Message ID | 9b55398a1537302fb7135330dba54e79bfabffb1.1724741926.git.kai.huang@intel.com (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
State | New, archived |
Headers | show |
Series | TDX host: metadata reading tweaks, bug fix and info dump | expand |
On 27/08/24 10:14, Kai Huang wrote: > A TDX module initialization failure was reported on a Emerald Rapids > platform: > > virt/tdx: initialization failed: TDMR [0x0, 0x80000000): reserved areas exhausted. > virt/tdx: module initialization failed (-28) > > As part of initializing the TDX module, the kernel informs the TDX > module of all "TDX-usable memory regions" using an array of TDX defined > structure "TD Memory Region" (TDMR). Each TDMR must be in 1GB aligned > and in 1GB granularity, and all "non-TDX-usable memory holes" within a > given TDMR must be marked as "reserved areas". The TDX module reports a > maximum number of reserved areas that can be supported per TDMR. The statement: ... all "non-TDX-usable memory holes" within a given TDMR must be marked as "reserved areas". is not exactly true, which is essentially the basis of this fix. The relevant requirements are (from the spec): Any non-reserved 4KB page within a TDMR must be convertible i.e., it must be within a CMR Reserved areas within a TDMR need not be within a CMR. PAMT areas must not overlap with TDMR non-reserved areas; however, they may reside within TDMR reserved areas (as long as these are convertible). > > Currently, the kernel finds those "non-TDX-usable memory holes" within a > given TDMR by walking over a list of "TDX-usable memory regions", which > essentially reflects the "usable" regions in the e820 table (w/o memory > hotplug operations precisely, but this is not relevant here). But including e820 table regions that are not "usable" in the TDMR reserved areas is not necessary - it is not one of the rules. What confused me initially was that I did not realize the we already require that the TDX Module does not touch memory in the TDMR non-reserved areas not specifically allocated to it. So it makes no difference to the TDX Module what the pages that have not been allocated to it, are used for. > > As shown above, the root cause of this failure is when the kernel tries > to construct a TDMR to cover address range [0x0, 0x80000000), there > are too many memory holes within that range and the number of memory > holes exceeds the maximum number of reserved areas. > > The E820 table of that platform (see [1] below) reflects this: the > number of memory holes among e820 "usable" entries exceeds 16, which is > the maximum number of reserved areas TDX module supports in practice. > > === Fix === > > There are two options to fix this: 1) reduce the number of memory holes > when constructing a TDMR to save "reserved areas"; 2) reduce the TDMR's > size to cover fewer memory regions, thus fewer memory holes. Probably better to try and get rid of this "two options" stuff and focus on how this is a simple and effective fix. > > Option 1) is possible, and in fact is easier and preferable: > > TDX actually has a concept of "Convertible Memory Regions" (CMRs). TDX > reports a list of CMRs that meet TDX's security requirements on memory. > TDX requires all the "TDX-usable memory regions" that the kernel passes > to the module via TDMRs, a.k.a, all the "non-reserved regions in TDMRs", > must be convertible memory. > > In other words, if a memory hole is indeed CMR, then it's not mandatory > for the kernel to add it to the reserved areas. By doing so, the number > of consumed reserved areas can be reduced w/o having any functional > impact. The kernel still allocates TDX memory from the page allocator. > There's no harm if the kernel tells the TDX module some memory regions > are "TDX-usable" but they will never be allocated by the kernel as TDX > memory. > > Note this doesn't have any security impact either because the kernel is > out of TDX's TCB anyway. > > This is feasible because in practice the CMRs just reflect the nature of > whether the RAM can indeed be used by TDX, thus each CMR tends to be a > large, uninterrupted range of memory, i.e., unlike the e820 table which > contains numerous "ACPI *" entries in the first 2G range. Refer to [2] > for CMRs reported on the problematic platform using off-tree TDX code. > > So for this particular module initialization failure, the memory holes > that are within [0x0, 0x80000000) are mostly indeed CMR. By not adding > them to the reserved areas, the number of consumed reserved areas for > the TDMR [0x0, 0x80000000) can be dramatically reduced. > > Option 2) is also theoretically feasible, but it is not desired: > > It requires more complicated logic to handle splitting TDMR into smaller > ones, which isn't trivial. There are limitations to splitting TDMR too, > thus it may not always work: 1) The smallest TDMR is 1GB, and it cannot > be split any further; 2) This also increases the total number of TDMRs, > which also has a maximum value limited by the TDX module. > > So, fix this issue by using option 1): > > 1) reading out the CMRs from the TDX module global metadata, and > 2) changing to find memory holes for a given TDMR based on CMRs, but not > based on the list of "TDX-usable memory regions". > > Also dump the CMRs in dmesg. They are helpful when something goes wrong > around "constructing the TDMRs and configuring the TDX module with > them". Note there are no existing userspace tools that the user can get > CMRs since they can only be read via SEAMCALL (no CPUID, MSR etc). > > [1] BIOS-E820 table of the problematic platform: > > BIOS-e820: [mem 0x0000000000000000-0x000000000009efff] usable > BIOS-e820: [mem 0x000000000009f000-0x00000000000fffff] reserved > BIOS-e820: [mem 0x0000000000100000-0x000000005d168fff] usable > BIOS-e820: [mem 0x000000005d169000-0x000000005d22afff] ACPI data > BIOS-e820: [mem 0x000000005d22b000-0x000000005d3cefff] usable > BIOS-e820: [mem 0x000000005d3cf000-0x000000005d469fff] reserved > BIOS-e820: [mem 0x000000005d46a000-0x000000005e5b2fff] usable > BIOS-e820: [mem 0x000000005e5b3000-0x000000005e5c2fff] reserved > BIOS-e820: [mem 0x000000005e5c3000-0x000000005e5d2fff] usable > BIOS-e820: [mem 0x000000005e5d3000-0x000000005e5e4fff] reserved > BIOS-e820: [mem 0x000000005e5e5000-0x000000005eb57fff] usable > BIOS-e820: [mem 0x000000005eb58000-0x0000000061357fff] ACPI NVS > BIOS-e820: [mem 0x0000000061358000-0x000000006172afff] usable > BIOS-e820: [mem 0x000000006172b000-0x0000000061794fff] ACPI data > BIOS-e820: [mem 0x0000000061795000-0x00000000617fefff] usable > BIOS-e820: [mem 0x00000000617ff000-0x0000000061912fff] ACPI