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Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH V2 1/2] x86/altp2m: Add hypercall to set a range of sve bits



On 13.11.2019 15:57, Tamas K Lengyel wrote:
> On Wed, Nov 13, 2019 at 7:51 AM Tamas K Lengyel <tamas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>
>> On Tue, Nov 12, 2019 at 7:31 AM Jan Beulich <jbeulich@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>>
>>> On 12.11.2019 15:05, Tamas K Lengyel wrote:
>>>> On Tue, Nov 12, 2019 at 4:54 AM Jan Beulich <jbeulich@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>>>> On 06.11.2019 16:35, Alexandru Stefan ISAILA wrote:
>>>>>> +        else
>>>>>> +        {
>>>>>> +            rc = p2m_set_suppress_ve_multi(d, &a.u.suppress_ve);
>>>>>> +
>>>>>> +            if ( rc == -ERESTART )
>>>>>> +                if ( __copy_field_to_guest(guest_handle_cast(arg,
>>>>>> +                                           xen_hvm_altp2m_op_t),
>>>>>> +                                           &a, u.suppress_ve.opaque) )
>>>>>> +                    rc = -EFAULT;
>>>>>
>>>>> If the operation is best effort, _some_ indication of failure should
>>>>> still be handed back to the caller. Whether that's through the opaque
>>>>> field or by some other means is secondary. If not via that field
>>>>> (which would make the outer of the two if()-s disappear), please fold
>>>>> the if()-s.
>>>>
>>>> At least for mem_sharing_range_op we also do a best-effort and don't
>>>> return an error for pages where it wasn't possible to share. So I
>>>> don't think it's absolutely necessary to do that, especially if the
>>>> caller can't do anything about those errors anyway.
>>>
>>> mem-sharing is a little different in nature, isn't it? If you
>>> can't share a page, both involved guests will continue to run
>>> with their own instances. If you want to suppress #VE delivery
>>> and it fails, behavior won't be transparently correct, as
>>> there'll potentially be #VE when there should be none. Whether
>>> that's benign to the guest very much depends on its handler.
>>
>> Makes me wonder whether it would make more sense to flip this thing on
>> its head and have supress_ve be set by default (since its ignored by
>> default) and then have pages for which the EPT violation should be
>> convertible to #VE be specifically enabled by turning suppress_ve off.
>> That would eliminate the possibility of having the in-guest handler
>> getting #VE for pages it is not ready to handle. The hypervisor (and
>> the external VMI toolstack) OTOH should always be in a position to
>> handle EPT violations it itself causes by changing the page
>> permissions.
> 
> Actually, now that I looked at it, that's _exactly_ what we do
> already. The suppress_ve bit is always set for all EPT pages. So this
> operation here is going to be used to enable #VE for pages, not the
> other way around. So there wouldn't be a case of "potentially be #VE
> when there should be none".

But this doesn't change the bottom line of my earlier comment: It's
as bad to an OS to see too many #VE as it is to miss any that are
expected.

Jan

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