From: Andrew Cooper <andrew.cooper3@citrix.com>
To: David Vrabel <david.vrabel@citrix.com>, Jan Beulich <JBeulich@suse.com>
Cc: xen-devel@lists.xenproject.org
Subject: Re: [PATCHv3 1/3] x86/fpu: improve check for XSAVE* not writing FIP/FDP fields
Date: Thu, 25 Feb 2016 13:16:24 +0000 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <56CEFEA8.6010600@citrix.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <56CEF854.9080604@citrix.com>
On 25/02/16 12:49, David Vrabel wrote:
> On 25/02/16 12:27, Jan Beulich wrote:
>>>>> On 25.02.16 at 13:18, <david.vrabel@citrix.com> wrote:
>>> On 25/02/16 11:32, Jan Beulich wrote:
>>>>>>> On 25.02.16 at 11:58, <david.vrabel@citrix.com> wrote:
>>>>> The poison value is fixed and thus knowable by a guest (or guest
>>>>> userspace). This could allow the guest to cause Xen to incorrectly
>>>>> detect that the field has not been written. But: a) this requires the
>>>>> FIP register to be a full 64 bits internally which is not the case for
>>>>> all current AMD and Intel CPUs; and b) this only allows the guest (or
>>>>> a guest userspace process) to corrupt its own state (i.e., it cannot
>>>>> affect the state of another guest or another user space process).
>>>>>
>>>>> This results in smaller code with fewer branches and is more
>>>>> understandable.
>>>>>
>>>>> Signed-off-by: David Vrabel <david.vrabel@citrix.com>
>>>> Pending confirmation on FIP register width by at least Intel,
>>>> Reviewed-by: Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
>>> For Intel CPUs, FIP is 48-bits internally and newer CPUs have FPCSDS and
>>> thus we will always use the 64-bit save.
>> Has Intel told you (but not us), or is this just based on experiments
>> you did, or re-stating what I've found from experimenting?
> I'm just restating things already mentioned in the various threads.
>
>>> For AMD, which only writes FIP and FDP if an exception is pending, if a
>>> guest wanted to use FIP to store an arbitrary 64-bit value (in some
>>> future CPU) it would have to manually set an exception as pending. Its
>>> seems implausible that any software would actually do this.
>> All of these uses of FIP/FDP are implausible, yet we're aiming at
>> correctly mimicking hardware behavior, allowing folks to even do
>> implausible things that work on bare hardware.
> I think:
>
> a) On hardware with FPCSDS, we always do a 64-bit save/restore and thus
> always match the hardware behaviour.
>
> b) On hardware without FPCSDS we /cannot/ match the hardware behaviour.
> We must have some sort of heuristic to cover the common use cases. The
> existing heuristic is /already/ inadequate since Driver Verifier
> confuses it. So IMO, making the heuristic a teeny, tiny bit less precise
> doesn't matter.
>
> c) For the uncommon use cases, there is always HVM_PARAM_X87_FIP_WIDTH
> to force a particular behaviour.
No OS is plausibly going to hide non-IP information in FIP.
If some theoretical OS does do something like that, there is always the
override available.
~Andrew
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next prev parent reply other threads:[~2016-02-25 13:16 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 17+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2016-02-25 10:58 [PATCHv3 0/3] x86: workaround inability to fully restore FPU state David Vrabel
2016-02-25 10:58 ` [PATCHv3 1/3] x86/fpu: improve check for XSAVE* not writing FIP/FDP fields David Vrabel
2016-02-25 11:32 ` Jan Beulich
2016-02-25 12:18 ` David Vrabel
2016-02-25 12:27 ` Jan Beulich
2016-02-25 12:49 ` David Vrabel
2016-02-25 13:16 ` Andrew Cooper [this message]
2016-02-25 14:27 ` Jan Beulich
2016-02-25 15:07 ` Andrew Cooper
2016-02-25 15:09 ` David Vrabel
2016-03-01 6:27 ` Tian, Kevin
2016-03-01 9:31 ` Jan Beulich
2016-02-25 10:58 ` [PATCHv3 2/3] x86/fpu: Add a per-domain field to set the width of FIP/FDP David Vrabel
2016-02-25 11:24 ` Jan Beulich
2016-02-25 11:38 ` David Vrabel
2016-02-25 11:55 ` Jan Beulich
2016-02-25 10:58 ` [PATCHv3 3/3] x86/hvm: add HVM_PARAM_X87_FIP_WIDTH David Vrabel
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