On 7/9/24 3:20 PM, Patrick Roy wrote: > Hey all, > > This RFC series is a rough draft adding support for running > non-confidential compute VMs in guest_memfd, based on prior discussions > with Sean [1]. Our specific usecase for this is the ability to unmap > guest memory from the host kernel's direct map, as a mitigation against > a large class of speculative execution issues. > > === Implementation === > > This patch series introduces a new flag to the `KVM_CREATE_GUEST_MEMFD` > to remove its pages from the direct map when they are allocated. When > trying to run a guest from such a VM, we now face the problem that > without either userspace or kernelspace mappings of guest_memfd, KVM > cannot access guest memory to, for example, do MMIO emulation of access > memory used to guest/host communication. We have multiple options for > solving this when running non-CoCo VMs: (1) implement a TDX-light > solution, where the guest shares memory that KVM needs to access, and > relies on paravirtual solutions where this is not possible (e.g. MMIO), > (2) have KVM use userspace mappings of guest_memfd (e.g. a > memfd_secret-style solution), or (3) dynamically reinsert pages into the > direct map whenever KVM wants to access them. > > This RFC goes for option (3). Option (1) is a lot of overhead for very > little gain, since we are not actually constrained by a physical > inability to access guest memory (e.g. we are not in a TDX context where > accesses to guest memory cause a #MC). Option (2) has previously been > rejected [1]. Do the pages have to have the same address when they are temporarily mapped? Wouldn't it be easier to do something similar to kmap_local_page() used for HIMEM? I.e. you get a temporary kernel mapping to do what's needed, but it doesn't have to alter the shared directmap. Maybe that was already discussed somewhere as unsuitable but didn't spot it here. > In this patch series, we make sufficient parts of KVM gmem-aware to be > able to boot a Linux initrd from private memory on x86. These include > KVM's MMIO emulation (including guest page table walking) and kvm-clock. > For VM types which do not allow accessing gmem, we return -EFAULT and > attempt to prepare a KVM_EXIT_MEMORY_FAULT. > > Additionally, this patch series adds support for "restricted" userspace > mappings of guest_memfd, which work similar to memfd_secret (e.g. > disallow get_user_pages), which allows handling I/O and loading the > guest kernel in a simple way. Support for this is completely independent > of the rest of the functionality introduced in this patch series. > However, it is required to build a minimal hypervisor PoC that actually > allows booting a VM from a disk. > > === Performance === > > We have run some preliminary performance benchmarks to assess the impact > of on-the-fly direct map manipulations. We were mainly interested in the > impact of manipulating the direct map for MMIO emulation on virtio-mmio. > Particularly, we were worried about the impact of the TLB and L1/2/3 > Cache flushes that set_memory_[n]p entails. > > In our setup, we have taken a modified Firecracker VMM, spawned a Linux > guest with 1 vCPU, and used fio to stress a virtio_blk device. We found > that the cache flushes caused throughput to drop from around 600MB/s to > ~50MB/s (~90%) for both reads and writes (on a Intel(R) Xeon(R) Platinum > 8375C CPU with 64 cores). We then converted our prototype to use > set_direct_map_{invalid,default}_noflush instead of set_memory_[n]p and > found that without cache flushes the pure impact of the direct map > manipulation is indistinguishable from noise. This is why we use > set_direct_map_{invalid,default}_noflush instead of set_memory_[n]p in > this RFC. > > Note that in this comparison, both the baseline, as well as the > guest_memfd-supporting version of Firecracker were made to bounce I/O > buffers in VMM userspace. As GUP is disabled for the guest_memfd VMAs, > the virtio stack cannot directly pass guest buffers to read/write > syscalls. > > === Security === > > We want to use unmapping guest memory from the host kernel as a security > mitigation against transient execution attacks. Temporarily restoring > direct map entries whenever KVM requires access to guest memory leaves a > gap in this mitigation. We believe this to be acceptable for the above > cases, since pages used for paravirtual guest/host communication (e.g. > kvm-clock) and guest page tables do not contain sensitive data. MMIO > emulation will only end up reading pages containing privileged > instructions (e.g. guest kernel code). > > === Summary === > > Patches 1-4 are about hot-patching various points inside of KVM that > access guest memory to correctly handle the case where memory happens to > be guest-private. This means either handling the access as a memory > error, or simply accessing the memslot's guest_memfd instead of looking > at the userspace provided VMA if the VM type allows these kind of > accesses. Patches 5-6 add a flag to KVM_CREATE_GUEST_MEMFD that will > make it remove its pages from the kernel's direct map. Whenever KVM > wants to access guest-private memory, it will temporarily re-insert the > relevant pages. Patches 7-8 allow for restricted userspace mappings > (e.g. get_user_pages paths are disabled like for memfd_secret) of > guest_memfd, so that userspace has an easy path for loading the guest > kernel and handling I/O-buffers. > > === ToDos / Limitations === > > There are still a few rough edges that need to be addressed before > dropping the "RFC" tag, e.g. > > * Handle errors of set_direct_map_default_not_flush in > kvm_gmem_invalidate_folio instead of calling BUG_ON > * Lift the limitation of "at most one gfn_to_pfn_cache for each > gfn/pfn" in e1c61f0a7963 ("kvm: gmem: Temporarily restore direct map > entries when needed"). It currently means that guests with more than 1 > vcpu fail to boot, because multiple vcpus can put their kvm-clock PV > structures into the same page (gfn) > * Write selftests, particularly around hole punching, direct map removal, > and mmap. > > Lastly, there's the question of nested virtualization which Sean brought > up in previous discussions, which runs into similar problems as MMIO. I > have looked at it very briefly. On Intel, KVM uses various gfn->uhva > caches, which run in similar problems as the gfn_to_hva_caches dealt > with in 200834b15dda ("kvm: use slowpath in gfn_to_hva_cache if memory > is private"). However, previous attempts at just converting this to > gfn_to_pfn_cache (which would make them work with guest_memfd) proved > complicated [2]. I suppose initially, we should probably disallow nested > virtualization in VMs that have their memory removed from the direct > map. > > Best, > Patrick > > [1]: https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/cc1bb8e9bc3e1ab637700a4d3defeec95b55060a.camel@xxxxxxxxxx/ > [2]: https://lore.kernel.org/kvm/ZBEEQtmtNPaEqU1i@xxxxxxxxxx/ > > Patrick Roy (8): > kvm: Allow reading/writing gmem using kvm_{read,write}_guest > kvm: use slowpath in gfn_to_hva_cache if memory is private > kvm: pfncache: enlighten about gmem > kvm: x86: support walking guest page tables in gmem > kvm: gmem: add option to remove guest private memory from direct map > kvm: gmem: Temporarily restore direct map entries when needed > mm: secretmem: use AS_INACCESSIBLE to prohibit GUP > kvm: gmem: Allow restricted userspace mappings > > arch/x86/kvm/mmu/paging_tmpl.h | 94 +++++++++++++++++++----- > include/linux/kvm_host.h | 5 ++ > include/linux/kvm_types.h | 1 + > include/linux/secretmem.h | 13 +++- > include/uapi/linux/kvm.h | 2 + > mm/secretmem.c | 6 +- > virt/kvm/guest_memfd.c | 83 +++++++++++++++++++-- > virt/kvm/kvm_main.c | 112 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++- > virt/kvm/pfncache.c | 130 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++---- > 9 files changed, 399 insertions(+), 47 deletions(-) > > > base-commit: 890a64810d59b1a58ed26efc28cfd821fc068e84