data > BIOS-e820: [mem 0x0000000061913000-0x0000000061998fff] usable > BIOS-e820: [mem 0x0000000061999000-0x00000000619dffff] ACPI data > BIOS-e820: [mem 0x00000000619e0000-0x00000000619e1fff] usable > BIOS-e820: [mem 0x00000000619e2000-0x00000000619e9fff] reserved > BIOS-e820: [mem 0x00000000619ea000-0x0000000061a26fff] usable > BIOS-e820: [mem 0x0000000061a27000-0x0000000061baefff] ACPI data > BIOS-e820: [mem 0x0000000061baf000-0x00000000623c2fff] usable > BIOS-e820: [mem 0x00000000623c3000-0x0000000062471fff] reserved > BIOS-e820: [mem 0x0000000062472000-0x0000000062823fff] usable > BIOS-e820: [mem 0x0000000062824000-0x0000000063a24fff] reserved > BIOS-e820: [mem 0x0000000063a25000-0x0000000063d57fff] usable > BIOS-e820: [mem 0x0000000063d58000-0x0000000064157fff] reserved > BIOS-e820: [mem 0x0000000064158000-0x0000000064158fff] usable > BIOS-e820: [mem 0x0000000064159000-0x0000000064194fff] reserved > BIOS-e820: [mem 0x0000000064195000-0x000000006e9cefff] usable > BIOS-e820: [mem 0x000000006e9cf000-0x000000006eccefff] reserved > BIOS-e820: [mem 0x000000006eccf000-0x000000006f6fefff] ACPI NVS > BIOS-e820: [mem 0x000000006f6ff000-0x000000006f7fefff] ACPI data > BIOS-e820: [mem 0x000000006f7ff000-0x000000006f7fffff] usable > BIOS-e820: [mem 0x000000006f800000-0x000000008fffffff] reserved > ...... > > [2] Convertible Memory Regions of the problematic platform: > > virt/tdx: CMR: [0x100000, 0x6f800000) > virt/tdx: CMR: [0x100000000, 0x107a000000) > virt/tdx: CMR: [0x1080000000, 0x207c000000) > virt/tdx: CMR: [0x2080000000, 0x307c000000) > virt/tdx: CMR: [0x3080000000, 0x407c000000) > > Fixes: dde3b60d572c9 ("x86/virt/tdx: Designate reserved areas for all TDMRs") > Signed-off-by: Kai Huang <kai.huang@intel.com> > --- > > v2 -> v3: > > - Add the Fixes tag, although this patch depends on previous patches. > - CMR_BASE0 -> CMR_BASE(_i), CMR_SIZE0 -> CMR_SIZE(_i) to silence the > build-check error. > > v1 -> v2: > - Change to walk over CMRs directly to find out memory holes, instead > of walking over TDX memory blocks and explicitly check whether a hole > is subregion of CMR. (Chao) > - Mention any constant macro definitions in global metadata structures > are TDX architectural. (Binbin) > - Slightly improve the changelog. > > --- > arch/x86/virt/vmx/tdx/tdx.c | 105 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++------ > arch/x86/virt/vmx/tdx/tdx.h | 13 +++++ > 2 files changed, 102 insertions(+), 16 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/arch/x86/virt/vmx/tdx/tdx.c b/arch/x86/virt/vmx/tdx/tdx.c > index 0fb673dd43ed..fa335ab1ae92 100644 > --- a/arch/x86/virt/vmx/tdx/tdx.c > +++ b/arch/x86/virt/vmx/tdx/tdx.c > @@ -331,6 +331,72 @@ static int get_tdx_sys_info_version(struct tdx_sys_info_version *sysinfo_version > return ret; > } > > +/* Update the @sysinfo_cmr->num_cmrs to trim tail empty CMRs */ > +static void trim_empty_tail_cmrs(struct tdx_sys_info_cmr *sysinfo_cmr) > +{ > + int i; > + > + for (i = 0; i < sysinfo_cmr->num_cmrs; i++) { > + u64 cmr_base = sysinfo_cmr->cmr_base[i]; > + u64 cmr_size = sysinfo_cmr->cmr_size[i]; > + > + if (!cmr_size) { > + WARN_ON_ONCE(cmr_base); > + break; > + } > + > + /* TDX architecture: CMR must be 4KB aligned */ > + WARN_ON_ONCE(!PAGE_ALIGNED(cmr_base) || > + !PAGE_ALIGNED(cmr_size)); > + } > + > + sysinfo_cmr->num_cmrs = i; > +} > + > +static int get_tdx_sys_info_cmr(struct tdx_sys_info_cmr *sysinfo_cmr) > +{ > + int i, ret = 0; > + > +#define TD_SYSINFO_MAP_CMR_INFO(_field_id, _member) \ > + TD_SYSINFO_MAP(_field_id, sysinfo_cmr, _member) > + > + TD_SYSINFO_MAP_CMR_INFO(NUM_CMRS, num_cmrs); > + > + if (ret) > + return ret; > + > + for (i = 0; i < sysinfo_cmr->num_cmrs; i++) { > + TD_SYSINFO_MAP_CMR_INFO(CMR_BASE(i), cmr_base[i]); > + TD_SYSINFO_MAP_CMR_INFO(CMR_SIZE(i), cmr_size[i]); > + } > + > + if (ret) > + return ret; > + > + /* > + * The TDX module may just report the maximum number of CMRs that > + * TDX architecturally supports as the actual number of CMRs, > + * despite the latter is smaller. In this case all the tail > + * CMRs will be empty. Trim them away. > + */ > + trim_empty_tail_cmrs(sysinfo_cmr); > + > + return 0; > +} > + > +static void print_sys_info_cmr(struct tdx_sys_info_cmr *sysinfo_cmr) > +{ > + int i; > + > + for (i = 0; i < sysinfo_cmr->num_cmrs; i++) { > + u64 cmr_base = sysinfo_cmr->cmr_base[i]; > + u64 cmr_size = sysinfo_cmr->cmr_size[i]; > + > + pr_info("CMR[%d]: [0x%llx, 0x%llx)\n", i, cmr_base, > + cmr_base + cmr_size); > + } > +} > + > static void print_basic_sys_info(struct tdx_sys_info *sysinfo) > { > struct tdx_sys_info_features *features = &sysinfo->features; > @@ -349,6 +415,8 @@ static void print_basic_sys_info(struct tdx_sys_info *sysinfo) > version->major, version->minor, version->update, > version->internal, version->build_num, > version->build_date, features->tdx_features0); > + > + print_sys_info_cmr(&sysinfo->cmr); > } > > static int get_tdx_sys_info_tdmr(struct tdx_sys_info_tdmr *sysinfo_tdmr) > @@ -379,6 +447,10 @@ static int get_tdx_sys_info(struct tdx_sys_info *sysinfo) > if (ret) > return ret; > > + ret = get_tdx_sys_info_cmr(&sysinfo->cmr); > + if (ret) > + return ret; > + > return get_tdx_sys_info_tdmr(&sysinfo->tdmr); > } > > @@ -803,29 +875,28 @@ static int tdmr_add_rsvd_area(struct tdmr_info *tdmr, int *p_idx, u64 addr, > } > > /* > - * Go through @tmb_list to find holes between memory areas. If any of > + * Go through all CMRs in @sysinfo_cmr to find memory holes. If any of > * those holes fall within @tdmr, set up a TDMR reserved area to cover > * the hole. > */ > -static int tdmr_populate_rsvd_holes(struct list_head *tmb_list, > +static int tdmr_populate_rsvd_holes(struct tdx_sys_info_cmr *sysinfo_cmr, > struct tdmr_info *tdmr, > int *rsvd_idx, > u16 max_reserved_per_tdmr) > { > - struct tdx_memblock *tmb; > u64 prev_end; > - int ret; > + int i, ret; > > /* > * Start looking for reserved blocks at the > * beginning of the TDMR. > */ > prev_end = tdmr->base; > - list_for_each_entry(tmb, tmb_list, list) { > + for (i = 0; i < sysinfo_cmr->num_cmrs; i++) { > u64 start, end; > > - start = PFN_PHYS(tmb->start_pfn); > - end = PFN_PHYS(tmb->end_pfn); > + start = sysinfo_cmr->cmr_base[i]; > + end = start + sysinfo_cmr->cmr_size[i]; > > /* Break if this region is after the TDMR */ > if (start >= tdmr_end(tdmr)) > @@ -926,16 +997,16 @@ static int rsvd_area_cmp_func(const void *a, const void *b) > > /* > * Populate reserved areas for the given @tdmr, including memory holes > - * (via @tmb_list) and PAMTs (via @tdmr_list). > + * (via @sysinfo_cmr) and PAMTs (via @tdmr_list). > */ > static int tdmr_populate_rsvd_areas(struct