cachepc-linux

Fork of AMDESE/linux with modifications for CachePC side-channel attack
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mmu.rst (21060B)


      1.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
      2
      3======================
      4The x86 kvm shadow mmu
      5======================
      6
      7The mmu (in arch/x86/kvm, files mmu.[ch] and paging_tmpl.h) is responsible
      8for presenting a standard x86 mmu to the guest, while translating guest
      9physical addresses to host physical addresses.
     10
     11The mmu code attempts to satisfy the following requirements:
     12
     13- correctness:
     14	       the guest should not be able to determine that it is running
     15               on an emulated mmu except for timing (we attempt to comply
     16               with the specification, not emulate the characteristics of
     17               a particular implementation such as tlb size)
     18- security:
     19	       the guest must not be able to touch host memory not assigned
     20               to it
     21- performance:
     22               minimize the performance penalty imposed by the mmu
     23- scaling:
     24               need to scale to large memory and large vcpu guests
     25- hardware:
     26               support the full range of x86 virtualization hardware
     27- integration:
     28               Linux memory management code must be in control of guest memory
     29               so that swapping, page migration, page merging, transparent
     30               hugepages, and similar features work without change
     31- dirty tracking:
     32               report writes to guest memory to enable live migration
     33               and framebuffer-based displays
     34- footprint:
     35               keep the amount of pinned kernel memory low (most memory
     36               should be shrinkable)
     37- reliability:
     38               avoid multipage or GFP_ATOMIC allocations
     39
     40Acronyms
     41========
     42
     43====  ====================================================================
     44pfn   host page frame number
     45hpa   host physical address
     46hva   host virtual address
     47gfn   guest frame number
     48gpa   guest physical address
     49gva   guest virtual address
     50ngpa  nested guest physical address
     51ngva  nested guest virtual address
     52pte   page table entry (used also to refer generically to paging structure
     53      entries)
     54gpte  guest pte (referring to gfns)
     55spte  shadow pte (referring to pfns)
     56tdp   two dimensional paging (vendor neutral term for NPT and EPT)
     57====  ====================================================================
     58
     59Virtual and real hardware supported
     60===================================
     61
     62The mmu supports first-generation mmu hardware, which allows an atomic switch
     63of the current paging mode and cr3 during guest entry, as well as
     64two-dimensional paging (AMD's NPT and Intel's EPT).  The emulated hardware
     65it exposes is the traditional 2/3/4 level x86 mmu, with support for global
     66pages, pae, pse, pse36, cr0.wp, and 1GB pages. Emulated hardware also
     67able to expose NPT capable hardware on NPT capable hosts.
     68
     69Translation
     70===========
     71
     72The primary job of the mmu is to program the processor's mmu to translate
     73addresses for the guest.  Different translations are required at different
     74times:
     75
     76- when guest paging is disabled, we translate guest physical addresses to
     77  host physical addresses (gpa->hpa)
     78- when guest paging is enabled, we translate guest virtual addresses, to
     79  guest physical addresses, to host physical addresses (gva->gpa->hpa)
     80- when the guest launches a guest of its own, we translate nested guest
     81  virtual addresses, to nested guest physical addresses, to guest physical
     82  addresses, to host physical addresses (ngva->ngpa->gpa->hpa)
     83
     84The primary challenge is to encode between 1 and 3 translations into hardware
     85that support only 1 (traditional) and 2 (tdp) translations.  When the
     86number of required translations matches the hardware, the mmu operates in
     87direct mode; otherwise it operates in shadow mode (see below).
     88
     89Memory
     90======
     91
     92Guest memory (gpa) is part of the user address space of the process that is
     93using kvm.  Userspace defines the translation between guest addresses and user
     94addresses (gpa->hva); note that two gpas may alias to the same hva, but not
     95vice versa.
     96
     97These hvas may be backed using any method available to the host: anonymous
     98memory, file backed memory, and device memory.  Memory might be paged by the
     99host at any time.
    100
    101Events
    102======
    103
    104The mmu is driven by events, some from the guest, some from the host.
