require a common ioctl(), but I don't see > any reason not to add a common helper, and adding a common helper would mean > KVM_CAP_PRIVATE_MEM can go away. But it should return a bitmask so that userspace > can do a single query to get all supported attributes, e.g. KVM_SUPPORTED_MEMORY_ATTRIBUTES. Do you have preference on using a new ioctl or just keep it as a cap? E.g. KVM_CAP_MEMORY_ATTIBUTES can also returns a mask. > > As for KVM_GET_MEMORY_ATTRIBUTES, we wouldn't necessarily have to provide such an > API, e.g. we could hold off until someone came along with a RMW use case (as above). > That said, debug would likely be a nightmare without KVM_GET_MEMORY_ATTRIBUTES, > so it's probably best to add it straightway. Dive into the implementation a bit, for KVM_GET_MEMORY_ATTRIBUTES we can have different attributes for different pages in the same user-provided range, in that case we will have to either return a list or just a error number. Or we only support per-page attributes for the getter? Chao > > > but sounds like we need a KVM_UNSET_MEMORY_ATTR. > > No need if the setter operates on all attributes. > > > Since we are exposing the attribute directly to userspace I also think > > we'd better treat shared memory as the default, so even when the private > > memory is not used, the bit can still be meaningful. So define BIT(0) as > > KVM_MEM_ATTR_PRIVATE instead of KVM_MEM_ATTR_SHARED. > > Ah, right.