| .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 |
| |
| KVM x86 |
| ======= |
| |
| Foreword |
| -------- |
| KVM strives to be a welcoming community; contributions from newcomers are |
| valued and encouraged. Please do not be discouraged or intimidated by the |
| length of this document and the many rules/guidelines it contains. Everyone |
| makes mistakes, and everyone was a newbie at some point. So long as you make |
| an honest effort to follow KVM x86's guidelines, are receptive to feedback, |
| and learn from any mistakes you make, you will be welcomed with open arms, not |
| torches and pitchforks. |
| |
| TL;DR |
| ----- |
| Testing is mandatory. Be consistent with established styles and patterns. |
| |
| Trees |
| ----- |
| KVM x86 is currently in a transition period from being part of the main KVM |
| tree, to being "just another KVM arch". As such, KVM x86 is split across the |
| main KVM tree, ``git.kernel.org/pub/scm/virt/kvm/kvm.git``, and a KVM x86 |
| specific tree, ``github.com/kvm-x86/linux.git``. |
| |
| Generally speaking, fixes for the current cycle are applied directly to the |
| main KVM tree, while all development for the next cycle is routed through the |
| KVM x86 tree. In the unlikely event that a fix for the current cycle is routed |
| through the KVM x86 tree, it will be applied to the ``fixes`` branch before |
| making its way to the main KVM tree. |
| |
| Note, this transition period is expected to last quite some time, i.e. will be |
| the status quo for the foreseeable future. |
| |
| Branches |
| ~~~~~~~~ |
| The KVM x86 tree is organized into multiple topic branches. The purpose of |
| using finer-grained topic branches is to make it easier to keep tabs on an area |
| of development, and to limit the collateral damage of human errors and/or buggy |
| commits, e.g. dropping the HEAD commit of a topic branch has no impact on other |
| in-flight commits' SHA1 hashes, and having to reject a pull request due to bugs |
| delays only that topic branch. |
| |
| All topic branches, except for ``next`` and ``fixes``, are rolled into ``next`` |
| via a Cthulhu merge on an as-needed basis, i.e. when a topic branch is updated. |
| As a result, force pushes to ``next`` are common. |
| |
| Lifecycle |
| ~~~~~~~~~ |
| Fixes that target the current release, a.k.a. mainline, are typically applied |
| directly to the main KVM tree, i.e. do not route through the KVM x86 tree. |
| |
| Changes that target the next release are routed through the KVM x86 tree. Pull |
| requests (from KVM x86 to main KVM) are sent for each KVM x86 topic branch, |
| typically the week before Linus' opening of the merge window, e.g. the week |
| following rc7 for "normal" releases. If all goes well, the topic branches are |
| rolled into the main KVM pull request sent during Linus' merge window. |
| |
| The KVM x86 tree doesn't have its own official merge window, but there's a soft |
| close around rc5 for new features, and a soft close around rc6 for fixes (for |
| the next release; see above for fixes that target the current release). |
| |
| Timeline |
| ~~~~~~~~ |
| Submissions are typically reviewed and applied in FIFO order, with some wiggle |
| room for the size of a series, patches that are "cache hot", etc. Fixes, |
| especially for the current release and or stable trees, get to jump the queue. |
| Patches that will be taken through a non-KVM tree (most often through the tip |
| tree) and/or have other acks/reviews also jump the queue to some extent. |
| |
| Note, the vast majority of review is done between rc1 and rc6, give or take. |
| The period between rc6 and the next rc1 is used to catch up on other tasks, |
| i.e. radio silence during this period isn't unusual. |
| |
| Pings to get a status update are welcome, but keep in mind the timing of the |
| current release cycle and have realistic expectations. If you are pinging for |
| acceptance, i.e. not just for feedback or an update, please do everything you |
| can, within reason, to ensure that your patches are ready to be merged! Pings |
| on series that break the build or fail tests lead to unhappy maintainers! |
| |
| Development |
| ----------- |
| |
| Base Tree/Branch |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| Fixes that target the current release, a.k.a. mainline, should be based on |
| ``git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/virt/kvm/kvm.git master``. Note, fixes do not |
| automatically warrant inclusion in the current release. There is no singular |
| rule, but typically only fixes for bugs that are urgent, critical, and/or were |
| introduced in the current release should target the current release. |
| |
| Everything else should be based on ``kvm-x86/next``, i.e. there is no need to |
| select a specific topic branch as the base. If there are conflicts and/or |
| dependencies across topic branches, it is the maintainer's job to sort them |
| out. |
| |
| The only exception to using ``kvm-x86/next`` as the base is if a patch/series |
| is a multi-arch series, i.e. has non-trivial modifications to common KVM code |