    105
    106Guest generated events:
    107
    108- writes to control registers (especially cr3)
    109- invlpg/invlpga instruction execution
    110- access to missing or protected translations
    111
    112Host generated events:
    113
    114- changes in the gpa->hpa translation (either through gpa->hva changes or
    115  through hva->hpa changes)
    116- memory pressure (the shrinker)
    117
    118Shadow pages
    119============
    120
    121The principal data structure is the shadow page, 'struct kvm_mmu_page'.  A
    122shadow page contains 512 sptes, which can be either leaf or nonleaf sptes.  A
    123shadow page may contain a mix of leaf and nonleaf sptes.
    124
    125A nonleaf spte allows the hardware mmu to reach the leaf pages and
    126is not related to a translation directly.  It points to other shadow pages.
    127
    128A leaf spte corresponds to either one or two translations encoded into
    129one paging structure entry.  These are always the lowest level of the
    130translation stack, with optional higher level translations left to NPT/EPT.
    131Leaf ptes point at guest pages.
    132
    133The following table shows translations encoded by leaf ptes, with higher-level
    134translations in parentheses:
    135
    136 Non-nested guests::
    137
    138  nonpaging:     gpa->hpa
    139  paging:        gva->gpa->hpa
    140  paging, tdp:   (gva->)gpa->hpa
    141
    142 Nested guests::
    143
    144  non-tdp:       ngva->gpa->hpa  (*)
    145  tdp:           (ngva->)ngpa->gpa->hpa
    146
    147  (*) the guest hypervisor will encode the ngva->gpa translation into its page
    148      tables if npt is not present
    149
    150Shadow pages contain the following information:
    151  role.level:
    152    The level in the shadow paging hierarchy that this shadow page belongs to.
    153    1=4k sptes, 2=2M sptes, 3=1G sptes, etc.
    154  role.direct:
    155    If set, leaf sptes reachable from this page are for a linear range.
    156    Examples include real mode translation, large guest pages backed by small
    157    host pages, and gpa->hpa translations when NPT or EPT is active.
    158    The linear range starts at (gfn << PAGE_SHIFT) and its size is determined
    159    by role.level (2MB for first level, 1GB for second level, 0.5TB for third
    160    level, 256TB for fourth level)
    161    If clear, this page corresponds to a guest page table denoted by the gfn
    162    field.
    163  role.quadrant:
    164    When role.has_4_byte_gpte=1, the guest uses 32-bit gptes while the host uses 64-bit
    165    sptes.  That means a guest page table contains more ptes than the host,
    166    so multiple shadow pages are needed to shadow one guest page.
    167    For first-level shadow pages, role.quadrant can be 0 or 1 and denotes the
    168    first or second 512-gpte block in the guest page table.  For second-level
    169    page tables, each 32-bit gpte is converted to two 64-bit sptes
    170    (since each first-level guest page is shadowed by two first-level
    171    shadow pages) so role.quadrant takes values in the range 0..3.  Each
    172    quadrant maps 1GB virtual address space.
    173  role.access:
    174    Inherited guest access permissions from the parent ptes in the form uwx.
    175    Note execute permission is positive, not negative.
    176  role.invalid:
    177    The page is invalid and should not be used.  It is a root page that is
    178    currently pinned (by a cpu hardware register pointing to it); once it is
    179    unpinned it will be destroyed.
    180  role.has_4_byte_gpte:
    181    Reflects the size of the guest PTE for which the page is valid, i.e. '0'
    182    if direct map or 64-bit gptes are in use, '1' if 32-bit gptes are in use.
    183  role.efer_nx:
    184    Contains the value of efer.nx for which the page is valid.
    185  role.cr0_wp:
    186    Contains the value of cr0.wp for which the page is valid.
    187  role.smep_andnot_wp:
    188    Contains the value of cr4.smep && !cr0.wp for which the page is valid
    189    (pages for which this is true are different from other pages; see the
    190    treatment of cr0.wp=0 below).
    191  role.smap_andnot_wp:
    192    Contains the value of cr4.smap && !cr0.wp for which the page is valid
    193    (pages for which this is true are different from other pages; see the
    194    treatment of cr0.wp=0 below).
    195  role.smm:
    196    Is 1 if the page is valid in system management mode.  This field
    197    determines which of the kvm_memslots array was used to build this
    198    shadow page; it is also used to go back from a struct kvm_mmu_page
    199    to a memslot, through the kvm_memslots_for_spte_role macro and
    200    __gfn_to_memslot.
