[PATCH 1/2] KVM: SVM: Don't inject #UD if KVM attempts emulation of SEV guest w/o insn

From: Sean Christopherson
Date: Thu Aug 10 2023 - 19:49:32 EST


Don't inject a #UD if KVM attempts to emulate an instruction for an SEV
guest without a prefilled buffer, and instead resume the guest and hope
that it can make forward progress. When commit 04c40f344def ("KVM: SVM:
Inject #UD on attempted emulation for SEV guest w/o insn buffer") added
the completely arbitrary #UD behavior, there were no known scenarios where
a well-behaved guest would induce a VM-Exit that triggered emulation, i.e.
it was thought that injecting #UD would be helpful.

However, now that KVM (correctly) attempts to re-inject INT3/INTO, e.g. if
a #NPF is encountered when attempting to deliver the INT3/INTO, an SEV
guest can trigger emulation without a buffer, through no fault of its own.
Resuming the guest and retrying the INT3/INTO is architecturally wrong,
e.g. the vCPU will incorrectly re-hit code #DBs, but for SEV guests there
is literally no other option that has a chance of making forward progress.

Drop the #UD injection for all flavors of emulation, even though that
means that a *misbehaving* guest will effectively end up in an infinite
loop instead of getting a #UD. There's no evidence that suggests that an
unexpected #UD is actually better than hanging the vCPU, e.g. a soft-hung
vCPU can still respond to IRQs and NMIs to generate a backtrace.

Reported-by: Wu Zongyo <wuzongyo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Closes: https://lore.kernel.org/all/8eb933fd-2cf3-d7a9-32fe-2a1d82eac42a@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Fixes: 6ef88d6e36c2 ("KVM: SVM: Re-inject INT3/INTO instead of retrying the instruction")
Cc: stable@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Cc: Tom Lendacky <thomas.lendacky@xxxxxxx>
Signed-off-by: Sean Christopherson <seanjc@xxxxxxxxxx>
---
arch/x86/kvm/svm/svm.c | 26 ++++++++++++++++----------
1 file changed, 16 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-)

diff --git a/arch/x86/kvm/svm/svm.c b/arch/x86/kvm/svm/svm.c
index 212706d18c62..581958c9dd4d 100644
--- a/arch/x86/kvm/svm/svm.c
+++ b/arch/x86/kvm/svm/svm.c
@@ -4725,18 +4725,24 @@ static bool svm_can_emulate_instruction(struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu, int emul_type,
* and cannot be decrypted by KVM, i.e. KVM would read cyphertext and
* decode garbage.
*
- * Inject #UD if KVM reached this point without an instruction buffer.
- * In practice, this path should never be hit by a well-behaved guest,
- * e.g. KVM doesn't intercept #UD or #GP for SEV guests, but this path
- * is still theoretically reachable, e.g. via unaccelerated fault-like
- * AVIC access, and needs to be handled by KVM to avoid putting the
- * guest into an infinite loop. Injecting #UD is somewhat arbitrary,
- * but its the least awful option given lack of insight into the guest.
+ * Resume the guest if KVM reached this point without an instruction
+ * buffer. This path should *almost* never be hit by a well-behaved
+ * guest, e.g. KVM doesn't intercept #UD or #GP for SEV guests. But if
+ * a #NPF occurs while the guest is vectoring an INT3/INTO, then KVM
+ * will attempt to re-inject the INT3/INTO and skip the instruction.
+ * In that scenario, retrying the INT3/INTO and hoping the guest will
+ * make forward progress is the only option that has a chance of
+ * success (and in practice it will work the vast majority of the time).
+ *
+ * This path is also theoretically reachable if the guest is doing
+ * something odd, e.g. if the guest is triggering unaccelerated fault-
+ * like AVIC access. Resuming the guest will put it into an infinite
+ * loop of sorts, but there's no hope of forward progress and injecting
+ * an exception will at best yield confusing behavior, not to mention
+ * break the INT3/INTO+#NPF case above.
*/
- if (unlikely(!insn)) {
- kvm_queue_exception(vcpu, UD_VECTOR);
+ if (unlikely(!insn))
return false;
- }

/*
* Emulate for SEV guests if the insn buffer is not empty. The buffer
--
2.41.0.694.ge786442a9b-goog