Re: [RFC PATCH v3 0/6] Direct Map Removal for guest_memfd

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On Tue, 2024-11-12 at 14:52 +0000, David Hildenbrand wrote:
> On 12.11.24 15:40, Patrick Roy wrote:
>> I remember talking to someone at some point about whether we could reuse
>> the proc-local stuff for guest memory, but I cannot remember the outcome
>> of that discussion... (or maybe I just wanted to have a discussion about
>> it, but forgot to follow up on that thought?).  I guess we wouldn't use
>> proc-local _allocations_, but rather just set up proc-local mappings of
>> the gmem allocations that have been removed from the direct map.
> 
> Yes. And likely only for memory we really access / try access, if possible.

Well, if we start on-demand mm-local mapping the things we want to
access, we're back in TLB flush hell, no? And we can't know
ahead-of-time what needs to be mapped, so everything would need to be
mapped (unless we do something like mm-local mapping a page on first
access, and then just never unmapping it again, under the assumption
that establishing the mapping won't be expensive)

>>
>> I'm wondering, where exactly would be the differences to Sean's idea
>> about messing with the CR3 register inside KVM to temporarily install
>> page tables that contain all the gmem stuff, conceptually? Wouldn't we
>> run into the same interrupt problems that Sean foresaw for the CR3
>> stuff? (which, admittedly, I still don't quite follow what these are :(
>> ).
> 
> I'd need some more details on that. If anything would rely on the direct
> mapping (from IRQ context?) than ... we obviously cannot remove the
> direct mapping :)

I've talked to Fares internally, and it seems that generally doing
mm-local mappings of guest memory would work for us. We also figured out
what the "interrupt problem" is, namely that if we receive an interrupt
while executing in a context that has mm-local mappings available, those
mappings will continue to be available while the interrupt is being
handled. I'm talking to my security folks to see how much of a concern
this is for the speculation hardening we're trying to achieve. Will keep
you in the loop there :)

> -- 
> Cheers,
> 
> David / dhildenb
> 

Best, 
Patrick




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