| and/or has more than superficial changes to other architectures' code. Multi- |
| arch patch/series should instead be based on a common, stable point in KVM's |
| history, e.g. the release candidate upon which ``kvm-x86 next`` is based. If |
| you're unsure whether a patch/series is truly multi-arch, err on the side of |
| caution and treat it as multi-arch, i.e. use a common base. |
| |
| Coding Style |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| When it comes to style, naming, patterns, etc., consistency is the number one |
| priority in KVM x86. If all else fails, match what already exists. |
| |
| With a few caveats listed below, follow the tip tree maintainers' preferred |
| :ref:`maintainer-tip-coding-style`, as patches/series often touch both KVM and |
| non-KVM x86 files, i.e. draw the attention of KVM *and* tip tree maintainers. |
| |
| Using reverse fir tree, a.k.a. reverse Christmas tree or reverse XMAS tree, for |
| variable declarations isn't strictly required, though it is still preferred. |
| |
| Except for a handful of special snowflakes, do not use kernel-doc comments for |
| functions. The vast majority of "public" KVM functions aren't truly public as |
| they are intended only for KVM-internal consumption (there are plans to |
| privatize KVM's headers and exports to enforce this). |
| |
| Comments |
| ~~~~~~~~ |
| Write comments using imperative mood and avoid pronouns. Use comments to |
| provide a high level overview of the code, and/or to explain why the code does |
| what it does. Do not reiterate what the code literally does; let the code |
| speak for itself. If the code itself is inscrutable, comments will not help. |
| |
| SDM and APM References |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| Much of KVM's code base is directly tied to architectural behavior defined in |
| Intel's Software Development Manual (SDM) and AMD's Architecture Programmer’s |
| Manual (APM). Use of "Intel's SDM" and "AMD's APM", or even just "SDM" or |
| "APM", without additional context is a-ok. |
| |
| Do not reference specific sections, tables, figures, etc. by number, especially |
| not in comments. Instead, if necessary (see below), copy-paste the relevant |
| snippet and reference sections/tables/figures by name. The layouts of the SDM |
| and APM are constantly changing, and so the numbers/labels aren't stable. |
| |
| Generally speaking, do not explicitly reference or copy-paste from the SDM or |
| APM in comments. With few exceptions, KVM *must* honor architectural behavior, |
| therefore it's implied that KVM behavior is emulating SDM and/or APM behavior. |
| Note, referencing the SDM/APM in changelogs to justify the change and provide |
| context is perfectly ok and encouraged. |
| |
| Shortlog |
| ~~~~~~~~ |
| The preferred prefix format is ``KVM: <topic>:``, where ``<topic>`` is one of:: |
| |
| - x86 |
| - x86/mmu |
| - x86/pmu |
| - x86/xen |
| - selftests |
| - SVM |
| - nSVM |
| - VMX |
| - nVMX |
| |
| **DO NOT use x86/kvm!** ``x86/kvm`` is used exclusively for Linux-as-a-KVM-guest |
| changes, i.e. for arch/x86/kernel/kvm.c. Do not use file names or complete file |
| paths as the subject/shortlog prefix. |
| |
| Note, these don't align with the topics branches (the topic branches care much |
| more about code conflicts). |
| |
| All names are case sensitive! ``KVM: x86:`` is good, ``kvm: vmx:`` is not. |
| |
| Capitalize the first word of the condensed patch description, but omit ending |
| punctionation. E.g.:: |
| |
| KVM: x86: Fix a null pointer dereference in function_xyz() |
| |
| not:: |
| |
| kvm: x86: fix a null pointer dereference in function_xyz. |
| |
| If a patch touches multiple topics, traverse up the conceptual tree to find the |
| first common parent (which is often simply ``x86``). When in doubt, |
| ``git log path/to/file`` should provide a reasonable hint. |
| |
| New topics do occasionally pop up, but please start an on-list discussion if |
| you want to propose introducing a new topic, i.e. don't go rogue. |
| |
| See :ref:`the_canonical_patch_format` for more information, with one amendment: |
| do not treat the 70-75 character limit as an absolute, hard limit. Instead, |
| use 75 characters as a firm-but-not-hard limit, and use 80 characters as a hard |
| limit. I.e. let the shortlog run a few characters over the standard limit if |
| you have good reason to do so. |
| |
| Changelog |
| ~~~~~~~~~ |
| Most importantly, write changelogs using imperative mood and avoid pronouns. |
| |
| See :ref:`describe_changes` for more information, with one amendment: lead with |
| a short blurb on the actual changes, and then follow up with the context and |
| background. Note! This order directly conflicts with the tip tree's preferred |
| approach! Please follow the tip tree's preferred style when sending patches |
| that primarily target arch/x86 code that is _NOT_ KVM code. |
| |
| Stating what a patch does before diving into details is preferred by KVM x86 |
| for several reasons. First and foremost, what code is actually being changed |
| is arguably the most important information, and so that info should be easy to |
