Commit dbaba470 authored by Xiaoyao Li's avatar Xiaoyao Li Committed by Thomas Gleixner

x86/split_lock: Rework the initialization flow of split lock detection

Current initialization flow of split lock detection has following issues:

1. It assumes the initial value of MSR_TEST_CTRL.SPLIT_LOCK_DETECT to be
   zero. However, it's possible that BIOS/firmware has set it.

2. X86_FEATURE_SPLIT_LOCK_DETECT flag is unconditionally set even if
   there is a virtualization flaw that FMS indicates the existence while
   it's actually not supported.

Rework the initialization flow to solve above issues. In detail, explicitly
clear and set split_lock_detect bit to verify MSR_TEST_CTRL can be
accessed, and rdmsr after wrmsr to ensure bit is cleared/set successfully.

X86_FEATURE_SPLIT_LOCK_DETECT flag is set only when the feature does exist
and the feature is not disabled with kernel param "split_lock_detect=off"

On each processor, explicitly updating the SPLIT_LOCK_DETECT bit based on
sld_sate in split_lock_init() since BIOS/firmware may touch it.
Originally-by: default avatarThomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de>
Signed-off-by: default avatarXiaoyao Li <xiaoyao.li@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: default avatarThomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de>
Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20200325030924.132881-2-xiaoyao.li@intel.com
parent 6650cdd9
......@@ -44,7 +44,7 @@ enum split_lock_detect_state {
* split_lock_setup() will switch this to sld_warn on systems that support
* split lock detect, unless there is a command line override.
*/
static enum split_lock_detect_state sld_state = sld_off;
static enum split_lock_detect_state sld_state __ro_after_init = sld_off;
/*
* Processors which have self-snooping capability can handle conflicting
......@@ -984,78 +984,87 @@ static inline bool match_option(const char *arg, int arglen, const char *opt)
return len == arglen && !strncmp(arg, opt, len);
}
static bool split_lock_verify_msr(bool on)
{
u64 ctrl, tmp;
if (rdmsrl_safe(MSR_TEST_CTRL, &ctrl))
return false;
if (on)
ctrl |= MSR_TEST_CTRL_SPLIT_LOCK_DETECT;
else
ctrl &= ~MSR_TEST_CTRL_SPLIT_LOCK_DETECT;
if (wrmsrl_safe(MSR_TEST_CTRL, ctrl))
return false;
rdmsrl(MSR_TEST_CTRL, tmp);
return ctrl == tmp;
}
static void __init split_lock_setup(void)
{
enum split_lock_detect_state state = sld_warn;
char arg[20];
int i, ret;
setup_force_cpu_cap(X86_FEATURE_SPLIT_LOCK_DETECT);
sld_state = sld_warn;
if (!split_lock_verify_msr(false)) {
pr_info("MSR access failed: Disabled\n");
return;
}
ret = cmdline_find_option(boot_command_line, "split_lock_detect",
arg, sizeof(arg));
if (ret >= 0) {
for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(sld_options); i++) {
if (match_option(arg, ret, sld_options[i].option)) {
sld_state = sld_options[i].state;
state = sld_options[i].state;
break;
}
}
}
switch (sld_state) {
switch (state) {
case sld_off:
pr_info("disabled\n");
break;
return;
case sld_warn:
pr_info("warning about user-space split_locks\n");
break;
case sld_fatal:
pr_info("sending SIGBUS on user-space split_locks\n");
break;
}
if (!split_lock_verify_msr(true)) {
pr_info("MSR access failed: Disabled\n");
return;
}
sld_state = state;
setup_force_cpu_cap(X86_FEATURE_SPLIT_LOCK_DETECT);
}
/*
* Locking is not required at the moment because only bit 29 of this
* MSR is implemented and locking would not prevent that the operation
* of one thread is immediately undone by the sibling thread.
* Use the "safe" versions of rdmsr/wrmsr here because although code
* checks CPUID and MSR bits to make sure the TEST_CTRL MSR should
* exist, there may be glitches in virtualization that leave a guest
* with an incorrect view of real h/w capabilities.
* MSR_TEST_CTRL is per core, but we treat it like a per CPU MSR. Locking
* is not implemented as one thread could undo the setting of the other
* thread immediately after dropping the lock anyway.
*/
static bool __sld_msr_set(bool on)
static void sld_update_msr(bool on)
{
u64 test_ctrl_val;
if (rdmsrl_safe(MSR_TEST_CTRL, &test_ctrl_val))
return false;
rdmsrl(MSR_TEST_CTRL, test_ctrl_val);
if (on)
test_ctrl_val |= MSR_TEST_CTRL_SPLIT_LOCK_DETECT;
else
test_ctrl_val &= ~MSR_TEST_CTRL_SPLIT_LOCK_DETECT;
return !wrmsrl_safe(MSR_TEST_CTRL, test_ctrl_val);
wrmsrl(MSR_TEST_CTRL, test_ctrl_val);
}
static void split_lock_init(void)
{
if (sld_state == sld_off)
return;
if (__sld_msr_set(true))
return;
/*
* If this is anything other than the boot-cpu, you've done
* funny things and you get to keep whatever pieces.
*/
pr_warn("MSR fail -- disabled\n");
sld_state = sld_off;
split_lock_verify_msr(sld_state != sld_off);
}
bool handle_user_split_lock(struct pt_regs *regs, long error_code)
......@@ -1071,7 +1080,7 @@ bool handle_user_split_lock(struct pt_regs *regs, long error_code)
* progress and set TIF_SLD so the detection is re-enabled via
* switch_to_sld() when the task is scheduled out.
*/
__sld_msr_set(false);
sld_update_msr(false);
set_tsk_thread_flag(current, TIF_SLD);
return true;
}
......@@ -1085,7 +1094,7 @@ bool handle_user_split_lock(struct pt_regs *regs, long error_code)
*/
void switch_to_sld(unsigned long tifn)
{
__sld_msr_set(!(tifn & _TIF_SLD));
sld_update_msr(!(tifn & _TIF_SLD));
}
#define SPLIT_LOCK_CPU(model) {X86_VENDOR_INTEL, 6, model, X86_FEATURE_ANY}
......
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