    201  role.ad_disabled:
    202    Is 1 if the MMU instance cannot use A/D bits.  EPT did not have A/D
    203    bits before Haswell; shadow EPT page tables also cannot use A/D bits
    204    if the L1 hypervisor does not enable them.
    205  role.passthrough:
    206    The page is not backed by a guest page table, but its first entry
    207    points to one.  This is set if NPT uses 5-level page tables (host
    208    CR4.LA57=1) and is shadowing L1's 4-level NPT (L1 CR4.LA57=1).
    209  gfn:
    210    Either the guest page table containing the translations shadowed by this
    211    page, or the base page frame for linear translations.  See role.direct.
    212  spt:
    213    A pageful of 64-bit sptes containing the translations for this page.
    214    Accessed by both kvm and hardware.
    215    The page pointed to by spt will have its page->private pointing back
    216    at the shadow page structure.
    217    sptes in spt point either at guest pages, or at lower-level shadow pages.
    218    Specifically, if sp1 and sp2 are shadow pages, then sp1->spt[n] may point
    219    at __pa(sp2->spt).  sp2 will point back at sp1 through parent_pte.
    220    The spt array forms a DAG structure with the shadow page as a node, and
    221    guest pages as leaves.
    222  gfns:
    223    An array of 512 guest frame numbers, one for each present pte.  Used to
    224    perform a reverse map from a pte to a gfn. When role.direct is set, any
    225    element of this array can be calculated from the gfn field when used, in
    226    this case, the array of gfns is not allocated. See role.direct and gfn.
    227  root_count:
    228    A counter keeping track of how many hardware registers (guest cr3 or
    229    pdptrs) are now pointing at the page.  While this counter is nonzero, the
    230    page cannot be destroyed.  See role.invalid.
    231  parent_ptes:
    232    The reverse mapping for the pte/ptes pointing at this page's spt. If
    233    parent_ptes bit 0 is zero, only one spte points at this page and
    234    parent_ptes points at this single spte, otherwise, there exists multiple
    235    sptes pointing at this page and (parent_ptes & ~0x1) points at a data
    236    structure with a list of parent sptes.
    237  unsync:
    238    If true, then the translations in this page may not match the guest's
    239    translation.  This is equivalent to the state of the tlb when a pte is
    240    changed but before the tlb entry is flushed.  Accordingly, unsync ptes
    241    are synchronized when the guest executes invlpg or flushes its tlb by
    242    other means.  Valid for leaf pages.
    243  unsync_children:
    244    How many sptes in the page point at pages that are unsync (or have
    245    unsynchronized children).
    246  unsync_child_bitmap:
    247    A bitmap indicating which sptes in spt point (directly or indirectly) at
    248    pages that may be unsynchronized.  Used to quickly locate all unsychronized
    249    pages reachable from a given page.
    250  clear_spte_count:
    251    Only present on 32-bit hosts, where a 64-bit spte cannot be written
    252    atomically.  The reader uses this while running out of the MMU lock
    253    to detect in-progress updates and retry them until the writer has
    254    finished the write.
    255  write_flooding_count:
    256    A guest may write to a page table many times, causing a lot of
    257    emulations if the page needs to be write-protected (see "Synchronized
    258    and unsynchronized pages" below).  Leaf pages can be unsynchronized
    259    so that they do not trigger frequent emulation, but this is not
    260    possible for non-leafs.  This field counts the number of emulations
    261    since the last time the page table was actually used; if emulation
    262    is triggered too frequently on this page, KVM will unmap the page
    263    to avoid emulation in the future.
    264
    265Reverse map
    266===========
    267
    268The mmu maintains a reverse mapping whereby all ptes mapping a page can be
    269reached given its gfn.  This is used, for example, when swapping out a page.
    270
    271Synchronized and unsynchronized pages
    272=====================================
    273
    274The guest uses two events to synchronize its tlb and page tables: tlb flushes
    275and page invalidations (invlpg).
    276
    277A tlb flush means that we need to synchronize all sptes reachable from the
    278guest's cr3.  This is expensive, so we keep all guest page tables write
    279protected, and synchronize sptes to gptes when a gpte is written.
    280
    281A special case is when a guest page table is reachable from the current
    282guest cr3.  In this case, the guest is obliged to issue an invlpg instruction
    283before using the translation.  We take advantage of that by removing write
    284protection from the guest page, and allowing the guest to modify it freely.
