arm64: KVM: Handle async aborts delivered while at EL2

If EL1 generates an asynchronous abort and then traps into EL2
before the abort has been delivered, we may end-up with the
abort firing at the worse possible place: on the host.

In order to avoid this, it is necessary to take the abort at EL2,
by clearing the PSTATE.A bit. In order to survive this abort,
we do it at a point where we're in a known state with respect
to the world switch, and handle the resulting exception,
overloading the exit code in the process.

Signed-off-by: Marc Zyngier <marc.zyngier@arm.com>
Signed-off-by: Christoffer Dall <christoffer.dall@linaro.org>
This commit is contained in:
Marc Zyngier 2016-09-06 14:02:07 +01:00 committed by Christoffer Dall
parent ddb3d07cfe
commit 395ea79ebe
3 changed files with 61 additions and 3 deletions

View File

@ -124,7 +124,38 @@ ENTRY(__guest_exit)
// Now restore the host regs
restore_callee_saved_regs x2
ret
// If we have a pending asynchronous abort, now is the
// time to find out. From your VAXorcist book, page 666:
// "Threaten me not, oh Evil one! For I speak with
// the power of DEC, and I command thee to show thyself!"
mrs x2, elr_el2
mrs x3, esr_el2
mrs x4, spsr_el2
mov x5, x0
dsb sy // Synchronize against in-flight ld/st
msr daifclr, #4 // Unmask aborts
// This is our single instruction exception window. A pending
// SError is guaranteed to occur at the earliest when we unmask
// it, and at the latest just after the ISB.
.global abort_guest_exit_start
abort_guest_exit_start:
isb
.global abort_guest_exit_end
abort_guest_exit_end:
// If the exception took place, restore the EL1 exception
// context so that we can report some information.
// Merge the exception code with the SError pending bit.
tbz x0, #ARM_EXIT_WITH_SERROR_BIT, 1f
msr elr_el2, x2
msr esr_el2, x3
msr spsr_el2, x4
orr x0, x0, x5
1: ret
ENDPROC(__guest_exit)
ENTRY(__fpsimd_guest_restore)

View File

@ -126,6 +126,28 @@ el1_error:
mov x0, #ARM_EXCEPTION_EL1_SERROR
b __guest_exit
el2_error:
/*
* Only two possibilities:
* 1) Either we come from the exit path, having just unmasked
* PSTATE.A: change the return code to an EL2 fault, and
* carry on, as we're already in a sane state to handle it.
* 2) Or we come from anywhere else, and that's a bug: we panic.
*
* For (1), x0 contains the original return code and x1 doesn't
* contain anything meaningful at that stage. We can reuse them
* as temp registers.
* For (2), who cares?
*/
mrs x0, elr_el2
adr x1, abort_guest_exit_start
cmp x0, x1
adr x1, abort_guest_exit_end
ccmp x0, x1, #4, ne
b.ne __hyp_panic
mov x0, #(1 << ARM_EXIT_WITH_SERROR_BIT)
eret
ENTRY(__hyp_do_panic)
mov lr, #(PSR_F_BIT | PSR_I_BIT | PSR_A_BIT | PSR_D_BIT |\
PSR_MODE_EL1h)
@ -150,7 +172,6 @@ ENDPROC(\label)
invalid_vector el2h_sync_invalid
invalid_vector el2h_irq_invalid
invalid_vector el2h_fiq_invalid
invalid_vector el2h_error_invalid
invalid_vector el1_sync_invalid
invalid_vector el1_irq_invalid
invalid_vector el1_fiq_invalid
@ -168,7 +189,7 @@ ENTRY(__kvm_hyp_vector)
ventry el2h_sync_invalid // Synchronous EL2h
ventry el2h_irq_invalid // IRQ EL2h
ventry el2h_fiq_invalid // FIQ EL2h
ventry el2h_error_invalid // Error EL2h
ventry el2_error // Error EL2h
ventry el1_sync // Synchronous 64-bit EL1
ventry el1_irq // IRQ 64-bit EL1

View File

@ -292,6 +292,12 @@ again:
exit_code = __guest_enter(vcpu, host_ctxt);
/* And we're baaack! */
/*
* We're using the raw exception code in order to only process
* the trap if no SError is pending. We will come back to the
* same PC once the SError has been injected, and replay the
* trapping instruction.
*/
if (exit_code == ARM_EXCEPTION_TRAP && !__populate_fault_info(vcpu))
goto again;