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Re: [Xen-devel] fxsave, fnsave, ltr hang for guest OS.

To: xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [Xen-devel] fxsave, fnsave, ltr hang for guest OS.
From: alarson@xxxxxxxx
Date: Fri, 12 Nov 2010 15:27:17 -0600
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History: fnsave in my 32-bit protected mode OS 'hangs' when paging is
turned on.

Keir Fraser <keir.xen@xxxxxxxxx> wrote on 11/04/2010 11:50:52 AM:

> On 04/11/2010 16:32, "alarson@xxxxxxxx" <alarson@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
> 
AL> ... When I restricted the two clients (dom0 and my os) to
AL> exclusively their own CPU, then, if you exclude the first trace
AL> below, a pattern seems to emerge, and it would seem that I should
AL> start with sh_page_fault().

KF> Hm, well maybe. sh_page_fault() is the entry point to one of the
KF> most complex pieces of the hypervisor, so you're likely to find it
KF> more of a sticky tar pit than a source of salvation. It may be
KF> involved, but you might want to wade in armed with some more debug
KF> info first so that your search has some greater focus.

KF> I would dispense with sampling the 'd' key -- clearly a bunch of
KF> stuff is happening -- and instead go for printk() tracing in the
KF> vmexit handler vmx_vmexit_handler(). ...

You advice was most helpful once again.  However, I'm now even more
confused than I was before.  I downloaded the OpenSuse source RPM for
xen (xen-4.0.0_21091_06-0.1.1.src.rpm) and added printk debugging
statements as suggested.  The following are the outputs I eventually
found most useful.  All expressions denote existing source code
variables:

(XEN) sh_page_fault va=303b90, regs->error_code=3
(XEN) x86_emulate: b=dd, modrm=31, modrm_reg=6
(XEN) sh_page_fault called x86_emulate va=303b90,result=1
(XEN) vmx_vmexit_handler reason=0
(XEN) vmx_vmexit_handler intr_info=80000b0e, vector=e

The key line is:
(XEN) x86_emulate: b=dd, modrm=31, modrm_reg=6

The instruction I'm executing is:

c0817476: dd 31 fnsave (%ecx)

Opcode 0xDD and the modrm_reg (0x6) matches.  The source for
x86_emulate() opcode 0xdd has no case for modrm_reg=0x6, so
x86_emulate() returns X86EMUL_UNHANDLEABLE (i.e., 1).

What I don't understand is why fnsave works before I turn on paging
and doesn't afterwords.

Am I just looking at an unimplemented feature, or is there something
more nefarious going on?

I haven't looked at why load task register (ltr) and 
accesses to the APIC behave similarly.  Does Xen assume
fnsave, ltr, etc. happen with paging turned off?


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