| find. Changelogs that bury the "what's actually changing" in a one-liner after |
| 3+ paragraphs of background make it very hard to find that information. |
| |
| For initial review, one could argue the "what's broken" is more important, but |
| for skimming logs and git archaeology, the gory details matter less and less. |
| E.g. when doing a series of "git blame", the details of each change along the |
| way are useless, the details only matter for the culprit. Providing the "what |
| changed" makes it easy to quickly determine whether or not a commit might be of |
| interest. |
| |
| Another benefit of stating "what's changing" first is that it's almost always |
| possible to state "what's changing" in a single sentence. Conversely, all but |
| the most simple bugs require multiple sentences or paragraphs to fully describe |
| the problem. If both the "what's changing" and "what's the bug" are super |
| short then the order doesn't matter. But if one is shorter (almost always the |
| "what's changing), then covering the shorter one first is advantageous because |
| it's less of an inconvenience for readers/reviewers that have a strict ordering |
| preference. E.g. having to skip one sentence to get to the context is less |
| painful than having to skip three paragraphs to get to "what's changing". |
| |
| Fixes |
| ~~~~~ |
| If a change fixes a KVM/kernel bug, add a Fixes: tag even if the change doesn't |
| need to be backported to stable kernels, and even if the change fixes a bug in |
| an older release. |
| |
| Conversely, if a fix does need to be backported, explicitly tag the patch with |
| "Cc: stable@vger.kernel" (though the email itself doesn't need to Cc: stable); |
| KVM x86 opts out of backporting Fixes: by default. Some auto-selected patches |
| do get backported, but require explicit maintainer approval (search MANUALSEL). |
| |
| Function References |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| When a function is mentioned in a comment, changelog, or shortlog (or anywhere |
| for that matter), use the format ``function_name()``. The parentheses provide |
| context and disambiguate the reference. |
| |
| Testing |
| ------- |
| At a bare minimum, *all* patches in a series must build cleanly for KVM_INTEL=m |
| KVM_AMD=m, and KVM_WERROR=y. Building every possible combination of Kconfigs |
| isn't feasible, but the more the merrier. KVM_SMM, KVM_XEN, PROVE_LOCKING, and |
| X86_64 are particularly interesting knobs to turn. |
| |
| Running KVM selftests and KVM-unit-tests is also mandatory (and stating the |
| obvious, the tests need to pass). The only exception is for changes that have |
| negligible probability of affecting runtime behavior, e.g. patches that only |
| modify comments. When possible and relevant, testing on both Intel and AMD is |
| strongly preferred. Booting an actual VM is encouraged, but not mandatory. |
| |
| For changes that touch KVM's shadow paging code, running with TDP (EPT/NPT) |
| disabled is mandatory. For changes that affect common KVM MMU code, running |
| with TDP disabled is strongly encouraged. For all other changes, if the code |
| being modified depends on and/or interacts with a module param, testing with |
| the relevant settings is mandatory. |
| |
| Note, KVM selftests and KVM-unit-tests do have known failures. If you suspect |
| a failure is not due to your changes, verify that the *exact same* failure |
| occurs with and without your changes. |
| |
| Changes that touch reStructured Text documentation, i.e. .rst files, must build |
| htmldocs cleanly, i.e. with no new warnings or errors. |
| |
| If you can't fully test a change, e.g. due to lack of hardware, clearly state |
| what level of testing you were able to do, e.g. in the cover letter. |
| |
| New Features |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| With one exception, new features *must* come with test coverage. KVM specific |
| tests aren't strictly required, e.g. if coverage is provided by running a |
| sufficiently enabled guest VM, or by running a related kernel selftest in a VM, |
| but dedicated KVM tests are preferred in all cases. Negative testcases in |
| particular are mandatory for enabling of new hardware features as error and |
| exception flows are rarely exercised simply by running a VM. |
| |
| The only exception to this rule is if KVM is simply advertising support for a |
| feature via KVM_GET_SUPPORTED_CPUID, i.e. for instructions/features that KVM |
| can't prevent a guest from using and for which there is no true enabling. |
| |
| Note, "new features" does not just mean "new hardware features"! New features |
| that can't be well validated using existing KVM selftests and/or KVM-unit-tests |
| must come with tests. |
| |
| Posting new feature development without tests to get early feedback is more |
| than welcome, but such submissions should be tagged RFC, and the cover letter |
| should clearly state what type of feedback is requested/expected. Do not abuse |
| the RFC process; RFCs will typically not receive in-depth review. |
| |
| Bug Fixes |
| ~~~~~~~~~ |
| Except for "obvious" found-by-inspection bugs, fixes must be accompanied by a |