tdmr_info *tdmr, > - struct list_head *tmb_list, > + struct tdx_sys_info_cmr *sysinfo_cmr, > struct tdmr_info_list *tdmr_list, > u16 max_reserved_per_tdmr) > { > int ret, rsvd_idx = 0; > > - ret = tdmr_populate_rsvd_holes(tmb_list, tdmr, &rsvd_idx, > + ret = tdmr_populate_rsvd_holes(sysinfo_cmr, tdmr, &rsvd_idx, > max_reserved_per_tdmr); > if (ret) > return ret; > @@ -954,10 +1025,10 @@ static int tdmr_populate_rsvd_areas(struct tdmr_info *tdmr, > > /* > * Populate reserved areas for all TDMRs in @tdmr_list, including memory > - * holes (via @tmb_list) and PAMTs. > + * holes (via @sysinfo_cmr) and PAMTs. > */ > static int tdmrs_populate_rsvd_areas_all(struct tdmr_info_list *tdmr_list, > - struct list_head *tmb_list, > + struct tdx_sys_info_cmr *sysinfo_cmr, > u16 max_reserved_per_tdmr) > { > int i; > @@ -966,7 +1037,7 @@ static int tdmrs_populate_rsvd_areas_all(struct tdmr_info_list *tdmr_list, > int ret; > > ret = tdmr_populate_rsvd_areas(tdmr_entry(tdmr_list, i), > - tmb_list, tdmr_list, max_reserved_per_tdmr); > + sysinfo_cmr, tdmr_list, max_reserved_per_tdmr); > if (ret) > return ret; > } > @@ -981,7 +1052,8 @@ static int tdmrs_populate_rsvd_areas_all(struct tdmr_info_list *tdmr_list, > */ > static int construct_tdmrs(struct list_head *tmb_list, > struct tdmr_info_list *tdmr_list, > - struct tdx_sys_info_tdmr *sysinfo_tdmr) > + struct tdx_sys_info_tdmr *sysinfo_tdmr, > + struct tdx_sys_info_cmr *sysinfo_cmr) > { > int ret; > > @@ -994,7 +1066,7 @@ static int construct_tdmrs(struct list_head *tmb_list, > if (ret) > return ret; > > - ret = tdmrs_populate_rsvd_areas_all(tdmr_list, tmb_list, > + ret = tdmrs_populate_rsvd_areas_all(tdmr_list, sysinfo_cmr, > sysinfo_tdmr->max_reserved_per_tdmr); > if (ret) > tdmrs_free_pamt_all(tdmr_list); > @@ -1185,7 +1257,8 @@ static int init_tdx_module(void) > goto err_free_tdxmem; > > /* Cover all TDX-usable memory regions in TDMRs */ > - ret = construct_tdmrs(&tdx_memlist, &tdx_tdmr_list, &sysinfo.tdmr); > + ret = construct_tdmrs(&tdx_memlist, &tdx_tdmr_list, &sysinfo.tdmr, > + &sysinfo.cmr); > if (ret) > goto err_free_tdmrs; > > diff --git a/arch/x86/virt/vmx/tdx/tdx.h b/arch/x86/virt/vmx/tdx/tdx.h > index b422e8517e01..e7bed9e717c7 100644 > --- a/arch/x86/virt/vmx/tdx/tdx.h > +++ b/arch/x86/virt/vmx/tdx/tdx.h > @@ -40,6 +40,10 @@ > #define MD_FIELD_ID_UPDATE_VERSION 0x0800000100000005ULL > #define MD_FIELD_ID_INTERNAL_VERSION 0x0800000100000006ULL > > +#define MD_FIELD_ID_NUM_CMRS 0x9000000100000000ULL > +#define MD_FIELD_ID_CMR_BASE(_i) (0x9000000300000080ULL + (u16)_i) > +#define MD_FIELD_ID_CMR_SIZE(_i) (0x9000000300000100ULL + (u16)_i) > + > #define MD_FIELD_ID_MAX_TDMRS 0x9100000100000008ULL > #define MD_FIELD_ID_MAX_RESERVED_PER_TDMR 0x9100000100000009ULL > #define MD_FIELD_ID_PAMT_4K_ENTRY_SIZE 0x9100000100000010ULL > @@ -160,6 +164,14 @@ struct tdx_sys_info_version { > u32 build_date; > }; > > +/* Class "CMR Info" */ > +#define TDX_MAX_CMRS 32 /* architectural */ > +struct tdx_sys_info_cmr { > + u16 num_cmrs; > + u64 cmr_base[TDX_MAX_CMRS]; > + u64 cmr_size[TDX_MAX_CMRS]; > +}; > + > /* Class "TDMR info" */ > struct tdx_sys_info_tdmr { > u16 max_tdmrs; > @@ -170,6 +182,7 @@ struct tdx_sys_info_tdmr { > struct tdx_sys_info { > struct tdx_sys_info_features features; > struct tdx_sys_info_version version; > + struct tdx_sys_info_cmr cmr; > struct tdx_sys_info_tdmr tdmr; > }; >
On Fri, 2024-08-30 at 13:50 +0300, Hunter, Adrian wrote: > On 27/08/24 10:14, Kai Huang wrote: > > A TDX module initialization failure was reported on a Emerald Rapids > > platform: > > > > virt/tdx: initialization failed: TDMR [0x0, 0x80000000): reserved areas exhausted. > > virt/tdx: module initialization failed (-28) > > > > As part of initializing the TDX module, the kernel informs the TDX > > module of all "TDX-usable memory regions" using an array of TDX defined > > structure "TD Memory Region" (TDMR). Each TDMR must be in 1GB aligned > > and in 1GB granularity, and all "non-TDX-usable memory holes" within a > > given TDMR must be marked as "reserved areas". The TDX module reports a > > maximum number of reserved areas that can be supported per TDMR. > > The statement: > > ... all "non-TDX-usable memory holes" within a > given TDMR must be marked as "reserved areas". > > is not exactly true, which is essentially the basis of this fix. Hmm I think I see what you mean. Perhaps the "must be marked as" confuses you? The "TDX-usable memory" here means all pages that can potentially be used by TDX. They don't have to be actually used by TDX, i.e., "TDX-usable memory" vs "TDX-used memory". And the "non-TDX-usable memory holes" means the memory regions that cannot be possibly used by TDX at all. Is below better if I change "must be marked as" to "are"? As part of initializing the TDX module, the kernel informs the TDX module of all "TDX-usable memory regions" using an array of TDX defined structure "TD Memory Region" (TDMR). Each TDMR must be in 1GB aligned and in 1GB granularity, and all "non-TDX-usable memory holes" within a given TDMR are marked as "reserved areas". The TDX module reports a maximum number of reserved areas that can be supported per TDMR. Note in my logic here we don't need to mention CMR. Here I just want to tell the fact that each TDMR has number of "reserved areas" and the maximum number is reported by TDX module. > > The relevant requirements are (from the spec): > > Any non-reserved 4KB page within a TDMR must be convertible > i.e., it must be within a CMR Yes. > > Reserved areas within a TDMR need not be within a CMR. Yes. They need not to be, but they can be. > > PAMT areas must not overlap with TDMR non-reserved areas; > however, they may reside within TDMR reserved areas > (as long as these are convertible). Yes. However in implementation PAMTs are out of page allocator so they are all within TDMRs thus need to be put to reserved areas. Those are TDX architectural requirements. They are not all related to the fix of this problem. The most important thing here is: Any non-reserved memory within a TDMR must be within CMR. That means as long as one memory region is CMR, it doesn't need to be in "reserved area" from TDX architecture's prespective. That means we can include more memory regions (even they cannot be used by TDX at all) as "non-reserved" areas in TDMRs to reduce the number of "reserved areas" as long as those regions are within CMR. This is the logic behind this fix. > > > > > Currently, the kernel finds those "non-TDX-usable memory holes" within a > > given TDMR by walking over a list of "TDX-usable memory regions", which > > essentially reflects