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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [PATCH v2 1/2] libacpi: Prevent CPU hotplug AML from corrupting memory
On 11.09.2025 17:32, Alejandro Vallejo wrote:
> On Thu Sep 11, 2025 at 4:52 PM CEST, Jan Beulich wrote:
>> On 11.09.2025 13:53, Alejandro Vallejo wrote:
>>> CPU hotplug relies on the online CPU bitmap being provided on PIO 0xaf00
>>> by the device model. The GPE handler checks this and compares it against
>>> the "online" flag on each MADT LAPIC entry, setting the flag to its
>>> related bit in the bitmap and adjusting the table's checksum.
>>>
>>> The bytecode doesn't, however, stop at NCPUS. It keeps comparing until it
>>> reaches 128, even if that overflows the MADT into some other (hopefully
>>> mapped) memory. The reading isn't as problematic as the writing though.
>>>
>>> If an "entry" outside the MADT is deemed to disagree with the CPU bitmap
>>> then the bit where the "online" flag would be is flipped, thus
>>> corrupting that memory. And the MADT checksum gets adjusted for a flip
>>> that happened outside its range. It's all terrible.
>>>
>>> Note that this corruption happens regardless of the device-model being
>>> present or not, because even if the bitmap holds 0s, the overflowed
>>> memory might not at the bits corresponding to the "online" flag.
>>>
>>> This patch adjusts the DSDT so entries >=NCPUS are skipped.
>>>
>>> Fixes: c70ad37a1f7c("HVM vcpu add/remove: setup dsdt infrastructure...")
>>
>> The code in question originates from e5dc62c4d4f1 ("hvmloader: Fix CPU
>> hotplug notify handler in ACPI DSDT"), though. Before that there was a
>> different issue (as mentioned in the description).
>
> As you mentioned elsewhere, it probably is 087543338924("hvmloader: limit CPUs
> exposed to guests") that matters. Until then the DSDT was correct.
>
>>
>>> --- a/tools/libacpi/mk_dsdt.c
>>> +++ b/tools/libacpi/mk_dsdt.c
>>> @@ -239,7 +239,8 @@ int main(int argc, char **argv)
>>> /* Extract current CPU's status: 0=offline; 1=online. */
>>> stmt("And", "Local1, 1, Local2");
>>> /* Check if status is up-to-date in the relevant MADT LAPIC
>>> entry... */
>>> - push_block("If", "LNotEqual(Local2, \\_SB.PR%02X.FLG)", cpu);
>>> + push_block("If", "And(LLess(%d, NCPU), LNotEqual(Local2,
>>> \\_SB.PR%02X.FLG))",
>>> + cpu, cpu);
>>
>> Don't we need to use \\_SB.NCPU here? From the other two uses it's not
>> quite clear; it might also be that the one using this form is actually
>> needlessly doing so. Yet here it may be better if only for consistency's
>> sake, as the LNotEqual() also operates on an absolute reference.
>
> \SB.PMAT method does the same thing. I'll just change that too while at it.
>
>> The other thing is that I'm not fluent in AML operand evaluation rules.
>> We want to avoid even the read access to FLG, and I'm unconvinced And()
>> will avoid evaluating its 2nd argument when the first one is 0. IOW this
>> may need to become a 2nd "If".
>
> I don't think there are any rules, it's unspecified. While in practice it
> wouldn't matter a lot, it's indeed better not to rely on it not blowing up.
>
> After sending this, I wondered about having a separate if with an early
> return.
>
>>
>> I further think that strictly speaking you mean LAnd() here, not And()
>> (but the above concern remains; all the ASL spec says is "Source1 and
>> Source2 are evaluated as integers" for both And() and LAnd()).
>
> I very definitely did mean LAnd! Nice catch. As for
>
>>
>> Jan
>
> TL;DR: Will s/And/LAnd/ and move it to a separate If
Except that once you use a separate If, no And() or LAnd() will be needed
anymore.
Jan
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