[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Ping: [PATCH] x86emul: de-duplicate scatters to the same linear address
On 05.02.2021 12:28, Jan Beulich wrote: > On 05.02.2021 11:41, Andrew Cooper wrote: >> On 10/11/2020 13:26, Jan Beulich wrote: >>> The SDM specifically allows for earlier writes to fully overlapping >>> ranges to be dropped. If a guest did so, hvmemul_phys_mmio_access() >>> would crash it if varying data was written to the same address. Detect >>> overlaps early, as doing so in hvmemul_{linear,phys}_mmio_access() would >>> be quite a bit more difficult. >> >> Are you saying that there is currently a bug if a guest does encode such >> an instruction, and we emulate it? > > That is my take on it, yes. > >>> Note that due to cache slot use being linear address based, there's no >>> similar issue with multiple writes to the same physical address (mapped >>> through different linear addresses). >>> >>> Since this requires an adjustment to the EVEX Disp8 scaling test, >>> correct a comment there at the same time. >>> >>> Signed-off-by: Jan Beulich <jbeulich@xxxxxxxx> >>> --- >>> TBD: The SDM isn't entirely unambiguous about the faulting behavior in >>> this case: If a fault would need delivering on the earlier slot >>> despite the write getting squashed, we'd have to call ops->write() >>> with size set to zero for the earlier write(s). However, >>> hvm/emulate.c's handling of zero-byte accesses extends only to the >>> virtual-to-linear address conversions (and raising of involved >>> faults), so in order to also observe #PF changes to that logic >>> would then also be needed. Can we live with a possible misbehavior >>> here? >> >> Do you have a chapter/section reference? > > The instruction pages. They say in particular > > "If two or more destination indices completely overlap, the “earlier” > write(s) may be skipped." > > and > > "Faults are delivered in a right-to-left manner. That is, if a fault > is triggered by an element and delivered ..." > > To me this may or may not mean the skipping of indices includes the > skipping of faults (which a later element then would raise anyway). Does the above address your concerns / questions? If not, what else do I need to provide? Jan
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