On 2020-06-29 18:09, Michael S. Tsirkin wrote:
On Wed, Jun 17, 2020 at 12:43:57PM +0200, Pierre Morel wrote:
An architecture protecting the guest memory against unauthorized host
access may want to enforce VIRTIO I/O device protection through the
use of VIRTIO_F_IOMMU_PLATFORM.
Let's give a chance to the architecture to accept or not devices
without VIRTIO_F_IOMMU_PLATFORM.

I agree it's a bit misleading. Protection is enforced by memory
encryption, you can't trust the hypervisor to report the bit correctly
so using that as a securoty measure would be pointless.
The real gain here is that broken configs are easier to
debug.

Here's an attempt at a better description:

        On some architectures, guest knows that VIRTIO_F_IOMMU_PLATFORM is
        required for virtio to function: e.g. this is the case on s390 protected
        virt guests, since otherwise guest passes encrypted guest memory to 
devices,
        which the device can't read. Without VIRTIO_F_IOMMU_PLATFORM the
        result is that affected memory (or even a whole page containing
        it is corrupted). Detect and fail probe instead - that is easier
        to debug.

Thanks indeed better aside from the "encrypted guest memory": the mechanism used to avoid the access to the guest memory from the host by s390 is not encryption but a hardware feature denying the general host access and allowing pieces of memory to be shared between guest and host. As a consequence the data read from memory is not corrupted but not read at all and the read error kills the hypervizor with a SIGSEGV.



however, now that we have described what it is (hypervisor
misconfiguration) I ask a question: can we be sure this will never
ever work? E.g. what if some future hypervisor gains ability to
access the protected guest memory in some abstractly secure manner?

The goal of the s390 PV feature is to avoid this possibility so I don't think so; however, there is a possibility that some hardware VIRTIO device gain access to the guest's protected memory, even such device does not exist yet.

At the moment such device exists we will need a driver for it, at least to enable the feature and apply policies, it is also one of the reasons why a hook to the architecture is interesting.

We are blocking this here, and it's hard to predict the future,
and a broken hypervisor can always find ways to crash the guest ...

yes, this is also something to fix on the hypervizor side, Halil is working on it.


IMHO it would be safer to just print a warning.
What do you think?

Sadly, putting a warning may not help as qemu is killed if it accesses the protected memory.
Also note that the crash occurs not only on start but also on hotplug.

Thanks,
Pierre

--
Pierre Morel
IBM Lab Boeblingen
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