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authorRusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>2015-02-11 07:45:10 +0300
committerRusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>2015-02-11 09:17:31 +0300
commitc565650b1028bc551e5d16dd0ec8f7078da7cace (patch)
tree019581b2a4821eba84ebdff179034c5ac57ca1a3 /drivers/lguest
parentc9e433e4b852b70ea267388cf9b5d8096b04c44c (diff)
downloadlinux-c565650b1028bc551e5d16dd0ec8f7078da7cace.tar.xz
lguest: send trap 13 through to userspace.
We copy 7 bytes at eip for userspace's instruction decode; we have to carefully handle the case where eip is at the end of a page. We can't leave this to userspace since kernel has all the page table decode logic. The decode logic moves to userspace, basically unchanged. Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Diffstat (limited to 'drivers/lguest')
-rw-r--r--drivers/lguest/x86/core.c133
1 files changed, 43 insertions, 90 deletions
diff --git a/drivers/lguest/x86/core.c b/drivers/lguest/x86/core.c
index f7a16b4ea456..42e87bf14113 100644
--- a/drivers/lguest/x86/core.c
+++ b/drivers/lguest/x86/core.c
@@ -314,95 +314,52 @@ void lguest_arch_run_guest(struct lg_cpu *cpu)
* usually attached to a PC.
*
* When the Guest uses one of these instructions, we get a trap (General
- * Protection Fault) and come here. We see if it's one of those troublesome
- * instructions and skip over it. We return true if we did.
+ * Protection Fault) and come here. We queue this to be sent out to the
+ * Launcher to handle.
*/
-static int emulate_insn(struct lg_cpu *cpu)
-{
- u8 insn;
- unsigned int insnlen = 0, in = 0, small_operand = 0;
- /*
- * The eip contains the *virtual* address of the Guest's instruction:
- * walk the Guest's page tables to find the "physical" address.
- */
- unsigned long physaddr = guest_pa(cpu, cpu->regs->eip);
-
- /*
- * This must be the Guest kernel trying to do something, not userspace!
- * The bottom two bits of the CS segment register are the privilege
- * level.
- */
- if ((cpu->regs->cs & 3) != GUEST_PL)
- return 0;
- /* Decoding x86 instructions is icky. */
- insn = lgread(cpu, physaddr, u8);
-
- /*
- * Around 2.6.33, the kernel started using an emulation for the
- * cmpxchg8b instruction in early boot on many configurations. This
- * code isn't paravirtualized, and it tries to disable interrupts.
- * Ignore it, which will Mostly Work.
- */
- if (insn == 0xfa) {
- /* "cli", or Clear Interrupt Enable instruction. Skip it. */
- cpu->regs->eip++;
- return 1;
+/*
+ * The eip contains the *virtual* address of the Guest's instruction:
+ * we copy the instruction here so the Launcher doesn't have to walk
+ * the page tables to decode it. We handle the case (eg. in a kernel
+ * module) where the instruction is over two pages, and the pages are
+ * virtually but not physically contiguous.
+ *
+ * The longest possible x86 instruction is 15 bytes, but we don't handle
+ * anything that strange.
+ */
+static void copy_from_guest(struct lg_cpu *cpu,
+ void *dst, unsigned long vaddr, size_t len)
+{
+ size_t to_page_end = PAGE_SIZE - (vaddr % PAGE_SIZE);
+ unsigned long paddr;
+
+ BUG_ON(len > PAGE_SIZE);
+
+ /* If it goes over a page, copy in two parts. */
+ if (len > to_page_end) {
+ /* But make sure the next page is mapped! */
+ if (__guest_pa(cpu, vaddr + to_page_end, &paddr))
+ copy_from_guest(cpu, dst + to_page_end,
+ vaddr + to_page_end,
+ len - to_page_end);
+ else
+ /* Otherwise fill with zeroes. */
+ memset(dst + to_page_end, 0, len - to_page_end);
+ len = to_page_end;
}
- /*
- * 0x66 is an "operand prefix". It means a 16, not 32 bit in/out.
- */
- if (insn == 0x66) {
- small_operand = 1;
- /* The instruction is 1 byte so far, read the next byte. */
- insnlen = 1;
- insn = lgread(cpu, physaddr + insnlen, u8);
- }
+ /* This will kill the guest if it isn't mapped, but that
+ * shouldn't happen. */
+ __lgread(cpu, dst, guest_pa(cpu, vaddr), len);
+}
- /*
- * We can ignore the lower bit for the moment and decode the 4 opcodes
- * we need to emulate.
- */
- switch (insn & 0xFE) {
- case 0xE4: /* in <next byte>,%al */
- insnlen += 2;
- in = 1;
- break;
- case 0xEC: /* in (%dx),%al */
- insnlen += 1;
- in = 1;
- break;
- case 0xE6: /* out %al,<next byte> */
- insnlen += 2;
- break;
- case 0xEE: /* out %al,(%dx) */
- insnlen += 1;
- break;
- default:
- /* OK, we don't know what this is, can't emulate. */
- return 0;
- }
- /*
- * If it was an "IN" instruction, they expect the result to be read
- * into %eax, so we change %eax. We always return all-ones, which
- * traditionally means "there's nothing there".
- */
- if (in) {
- /* Lower bit tells means it's a 32/16 bit access */
- if (insn & 0x1) {
- if (small_operand)
- cpu->regs->eax |= 0xFFFF;
- else
- cpu->regs->eax = 0xFFFFFFFF;
- } else
- cpu->regs->eax |= 0xFF;
- }
- /* Finally, we've "done" the instruction, so move past it. */
- cpu->regs->eip += insnlen;
- /* Success! */
- return 1;
+static void setup_emulate_insn(struct lg_cpu *cpu)
+{
+ cpu->pending.trap = 13;
+ copy_from_guest(cpu, cpu->pending.insn, cpu->regs->eip,
+ sizeof(cpu->pending.insn));
}
/*H:050 Once we've re-enabled interrupts, we look at why the Guest exited. */
@@ -410,14 +367,10 @@ void lguest_arch_handle_trap(struct lg_cpu *cpu)
{
switch (cpu->regs->trapnum) {
case 13: /* We've intercepted a General Protection Fault. */
- /*
- * Check if this was one of those annoying IN or OUT
- * instructions which we need to emulate. If so, we just go
- * back into the Guest after we've done it.
- */
+ /* Hand to Launcher to emulate those pesky IN and OUT insns */
if (cpu->regs->errcode == 0) {
- if (emulate_insn(cpu))
- return;
+ setup_emulate_insn(cpu);
+ return;
}
break;
case 14: /* We've intercepted a Page Fault. */