diff options
author | Sean Christopherson | 2022-10-06 00:19:56 +0000 |
---|---|---|
committer | Greg Kroah-Hartman | 2023-01-07 11:11:47 +0100 |
commit | 04066fcbf18eaa8747b8e7560d318b669e676503 (patch) | |
tree | d2a77cc20837532454355db0883ad140cd738d31 /arch | |
parent | c877c99ee5c0ce20d6eca98fc8c6925bed5359b7 (diff) |
KVM: nVMX: Inject #GP, not #UD, if "generic" VMXON CR0/CR4 check fails
commit 9cc409325ddd776f6fd6293d5ce93ce1248af6e4 upstream.
Inject #GP for if VMXON is attempting with a CR0/CR4 that fails the
generic "is CRx valid" check, but passes the CR4.VMXE check, and do the
generic checks _after_ handling the post-VMXON VM-Fail.
The CR4.VMXE check, and all other #UD cases, are special pre-conditions
that are enforced prior to pivoting on the current VMX mode, i.e. occur
before interception if VMXON is attempted in VMX non-root mode.
All other CR0/CR4 checks generate #GP and effectively have lower priority
than the post-VMXON check.
Per the SDM:
IF (register operand) or (CR0.PE = 0) or (CR4.VMXE = 0) or ...
THEN #UD;
ELSIF not in VMX operation
THEN
IF (CPL > 0) or (in A20M mode) or
(the values of CR0 and CR4 are not supported in VMX operation)
THEN #GP(0);
ELSIF in VMX non-root operation
THEN VMexit;
ELSIF CPL > 0
THEN #GP(0);
ELSE VMfail("VMXON executed in VMX root operation");
FI;
which, if re-written without ELSIF, yields:
IF (register operand) or (CR0.PE = 0) or (CR4.VMXE = 0) or ...
THEN #UD
IF in VMX non-root operation
THEN VMexit;
IF CPL > 0
THEN #GP(0)
IF in VMX operation
THEN VMfail("VMXON executed in VMX root operation");
IF (in A20M mode) or
(the values of CR0 and CR4 are not supported in VMX operation)
THEN #GP(0);
Note, KVM unconditionally forwards VMXON VM-Exits that occur in L2 to L1,
i.e. there is no need to check the vCPU is not in VMX non-root mode. Add
a comment to explain why unconditionally forwarding such exits is
functionally correct.
Reported-by: Eric Li <ercli@ucdavis.edu>
Fixes: c7d855c2aff2 ("KVM: nVMX: Inject #UD if VMXON is attempted with incompatible CR0/CR4")
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Sean Christopherson <seanjc@google.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20221006001956.329314-1-seanjc@google.com
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'arch')
-rw-r--r-- | arch/x86/kvm/vmx/nested.c | 44 |
1 files changed, 33 insertions, 11 deletions
diff --git a/arch/x86/kvm/vmx/nested.c b/arch/x86/kvm/vmx/nested.c index 5b0d4859e4b7..3539ca650fb0 100644 --- a/arch/x86/kvm/vmx/nested.c +++ b/arch/x86/kvm/vmx/nested.c @@ -5100,24 +5100,35 @@ static int handle_vmxon(struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu) | FEAT_CTL_VMX_ENABLED_OUTSIDE_SMX; /* - * Note, KVM cannot rely on hardware to perform the CR0/CR4 #UD checks - * that have higher priority than VM-Exit (see Intel SDM's pseudocode - * for VMXON), as KVM must load valid CR0/CR4 values into hardware while - * running the guest, i.e. KVM needs to check the _guest_ values. + * Manually check CR4.VMXE checks, KVM must force CR4.VMXE=1 to enter + * the guest and so cannot rely on hardware to perform the check, + * which has higher priority than VM-Exit (see Intel SDM's pseudocode + * for VMXON). * - * Rely on hardware for the other two pre-VM-Exit checks, !VM86 and - * !COMPATIBILITY modes. KVM may run the guest in VM86 to emulate Real - * Mode, but KVM will never take the guest out of those modes. + * Rely on hardware for the other pre-VM-Exit checks, CR0.PE=1, !VM86 + * and !COMPATIBILITY modes. For an unrestricted guest, KVM doesn't + * force any of the relevant guest state. For a restricted guest, KVM + * does force CR0.PE=1, but only to also force VM86 in order to emulate + * Real Mode, and so there's no need to check CR0.PE manually. */ - if (!nested_host_cr0_valid(vcpu, kvm_read_cr0(vcpu)) || - !nested_host_cr4_valid(vcpu, kvm_read_cr4(vcpu))) { + if (!kvm_read_cr4_bits(vcpu, X86_CR4_VMXE)) { kvm_queue_exception(vcpu, UD_VECTOR); return 1; } /* - * CPL=0 and all other checks that are lower priority than VM-Exit must - * be checked manually. + * The CPL is checked for "not in VMX operation" and for "in VMX root", + * and has higher priority than the VM-Fail due to being post-VMXON, + * i.e. VMXON #GPs outside of VMX non-root if CPL!=0. In VMX non-root, + * VMXON causes VM-Exit and KVM unconditionally forwards VMXON VM-Exits + * from L2 to L1, i.e. there's no need to check for the vCPU being in + * VMX non-root. + * + * Forwarding the VM-Exit unconditionally, i.e. without performing the + * #UD checks (see above), is functionally ok because KVM doesn't allow + * L1 to run L2 without CR4.VMXE=0, and because KVM never modifies L2's + * CR0 or CR4, i.e. it's L2's responsibility to emulate #UDs that are + * missed by hardware due to shadowing CR0 and/or CR4. */ if (vmx_get_cpl(vcpu)) { kvm_inject_gp(vcpu, 0); @@ -5127,6 +5138,17 @@ static int handle_vmxon(struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu) if (vmx->nested.vmxon) return nested_vmx_fail(vcpu, VMXERR_VMXON_IN_VMX_ROOT_OPERATION); + /* + * Invalid CR0/CR4 generates #GP. These checks are performed if and + * only if the vCPU isn't already in VMX operation, i.e. effectively + * have lower priority than the VM-Fail above. + */ + if (!nested_host_cr0_valid(vcpu, kvm_read_cr0(vcpu)) || + !nested_host_cr4_valid(vcpu, kvm_read_cr4(vcpu))) { + kvm_inject_gp(vcpu, 0); + return 1; + } + if ((vmx->msr_ia32_feature_control & VMXON_NEEDED_FEATURES) != VMXON_NEEDED_FEATURES) { kvm_inject_gp(vcpu, 0); |