Re: [PATCH] thunderbolt: Stop using iommu_present()

From: Robin Murphy
Date: Wed Mar 16 2022 - 14:22:32 EST


On 2022-03-16 17:53, Limonciello, Mario wrote:
[Public]


There is a way to figure out the "tunneled" PCIe ports by looking at
certain properties and we do that already actually. The BIOS has the
following under these ports:


https://nam11.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fdocs
.microsoft.com%2Fen-us%2Fwindows-
hardware%2Fdrivers%2Fpci%2Fdsd-
for-pcie-root-ports%23identifying-externally-exposed-pcie-root-

ports&data=04%7C01%7Cmario.limonciello%40amd.com%7C0465d319a

6684335d9c208da07710e7c%7C3dd8961fe4884e608e11a82d994e183d%7C0%7

C0%7C637830479402895833%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJWIjoiMC4w

LjAwMDAiLCJQIjoiV2luMzIiLCJBTiI6Ik1haWwiLCJXVCI6Mn0%3D%7C3000&am

p;sdata=z6hpYGpj%2B%2BVvz9d6MXiO4N66PUm4zwhOdI%2Br6l3PjhQ%3D
&reserved=0

and the ports will have dev->external_facing set to 1. Perhaps looking
at that field helps here?

External facing isn't a guarantee from the firmware though. It's
something we
all expect in practice, but I think it's better to look at the ones that are
from
the _DSD usb4-host-interface to be safer.

Right but then we have the discrete ones with the DVSEC that exposes the
tunneled ports :(


Can the USB4 CM make the device links in the DVSEC case perhaps too? I would
think we want that anyway to control device suspend ordering.

If I had something discrete to try I'd dust off the DVSEC patch I wrote before to
try it, but alas all I have is integrated stuff on my hand.

Mika, you might not have seen it yet, but I sent a follow up diff in this
thread
to Robin's patch. If that looks good Robin can submit a v2 (or I'm happy to
do
so as well as I confirmed it helps my original intent too).

I saw it now and I'm thinking are we making this unnecessary complex? I
mean Microsoft solely depends on the DMAR platform opt-in flag:




I think Microsoft doesn't allow you to turn off the IOMMU though or put it in
passthrough through on the kernel command line.

We also do turn on full IOMMU mappings in that case for devices that are
marked as external facing by the same firmware that provided the DMAR
bit. If the user decides to disable IOMMU from command line for instance
then we expect she knows what she is doing.

Yeah, if external_facing is set correctly then we can safely expect the
the IOMMU layer to do the right thing, so in that case it probably is OK
to infer that if an IOMMU is present for the NHI then it'll be managing
that whole bus hierarchy. What I'm really thinking about here is whether
we can defend against a case when external_facing *isn't* set, so we
treat the tunnelled ports as normal PCI buses, assume it's OK since
we've got an IOMMU and everything else is getting translation domains by
default, but then a Thunderbolt device shows up masquerading the VID:DID
of something that gets a passthrough quirk, and thus tricks its way
through the perceived protection.

Robin.

Unless it happened after 5.17-rc8 looking at the code I think that's Intel
specific behavior though at the moment (has_external_pci). I don't see it
in a generic layer.

Ah, it's not necessarily the most obvious thing - pci_dev->external_facing gets propagated through to pci_dev->untrusted by set_pcie_untrusted(), and it's that that's then checked by iommu_get_def_domain_type() to enforce a translation domain regardless of default passthrough or quirks. It's then further checked by iommu-dma's dev_is_untrusted() to enforce bounce-buffering to avoid data leakage in sub-page mappings too.

In addition to the point Robin said about firmware not setting external facing
if the IOMMU was disabled on command line then iommu_dma_protection
would be showing the wrong values meaning userspace may choose to
authorize the device automatically in a potentially unsafe scenario.

Even if the user "knew what they were doing", I would expect that we still
do our best to protect them from themselves and not advertise something
that will cause automatic authorization.

Might it be reasonable for the Thunderbolt core to check early on if any tunnelled ports are not marked as external facing, and if so just tell the user that iommu_dma_protection is off the table and anything they authorise is at their own risk?

Robin.