the "usable" regions in the e820 table (w/o memory > > hotplug operations precisely, but this is not relevant here). > > But including e820 table regions that are not "usable" in the TDMR > reserved areas is not necessary - it is not one of the rules. True. That's why we can do this fix. > > What confused me initially was that I did not realize the we already > require that the TDX Module does not touch memory in the TDMR > non-reserved areas not specifically allocated to it. So it makes no > difference to the TDX Module what the pages that have not been allocated > to it, are used for. > > > > > As shown above, the root cause of this failure is when the kernel tries > > to construct a TDMR to cover address range [0x0, 0x80000000), there > > are too many memory holes within that range and the number of memory > > holes exceeds the maximum number of reserved areas. > > > > The E820 table of that platform (see [1] below) reflects this: the > > number of memory holes among e820 "usable" entries exceeds 16, which is > > the maximum number of reserved areas TDX module supports in practice. > > > > === Fix === > > > > There are two options to fix this: 1) reduce the number of memory holes > > when constructing a TDMR to save "reserved areas"; 2) reduce the TDMR's > > size to cover fewer memory regions, thus fewer memory holes. > > Probably better to try and get rid of this "two options" stuff and focus > on how this is a simple and effective fix. As I mentioned in another reply I would prefer to keep those options since I believe they can provide a full view to the reviewers.
On 30/08/24 14:52, Huang, Kai wrote: > On Fri, 2024-08-30 at 13:50 +0300, Hunter, Adrian wrote: >> On 27/08/24 10:14, Kai Huang wrote: >>> A TDX module initialization failure was reported on a Emerald Rapids >>> platform: >>> >>> virt/tdx: initialization failed: TDMR [0x0, 0x80000000): reserved areas exhausted. >>> virt/tdx: module initialization failed (-28) >>> >>> As part of initializing the TDX module, the kernel informs the TDX >>> module of all "TDX-usable memory regions" using an array of TDX defined >>> structure "TD Memory Region" (TDMR). Each TDMR must be in 1GB aligned >>> and in 1GB granularity, and all "non-TDX-usable memory holes" within a >>> given TDMR must be marked as "reserved areas". The TDX module reports a >>> maximum number of reserved areas that can be supported per TDMR. >> >> The statement: >> >> ... all "non-TDX-usable memory holes" within a >> given TDMR must be marked as "reserved areas". >> >> is not exactly true, which is essentially the basis of this fix. > > Hmm I think I see what you mean. Perhaps the "must be marked as" confuses > you? > > The "TDX-usable memory" here means all pages that can potentially be used by > TDX. They don't have to be actually used by TDX, i.e., "TDX-usable memory" vs > "TDX-used memory". > > And the "non-TDX-usable memory holes" means the memory regions that cannot be > possibly used by TDX at all. > > Is below better if I change "must be marked as" to "are"? > > As part of initializing the TDX module, the kernel informs the TDX > module of all "TDX-usable memory regions" using an array of TDX defined > structure "TD Memory Region" (TDMR). Each TDMR must be in 1GB aligned > and in 1GB granularity, and all "non-TDX-usable memory holes" within a > given TDMR are marked as "reserved areas". The TDX module reports a > maximum number of reserved areas that can be supported per TDMR. Yes, that's better. > > Note in my logic here we don't need to mention CMR. Here I just want to tell > the fact that each TDMR has number of "reserved areas" and the maximum number > is reported by TDX module. > >> >> The relevant requirements are (from the spec): >> >> Any non-reserved 4KB page within a TDMR must be convertible >> i.e., it must be within a CMR > > Yes. > >> >> Reserved areas within a TDMR need not be within a CMR. > > Yes. They need not to be, but they can be. > >> >> PAMT areas must not overlap with TDMR non-reserved areas; >> however, they may reside within TDMR reserved areas >> (as long as these are convertible). > > Yes. However in implementation PAMTs are out of page allocator so they are > all within TDMRs thus need to be put to reserved areas. > > Those are TDX architectural requirements. They are not all related to the fix > of this problem. The most important thing here is: > > Any non-reserved memory within a TDMR must be within CMR. > > That means as long as one memory region is CMR, it doesn't need to be in > "reserved area" from TDX architecture's prespective. > > That means we can include more memory regions (even they cannot be used by TDX > at all) as "non-reserved" areas in TDMRs to reduce the number of "reserved > areas" as long as those regions are within CMR. > > This is the logic behind this fix. > >> >>> >>> Currently, the kernel finds those "non-TDX-usable memory holes" within a >>> given TDMR by walking over a list of "TDX-usable memory regions", which >>> essentially reflects the "usable" regions in the e820 table (w/o memory >>> hotplug operations precisely, but this is not relevant here). >> >> But including e820 table regions that are not "usable" in the TDMR >> reserved areas is not necessary - it is not one of the rules. > > True. That's why we can do this fix. > >> >> What confused me initially was that I did not realize the we already >> require that the TDX Module does not touch memory in the TDMR >> non-reserved areas not specifically allocated to it. So it makes no >> difference to the TDX Module what the pages that have not been allocated >> to it, are used for. >> >>> >>> As shown above, the root cause of this failure is when the kernel tries >>> to construct a TDMR to cover address range [0x0, 0x80000000), there >>> are too many memory holes within that range and the number of memory >>> holes exceeds the maximum number of reserved areas. >>> >>> The E820 table of that platform (see [1] below) reflects this: the >>> number of memory holes among e820 "usable" entries exceeds 16, which is >>> the maximum number of reserved areas TDX module supports in practice. >>> >>> === Fix === >>> >>> There are two options to fix this: 1) reduce the number of memory holes >>> when constructing a TDMR to save "reserved areas"; 2) reduce the TDMR's >>> size to cover fewer memory regions, thus fewer memory holes. >> >> Probably better to try and get rid of this "two options" stuff and focus >> on how this is a simple and effective fix. > > As I mentioned in another reply I would prefer to keep those options since I > believe they can provide a full view to the reviewers.