    285We synchronize modified gptes when the guest invokes invlpg.  This reduces
    286the amount of emulation we have to do when the guest modifies multiple gptes,
    287or when the a guest page is no longer used as a page table and is used for
    288random guest data.
    289
    290As a side effect we have to resynchronize all reachable unsynchronized shadow
    291pages on a tlb flush.
    292
    293
    294Reaction to events
    295==================
    296
    297- guest page fault (or npt page fault, or ept violation)
    298
    299This is the most complicated event.  The cause of a page fault can be:
    300
    301  - a true guest fault (the guest translation won't allow the access) (*)
    302  - access to a missing translation
    303  - access to a protected translation
    304    - when logging dirty pages, memory is write protected
    305    - synchronized shadow pages are write protected (*)
    306  - access to untranslatable memory (mmio)
    307
    308  (*) not applicable in direct mode
    309
    310Handling a page fault is performed as follows:
    311
    312 - if the RSV bit of the error code is set, the page fault is caused by guest
    313   accessing MMIO and cached MMIO information is available.
    314
    315   - walk shadow page table
    316   - check for valid generation number in the spte (see "Fast invalidation of
    317     MMIO sptes" below)
    318   - cache the information to vcpu->arch.mmio_gva, vcpu->arch.mmio_access and
    319     vcpu->arch.mmio_gfn, and call the emulator
    320
    321 - If both P bit and R/W bit of error code are set, this could possibly
    322   be handled as a "fast page fault" (fixed without taking the MMU lock).  See
    323   the description in Documentation/virt/kvm/locking.rst.
    324
    325 - if needed, walk the guest page tables to determine the guest translation
    326   (gva->gpa or ngpa->gpa)
    327
    328   - if permissions are insufficient, reflect the fault back to the guest
    329
    330 - determine the host page
    331
    332   - if this is an mmio request, there is no host page; cache the info to
    333     vcpu->arch.mmio_gva, vcpu->arch.mmio_access and vcpu->arch.mmio_gfn
    334
    335 - walk the shadow page table to find the spte for the translation,
    336   instantiating missing intermediate page tables as necessary
    337
    338   - If this is an mmio request, cache the mmio info to the spte and set some
    339     reserved bit on the spte (see callers of kvm_mmu_set_mmio_spte_mask)
    340
    341 - try to unsynchronize the page
    342
    343   - if successful, we can let the guest continue and modify the gpte
    344
    345 - emulate the instruction
    346
    347   - if failed, unshadow the page and let the guest continue
    348
    349 - update any translations that were modified by the instruction
    350
    351invlpg handling:
    352
    353  - walk the shadow page hierarchy and drop affected translations
    354  - try to reinstantiate the indicated translation in the hope that the
    355    guest will use it in the near future
    356
    357Guest control register updates:
    358
    359- mov to cr3
    360
    361  - look up new shadow roots
    362  - synchronize newly reachable shadow pages
    363
    364- mov to cr0/cr4/efer
    365
    366  - set up mmu context for new paging mode
    367  - look up new shadow roots
    368  - synchronize newly reachable shadow pages
    369
    370Host translation updates:
    371
    372  - mmu notifier called with updated hva
    373  - look up affected sptes through reverse map
    374  - drop (or update) translations
    375
    376Emulating cr0.wp
    377================
    378
    379If tdp is not enabled, the host must keep cr0.wp=1 so page write protection
    380works for the guest kernel, not guest guest userspace.  When the guest
    381cr0.wp=1, this does not present a problem.  However when the guest cr0.wp=0,
    382we cannot map the permissions for gpte.u=1, gpte.w=0 to any spte (the
    383semantics require allowing any guest kernel access plus user read access).
    384
    385We handle this by mapping the permissions to two possible sptes, depending
    386on fault type:
    387
    388- kernel write fault: spte.u=0, spte.w=1 (allows full kernel access,
    389  disallows user access)
    390- read fault: spte.u=1, spte.w=0 (allows full read access, disallows kernel
    391  write access)
    392
    393(user write faults generate a #PF)
    394
    395In the first case there are two additional complications:
    396
    397- if CR4.SMEP is enabled: since we've turned the page into a kernel page,
    398  the kernel may now execute it.  We handle this by also setting spte.nx.
