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Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH 2/2] x86: use invpcid to do global flushing



>>> On 05.03.18 at 13:35, <andrew.cooper3@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> On 05/03/18 12:06, Juergen Gross wrote:
>> On 05/03/18 12:50, Andrew Cooper wrote:
>>> On 05/03/18 11:31, Jan Beulich wrote:
>>>>>>> On 05.03.18 at 10:50, <wei.liu2@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>>>> Signed-off-by: Wei Liu <wei.liu2@xxxxxxxxxx>
>>>> No description at all? I'd at least expect mention of how much of a
>>>> performance win this is (for whichever hardware you happen to
>>>> know that).
>>>>
>>>>> @@ -120,11 +121,24 @@ unsigned int flush_area_local(const void *va, 
>>>>> unsigned 
> int flags)
>>>>>          else
>>>>>          {
>>>>>              u32 t = pre_flush();
>>>>> -            unsigned long cr4 = read_cr4();
>>>>>  
>>>>> -            write_cr4(cr4 & ~X86_CR4_PGE);
>>>>> -            barrier();
>>>>> -            write_cr4(cr4);
>>>>> +            if ( !cpu_has_invpcid )
>>>>> +            {
>>>>> +                unsigned long cr4 = read_cr4();
>>>>> +
>>>>> +                write_cr4(cr4 & ~X86_CR4_PGE);
>>>>> +                barrier();
>>>>> +                write_cr4(cr4);
>>>>> +            }
>>>>> +            else
>>>>> +            {
>>>>> +                /*
>>>>> +                 * Using invpcid to flush all mappings works
>>>>> +                 * regardless of whether PCID is enabled or not.
>>>>> +                 * It is faster than read-modify-write CR4.
>>>>> +                 */
>>> Its a cr4 double write, rather than RMW.  We read from a cached value
>>> anyway, not from hardware.
>>>
>>>>> +                invpcid_flush_all();
>>>>> +            }
>>>> The reference to PCID in the comment isn't really meaningful imo.
>>>> PCID and INVPCID are independent features anyway. Also please
>>>> don't create artificially short comment lines.
>>>>
>>>> Generally I also think such if() conditions would better be inverted:
>>>> There's no reason to make the legacy form look as if it was
>>>> preferred.
>>>>
>>>> And then - what about the use in write_cr3() and the two uses that
>>>> remain after my XPTI follow-up series (which sadly looks to be stuck
>>>> for whatever reason), or (without that series) the write_cr3
>>>> assembler macro?
>>> I don't think it is safe to use invpcid when we're also switching cr3. 
>>> The new cr3 may have global pages with different translations, as they
>>> are guest controlled.
>> Can you elaborate a little bit more?
>>
>> How can a guest control any hypervisor mappings? As long as the new cr3
>> is being loaded before the TLB is flushed via INVPCID I can't see how
>> a problem should occur.
>>
>> In fact my series does exactly what Jan is asking above: it is replacing
>> the remaining cr4 based TLB flushing by INVPCID if possible. So in case
>> there is a flaw in my design please tell me.
> 
> At the moment, we have guest and hypervisor controlled global mappings.
> 
> The current switch is:
> cr4 &= ~PGE;
> cr3 = new_cr3;
> cr4 |= PGE;
> 
> which means that all global mappings are flushed by the first action,
> and no new global mappings can come into existence.  We then switch to
> the new cr3 (again with global fully disabled), then allow global
> mappings to come back into existence.
> 
> With the invpcid route, we switch via:
> 
> cr3 = new_cr3;
> invpcid all+global;
> 
> This has a race window where global mappings are active, and could
> mismatch what is in cr3.  This yields #MC on at least some hardware, and
> is specified to have undefined behaviour. 

Oh, right, this would be okay only without what used to be named
USER_MAPPINGS_ARE_GLOBAL (and what is now implied).

Jan


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