Re: [PATCH 1/2] KVM: arm64: vgic: Forbid invalid userspace Redistributor accesses

From: Marc Zyngier
Date: Tue Nov 17 2020 - 05:51:35 EST


On 2020-11-17 09:59, Auger Eric wrote:
Hi Marc,

On 11/17/20 9:49 AM, Marc Zyngier wrote:
Hi Zenghui,

On 2020-11-16 14:57, Zenghui Yu wrote:
Hi Marc,

On 2020/11/16 22:10, Marc Zyngier wrote:
My take is that only if the "[Re]Distributor base address" is specified
in the system memory map, will the user-provided kvm_device_attr.offset
make sense. And we can then handle the access to the register which is
defined by "base address + offset".

I'd tend to agree, but it is just that this is a large change at -rc4.
I'd rather have a quick fix for 5.10, and a more invasive change for
5.11,
spanning all the possible vgic devices.

So you prefer fixing it by "return a value that doesn't have the Last
bit set" for v5.10? I'm ok with it and can send v2 for it.

Cool. Thanks for that.

Btw, looking again at the way we handle the user-reading of GICR_TYPER

    vgic_mmio_read_v3r_typer(vcpu, addr, len)

it seems that @addr is actually the *offset* of GICR_TYPER (0x0008) and
@addr is unlikely to be equal to last_rdist_typer, which is the *GPA* of
the last RD. Looks like the user-reading of GICR_TYPER.Last is always
broken?

I think you are right. Somehow, we don't seem to track the index of
the RD in the region, so we can never compute the address of the RD
even if the base address is set.

Let's drop the reporting of Last for userspace for now, as it never
worked. If you post a patch addressing that quickly, I'll get it to
Paolo by the end of the week (there's another fix that needs merging).

Eric: do we have any test covering the userspace API?

So as this issue seems related to the changes made when implementing the
multiple RDIST regions, I volunteer to write those KVM selftests :-)

You're on! :D

More seriously, there is scope for fuzzing the device save/restore API,
as we find bugs every time someone change the "known good" ordering that
is implemented in QEMU.

Maybe it means getting rid of some unnecessary flexibility, as proposed
by Zenghui, if we are confident that no userspace makes use of it.
And in the future, making sure that new APIs are rigid enough to avoid such
bugs.

Thanks,

M.
--
Jazz is not dead. It just smells funny...