| .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 |
| |
| ================= |
| KVM Lock Overview |
| ================= |
| |
| 1. Acquisition Orders |
| --------------------- |
| |
| The acquisition orders for mutexes are as follows: |
| |
| - cpus_read_lock() is taken outside kvm_lock |
| |
| - kvm->lock is taken outside vcpu->mutex |
| |
| - kvm->lock is taken outside kvm->slots_lock and kvm->irq_lock |
| |
| - kvm->slots_lock is taken outside kvm->irq_lock, though acquiring |
| them together is quite rare. |
| |
| - kvm->mn_active_invalidate_count ensures that pairs of |
| invalidate_range_start() and invalidate_range_end() callbacks |
| use the same memslots array. kvm->slots_lock and kvm->slots_arch_lock |
| are taken on the waiting side when modifying memslots, so MMU notifiers |
| must not take either kvm->slots_lock or kvm->slots_arch_lock. |
| |
| For SRCU: |
| |
| - ``synchronize_srcu(&kvm->srcu)`` is called inside critical sections |
| for kvm->lock, vcpu->mutex and kvm->slots_lock. These locks _cannot_ |
| be taken inside a kvm->srcu read-side critical section; that is, the |
| following is broken:: |
| |
| srcu_read_lock(&kvm->srcu); |
| mutex_lock(&kvm->slots_lock); |
| |
| - kvm->slots_arch_lock instead is released before the call to |
| ``synchronize_srcu()``. It _can_ therefore be taken inside a |
| kvm->srcu read-side critical section, for example while processing |
| a vmexit. |
| |
| On x86: |
| |
| - vcpu->mutex is taken outside kvm->arch.hyperv.hv_lock and kvm->arch.xen.xen_lock |
| |
| - kvm->arch.mmu_lock is an rwlock. kvm->arch.tdp_mmu_pages_lock and |
| kvm->arch.mmu_unsync_pages_lock are taken inside kvm->arch.mmu_lock, and |
| cannot be taken without already holding kvm->arch.mmu_lock (typically with |
| ``read_lock`` for the TDP MMU, thus the need for additional spinlocks). |
| |
| Everything else is a leaf: no other lock is taken inside the critical |
| sections. |
| |
| 2. Exception |
| ------------ |
| |
| Fast page fault: |
| |
| Fast page fault is the fast path which fixes the guest page fault out of |
| the mmu-lock on x86. Currently, the page fault can be fast in one of the |
| following two cases: |
| |
| 1. Access Tracking: The SPTE is not present, but it is marked for access |
| tracking. That means we need to restore the saved R/X bits. This is |
| described in more detail later below. |
| |
| 2. Write-Protection: The SPTE is present and the fault is caused by |
| write-protect. That means we just need to change the W bit of the spte. |
| |
| What we use to avoid all the races is the Host-writable bit and MMU-writable bit |
| on the spte: |
| |
| - Host-writable means the gfn is writable in the host kernel page tables and in |
| its KVM memslot. |
| - MMU-writable means the gfn is writable in the guest's mmu and it is not |
| write-protected by shadow page write-protection. |
| |
| On fast page fault path, we will use cmpxchg to atomically set the spte W |
| bit if spte.HOST_WRITEABLE = 1 and spte.WRITE_PROTECT = 1, to restore the saved |
| R/X bits if for an access-traced spte, or both. This is safe because whenever |
| changing these bits can be detected by cmpxchg. |
| |
| But we need carefully check these cases: |
| |
| 1) The mapping from gfn to pfn |
| |
| The mapping from gfn to pfn may be changed since we can only ensure the pfn |
| is not changed during cmpxchg. This is a ABA problem, for example, below case |
| will happen: |
| |
| +------------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | At the beginning:: | |
| | | |
| | gpte = gfn1 | |
| | gfn1 is mapped to pfn1 on host | |
| | spte is the shadow page table entry corresponding with gpte and | |
| | spte = pfn1 | |
| +------------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | On fast page fault path: | |
| +------------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ |
| | CPU 0: | CPU 1: | |
| +------------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ |
