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author | Christian Borntraeger <borntraeger@de.ibm.com> | 2012-11-15 09:35:16 +0100 |
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committer | Martin Schwidefsky <schwidefsky@de.ibm.com> | 2012-11-23 11:14:34 +0100 |
commit | ce6a04ac1b759beafc88dbc443ae5da867579eeb (patch) | |
tree | d291f9d71b8d6ab6ef1d8e3783eac4acc667f2cd | |
parent | 39efd4ec9a2967e9720be7b66d9a4b31a58dbf61 (diff) | |
download | talos-op-linux-ce6a04ac1b759beafc88dbc443ae5da867579eeb.tar.gz talos-op-linux-ce6a04ac1b759beafc88dbc443ae5da867579eeb.zip |
s390/kvm: Fix address space mixup
I was chasing down a bug of random validity intercepts on s390.
(guest prefix page not mapped in the host virtual aspace). Turns out
that the problem was a wrong address space control element. The
cause was quite complex:
During paging activity a DAT protection during SIE caused a program
interrupt. Normally, the sie retry loop tries to catch all
interrupts during and shortly before sie to rerun the setup. The
problem is now that protection causes a suppressing program interrupt,
causing the PSW to point to the instruction AFTER SIE in case of DAT
protection. This confused the logic of the retry loop to not trigger,
instead we jumped directly back to SIE after return from
the program interrupt. (the protection fault handler itself did
a rewind of the psw). This usually works quite well, but:
If now the protection fault handler has to wait, another program
might be scheduled in. Later on the sie process will be schedules
in again. In that case the content of CR1 (primary address space)
will be wrong because switch_to will put the user space ASCE into CR1
and not the guest ASCE.
In addition the program parameter is also wrong for every protection
fault of a guest, since we dont issue the SPP instruction.
So lets also check for PSW == instruction after SIE in the program
check handler. Instead of expensively checking all program
interruption codes that might be suppressing we assume that a program
interrupt pointing after SIE was always a program interrupt in SIE.
(Otherwise we have a kernel bug anyway).
We also have to compensate the rewinding, since the C-level handlers
will do that. Therefore we need to add a nop with the same length
as SIE before the sie_loop.
Signed-off-by: Christian Borntraeger <borntraeger@de.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Martin Schwidefsky <schwidefsky@de.ibm.com>
CC: stable@vger.kernel.org
CC: Heiko Carstens <heiko.carstens@de.ibm.com>
-rw-r--r-- | arch/s390/kernel/entry64.S | 25 |
1 files changed, 20 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/arch/s390/kernel/entry64.S b/arch/s390/kernel/entry64.S index 7a2d22dda9ef..14eec6a9577e 100644 --- a/arch/s390/kernel/entry64.S +++ b/arch/s390/kernel/entry64.S @@ -80,14 +80,21 @@ _TIF_EXIT_SIE = (_TIF_SIGPENDING | _TIF_NEED_RESCHED | _TIF_MCCK_PENDING) #endif .endm - .macro HANDLE_SIE_INTERCEPT scratch + .macro HANDLE_SIE_INTERCEPT scratch,pgmcheck #if defined(CONFIG_KVM) || defined(CONFIG_KVM_MODULE) tmhh %r8,0x0001 # interrupting from user ? jnz .+42 lgr \scratch,%r9 slg \scratch,BASED(.Lsie_loop) clg \scratch,BASED(.Lsie_length) + .if \pgmcheck + # Some program interrupts are suppressing (e.g. protection). + # We must also check the instruction after SIE in that case. + # do_protection_exception will rewind to rewind_pad + jh .+22 + .else jhe .+22 + .endif lg %r9,BASED(.Lsie_loop) SPP BASED(.Lhost_id) # set host id #endif @@ -390,7 +397,7 @@ ENTRY(pgm_check_handler) lg %r12,__LC_THREAD_INFO larl %r13,system_call lmg %r8,%r9,__LC_PGM_OLD_PSW - HANDLE_SIE_INTERCEPT %r14 + HANDLE_SIE_INTERCEPT %r14,1 tmhh %r8,0x0001 # test problem state bit jnz 1f # -> fault in user space tmhh %r8,0x4000 # PER bit set in old PSW ? @@ -466,7 +473,7 @@ ENTRY(io_int_handler) lg %r12,__LC_THREAD_INFO larl %r13,system_call lmg %r8,%r9,__LC_IO_OLD_PSW - HANDLE_SIE_INTERCEPT %r14 + HANDLE_SIE_INTERCEPT %r14,0 SWITCH_ASYNC __LC_SAVE_AREA_ASYNC,__LC_ASYNC_STACK,STACK_SHIFT tmhh %r8,0x0001 # interrupting from user? jz io_skip @@ -612,7 +619,7 @@ ENTRY(ext_int_handler) lg %r12,__LC_THREAD_INFO larl %r13,system_call lmg %r8,%r9,__LC_EXT_OLD_PSW - HANDLE_SIE_INTERCEPT %r14 + HANDLE_SIE_INTERCEPT %r14,0 SWITCH_ASYNC __LC_SAVE_AREA_ASYNC,__LC_ASYNC_STACK,STACK_SHIFT tmhh %r8,0x0001 # interrupting from user ? jz ext_skip @@ -660,7 +667,7 @@ ENTRY(mcck_int_handler) lg %r12,__LC_THREAD_INFO larl %r13,system_call lmg %r8,%r9,__LC_MCK_OLD_PSW - HANDLE_SIE_INTERCEPT %r14 + HANDLE_SIE_INTERCEPT %r14,0 tm __LC_MCCK_CODE,0x80 # system damage? jo mcck_panic # yes -> rest of mcck code invalid lghi %r14,__LC_CPU_TIMER_SAVE_AREA @@ -959,6 +966,13 @@ ENTRY(sie64a) stg %r3,__SF_EMPTY+8(%r15) # save guest register save area xc __SF_EMPTY+16(8,%r15),__SF_EMPTY+16(%r15) # host id == 0 lmg %r0,%r13,0(%r3) # load guest gprs 0-13 +# some program checks are suppressing. C code (e.g. do_protection_exception) +# will rewind the PSW by the ILC, which is 4 bytes in case of SIE. Other +# instructions in the sie_loop should not cause program interrupts. So +# lets use a nop (47 00 00 00) as a landing pad. +# See also HANDLE_SIE_INTERCEPT +rewind_pad: + nop 0 sie_loop: lg %r14,__LC_THREAD_INFO # pointer thread_info struct tm __TI_flags+7(%r14),_TIF_EXIT_SIE @@ -998,6 +1012,7 @@ sie_fault: .Lhost_id: .quad 0 + EX_TABLE(rewind_pad,sie_fault) EX_TABLE(sie_loop,sie_fault) #endif |