Re: [PATCH v11 09/13] x86, sgx: basic routines for enclave page cache

From: Jarkko Sakkinen
Date: Mon Jun 25 2018 - 05:21:33 EST


On Wed, 2018-06-20 at 06:21 -0700, Sean Christopherson wrote:
> On Fri, 2018-06-08 at 19:09 +0200, Jarkko Sakkinen wrote:
> > SGX has a set of data structures to maintain information about the enclaves
> > and their security properties. BIOS reserves a fixed size region of
> > physical memory for these structures by setting Processor Reserved Memory
> > Range Registers (PRMRR). This memory area is called Enclave Page Cache
> > (EPC).
> >
> > This commit implements the basic routines to allocate and free pages from
> > different EPC banks. There is also a swapper thread ksgxswapd for EPC pages
> > that gets woken up by sgx_alloc_page() when we run below the low watermark.
> > The swapper thread continues swapping pages up until it reaches the high
> > watermark.
> >
> > Each subsystem that uses SGX must provide a set of callbacks for EPC
> > pages that are used to reclaim, block and write an EPC page. Kernel
> > takes the responsibility of maintaining LRU cache for them.
> >
> > Signed-off-by: Jarkko Sakkinen <jarkko.sakkinen@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> > ---
> > arch/x86/include/asm/sgx.h | 67 +++++
> > arch/x86/include/asm/sgx_arch.h | 224 ++++++++++++++++
> > arch/x86/kernel/cpu/intel_sgx.c | 443 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-
> > 3 files changed, 732 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
> > create mode 100644 arch/x86/include/asm/sgx_arch.h
>
> ...
>
> > +struct sgx_pcmd {
> > + struct sgx_secinfo secinfo;
> > + uint64_t enclave_id;
> > + uint8_t reserved[40];
> > + uint8_t mac[16];
> > +};
>
> sgx_pcmd has a 128-byte alignment requirement. I think it's
> worth specifying here as sgx_pcmd is small enough that it could
> be put on the stack, e.g. by KVM when trapping and executing
> ELD* on behalf of a guest VM.
>
> In fact, it probably makes sense to add alightment attributes
> to all SGX structs for self-documentation purposes, even though
> many of them will never be allocated statically or on the stack.

I agree with this. It also documents stuff so that you don't have
to look it up from the SDM.

Neil: this should also clear your concerns.

/Jarkko