On Mon, Apr 15, 2024, Yan Zhao wrote:
On Mon, Apr 15, 2024 at 08:05:49AM +0000, Ackerley Tng wrote:
The Intel GHCI Spec says in R12, bit 63 is set if the GPA is valid. As a
But above "__LINE__" is obviously not a valid GPA.
Do you think it's better to check "data_gpa" is with shared bit on and aligned in 4K before setting bit 63?
I read "valid" in the spec to mean that the value in R13 "should be considered as useful" or "should be passed on to the host VMM via the TDX module", and not so much as in "validated".
We could validate the data_gpa as you suggested to check alignment and shared bit, but perhaps that could be a higher-level function that calls tdg_vp_vmcall_report_fatal_error()?
If it helps, shall we rename "data_gpa" to "data" for this lower-level, generic helper function and remove these two lines
if (data_gpa) error_code |= 0x8000000000000000;
A higher-level function could perhaps do the validation as you suggested and then set bit 63.
This could be all right. But I'm not sure if it would be a burden for higher-level function to set bit 63 which is of GHCI details.
What about adding another "data_gpa_valid" parameter and then test "data_gpa_valid" rather than test "data_gpa" to set bit 63?
Who cares what the GHCI says about validity? The GHCI is a spec for getting random guests to play nice with random hosts. Selftests own both, and the goal of selftests is to test that KVM (and KVM's dependencies) adhere to their relevant specs. And more importantly, KVM is NOT inheriting the GHCI ABI verbatim[*].
So except for the bits and bobs that *KVM* (or the TDX module) gets involved in, just ignore the GHCI (or even deliberately abuse it). To put it differently, use selftests verify *KVM's* ABI and functionality.
As it pertains to this thread, while I haven't looked at any of this in detail, I'm guessing that whether or not bit 63 is set is a complete "don't care", i.e. KVM and the TDX Module should pass it through as-is.