On 27.08.24 г. 10:14 ч., Kai Huang wrote: <snip> > [2] Convertible Memory Regions of the problematic platform: > > virt/tdx: CMR: [0x100000, 0x6f800000) > virt/tdx: CMR: [0x100000000, 0x107a000000) > virt/tdx: CMR: [0x1080000000, 0x207c000000) > virt/tdx: CMR: [0x2080000000, 0x307c000000) > virt/tdx: CMR: [0x3080000000, 0x407c000000) > > Fixes: dde3b60d572c9 ("x86/virt/tdx: Designate reserved areas for all TDMRs") > Signed-off-by: Kai Huang <kai.huang@intel.com> > --- <snpi> > --- > arch/x86/virt/vmx/tdx/tdx.c | 105 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++------ > arch/x86/virt/vmx/tdx/tdx.h | 13 +++++ > 2 files changed, 102 insertions(+), 16 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/arch/x86/virt/vmx/tdx/tdx.c b/arch/x86/virt/vmx/tdx/tdx.c > index 0fb673dd43ed..fa335ab1ae92 100644 > --- a/arch/x86/virt/vmx/tdx/tdx.c > +++ b/arch/x86/virt/vmx/tdx/tdx.c > @@ -331,6 +331,72 @@ static int get_tdx_sys_info_version(struct tdx_sys_info_version *sysinfo_version > return ret; > } > > +/* Update the @sysinfo_cmr->num_cmrs to trim tail empty CMRs */ > +static void trim_empty_tail_cmrs(struct tdx_sys_info_cmr *sysinfo_cmr) > +{ > + int i; > + > + for (i = 0; i < sysinfo_cmr->num_cmrs; i++) { > + u64 cmr_base = sysinfo_cmr->cmr_base[i]; > + u64 cmr_size = sysinfo_cmr->cmr_size[i]; > + > + if (!cmr_size) { > + WARN_ON_ONCE(cmr_base); > + break; > + } > + > + /* TDX architecture: CMR must be 4KB aligned */ > + WARN_ON_ONCE(!PAGE_ALIGNED(cmr_base) || > + !PAGE_ALIGNED(cmr_size)); > + } > + > + sysinfo_cmr->num_cmrs = i; > +} > + > +static int get_tdx_sys_info_cmr(struct tdx_sys_info_cmr *sysinfo_cmr) > +{ > + int i, ret = 0; > + > +#define TD_SYSINFO_MAP_CMR_INFO(_field_id, _member) \ > + TD_SYSINFO_MAP(_field_id, sysinfo_cmr, _member) > + > + TD_SYSINFO_MAP_CMR_INFO(NUM_CMRS, num_cmrs); > + > + if (ret) > + return ret; > + > + for (i = 0; i < sysinfo_cmr->num_cmrs; i++) { > + TD_SYSINFO_MAP_CMR_INFO(CMR_BASE(i), cmr_base[i]); Yeah, this is just golden, not only are you going through 3 levels of indirection to expand the TD_SYSINFO_MAP but you also top it with one final one MD_FIELD_ID_CMR_BASE(i). I'm fine with the CMR_BASE/SIZE macros, but the way you introduce 3 levels of macros just to avoid typing TD_SYSINFO_MAP(foo, bar, zoo) makes no sense. <snip>
Kai Huang wrote: > A TDX module initialization failure was reported on a Emerald Rapids > platform: > > virt/tdx: initialization failed: TDMR [0x0, 0x80000000): reserved areas exhausted. > virt/tdx: module initialization failed (-28) > [..] I feel what I trimmed above is a lot of text just to say: "build_tdx_memlist() tries to fulfill the TDX module requirement it be told about holes in the TDMR space <insert pointer / reference to requirement>. It turns out that the kernel's view of memory holes is too fine grained and sometimes exceeds the number of holes (16) that the TDX module can track per TDMR <insert problematic memory map>. Thankfully the module also lists memory that is potentially convertible in a list of CMRs. That coarser grained CMR list tends to track usable memory in the memory map even if it might be reserved for host usage like 'ACPI data'. Use that list to relax what the kernel considers unusable memory. If it falls in a CMR no need to instantiate a hole, and rely on the fact that kernel will keep what it considers 'reserved' out of the page allocator." ...but don't spin the patch just to make the changelog more concise. It took me reading a few times to pull out those salient details, that is, if I understood it correctly? > diff --git a/arch/x86/virt/vmx/tdx/tdx.c b/arch/x86/virt/vmx/tdx/tdx.c > index 0fb673dd43ed..fa335ab1ae92 100644 > --- a/arch/x86/virt/vmx/tdx/tdx.c > +++ b/arch/x86/virt/vmx/tdx/tdx.c > @@ -331,6 +331,72 @@ static int get_tdx_sys_info_version(struct tdx_sys_info_version *sysinfo_version > return ret; > } > > +/* Update the @sysinfo_cmr->num_cmrs to trim tail empty CMRs */ > +static void trim_empty_tail_cmrs(struct tdx_sys_info_cmr *sysinfo_cmr) > +{ > + int i; > + > + for (i = 0; i < sysinfo_cmr->num_cmrs; i++) { > + u64 cmr_base = sysinfo_cmr->cmr_base[i]; > + u64 cmr_size = sysinfo_cmr->cmr_size[i]; > + > + if (!cmr_size) { > + WARN_ON_ONCE(cmr_base); > + break; > + } > + > + /* TDX architecture: CMR must be 4KB aligned */ > + WARN_ON_ONCE(!PAGE_ALIGNED(cmr_base) || > + !PAGE_ALIGNED(cmr_size)); Is it really required to let the TDX module taint and possibly crash the kernel if it provides misaligned CMRs? Shouldn't these be validated early and just turn off TDX support if the TDX module is this broken?
