Re: [PATCH v3] KVM: VMX: Enable Notify VM exit
From: Jim Mattson
Date: Fri Feb 25 2022 - 23:25:44 EST
On Fri, Feb 25, 2022 at 8:07 PM Xiaoyao Li <xiaoyao.li@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> On 2/25/2022 11:13 PM, Paolo Bonzini wrote:
> > On 2/25/22 16:12, Xiaoyao Li wrote:
> >>>>>
> >>>>
> >>>> I don't like the idea of making things up without notifying userspace
> >>>> that this is fictional. How is my customer running nested VMs supposed
> >>>> to know that L2 didn't actually shutdown, but L0 killed it because the
> >>>> notify window was exceeded? If this information isn't reported to
> >>>> userspace, I have no way of getting the information to the customer.
> >>>
> >>> Then, maybe a dedicated software define VM exit for it instead of
> >>> reusing triple fault?
> >>>
> >>
> >> Second thought, we can even just return Notify VM exit to L1 to tell
> >> L2 causes Notify VM exit, even thought Notify VM exit is not exposed
> >> to L1.
> >
> > That might cause NULL pointer dereferences or other nasty occurrences.
>
> IMO, a well written VMM (in L1) should handle it correctly.
>
> L0 KVM reports no Notify VM Exit support to L1, so L1 runs without
> setting Notify VM exit. If a L2 causes notify_vm_exit with
> invalid_vm_context, L0 just reflects it to L1. In L1's view, there is no
> support of Notify VM Exit from VMX MSR capability. Following L1 handler
> is possible:
>
> a) if (notify_vm_exit available & notify_vm_exit enabled) {
> handle in b)
> } else {
> report unexpected vm exit reason to userspace;
> }
>
> b) similar handler like we implement in KVM:
> if (!vm_context_invalid)
> re-enter guest;
> else
> report to userspace;
>
> c) no Notify VM Exit related code (e.g. old KVM), it's treated as
> unsupported exit reason
>
> As long as it belongs to any case above, I think L1 can handle it
> correctly. Any nasty occurrence should be caused by incorrect handler in
> L1 VMM, in my opinion.
Please test some common hypervisors (e.g. ESXi and Hyper-V).