On Thu, 30 Sep 2021 07:12:21 -0400 "Michael S. Tsirkin" <mst@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Thu, Sep 30, 2021 at 03:20:49AM +0200, Halil Pasic wrote: > > This patch fixes a regression introduced by commit 82e89ea077b9 > > ("virtio-blk: Add validation for block size in config space") and > > enables similar checks in verify() on big endian platforms. > > > > The problem with checking multi-byte config fields in the verify > > callback, on big endian platforms, and with a possibly transitional > > device is the following. The verify() callback is called between > > config->get_features() and virtio_finalize_features(). That we have a > > device that offered F_VERSION_1 then we have the following options > > either the device is transitional, and then it has to present the legacy > > interface, i.e. a big endian config space until F_VERSION_1 is > > negotiated, or we have a non-transitional device, which makes > > F_VERSION_1 mandatory, and only implements the non-legacy interface and > > thus presents a little endian config space. Because at this point we > > can't know if the device is transitional or non-transitional, we can't > > know do we need to byte swap or not. > > Hmm which transport does this refer to? It is the same with virtio-ccw and virtio-pci. I see the same problem with both on s390x. I didn't try with virtio-blk-pci-non-transitional yet (have to figure out how to do that with libvirt) for pci I used virtio-blk-pci. > Distinguishing between legacy and modern drivers is transport > specific. PCI presents > legacy and modern at separate addresses so distinguishing > between these two should be no trouble. You mean the device id? Yes that is bolted down in the spec, but currently we don't exploit that information. Furthermore there is a fat chance that with QEMU even the allegedly non-transitional devices only present a little endian config space after VERSION_1 was negotiated. Namely get_config for virtio-blk is implemented in virtio_blk_update_config() which does virtio_stl_p(vdev, &blkcfg.blk_size, blk_size) and in there we don't care about transitional or not: static inline bool virtio_access_is_big_endian(VirtIODevice *vdev) { #if defined(LEGACY_VIRTIO_IS_BIENDIAN) return virtio_is_big_endian(vdev); #elif defined(TARGET_WORDS_BIGENDIAN) if (virtio_vdev_has_feature(vdev, VIRTIO_F_VERSION_1)) { /* Devices conforming to VIRTIO 1.0 or later are always LE. */ return false; } return true; #else return false; #endif } > Channel i/o has versioning so same thing? > Don't think so. Both a transitional and a non-transitional device would have to accept revisions higher than 0 if the driver tried to negotiate those (and we do in our case). > > The virtio spec explicitly states that the driver MAY read config > > between reading and writing the features so saying that first accessing > > the config before feature negotiation is done is not an option. The > > specification ain't clear about setting the features multiple times > > before FEATURES_OK, so I guess that should be fine. > > > > I don't consider this patch super clean, but frankly I don't think we > > have a ton of options. Another option that may or man not be cleaner, > > but is also IMHO much uglier is to figure out whether the device is > > transitional by rejecting _F_VERSION_1, then resetting it and proceeding > > according tho what we have figured out, hoping that the characteristics > > of the device didn't change. > > I am confused here. So is the problem at the device or at the driver level? We have a driver regression. Since the 82e89ea077b9 ("virtio-blk: Add validation for block size in config space") virtio-blk is broken on s390. The deeper problem is in the spec. We stated that the driver may read config space before the feature negotiation is finalized, but we didn't think enough about what happens when native endiannes is not little endian in the different cases. I believe, for non-transitional devices we have a problem in the host as well (i.e. in QEMU). > I suspect it's actually the host that has the issue, not > the guest? I tend to say we have a problem both in the host and in the guest. I'm more concerned about the problem in the guest, because that is a really nasty regression. For the host. I think for legacy we don't have a problem, because both sides would operate on the assumption no _F_VERSION_1, IMHO the implementation for the transitional devices is correct. For non-transitional flavor, it depends on the device. For example virtio-net and virtio-blk is broken, because we use primitives like virtio_stl_p() and those don't do the right thing before feature negotiation is completed. On the other hand virtio-crypto.c as a truly non-transitional device uses stl_le_p() and IMHO does the right thing. Thanks for your comments! I hope I managed to answer your questions. I need some guidance on how do we want to move forward on this. Regards, Halil > > > > Signed-off-by: Halil Pasic <pasic@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> > > Fixes: 82e89ea077b9 ("virtio-blk: Add validation for block size in config space") > > Reported-by: markver@xxxxxxxxxx > > --- > > drivers/virtio/virtio.c | 4 ++++ > > 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+) > > > > diff --git a/drivers/virtio/virtio.c b/drivers/virtio/virtio.c > > index 0a5b54034d4b..9dc3cfa17b1c 100644 > > --- a/drivers/virtio/virtio.c > > +++ b/drivers/virtio/virtio.c > > @@ -249,6 +249,10 @@ static int virtio_dev_probe(struct device *_d) > > if (device_features & (1ULL << i)) > > __virtio_set_bit(dev, i); > > > > + /* Write back features before validate to know endianness */ > > + if (device_features & (1ULL << VIRTIO_F_VERSION_1)) > > + dev->config->finalize_features(dev); > > + > > if (drv->validate) { > > err = drv->validate(dev); > > if (err) > > > > base-commit: 02d5e016800d082058b3d3b7c3ede136cdc6ddcb > > -- > > 2.25.1 > _______________________________________________ Virtualization mailing list Virtualization@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/virtualization