On Fri, 2024-09-06 at 16:31 -0700, Dan Williams wrote: > Kai Huang wrote: > > A TDX module initialization failure was reported on a Emerald Rapids > > platform: > > > > virt/tdx: initialization failed: TDMR [0x0, 0x80000000): reserved areas exhausted. > > virt/tdx: module initialization failed (-28) > > > [..] > > I feel what I trimmed above is a lot of text just to say: > > "build_tdx_memlist() tries to fulfill the TDX module requirement it be > told about holes in the TDMR space <insert pointer / reference to > requirement>. It turns out that the kernel's view of memory holes is too > fine grained and sometimes exceeds the number of holes (16) that the TDX > module can track per TDMR <insert problematic memory map>. Thankfully > the module also lists memory that is potentially convertible in a list > of CMRs. That coarser grained CMR list tends to track usable memory in > the memory map even if it might be reserved for host usage like 'ACPI > data'. Use that list to relax what the kernel considers unusable > memory. If it falls in a CMR no need to instantiate a hole, and rely on > the fact that kernel will keep what it considers 'reserved' out of the > page allocator." > > ...but don't spin the patch just to make the changelog more concise. It > took me reading a few times to pull out those salient details, that is, > if I understood it correctly? Thanks. Let me try to trim down the changelog since I need to send out another version anyway. > > > diff --git a/arch/x86/virt/vmx/tdx/tdx.c b/arch/x86/virt/vmx/tdx/tdx.c > > index 0fb673dd43ed..fa335ab1ae92 100644 > > --- a/arch/x86/virt/vmx/tdx/tdx.c > > +++ b/arch/x86/virt/vmx/tdx/tdx.c > > @@ -331,6 +331,72 @@ static int get_tdx_sys_info_version(struct tdx_sys_info_version *sysinfo_version > > return ret; > > } > > > > +/* Update the @sysinfo_cmr->num_cmrs to trim tail empty CMRs */ > > +static void trim_empty_tail_cmrs(struct tdx_sys_info_cmr *sysinfo_cmr) > > +{ > > + int i; > > + > > + for (i = 0; i < sysinfo_cmr->num_cmrs; i++) { > > + u64 cmr_base = sysinfo_cmr->cmr_base[i]; > > + u64 cmr_size = sysinfo_cmr->cmr_size[i]; > > + > > + if (!cmr_size) { > > + WARN_ON_ONCE(cmr_base); > > + break; > > + } > > + > > + /* TDX architecture: CMR must be 4KB aligned */ > > + WARN_ON_ONCE(!PAGE_ALIGNED(cmr_base) || > > + !PAGE_ALIGNED(cmr_size)); > > Is it really required to let the TDX module taint and possibly crash the > kernel if it provides misaligned CMRs? Shouldn't these be validated > early and just turn off TDX support if the TDX module is this broken? We can make this function return error code for those error cases, and fail to initialize TDX module. But CMRs are actually verified by the MCHECK. If any WARN() above happens, TDX won't get enabled in hardware. I think maybe we can just remove the WARN()s?
diff --git a/arch/x86/virt/vmx/tdx/tdx.c b/arch/x86/virt/vmx/tdx/tdx.c index 0fb673dd43ed..fa335ab1ae92 100644 --- a/arch/x86/virt/vmx/tdx/tdx.c +++ b/arch/x86/virt/vmx/tdx/tdx.c @@ -331,6 +331,72 @@ static int get_tdx_sys_info_version(struct tdx_sys_info_version *sysinfo_version return ret; } +/* Update the @sysinfo_cmr->num_cmrs to trim tail empty CMRs */ +static void trim_empty_tail_cmrs(struct tdx_sys_info_cmr *sysinfo_cmr) +{ + int i; + + for (i = 0; i < sysinfo_cmr->num_cmrs; i++) { + u64 cmr_base = sysinfo_cmr->cmr_base[i]; + u64 cmr_size = sysinfo_cmr->cmr_size[i]; + + if (!cmr_size) { + WARN_ON_ONCE(cmr_base); + break; + } + + /* TDX architecture: CMR must be 4KB aligned */ + WARN_ON_ONCE(!PAGE_ALIGNED(cmr_base) || + !PAGE_ALIGNED(cmr_size)); + } + + sysinfo_cmr->num_cmrs = i; +} + +static int get_tdx_sys_info_cmr(struct tdx_sys_info_cmr *sysinfo_cmr) +{ + int i, ret = 0; + +#define TD_SYSINFO_MAP_CMR_INFO(_field_id, _member) \ + TD_SYSINFO_MAP(_field_id, sysinfo_cmr, _member) + + TD_SYSINFO_MAP_CMR_INFO(NUM_CMRS, num_cmrs); + + if (ret) + return ret; + + for (i = 0; i < sysinfo_cmr->num_cmrs; i++) { + TD_SYSINFO_MAP_CMR_INFO(CMR_BASE(i), cmr_base[i]); + TD_SYSINFO_MAP_CMR_INFO(CMR_SIZE(i), cmr_size[i]); + } + + if (ret) + return ret; + + /* + * The TDX module may just report the maximum number of CMRs that + * TDX architecturally supports as the actual number of CMRs, + * despite the latter is smaller. In this case all the tail + * CMRs will be empty. Trim them away. + */ + trim_empty_tail_cmrs(sysinfo_cmr); + + return 0; +} + +static void print_sys_info_cmr(struct tdx_sys_info_cmr *sysinfo_cmr) +{ + int i; + + for (i = 0; i < sysinfo_cmr->num_cmrs; i++) { + u64 cmr_base = sysinfo_cmr->cmr_base[i]; + u64 cmr_size = sysinfo_cmr->cmr_size[i]; + + pr_info("CMR[%d]: [0x%llx, 0x%llx)\n", i, cmr_base, + cmr_base + cmr_size); + } +} + static void print_basic_sys_info(struct tdx_sys_info *sysinfo) { struct tdx_sys_info_features *features = &sysinfo->features; @@ -349,6 +415,8 @@ static void print_basic_sys_info(struct tdx_sys_info *sysinfo) version->major, version->minor, version->update, version->internal, version->build_num, version->build_date, features->tdx_features0); + + print_sys_info_cmr(&sysinfo->cmr); } static int get_tdx_sys_info_tdmr(struct tdx_sys_info_tdmr *sysinfo_tdmr) @@ -379,6 +447,10 @@ static int get_tdx_sys_info(struct tdx_sys_info *sysinfo) if (ret) return ret; + ret = get_tdx_sys_info_cmr(&sysinfo->cmr); + if (ret) + return ret; + return get_tdx_sys_info_tdmr(&sysinfo->tdmr); } @@ -803,29 +875,28 @@ static int tdmr_add_rsvd_area(struct tdmr_info *tdmr, int *p_idx, u64 addr, } /* - * Go through @tmb_list to find holes between memory areas. If any of + * Go through all CMRs in @sysinfo_cmr to find memory holes. If any of * those holes fall within @tdmr, set up a TDMR reserved area to cover * the hole. */ -static int tdmr_populate_rsvd_holes(struct list_head *tmb_list, +static int