| | :: | | |
| | | | |
| | old_spte = *spte; | | |
| +------------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ |
| | | pfn1 is swapped out:: | |
| | | | |
| | | spte = 0; | |
| | | | |
| | | pfn1 is re-alloced for gfn2. | |
| | | | |
| | | gpte is changed to point to | |
| | | gfn2 by the guest:: | |
| | | | |
| | | spte = pfn1; | |
| +------------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ |
| | :: | |
| | | |
| | if (cmpxchg(spte, old_spte, old_spte+W) | |
| | mark_page_dirty(vcpu->kvm, gfn1) | |
| | OOPS!!! | |
| +------------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| |
| We dirty-log for gfn1, that means gfn2 is lost in dirty-bitmap. |
| |
| For direct sp, we can easily avoid it since the spte of direct sp is fixed |
| to gfn. For indirect sp, we disabled fast page fault for simplicity. |
| |
| A solution for indirect sp could be to pin the gfn, for example via |
| kvm_vcpu_gfn_to_pfn_atomic, before the cmpxchg. After the pinning: |
| |
| - We have held the refcount of pfn; that means the pfn can not be freed and |
| be reused for another gfn. |
| - The pfn is writable and therefore it cannot be shared between different gfns |
| by KSM. |
| |
| Then, we can ensure the dirty bitmaps is correctly set for a gfn. |
| |
| 2) Dirty bit tracking |
| |
| In the origin code, the spte can be fast updated (non-atomically) if the |
| spte is read-only and the Accessed bit has already been set since the |
| Accessed bit and Dirty bit can not be lost. |
| |
| But it is not true after fast page fault since the spte can be marked |
| writable between reading spte and updating spte. Like below case: |
| |
| +------------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | At the beginning:: | |
| | | |
| | spte.W = 0 | |
| | spte.Accessed = 1 | |
| +------------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ |
| | CPU 0: | CPU 1: | |
| +------------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ |
| | In mmu_spte_clear_track_bits():: | | |
| | | | |
| | old_spte = *spte; | | |
| | | | |
| | | | |
| | /* 'if' condition is satisfied. */| | |
| | if (old_spte.Accessed == 1 && | | |
| | old_spte.W == 0) | | |
| | spte = 0ull; | | |
| +------------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ |
| | | on fast page fault path:: | |
| | | | |
| | | spte.W = 1 | |
| | | | |
| | | memory write on the spte:: | |
| | | | |
| | | spte.Dirty = 1 | |
| +------------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ |
| | :: | | |
| | | | |
| | else | | |
| | old_spte = xchg(spte, 0ull) | | |
| | if (old_spte.Accessed == 1) | | |
| | kvm_set_pfn_accessed(spte.pfn);| | |
| | if (old_spte.Dirty == 1) | | |
| | kvm_set_pfn_dirty(spte.pfn); | | |
| | OOPS!!! | | |
| +------------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ |
| |
| The Dirty bit is lost in this case. |
| |
| In order to avoid this kind of issue, we always treat the spte as "volatile" |
| if it can be updated out of mmu-lock [see spte_has_volatile_bits()]; it means |
| the spte is always atomically updated in this case. |
| |
| 3) flush tlbs due to spte updated |
| |
| If the spte is updated from writable to read-only, we should flush all TLBs, |
| otherwise rmap_write_protect will find a read-only spte, even though the |
| writable spte might be cached on a CPU's TLB. |
| |
| As mentioned before, the spte can be updated to writable out of mmu-lock on |
| fast page fault path. In order to easily audit the path, we see if TLBs needing |
| to be flushed caused this reason in mmu_spte_update() since this is a common |
| function to update spte (present -> present). |
| |
| Since the spte is "volatile" if it can be updated out of mmu-lock, we always |
| atomically update the spte and the race caused by fast page fault can be avoided. |
| See the comments in spte_has_volatile_bits() and mmu_spte_update(). |
| |
| Lockless Access Tracking: |
| |
