linux-stable/virt/kvm/dirty_ring.c
Marc Zyngier 8929bc9659 KVM: Use acquire/release semantics when accessing dirty ring GFN state
The current implementation of the dirty ring has an implicit requirement
that stores to the dirty ring from userspace must be:

- be ordered with one another

- visible from another CPU executing a ring reset

While these implicit requirements work well for x86 (and any other
TSO-like architecture), they do not work for more relaxed architectures
such as arm64 where stores to different addresses can be freely
reordered, and loads from these addresses not observing writes from
another CPU unless the required barriers (or acquire/release semantics)
are used.

In order to start fixing this, upgrade the ring reset accesses:

- the kvm_dirty_gfn_harvested() helper now uses acquire semantics
  so it is ordered after all previous writes, including that from
  userspace

- the kvm_dirty_gfn_set_invalid() helper now uses release semantics
  so that the next_slot and next_offset reads don't drift past
  the entry invalidation

This is only a partial fix as the userspace side also need upgrading.

Signed-off-by: Marc Zyngier <maz@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Gavin Shan <gshan@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Peter Xu <peterx@redhat.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220926145120.27974-2-maz@kernel.org
2022-09-29 10:23:08 +01:00

180 lines
4.2 KiB
C

// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only
/*
* KVM dirty ring implementation
*
* Copyright 2019 Red Hat, Inc.
*/
#include <linux/kvm_host.h>
#include <linux/kvm.h>
#include <linux/vmalloc.h>
#include <linux/kvm_dirty_ring.h>
#include <trace/events/kvm.h>
#include "kvm_mm.h"
int __weak kvm_cpu_dirty_log_size(void)
{
return 0;
}
u32 kvm_dirty_ring_get_rsvd_entries(void)
{
return KVM_DIRTY_RING_RSVD_ENTRIES + kvm_cpu_dirty_log_size();
}
static u32 kvm_dirty_ring_used(struct kvm_dirty_ring *ring)
{
return READ_ONCE(ring->dirty_index) - READ_ONCE(ring->reset_index);
}
bool kvm_dirty_ring_soft_full(struct kvm_dirty_ring *ring)
{
return kvm_dirty_ring_used(ring) >= ring->soft_limit;
}
static bool kvm_dirty_ring_full(struct kvm_dirty_ring *ring)
{
return kvm_dirty_ring_used(ring) >= ring->size;
}
static void kvm_reset_dirty_gfn(struct kvm *kvm, u32 slot, u64 offset, u64 mask)
{
struct kvm_memory_slot *memslot;
int as_id, id;
as_id = slot >> 16;
id = (u16)slot;
if (as_id >= KVM_ADDRESS_SPACE_NUM || id >= KVM_USER_MEM_SLOTS)
return;
memslot = id_to_memslot(__kvm_memslots(kvm, as_id), id);
if (!memslot || (offset + __fls(mask)) >= memslot->npages)
return;
KVM_MMU_LOCK(kvm);
kvm_arch_mmu_enable_log_dirty_pt_masked(kvm, memslot, offset, mask);
KVM_MMU_UNLOCK(kvm);
}
int kvm_dirty_ring_alloc(struct kvm_dirty_ring *ring, int index, u32 size)
{
ring->dirty_gfns = vzalloc(size);
if (!ring->dirty_gfns)
return -ENOMEM;
ring->size = size / sizeof(struct kvm_dirty_gfn);
ring->soft_limit = ring->size - kvm_dirty_ring_get_rsvd_entries();
ring->dirty_index = 0;
ring->reset_index = 0;
ring->index = index;
return 0;
}
static inline void kvm_dirty_gfn_set_invalid(struct kvm_dirty_gfn *gfn)
{
smp_store_release(&gfn->flags, 0);
}
static inline void kvm_dirty_gfn_set_dirtied(struct kvm_dirty_gfn *gfn)
{
gfn->flags = KVM_DIRTY_GFN_F_DIRTY;
}
static inline bool kvm_dirty_gfn_harvested(struct kvm_dirty_gfn *gfn)
{
return smp_load_acquire(&gfn->flags) & KVM_DIRTY_GFN_F_RESET;
}
int kvm_dirty_ring_reset(struct kvm *kvm, struct kvm_dirty_ring *ring)
{
u32 cur_slot, next_slot;
u64 cur_offset, next_offset;
unsigned long mask;
int count = 0;
struct kvm_dirty_gfn *entry;
bool first_round = true;
/* This is only needed to make compilers happy */
cur_slot = cur_offset = mask = 0;
while (true) {
entry = &ring->dirty_gfns[ring->reset_index & (ring->size - 1)];
if (!kvm_dirty_gfn_harvested(entry))
break;
next_slot = READ_ONCE(entry->slot);
next_offset = READ_ONCE(entry->offset);
/* Update the flags to reflect that this GFN is reset */
kvm_dirty_gfn_set_invalid(entry);
ring->reset_index++;
count++;
/*
* Try to coalesce the reset operations when the guest is
* scanning pages in the same slot.
*/
if (!first_round && next_slot == cur_slot) {
s64 delta = next_offset - cur_offset;
if (delta >= 0 && delta < BITS_PER_LONG) {
mask |= 1ull << delta;
continue;
}
/* Backwards visit, careful about overflows! */
if (delta > -BITS_PER_LONG && delta < 0 &&
(mask << -delta >> -delta) == mask) {
cur_offset = next_offset;
mask = (mask << -delta) | 1;
continue;
}
}
kvm_reset_dirty_gfn(kvm, cur_slot, cur_offset, mask);
cur_slot = next_slot;
cur_offset = next_offset;
mask = 1;
first_round = false;
}
kvm_reset_dirty_gfn(kvm, cur_slot, cur_offset, mask);
trace_kvm_dirty_ring_reset(ring);
return count;
}
void kvm_dirty_ring_push(struct kvm_dirty_ring *ring, u32 slot, u64 offset)
{
struct kvm_dirty_gfn *entry;
/* It should never get full */
WARN_ON_ONCE(kvm_dirty_ring_full(ring));
entry = &ring->dirty_gfns[ring->dirty_index & (ring->size - 1)];
entry->slot = slot;
entry->offset = offset;
/*
* Make sure the data is filled in before we publish this to
* the userspace program. There's no paired kernel-side reader.
*/
smp_wmb();
kvm_dirty_gfn_set_dirtied(entry);
ring->dirty_index++;
trace_kvm_dirty_ring_push(ring, slot, offset);
}
struct page *kvm_dirty_ring_get_page(struct kvm_dirty_ring *ring, u32 offset)
{
return vmalloc_to_page((void *)ring->dirty_gfns + offset * PAGE_SIZE);
}
void kvm_dirty_ring_free(struct kvm_dirty_ring *ring)
{
vfree(ring->dirty_gfns);
ring->dirty_gfns = NULL;
}