On Mon, Dec 13, 2021, Suravee Suthikulpanit wrote:
.....
+ } else {
+ u32 count = get_count_order(apic_get_max_phys_apicid());
+
+ avic_host_physical_id_mask = BIT_ULL(count) - 1;
+ }
Why is the "legal" mask dynamically calculated? That's way more complicated and
convoluted then this needs to be.
The cover letter says
However, newer AMD systems can have physical APIC ID larger than 255,
and AVIC hardware has been extended to support upto the maximum physical
APIC ID available in the system.
and newer versions of the APM have bits
11:8 - Reserved/SBZ for legacy APIC; extension of Host Physical APIC ID when
x2APIC is enabled.
7:0 - Host Physical APIC ID Physical APIC ID of the physical core allocated by
the VMM to host the guest virtual processor. This field is not valid
unless the IsRunning bit is set.
whereas older versions have
11:8 - Reserved, SBZ. Should always be set to zero.
That implies that an APIC ID > 255 on older hardware what ignores bits 11:8 even
in x2APIC will silently fail, and the whole point of this mask is to avoid exactly
that.
To further confuse things, the APM was only partially updated and needs to be fixed,
e.g. "Figure 15-19. Physical APIC Table in Memory" and the following blurb wasn't
updated to account for the new x2APIC behavior.
But at least one APM blurb appears to have been wrong (or the architecture is broken)
prior to the larger AVIC width:
Since a destination of FFh is used to specify a broadcast, physical APIC ID FFh
is reserved.
We have Rome systems with 256 CPUs and thus an x2APIC ID for a CPU of FFh. So
either the APM is wrong or AVIC is broken on older large systems.
Anyways, for the new larger mask, IMO dynamically computing the mask based on what
APIC IDs were enumerated to the kernel is pointless. If the AVIC doesn't support
using bits 11:0 to address APIC IDs then KVM is silently hosed no matter what if
any APIC ID is >255.
Ideally, there would be a feature flag enumerating the larger AVIC support so we
could do:
if (!x2apic_mode || !boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_FANCY_NEW_AVIC))
avic_host_physical_id_mask = GENMASK(7:0);
else
avic_host_physical_id_mask = GENMASK(11:0);
but since it sounds like that's not the case, and presumably hardware is smart
enough not to assign APIC IDs it can't address, this can simply be
if (!x2apic_mode)
avic_host_physical_id_mask = GENMASK(7:0);
else
avic_host_physical_id_mask = GENMASK(11:0);
and patch 01 to add+export apic_get_max_phys_apicid() goes away.
+ pr_debug("Using AVIC host physical APIC ID mask %#0llx\n",
+ avic_host_physical_id_mask);
+}
+
int avic_vm_init(struct kvm *kvm)
{
unsigned long flags;
@@ -943,22 +959,17 @@ avic_update_iommu_vcpu_affinity(struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu, int cpu, bool r)
void avic_vcpu_load(struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu, int cpu)
{
u64 entry;
- /* ID = 0xff (broadcast), ID > 0xff (reserved) */
int h_physical_id = kvm_cpu_get_apicid(cpu);
struct vcpu_svm *svm = to_svm(vcpu);
- /*
- * Since the host physical APIC id is 8 bits,
- * we can support host APIC ID upto 255.
- */
- if (WARN_ON(h_physical_id > AVIC_PHYSICAL_ID_ENTRY_HOST_PHYSICAL_ID_MASK))
+ if (WARN_ON(h_physical_id > avic_host_physical_id_mask))
Not really your code, but this should really be
if (WARN_ON((h_physical_id & avic_host_physical_id_mask) != h_physical_id))
return;
otherwise a negative value will get a false negative.