| This is used for Intel CPUs that are using EPT but do not support the EPT A/D |
| bits. In this case, PTEs are tagged as A/D disabled (using ignored bits), and |
| when the KVM MMU notifier is called to track accesses to a page (via |
| kvm_mmu_notifier_clear_flush_young), it marks the PTE not-present in hardware |
| by clearing the RWX bits in the PTE and storing the original R & X bits in more |
| unused/ignored bits. When the VM tries to access the page later on, a fault is |
| generated and the fast page fault mechanism described above is used to |
| atomically restore the PTE to a Present state. The W bit is not saved when the |
| PTE is marked for access tracking and during restoration to the Present state, |
| the W bit is set depending on whether or not it was a write access. If it |
| wasn't, then the W bit will remain clear until a write access happens, at which |
| time it will be set using the Dirty tracking mechanism described above. |
| |
| 3. Reference |
| ------------ |
| |
| ``kvm_lock`` |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| :Type: mutex |
| :Arch: any |
| :Protects: - vm_list |
| - kvm_usage_count |
| - hardware virtualization enable/disable |
| :Comment: KVM also disables CPU hotplug via cpus_read_lock() during |
| enable/disable. |
| |
| ``kvm->mn_invalidate_lock`` |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| :Type: spinlock_t |
| :Arch: any |
| :Protects: mn_active_invalidate_count, mn_memslots_update_rcuwait |
| |
| ``kvm_arch::tsc_write_lock`` |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| :Type: raw_spinlock_t |
| :Arch: x86 |
| :Protects: - kvm_arch::{last_tsc_write,last_tsc_nsec,last_tsc_offset} |
| - tsc offset in vmcb |
| :Comment: 'raw' because updating the tsc offsets must not be preempted. |
| |
| ``kvm->mmu_lock`` |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| :Type: spinlock_t or rwlock_t |
| :Arch: any |
| :Protects: -shadow page/shadow tlb entry |
| :Comment: it is a spinlock since it is used in mmu notifier. |
| |
| ``kvm->srcu`` |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| :Type: srcu lock |
| :Arch: any |
| :Protects: - kvm->memslots |
| - kvm->buses |
| :Comment: The srcu read lock must be held while accessing memslots (e.g. |
| when using gfn_to_* functions) and while accessing in-kernel |
| MMIO/PIO address->device structure mapping (kvm->buses). |
| The srcu index can be stored in kvm_vcpu->srcu_idx per vcpu |
| if it is needed by multiple functions. |
| |
| ``kvm->slots_arch_lock`` |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| :Type: mutex |
| :Arch: any (only needed on x86 though) |
| :Protects: any arch-specific fields of memslots that have to be modified |
| in a ``kvm->srcu`` read-side critical section. |
| :Comment: must be held before reading the pointer to the current memslots, |
| until after all changes to the memslots are complete |
| |
| ``wakeup_vcpus_on_cpu_lock`` |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| :Type: spinlock_t |
| :Arch: x86 |
| :Protects: wakeup_vcpus_on_cpu |
| :Comment: This is a per-CPU lock and it is used for VT-d posted-interrupts. |
| When VT-d posted-interrupts are supported and the VM has assigned |
| devices, we put the blocked vCPU on the list blocked_vcpu_on_cpu |
| protected by blocked_vcpu_on_cpu_lock. When VT-d hardware issues |
| wakeup notification event since external interrupts from the |
| assigned devices happens, we will find the vCPU on the list to |
| wakeup. |
| |
| ``vendor_module_lock`` |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| :Type: mutex |
| :Arch: x86 |
| :Protects: loading a vendor module (kvm_amd or kvm_intel) |
| :Comment: Exists because using kvm_lock leads to deadlock. cpu_hotplug_lock is |
| taken outside of kvm_lock, e.g. in KVM's CPU online/offline callbacks, and |
| many operations need to take cpu_hotplug_lock when loading a vendor module, |
| e.g. updating static calls. |