tdmr_populate_rsvd_holes(struct tdx_sys_info_cmr *sysinfo_cmr, struct tdmr_info *tdmr, int *rsvd_idx, u16 max_reserved_per_tdmr) { - struct tdx_memblock *tmb; u64 prev_end; - int ret; + int i, ret; /* * Start looking for reserved blocks at the * beginning of the TDMR. */ prev_end = tdmr->base; - list_for_each_entry(tmb, tmb_list, list) { + for (i = 0; i < sysinfo_cmr->num_cmrs; i++) { u64 start, end; - start = PFN_PHYS(tmb->start_pfn); - end = PFN_PHYS(tmb->end_pfn); + start = sysinfo_cmr->cmr_base[i]; + end = start + sysinfo_cmr->cmr_size[i]; /* Break if this region is after the TDMR */ if (start >= tdmr_end(tdmr)) @@ -926,16 +997,16 @@ static int rsvd_area_cmp_func(const void *a, const void *b) /* * Populate reserved areas for the given @tdmr, including memory holes - * (via @tmb_list) and PAMTs (via @tdmr_list). + * (via @sysinfo_cmr) and PAMTs (via @tdmr_list). */ static int tdmr_populate_rsvd_areas(struct tdmr_info *tdmr, - struct list_head *tmb_list, + struct tdx_sys_info_cmr *sysinfo_cmr, struct tdmr_info_list *tdmr_list, u16 max_reserved_per_tdmr) { int ret, rsvd_idx = 0; - ret = tdmr_populate_rsvd_holes(tmb_list, tdmr, &rsvd_idx, + ret = tdmr_populate_rsvd_holes(sysinfo_cmr, tdmr, &rsvd_idx, max_reserved_per_tdmr); if (ret) return ret; @@ -954,10 +1025,10 @@ static int tdmr_populate_rsvd_areas(struct tdmr_info *tdmr, /* * Populate reserved areas for all TDMRs in @tdmr_list, including memory - * holes (via @tmb_list) and PAMTs. + * holes (via @sysinfo_cmr) and PAMTs. */ static int tdmrs_populate_rsvd_areas_all(struct tdmr_info_list *tdmr_list, - struct list_head *tmb_list, + struct tdx_sys_info_cmr *sysinfo_cmr, u16 max_reserved_per_tdmr) { int i; @@ -966,7 +1037,7 @@ static int tdmrs_populate_rsvd_areas_all(struct tdmr_info_list *tdmr_list, int ret; ret = tdmr_populate_rsvd_areas(tdmr_entry(tdmr_list, i), - tmb_list, tdmr_list, max_reserved_per_tdmr); + sysinfo_cmr, tdmr_list, max_reserved_per_tdmr); if (ret) return ret; } @@ -981,7 +1052,8 @@ static int tdmrs_populate_rsvd_areas_all(struct tdmr_info_list *tdmr_list, */ static int construct_tdmrs(struct list_head *tmb_list, struct tdmr_info_list *tdmr_list, - struct tdx_sys_info_tdmr *sysinfo_tdmr) + struct tdx_sys_info_tdmr *sysinfo_tdmr, + struct tdx_sys_info_cmr *sysinfo_cmr) { int ret; @@ -994,7 +1066,7 @@ static int construct_tdmrs(struct list_head *tmb_list, if (ret) return ret; - ret = tdmrs_populate_rsvd_areas_all(tdmr_list, tmb_list, + ret = tdmrs_populate_rsvd_areas_all(tdmr_list, sysinfo_cmr, sysinfo_tdmr->max_reserved_per_tdmr); if (ret) tdmrs_free_pamt_all(tdmr_list); @@ -1185,7 +1257,8 @@ static int init_tdx_module(void) goto err_free_tdxmem; /* Cover all TDX-usable memory regions in TDMRs */ - ret = construct_tdmrs(&tdx_memlist, &tdx_tdmr_list, &sysinfo.tdmr); + ret = construct_tdmrs(&tdx_memlist, &tdx_tdmr_list, &sysinfo.tdmr, + &sysinfo.cmr); if (ret) goto err_free_tdmrs; diff --git a/arch/x86/virt/vmx/tdx/tdx.h b/arch/x86/virt/vmx/tdx/tdx.h index b422e8517e01..e7bed9e717c7 100644 --- a/arch/x86/virt/vmx/tdx/tdx.h +++ b/arch/x86/virt/vmx/tdx/tdx.h @@ -40,6 +40,10 @@ #define MD_FIELD_ID_UPDATE_VERSION 0x0800000100000005ULL #define MD_FIELD_ID_INTERNAL_VERSION 0x0800000100000006ULL +#define MD_FIELD_ID_NUM_CMRS 0x9000000100000000ULL +#define MD_FIELD_ID_CMR_BASE(_i) (0x9000000300000080ULL + (u16)_i) +#define MD_FIELD_ID_CMR_SIZE(_i) (0x9000000300000100ULL + (u16)_i) + #define MD_FIELD_ID_MAX_TDMRS 0x9100000100000008ULL #define MD_FIELD_ID_MAX_RESERVED_PER_TDMR 0x9100000100000009ULL #define MD_FIELD_ID_PAMT_4K_ENTRY_SIZE 0x9100000100000010ULL @@ -160,6 +164,14 @@ struct tdx_sys_info_version { u32 build_date; }; +/* Class "CMR Info" */ +#define TDX_MAX_CMRS 32 /* architectural */ +struct tdx_sys_info_cmr { + u16 num_cmrs; + u64 cmr_base[TDX_MAX_CMRS]; + u64 cmr_size[TDX_MAX_CMRS]; +}; + /* Class "TDMR info" */ struct tdx_sys_info_tdmr { u16 max_tdmrs; @@ -170,6 +182,7 @@ struct tdx_sys_info_tdmr { struct tdx_sys_info { struct tdx_sys_info_features features; struct tdx_sys_info_version version; + struct tdx_sys_info_cmr cmr; struct tdx_sys_info_tdmr tdmr; };
A TDX module initialization failure was reported on a Emerald Rapids platform: virt/tdx: initialization failed: TDMR [0x0, 0x80000000): reserved areas exhausted. virt/tdx: module initialization failed (-28) As part of initializing the TDX module, the kernel informs the TDX module of all "TDX-usable memory regions" using an array of TDX defined structure "TD Memory Region" (TDMR). Each TDMR must be in 1GB aligned and in 1GB granularity, and all "non-TDX-usable memory holes" within a given TDMR must be marked as "reserved areas". The TDX module reports a maximum number of reserved areas that can be supported per TDMR. Currently, the kernel finds those "non-TDX-usable memory holes" within a given TDMR by walking over a list of "TDX-usable memory regions", which essentially reflects the "usable" regions in the e820 table (w/o memory hotplug operations precisely, but this is not relevant here). As shown above, the root cause of this failure is when the kernel tries to construct a TDMR to cover address range [0x0, 0x80000000), there are too many memory holes within that range and the number of memory holes exceeds the maximum number of reserved areas. The E820 table of that platform (see [1] below) reflects this: the number of memory holes among e820 "usable" entries exceeds 16, which is the maximum number of reserved areas TDX module supports in practice. === Fix === There are two options to fix this: 1) reduce the number of memory holes when constructing a TDMR to save "reserved areas"; 2) reduce the TDMR's size to cover fewer memory regions, thus fewer memory holes. Option 1) is possible, and in fact is easier and preferable: TDX actually has a concept