> From: Michael Kelley (LINUX) <mikelley@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> > Sent: Tuesday, August 15, 2023 5:35 PM > > [...] > > For a Linux VM with a NVIDIA GPU running on Hyper-V, before the GPU > driver > > is installed, hibernating the VM will trigger a panic: if the GPU driver > > is not installed and loaded, MSI-X/MSI is not enabled on the device, so > > pdev->dev.msi.data is NULL, and msi_lock_descs(&pdev->dev) causes the > > NULL pointer dereference. Fix this by checking pdev->dev.msi.data. > > Is the scenario here a little broader than just the NVIDIA GPU driver? For > any virtual PCI device that is presented in the guest VM as a VMBus device, > the driver might not be installed. There could have been some initial > problem getting the driver installed, or it might have been manually > uninstalled later in the life of the VM. Also the host might have rescinded > the virtual PCI device and added it back later, creating another opportunity > where the driver might not be loaded. In any case, it seems like we could > have the VMBus aspects of the device setup, but not the driver for the > device. This suspend/resume code in pci-hyperv.c is all about handling > the VMBus aspects of the device anyway. Good point! The bug also affects other PCI devices, e.g. if I unload mlx5_core and let the VM with a Mellanox VF NIC hibernate, I hit the same NULL pointer dereference. > Assuming my thinking is correct, is there some Hyper-V/VMBus setting > owned by the pci-hyperv.c driver that would be better to test here than > the low-level dev.msi.data pointer? The MSI code rework that added IMO there is no easy and reliable way in Hyper-V/VMBus/pci-hyperv to tell if MSI/MSI-X is enabled for a PCI device. We can potentially track the MSI/MSI-X irqs in hv_compose_msi_msg() and hv_irq_unmask(), but IMO that's not very easy and may be inaccurate. > the descriptor lock encapsulates the internals with appropriate accessor > functions, and reaching in to directly test dev.msi.data violates that > encapsulation. I agree. Compared with: if (!pdev->dev.msi.data) return 0; I think it's better to use this: if (!pdev->msi_enabled && !pdev->msix_enabled) return 0; pdev-> msix_enabled has been used in many drivers, e.g. "arch/x86/pci/xen.c": xen_pv_teardown_msi_irqs() "drivers/hid/intel-ish-hid/ipc/pci-ish.c": ish_probe() "drivers/infiniband/hw/vmw_pvrdma/pvrdma_main.c": pvrdma_intr0_handler() "drivers/scsi/vmw_pvscsi.c": pvscsi_probe() and more. So it looks like pdev-> msix_enabled is a legit and stable API. I'll post v2 with it. I'll update the changelog accordingly. Please let me know if you have concerns about it.