| reproducer for the bug being fixed. In many cases the reproducer is implicit, |
| e.g. for build errors and test failures, but it should still be clear to |
| readers what is broken and how to verify the fix. Some leeway is given for |
| bugs that are found via non-public workloads/tests, but providing regression |
| tests for such bugs is strongly preferred. |
| |
| In general, regression tests are preferred for any bug that is not trivial to |
| hit. E.g. even if the bug was originally found by a fuzzer such as syzkaller, |
| a targeted regression test may be warranted if the bug requires hitting a |
| one-in-a-million type race condition. |
| |
| Note, KVM bugs are rarely urgent *and* non-trivial to reproduce. Ask yourself |
| if a bug is really truly the end of the world before posting a fix without a |
| reproducer. |
| |
| Posting |
| ------- |
| |
| Links |
| ~~~~~ |
| Do not explicitly reference bug reports, prior versions of a patch/series, etc. |
| via ``In-Reply-To:`` headers. Using ``In-Reply-To:`` becomes an unholy mess |
| for large series and/or when the version count gets high, and ``In-Reply-To:`` |
| is useless for anyone that doesn't have the original message, e.g. if someone |
| wasn't Cc'd on the bug report or if the list of recipients changes between |
| versions. |
| |
| To link to a bug report, previous version, or anything of interest, use lore |
| links. For referencing previous version(s), generally speaking do not include |
| a Link: in the changelog as there is no need to record the history in git, i.e. |
| put the link in the cover letter or in the section git ignores. Do provide a |
| formal Link: for bug reports and/or discussions that led to the patch. The |
| context of why a change was made is highly valuable for future readers. |
| |
| Git Base |
| ~~~~~~~~ |
| If you are using git version 2.9.0 or later (Googlers, this is all of you!), |
| use ``git format-patch`` with the ``--base`` flag to automatically include the |
| base tree information in the generated patches. |
| |
| Note, ``--base=auto`` works as expected if and only if a branch's upstream is |
| set to the base topic branch, e.g. it will do the wrong thing if your upstream |
| is set to your personal repository for backup purposes. An alternative "auto" |
| solution is to derive the names of your development branches based on their |
| KVM x86 topic, and feed that into ``--base``. E.g. ``x86/pmu/my_branch_name``, |
| and then write a small wrapper to extract ``pmu`` from the current branch name |
| to yield ``--base=x/pmu``, where ``x`` is whatever name your repository uses to |
| track the KVM x86 remote. |
| |
| Co-Posting Tests |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| KVM selftests that are associated with KVM changes, e.g. regression tests for |
| bug fixes, should be posted along with the KVM changes as a single series. The |
| standard kernel rules for bisection apply, i.e. KVM changes that result in test |
| failures should be ordered after the selftests updates, and vice versa, new |
| tests that fail due to KVM bugs should be ordered after the KVM fixes. |
| |
| KVM-unit-tests should *always* be posted separately. Tools, e.g. b4 am, don't |
| know that KVM-unit-tests is a separate repository and get confused when patches |
| in a series apply on different trees. To tie KVM-unit-tests patches back to |
| KVM patches, first post the KVM changes and then provide a lore Link: to the |
| KVM patch/series in the KVM-unit-tests patch(es). |
| |
| Notifications |
| ------------- |
| When a patch/series is officially accepted, a notification email will be sent |
| in reply to the original posting (cover letter for multi-patch series). The |
| notification will include the tree and topic branch, along with the SHA1s of |
| the commits of applied patches. |
| |
| If a subset of patches is applied, this will be clearly stated in the |
| notification. Unless stated otherwise, it's implied that any patches in the |
| series that were not accepted need more work and should be submitted in a new |
| version. |
| |
| If for some reason a patch is dropped after officially being accepted, a reply |
| will be sent to the notification email explaining why the patch was dropped, as |
| well as the next steps. |
| |
| SHA1 Stability |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| SHA1s are not 100% guaranteed to be stable until they land in Linus' tree! A |
| SHA1 is *usually* stable once a notification has been sent, but things happen. |
| In most cases, an update to the notification email be provided if an applied |
| patch's SHA1 changes. However, in some scenarios, e.g. if all KVM x86 branches |
| need to be rebased, individual notifications will not be given. |
| |
| Vulnerabilities |
| --------------- |
| Bugs that can be exploited by the guest to attack the host (kernel or |
| userspace), or that can be exploited by a nested VM to *its* host (L2 attacking |
| L1), are of particular interest to KVM. Please follow the protocol for |
| :ref:`securitybugs` if you suspect a bug can lead to an escape, data leak, etc. |
| |