    399  If we get a user fetch or read fault, we'll change spte.u=1 and
    400  spte.nx=gpte.nx back.  For this to work, KVM forces EFER.NX to 1 when
    401  shadow paging is in use.
    402- if CR4.SMAP is disabled: since the page has been changed to a kernel
    403  page, it can not be reused when CR4.SMAP is enabled. We set
    404  CR4.SMAP && !CR0.WP into shadow page's role to avoid this case. Note,
    405  here we do not care the case that CR4.SMAP is enabled since KVM will
    406  directly inject #PF to guest due to failed permission check.
    407
    408To prevent an spte that was converted into a kernel page with cr0.wp=0
    409from being written by the kernel after cr0.wp has changed to 1, we make
    410the value of cr0.wp part of the page role.  This means that an spte created
    411with one value of cr0.wp cannot be used when cr0.wp has a different value -
    412it will simply be missed by the shadow page lookup code.  A similar issue
    413exists when an spte created with cr0.wp=0 and cr4.smep=0 is used after
    414changing cr4.smep to 1.  To avoid this, the value of !cr0.wp && cr4.smep
    415is also made a part of the page role.
    416
    417Large pages
    418===========
    419
    420The mmu supports all combinations of large and small guest and host pages.
    421Supported page sizes include 4k, 2M, 4M, and 1G.  4M pages are treated as
    422two separate 2M pages, on both guest and host, since the mmu always uses PAE
    423paging.
    424
    425To instantiate a large spte, four constraints must be satisfied:
    426
    427- the spte must point to a large host page
    428- the guest pte must be a large pte of at least equivalent size (if tdp is
    429  enabled, there is no guest pte and this condition is satisfied)
    430- if the spte will be writeable, the large page frame may not overlap any
    431  write-protected pages
    432- the guest page must be wholly contained by a single memory slot
    433
    434To check the last two conditions, the mmu maintains a ->disallow_lpage set of
    435arrays for each memory slot and large page size.  Every write protected page
    436causes its disallow_lpage to be incremented, thus preventing instantiation of
    437a large spte.  The frames at the end of an unaligned memory slot have
    438artificially inflated ->disallow_lpages so they can never be instantiated.
    439
    440Fast invalidation of MMIO sptes
    441===============================
    442
    443As mentioned in "Reaction to events" above, kvm will cache MMIO
    444information in leaf sptes.  When a new memslot is added or an existing
    445memslot is changed, this information may become stale and needs to be
    446invalidated.  This also needs to hold the MMU lock while walking all
    447shadow pages, and is made more scalable with a similar technique.
    448
    449MMIO sptes have a few spare bits, which are used to store a
    450generation number.  The global generation number is stored in
    451kvm_memslots(kvm)->generation, and increased whenever guest memory info
    452changes.
    453
    454When KVM finds an MMIO spte, it checks the generation number of the spte.
    455If the generation number of the spte does not equal the global generation
    456number, it will ignore the cached MMIO information and handle the page
    457fault through the slow path.
    458
    459Since only 18 bits are used to store generation-number on mmio spte, all
    460pages are zapped when there is an overflow.
    461
    462Unfortunately, a single memory access might access kvm_memslots(kvm) multiple
    463times, the last one happening when the generation number is retrieved and
    464stored into the MMIO spte.  Thus, the MMIO spte might be created based on
    465out-of-date information, but with an up-to-date generation number.
    466
    467To avoid this, the generation number is incremented again after synchronize_srcu
    468returns; thus, bit 63 of kvm_memslots(kvm)->generation set to 1 only during a
    469memslot update, while some SRCU readers might be using the old copy.  We do not
    470want to use an MMIO sptes created with an odd generation number, and we can do
    471this without losing a bit in the MMIO spte.  The "update in-progress" bit of the
    472generation is not stored in MMIO spte, and is so is implicitly zero when the
    473generation is extracted out of the spte.  If KVM is unlucky and creates an MMIO
    474spte while an update is in-progress, the next access to the spte will always be
    475a cache miss.  For example, a subsequent access during the update window will
    476miss due to the in-progress flag diverging, while an access after the update
    477window closes will have a higher generation number (as compared to the spte).
    478
    479
    480Further reading
    481===============
    482
    483- NPT presentation from KVM Forum 2008
    484  https://www.linux-kvm.org/images/c/c8/KvmForum2008%24kdf2008_21.pdf