diff mbox series

Revert "EDAC/mce_amd: Do not load edac_mce_amd module on guests"

Message ID ZPqQEHXgmak1LMNh@mattapan.m5p.com (mailing list archive)
State New, archived
Headers show
Series Revert "EDAC/mce_amd: Do not load edac_mce_amd module on guests" | expand

Commit Message

Elliott Mitchell Sept. 8, 2023, 3:08 a.m. UTC
This reverts commit 767f4b620edadac579c9b8b6660761d4285fa6f9.

There are at least 3 valid reasons why a VM may see MCE events/registers.

First, the hypervisor may have a bug.  Ideally this should be dealt with
by fixing the hypervisor.  Failing that, the hypervisor and versions
effected need to be identified so only they are flagged as buggy.

Second, the Linux kernel may be handling adminstrative duties/hardware
for a hypervisor.  In this case, the events need to be processed and
potentially passed back through the hypervisor.

Third, the hypervisor may do full virtualization of MCE events.  In such
case, they should be handled normally.

Any of these blanket disabling the functionality is bad.  The original
patch was wrong.
---
 drivers/edac/mce_amd.c | 3 ---
 1 file changed, 3 deletions(-)

Comments

Borislav Petkov Sept. 8, 2023, 3:59 a.m. UTC | #1
On Thu, Sep 07, 2023 at 08:08:00PM -0700, Elliott Mitchell wrote:
> This reverts commit 767f4b620edadac579c9b8b6660761d4285fa6f9.
> 
> There are at least 3 valid reasons why a VM may see MCE events/registers.

Hmm, so they all read like a bunch of handwaving to me, with those
probable hypothetical "may" formulations.

How about we cut to the chase and you explain what exactly is the
concrete issue you're encountering and trying to solve?

Thx.
Yazen Ghannam Sept. 13, 2023, 2:36 p.m. UTC | #2
On 9/7/23 11:59 PM, Borislav Petkov wrote:
> On Thu, Sep 07, 2023 at 08:08:00PM -0700, Elliott Mitchell wrote:
>> This reverts commit 767f4b620edadac579c9b8b6660761d4285fa6f9.
>>
>> There are at least 3 valid reasons why a VM may see MCE events/registers.
> 
> Hmm, so they all read like a bunch of handwaving to me, with those
> probable hypothetical "may" formulations.
> 
> How about we cut to the chase and you explain what exactly is the
> concrete issue you're encountering and trying to solve?

Also, please note that the EDAC modules don't handle MCE events
directly. They act on information passed from the MCE subsystem.

Furthermore, there are other EDAC modules that have the same !hypervisor
check, so why change only this one?

Thanks,
Yazen
Luck, Tony Sept. 13, 2023, 3:50 p.m. UTC | #3
> Also, please note that the EDAC modules don't handle MCE events
> directly. They act on information passed from the MCE subsystem.
>
> Furthermore, there are other EDAC modules that have the same !hypervisor
> check, so why change only this one?

The older Intel EDAC drivers translated system physical addresses to DIMM
addresses by digging around in the CONFIG and MMIO space of the memory
controller devices. It would seem unwise for a VMM to give access to those
addresses to a guest (in general ... perhaps OK for a Xen style "DOM0" guest that is
handling many tasks for the VMM?).

What system resources do AMD EDAC drivers need access to? Could they
work inside a guest?

-Tony
Yazen Ghannam Sept. 13, 2023, 4:21 p.m. UTC | #4
On 9/13/23 11:50 AM, Luck, Tony wrote:
>> Also, please note that the EDAC modules don't handle MCE events
>> directly. They act on information passed from the MCE subsystem.
>>
>> Furthermore, there are other EDAC modules that have the same !hypervisor
>> check, so why change only this one?
> 
> The older Intel EDAC drivers translated system physical addresses to DIMM
> addresses by digging around in the CONFIG and MMIO space of the memory
> controller devices. It would seem unwise for a VMM to give access to those
> addresses to a guest (in general ... perhaps OK for a Xen style "DOM0" guest that is
> handling many tasks for the VMM?).
> 
> What system resources do AMD EDAC drivers need access to? Could they
> work inside a guest?
>

The MCE decoder may access some newer MCA registers, or request info
from the MCE subsystem. But this is for informational error decoding. It
won't support any actions that a guest could take.

The AMD64 EDAC module reads system-specific memory controller registers
through non-architectural interfaces. So also unwise or not useful for a
guest to access.

Thanks,
Yazen
Elliott Mitchell Sept. 14, 2023, 5:02 p.m. UTC | #5
On Fri, Sep 08, 2023 at 05:59:11AM +0200, Borislav Petkov wrote:
> On Thu, Sep 07, 2023 at 08:08:00PM -0700, Elliott Mitchell wrote:
> > This reverts commit 767f4b620edadac579c9b8b6660761d4285fa6f9.
> > 
> > There are at least 3 valid reasons why a VM may see MCE events/registers.
> 
> Hmm, so they all read like a bunch of handwaving to me, with those
> probable hypothetical "may" formulations.

Indeed.  At what point is the lack of information and response long
enough to simply commit a revert due to those lacks?

Even with the commit message having been rewritten and the link to:
https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20210628172740.245689-1-Smita.KoralahalliChannabasappa@amd.com
added, this still reads as roughly:

"A hypothetical bug on a hypothetivisor"

I rather suspect a genuine issue was observed, but with absolutely no
detail this is useless.  I can make some guesses, but those guesses
relation to reality is dubious.


