Re: KVM guest sometimes failed to boot because of kernel stack overflow if KPTI is enabled on a hisilicon ARM64 platform.

From: Wei Xu
Date: Wed Jun 20 2018 - 11:52:48 EST


Hi Will,

On 2018/6/20 22:42, Will Deacon wrote:
Hi Wei,

On Wed, Jun 20, 2018 at 10:18:00PM +0800, Wei Xu wrote:
We have observed KVM guest sometimes failed to boot because of kernel stack
overflow if KPTI is enabled on a hisilicon arm64 platform.

We also tested with different kernel version and found it is only
happened if the KPTI and KVM(enable-kvm & cpu=host) are enabled on the
guest.
The detail result is as below table.

+---------+----------+--------+------------+-------------------+
| host |host KPTI | guest | guest KPTI | kvm guest |
| kernel |enabled | kernel | enabled | booting result |
+---------+----------+--------+------------+-------------------+
| 4.17 | Y | 4.17 | Y | stack overflow |
+---------+----------+--------+------------+-------------------+
| 4.17 | Y | 4.16 | NA | OK |
+---------+----------+--------+------------+-------------------+
| 4.16 | NA | 4.17 | Y | stack overflow |
+---------+----------+--------+------------+-------------------+
| 4.16 | NA | 4.16 | NA | OK |
+---------+----------+--------+------------+-------------------+

A simple walk-around is adding this platform into the "kpti_safe_list".
But it does not resolve the issue indeed.
Could you please share any hint how to resolve this kind issue?
Thanks!

Another issue we found is "kpti_install_ng_mappings" will be invoked
even "kpti=off" has been added in the kernel command line. Is that expected?
This is because "kpti" is not a *early* param that "init_cpu_features" will
be invoked before parsing the param.
That sounds like a straightforward bug, which means we should use
early_param instead of __setup. I assume that doesn't fix your crash,
though?

Thanks for you quick response!
It can fix our crash but just another walk-around.

The command we are using to run the guest is as:

./qemu-system-aarch64 -machine virt,kernel_irqchip=on,gic-version=3 -cpu
host
-enable-kvm -smp 1 -m 1024 -kernel ./Image -initrd
../mini-rootfs-arm64.cpio.gz
-nographic -append "rdinit=init console=ttyAMA0
earlycon=pl011,0x9000000"

The log is as below:

[ 0.000000] Booting Linux on physical CPU 0x0000000000
[0x480fd010]
[ 0.000000] Linux version 4.17.0-45864-g29dcea8-dirty
(joyx@Turing-Arch-b) (gcc version 4.9.1 20140505 (prerelease) (crosstool-NG
linaro-1.13.1-4.9-2014.05 - Linaro GCC 4.9-2014.05)) #6 SMP PREEMPT Fri Jun
15 21:39:52 CST 2018
^^^ This is reproducible with vanilla v4.17 and defconfig, right?

Yes.


[ 0.038859] SMP: Total of 1 processors activated.
[ 0.039338] CPU features: detected: GIC system register CPU
interface
[ 0.039988] CPU features: detected: Privileged Access Never
[ 0.040560] CPU features: detected: User Access Override
[ 0.041093] CPU features: detected: RAS Extension Support
[ 0.042947] Insufficient stack space to handle exception!
[ 0.042949] ESR: 0x96000046 -- DABT (current EL)
[ 0.043963] FAR: 0xffff0000093a80e0
[ 0.045794] Task stack: [0xffff0000093a8000..0xffff0000093ac000]
[ 0.052181] IRQ stack: [0xffff000008000000..0xffff000008004000]
[ 0.058572] Overflow stack:
[0xffff80003efce2f0..0xffff80003efcf2f0]
[ 0.065068] CPU: 0 PID: 12 Comm: migration/0 Not tainted
4.17.0-45864-g29dcea8-dirty #6
[ 0.073138] Hardware name: linux,dummy-virt (DT)
[ 0.077831] pstate: 604003c5 (nZCv DAIF +PAN -UAO)
[ 0.082661] pc : el1_sync+0x0/0xb0
[ 0.086152] lr : kpti_install_ng_mappings+0x120/0x214
Can you use scripts/faddr2line to find out which line of code the lr is
pointing at, please? It would be interesting to know if we managed to
install the idmap.
I did not use addr2line before but with gdb we can get same info as below:

(gdb) list *kpti_install_ng_mappings+0x120/0x214
0xffff000008091d70 is in kpti_install_ng_mappings (/home/joyx/plinth-kernel-v200/arch/arm64/kernel/cpufeature.c:907).
902 return !has_cpuid_feature(entry, scope);
903 }
904
905 static void
906 kpti_install_ng_mappings(const struct arm64_cpu_capabilities *__unused)
907 {
908 typedef void (kpti_remap_fn)(int, int, phys_addr_t);
909 extern kpti_remap_fn idmap_kpti_install_ng_mappings;
910 kpti_remap_fn *remap_fn;
911

Hmm, I wonder if this is at all related to RAS, since we've just enabled
that and if we take a fault whilst rewriting swapper then we're going to
get stuck. What happens if you set CONFIG_ARM64_RAS_EXTN=n in the guest?

I will try it now.
Thanks!

Best Regards,
Wei

Will

.