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[Xen-devel] PROPOSAL: Microcode loading under x86 - various options, discussion, etc



Hey,

Out of the patches that are out of tree the ones that are still missing are:
 - microcode loader.

I dug around the "old" implementation of microcode_xen and looked at some old
Red Hat bugs to get an idea of its pedigree. What I am not sure about, and
I would appreciate some feedback on that, is whether:

 - One should not do a microcode once the CPU has gone in VT mode. That is it
   has some HVM guests running? (or PVH)? Is that some bogus out-of-date
   information that was relevant for the first generation CPUs?


a)Anyhow, barring that I looked at how the baremetal version of the microcode
  update works to see if the hypervisor could trap on the MSR writes and 
continue
  on with the update.

  The Intel and AMD Linux drivers seem to follow the same pattern:

  1). Find out what the current microcode version is. That on
   Intel) is via cpuid (0x00000001) and potential RDMSR on MSR_IA32_PLATFORM_ID
   AMD) is via cpuid (0x00000001)

   (both of them read the eax register value)
  2). Apply if neccessary:
   Intel) does an wrmslr on MSR_IA32_UCODE_WRITE (with payload), then wrmslr
       to MSR_IA32_UCODE_REV (with 0), do cpuid (to flush the pipeline + L1)  
and then
       rdmsrl MSR_IA32_UCODE_REV to double check.

   AMD) is via doing rdmsr on MSR_AMD64_PATCH_LEVEL (to check) then follow it 
via
       wrmslr to MSR_AMD64_PATCH_LOADER and rdmsr of MSR_AMD64_PATCH_LEVEL.


  Great, except that the "blob" that is provided via these MSR is just an 
virtual
  address. No size, nothing. Just 'here it is', and the CPU has to figure out 
the
  size and whether the blob is correct by itself.

  That means implementing this in the hypervisor to do continuation of the 
microcode
  loading is not an option. 

b) The microcode_xen driver is not an upstream option either - I don't remember 
the
  details of it, but I do recall Boris Petkov being unhappy about it.

c) Anyhow, thinking about kexec solved I wrote a little tool (see attached) 
that sure
  enough allows me to update the microcode. But this is not really an option - 
unless
  we add some code in /etc/init.d/xencommons to use this program (with more 
logic in it)
  and load the latest microcode.

d) The other option is to use the hypervisor loading logic that Jan developed - 
it
  works, but it requires changes in dracut (or mkinitrd) to append all of the
  firmwares (for a specific platform - you can't mix Intel and AMD) and add it 
to
  the stanze. This does it for me:

        cat /lib/firmware/ucode-intel/* > /srv/tftpboot/lab/tst035/microcode.bin

   And then this extra piece of stanze makes it work:

        KERNEL mboot.c32
        APPEND xen.gz   ucode=2 --- vmlinuz  --- initramfs.cpio.gz --- 
microcode.bin


e) A variation of this - is to piggyback on the early-microcode code work done
  by Intel (and AMD), where they construct an cpio image with microcodes and 
append it to
  the initrd and scan for a known signature during the boot. The nice thing is 
that it
  is generic (can have both AMD and Intel blobs) - Linux does it an Xen can do 
it too.
  (See Documentation/x86/early-microcode.txt). Problem is I can't find any
  tools (dracut, mkinitrd, etc) that implement it. The tools (dracut) would 
probably do:


        mkdir initrd                                                            
           
        cd initrd                                                               
           
        mkdir kernel                                                            
           
        mkdir kernel/x86                                                        
           
        mkdir kernel/x86/microcode                                              
           
        cp /srv/tftpboot/lab/tst035/microcode.bin 
kernel/x86/microcode/GenuineIntel.bin
        cp /srv/tftpboot/lab/tst035/amd-microcode.bin 
kernel/x86/microcode/AuthenticAMD.bin
        find .|cpio -oc >../ucode.cpio                                          
           
        cd ..                                                                   
           
        cat ucode.cpio /boot/initrd-3.5.0.img >/boot/initrd-3.5.0.ucode.img

  (lifted from said file).

  Anyhow, the neat thing about e) is that once the tools have this, we can just 
piggyback
  on it by scanning for the signature and then be able to load the microcode.


I am leaning towards e) b/c it would allow us to:
 - automatically during bootup find the microcode
 - one extra blob for AMD and Intel platforms.
 - generic - as Linux OS can use it as well.

Thoughts?

Attachment: 0001-misc-xenmicrocode-Upload-lib-firmware-some-blob-to-t.patch
Description: Text document

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