of "Convertible Memory Regions" (CMRs). TDX reports a list of CMRs that meet TDX's security requirements on memory. TDX requires all the "TDX-usable memory regions" that the kernel passes to the module via TDMRs, a.k.a, all the "non-reserved regions in TDMRs", must be convertible memory. In other words, if a memory hole is indeed CMR, then it's not mandatory for the kernel to add it to the reserved areas. By doing so, the number of consumed reserved areas can be reduced w/o having any functional impact. The kernel still allocates TDX memory from the page allocator. There's no harm if the kernel tells the TDX module some memory regions are "TDX-usable" but they will never be allocated by the kernel as TDX memory. Note this doesn't have any security impact either because the kernel is out of TDX's TCB anyway. This is feasible because in practice the CMRs just reflect the nature of whether the RAM can indeed be used by TDX, thus each CMR tends to be a large, uninterrupted range of memory, i.e., unlike the e820 table which contains numerous "ACPI *" entries in the first 2G range. Refer to [2] for CMRs reported on the problematic platform using off-tree TDX code. So for this particular module initialization failure, the memory holes that are within [0x0, 0x80000000) are mostly indeed CMR. By not adding them to the reserved areas, the number of consumed reserved areas for the TDMR [0x0, 0x80000000) can be dramatically reduced. Option 2) is also theoretically feasible, but it is not desired: It requires more complicated logic to handle splitting TDMR into smaller ones, which isn't trivial. There are limitations to splitting TDMR too, thus it may not always work: 1) The smallest TDMR is 1GB, and it cannot be split any further; 2) This also increases the total number of TDMRs, which also has a maximum value limited by the TDX module. So, fix this issue by using option 1): 1) reading out the CMRs from the TDX module global metadata, and 2) changing to find memory holes for a given TDMR based on CMRs, but not based on the list of "TDX-usable memory regions". Also dump the CMRs in dmesg. They are helpful when something goes wrong around "constructing the TDMRs and configuring the TDX module with them". Note there are no existing userspace tools that the user can get CMRs since they can only be read via SEAMCALL (no CPUID, MSR etc). [1] BIOS-E820 table of the problematic platform: BIOS-e820: [mem 0x0000000000000000-0x000000000009efff] usable BIOS-e820: [mem 0x000000000009f000-0x00000000000fffff] reserved BIOS-e820: [mem 0x0000000000100000-0x000000005d168fff] usable BIOS-e820: [mem 0x000000005d169000-0x000000005d22afff] ACPI data BIOS-e820: [mem 0x000000005d22b000-0x000000005d3cefff] usable BIOS-e820: [mem 0x000000005d3cf000-0x000000005d469fff] reserved BIOS-e820: [mem 0x000000005d46a000-0x000000005e5b2fff] usable BIOS-e820: [mem 0x000000005e5b3000-0x000000005e5c2fff] reserved BIOS-e820: [mem 0x000000005e5c3000-0x000000005e5d2fff] usable BIOS-e820: [mem 0x000000005e5d3000-0x000000005e5e4fff] reserved BIOS-e820: [mem 0x000000005e5e5000-0x000000005eb57fff] usable BIOS-e820: [mem 0x000000005eb58000-0x0000000061357fff] ACPI NVS BIOS-e820: [mem 0x0000000061358000-0x000000006172afff] usable BIOS-e820: [mem 0x000000006172b000-0x0000000061794fff] ACPI data BIOS-e820: [mem 0x0000000061795000-0x00000000617fefff] usable BIOS-e820: [mem 0x00000000617ff000-0x0000000061912fff] ACPI data BIOS-e820: [mem 0x0000000061913000-0x0000000061998fff] usable BIOS-e820: [mem 0x0000000061999000-0x00000000619dffff] ACPI data BIOS-e820: [mem 0x00000000619e0000-0x00000000619e1fff] usable BIOS-e820: [mem 0x00000000619e2000-0x00000000619e9fff] reserved BIOS-e820: [mem 0x00000000619ea000-0x0000000061a26fff] usable BIOS-e820: [mem 0x0000000061a27000-0x0000000061baefff] ACPI data BIOS-e820: [mem 0x0000000061baf000-0x00000000623c2fff] usable BIOS-e820: [mem 0x00000000623c3000-0x0000000062471fff] reserved BIOS-e820: [mem 0x0000000062472000-0x0000000062823fff] usable BIOS-e820: [mem 0x0000000062824000-0x0000000063a24fff] reserved BIOS-e820: [mem 0x0000000063a25000-0x0000000063d57fff] usable BIOS-e820: [mem 0x0000000063d58000-0x0000000064157fff] reserved BIOS-e820: [mem 0x0000000064158000-0x0000000064158fff] usable BIOS-e820: [mem 0x0000000064159000-0x0000000064194fff] reserved BIOS-e820: [mem 0x0000000064195000-0x000000006e9cefff] usable BIOS-e820: [mem 0x000000006e9cf000-0x000000006eccefff] reserved BIOS-e820: [mem 0x000000006eccf000-0x000000006f6fefff] ACPI NVS BIOS-e820: [mem 0x000000006f6ff000-0x000000006f7fefff] ACPI data BIOS-e820: [mem 0x000000006f7ff000-0x000000006f7fffff] usable BIOS-e820: [mem 0x000000006f800000-0x000000008fffffff] reserved ...... [2] Convertible Memory Regions of the problematic platform: virt/tdx: CMR: [0x100000, 0x6f800000) virt/tdx: CMR: [0x100000000, 0x107a000000) virt/tdx: CMR: [0x1080000000, 0x207c000000) virt/tdx: CMR: [0x2080000000, 0x307c000000) virt/tdx: CMR: [0x3080000000, 0x407c000000) Fixes: dde3b60d572c9 ("x86/virt/tdx: Designate reserved areas for all TDMRs") Signed-off-by: Kai Huang <kai.huang@intel.com> --- v2 -> v3: - Add the Fixes tag, although this patch depends on previous patches. - CMR_BASE0 -> CMR_BASE(_i), CMR_SIZE0 -> CMR_SIZE(_i) to silence the build-check error. v1 -> v2: - Change to walk over CMRs directly to find out memory holes, instead of walking over TDX memory blocks and explicitly check whether a hole is subregion of CMR. (Chao) - Mention any constant macro definitions in global metadata structures are TDX architectural. (Binbin) - Slightly improve the changelog. --- arch/x86/virt/vmx/tdx/tdx.c | 105 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++------ arch/x86/virt/vmx/tdx/tdx.h | 13 +++++ 2 files changed, 102 insertions(+), 16 deletions(-)