Re: [PATCH v3 3/3] x86/sev: Fix broken SNP support with KVM module built-in

From: Sean Christopherson
Date: Fri Feb 07 2025 - 10:53:25 EST


On Wed, Feb 05, 2025, Ashish Kalra wrote:
> On 2/5/2025 1:31 PM, Sean Christopherson wrote:
> > On Wed, Feb 05, 2025, Vasant Hegde wrote:
> >> So we don't want to clear CC_ATTR_HOST_SEV_SNP after RMP initialization -OR-
> >> clear for all failures?
> >
> > I honestly don't know, because the answer largely depends on what happens with
> > hardware. I asked in an earlier version of this series if IOMMU initialization
> > failure after the RMP is configured is even survivable.
> >
>
> As i mentioned earlier and as part of this series and summarizing this again here:

Thanks!

> - snp_rmptable_init() enables SNP support system-wide and that means the HW starts
> doing RMP checks for memory accesses, but as RMP table is zeroed out initially,
> all memory is configured to be host/HV owned.
>
> It is only after SNP_INIT(_EX) that RMP table is configured and initialized with
> HV_Fixed, firmware pages and stuff like IOMMU RMP enforcement is enabled.
>
> If the IOMMU initialization fails after IOMMU support on SNP check is completed
> and host SNP is enabled, then SNP_INIT(_EX) will fail as IOMMUs need to be enabled
> for SNP_INIT to succeed.
>
> > For this series, I think it makes sense to match the existing behavior, unless
> > someone from AMD can definitively state that we should do something different.
> > And the existing behavior is that amd_iommu_snp_en and CC_ATTR_HOST_SEV_SNP will
> > be left set if the IOMMU completes iommu_snp_enable(), and the kernel completes
> > RMP setup.
>
> Yes, that is true and this behavior is still consistent with this series.
>
> Again to reiterate, if iommu_snp_enable() and host SNP enablement is successful,
> any late IOMMU initialization failures should cause SNP_INIT to fail and that means
> IOMMU RMP enforcement will never get enabled and RMP table will remain configured
> for all memory marked as HV/host owned.

So the kernel should be able to limp along, but CC_ATTR_HOST_SEV_SNP will be in
a half-baked state.

Would it make sense to WARN if the RMP has been configured? E.g. as a follow-up
change:

/*
* SNP platform initilazation requires IOMMUs to be fully configured.
* If the RMP has NOT been configured, simply mark SNP as unsupported.
* If the RMP is configured, but RMP enforcement has not been enabled
* in IOMMUs, then the system is in a half-baked state, but can limp
* along as all memory should be Hypervisor-Owned in the RMP. WARN,
* but leave SNP as "supported" to avoid confusing the kernel.
*/
if (ret && cc_platform_has(CC_ATTR_HOST_SEV_SNP) &&
!WARN_ON_ONCE(amd_iommu_snp_en))
cc_platform_clear(CC_ATTR_HOST_SEV_SNP);