On 7/15/21 9:38 PM, Brijesh Singh wrote: > > > On 7/15/21 1:39 PM, Sean Christopherson wrote: >> On Thu, Jul 15, 2021, Brijesh Singh wrote: >>> The memfd_secrets uses the set_direct_map_{invalid,default}_noflush() and it >>> is designed to remove/add the present bit in the direct map. We can't use >>> them, because in our case the page may get accessed by the KVM (e.g >>> kvm_guest_write, kvm_guest_map etc). >> >> But KVM should never access a guest private page, i.e. the direct map should >> always be restored to PRESENT before KVM attempts to access the page. >> > > Yes, KVM should *never* access the guest private pages. So, we could potentially > enhance the RMPUPDATE() to check for the assigned and act accordingly. I think I'm not the first one suggesting it, but IMHO the best solution would be to leave direct map alone (except maybe in some debugging/development mode where you could do the unmapping to catch unexpected host accesses), and once there's a situation with host accessing a shared page of the guest, it would temporarily kmap() it outside of the direct map. Shouldn't these situations be rare enough, and already recognizable due to the need to set up the page sharing in the first place, that this approach would be feasible? > Are you thinking something along the line of this: > > int rmpupdate(struct page *page, struct rmpupdate *val) > { > ... > > /* > * If page is getting assigned in the RMP entry then unmap > * it from the direct map before its added in the RMP table. > */ > if (val.assigned) > set_direct_map_invalid_noflush(page_to_virt(page), 1); > > ... > > /* > * If the page is getting unassigned then restore the mapping > * in the direct map after its removed from the RMP table. > */ > if (!val.assigned) > set_direct_map_default_noflush(page_to_virt(page), 1); > > ... > } > > thanks