Re: [PATCH Part2 RFC v4 21/40] KVM: SVM: Add initial SEV-SNP support

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On 7/16/21 2:31 PM, Sean Christopherson wrote:
> That's not what I was asking.  My question is if KVM will break/fail if someone
> runs a KVM build with SNP enabled halfway through the series.  E.g. if I make a
> KVM build at patch 22, "KVM: SVM: Add KVM_SNP_INIT command", what will happen if
> I attempt to launch an SNP guest?  Obviously it won't fully succeed, but will KVM
> fail gracefully and do all the proper cleanup?  Repeat the question for all patches
> between this one and the final patch of the series.
>
> SNP simply not working is ok, but if KVM explodes or does weird things without
> "full" SNP support, then at minimum the module param should be off by default
> until it's safe to enable.  E.g. for the TDP MMU, I believe the approach was to
> put all the machinery in place but not actually let userspace flip on the module
> param until the full implementation was ready.  Bisecting and testing the
> individual commits is a bit painful because it requires modifying KVM code, but
> on the plus side unrelated bisects won't stumble into a half-baked state.

There is one to two patches where I can think of that we may break the
KVM if SNP guest is created before applying the full series. In one
patch we add LAUNCH_UPDATE but reclaim is done in next patch. I like
your idea to push the module init  later in the series.


>
> Ya, got that, but again not what I was asking :-)  Why use cpu_feature_enabled()
> instead of boot_cpu_has()?  As a random developer, I would fully expect that
> boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_SEV_SNP) is true iff SNP is fully enabled by the kernel.

I have to check but I think boot_cpu_has(X64_FEATURE_SEV_SNP) will
return true even when the CONFIG_MEM_ENCRYPT is disabled.


>
>> The approach here is similar to SEV/ES. IIRC, it was done mainly to
>> avoid adding dead code when CONFIG_KVM_AMD_SEV is disabled.
> But this is already in an #ifdef, checking sev_es_guest() is pointless.


Ah Good point.





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