On Wed, Sep 13, 2023 at 03:50:12PM +0000, Luck, Tony wrote:
> > Also, please note that the EDAC modules don't handle MCE events
> > directly. They act on information passed from the MCE subsystem.
> >
> > Furthermore, there are other EDAC modules that have the same !hypervisor
> > check, so why change only this one?
> 
> The older Intel EDAC drivers translated system physical addresses to DIMM
> addresses by digging around in the CONFIG and MMIO space of the memory
> controller devices. It would seem unwise for a VMM to give access to those
> addresses to a guest (in general ... perhaps OK for a Xen style "DOM0" guest that is
> handling many tasks for the VMM?).

Which seems oddly similar to:
"the Linux kernel may be handling adminstrative duties/hardware
for a hypervisor.  In this case, the events need to be processed and
potentially passed back through the hypervisor."


On Wed, Sep 13, 2023 at 12:21:50PM -0400, Yazen Ghannam wrote:
> The MCE decoder may access some newer MCA registers, or request info
> from the MCE subsystem. But this is for informational error decoding. It
> won't support any actions that a guest could take.
> 
> The AMD64 EDAC module reads system-specific memory controller registers
> through non-architectural interfaces. So also unwise or not useful for a
> guest to access.

This could be emulated.  With it not being officially specified the
emulation may not be too accurate, but it is possible.  Admittedly VMware
may have abandoned this level of perfect emulation accuracy, but one
could do it.  Which would be "full virtualization of MCE events."


On Wed, Sep 13, 2023 at 10:36:50AM -0400, Yazen Ghannam wrote:
> Furthermore, there are other EDAC modules that have the same !hypervisor
> check, so why change only this one?

Indeed.  Those will also need similar treatment, but that wouldn't be a
revert of 767f4b620eda.  I found 767f4b620eda in the process of looking
for the correct hook point.



There are at least two, and possibly more, points of view with regards
to MCE and virtualization.  I keep noticing most implementers are
strictly thinking of perfect, full virtualization of hardware, and
missing what is actually desired.

Full virtualization is where you are renting an actual physical slice of
actual hardware, proper virtualization of CEs and UEs is desireable.

In reality most clients merely want to rent the processing power the
hardware provides and not deal with actually owning the hardware.  To
them, CEs are an annoyance since they clutter logs and they're not
something they're in a position to deal with.  Instead the owner of the
hardware wants the CEs so they can monitor hardware health.

What you want depends on your SLAs, but the most prominent authors keep
missing that many clients (VM owners) don't actually want to deal with
CEs.  A SLA could also state a single UE means discarding current VM
state and rolling back to the last known good checkpoint.
Borislav Petkov Sept. 15, 2023, 11:56 a.m. UTC | #6
On Thu, Sep 14, 2023 at 10:02:05AM -0700, Elliott Mitchell wrote:
> Indeed.  At what point is the lack of information and response long
> enough to simply commit a revert due to those lacks?

At no point.

> Even with the commit message having been rewritten and the link to:
> https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20210628172740.245689-1-Smita.KoralahalliChannabasappa@amd.com
> added, this still reads as roughly:
> 
> "A hypothetical bug on a hypothetivisor"

If "Hypervisors likely do not expose the SMCA feature to the guest"
doesn't explain to you what the problem is this commit is fixing, then
I can't help you.
Elliott Mitchell Sept. 21, 2023, 9:18 p.m. UTC | #7
On Fri, Sep 15, 2023 at 01:56:31PM +0200, Borislav Petkov wrote:
> On Thu, Sep 14, 2023 at 10:02:05AM -0700, Elliott Mitchell wrote:
> > Indeed.  At what point is the lack of information and response long
> > enough to simply commit a revert due to those lacks?
> 
> At no point.
> 
> > Even with the commit message having been rewritten and the link to:
> > https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20210628172740.245689-1-Smita.KoralahalliChannabasappa@amd.com
> > added, this still reads as roughly:
> > 
> > "A hypothetical bug on a hypothetivisor"
> 
> If "Hypervisors likely do not expose the SMCA feature to the guest"
> doesn't explain to you what the problem is this commit is fixing, then
> I can't help you.

Problem is you were objecting to 'probable hypothetical "may"
formulations' in what I wrote, yet the original patch message overtly
uses that word.

In order for the first patch to be correct, it is insufficient for the
condition to be unlikely.  Ideally it should be mathematically proven
impossible.

As such I was writing about known counter-examples from the real world.
Mainly at least one hypervisor (Xen) does tend to allow a particular VM
to access sensitive system registers.  Also it is entirely possible some
hypervisor could proxy access to the registers and thus properly simulate
the events.

Not only that, but in fact this very strategy was already actively
deployed:
https://bugs.debian.org/810964

I'm less than 100% certain this successfully retrieves EDAC events on Xen
right now, so I had been taking a look at the situation only to find
767f4b620eda.

Perhaps everyone should consult with large-scale system administrators
when doing things which effect them?
diff mbox series

Patch

diff --git a/drivers/edac/mce_amd.c b/drivers/edac/mce_amd.c
index 9215c06783df..1b7fccfbb654 100644
--- a/drivers/edac/mce_amd.c
+++ b/drivers/edac/mce_amd.c
@@ -1361,9 +1361,6 @@  static int __init mce_amd_init(void)
 	    c->x86_vendor != X86_VENDOR_HYGON)
 		return -ENODEV;
 
-	if (cpu_feature_enabled(X86_FEATURE_HYPERVISOR))
-		return -ENODEV;
-
 	if (boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_SMCA)) {
 		xec_mask = 0x3f;
 		goto out;