On Mon, 18 Jan 2021 at 22:42, Arvind Sankar <nivedita@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Mon, Jan 18, 2021 at 09:24:09PM +0100, Borislav Petkov wrote: > > > > > As a matter of fact, it seems like the four assertions could be combined > > > > > into: > > > > > BUILD_BUG_ON((EFI_VA_END & P4D_MASK) != (MODULES_END & P4D_MASK)); > > > > > BUILD_BUG_ON((EFI_VA_START & P4D_MASK) != (EFI_VA_END & P4D_MASK)); > > > > > instead of separately asserting they're the same PGD entry and the same > > > > > P4D entry. > > > > > > > > > > Thanks. > > > > > > > > I actually don't quite get the MODULES_END check -- Ard, do you know > > > > what that's for? > > > > > > > > > > Maybe Boris remembers? He wrote the original code for the 'new' EFI > > > page table layout. > > > > That was added by Kirill for 5-level pgtables: > > > > e981316f5604 ("x86/efi: Add 5-level paging support") > > That just duplicates the existing pgd_index() check for the p4d_index() > as well. It looks like the original commit adding > efi_sync_low_kernel_mappings() used to copy upto the PGD entry including > MODULES_END: > d2f7cbe7b26a7 ("x86/efi: Runtime services virtual mapping") > and then Matt changed that when creating efi_mm: > 67a9108ed4313 ("x86/efi: Build our own page table structures") > to use EFI_VA_END instead but have a check that EFI_VA_END is in the > same entry as MODULES_END. > > AFAICT, MODULES_END is only relevant as being something that happens to > be in the top 512GiB, and -1ul would be clearer. > > > > > Documentation/x86/x86_64/mm.rst should explain the pagetable layout: > > > > ffffff8000000000 | -512 GB | ffffffeeffffffff | 444 GB | ... unused hole > > ffffffef00000000 | -68 GB | fffffffeffffffff | 64 GB | EFI region mapping space > > ffffffff00000000 | -4 GB | ffffffff7fffffff | 2 GB | ... unused hole > > ffffffff80000000 | -2 GB | ffffffff9fffffff | 512 MB | kernel text mapping, mapped to physical address 0 > > ffffffff80000000 |-2048 MB | | | > > ffffffffa0000000 |-1536 MB | fffffffffeffffff | 1520 MB | module mapping space > > ffffffffff000000 | -16 MB | | | > > FIXADDR_START | ~-11 MB | ffffffffff5fffff | ~0.5 MB | kernel-internal fixmap range, variable size and offset > > > > That thing which starts at -512 GB above is the last PGD on the > > pagetable. In it, between -4G and -68G there are 64G which are the EFI > > region mapping space for runtime services. > > > > Frankly I'm not sure what this thing is testing because the EFI VA range > > is hardcoded and I can't imagine it being somewhere else *except* in the > > last PGD. > > It's just so that someone doesn't just change the #define's for > EFI_VA_END/START and think that it will work, I guess. > > Another reasonable option, for example, would be to reserve an entire > PGD entry, allowing everything but the PGD level to be shared, and > adding the EFI PGD to the pgd_list and getting rid of > efi_sync_low_kernel_mappings() altogether. There aren't that many PGD > entries still unused though, so this is probably not worth it. > The churn doesn't seem to be worth it, tbh. So could we get rid of the complexity here, and only build_bug() on the start address of the EFI region being outside the topmost p4d? That should make the PGD test redundant as well.