Commit Graph

20 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Neel Natu
3d5444c864 Add emulation for legacy x86 task switching mechanism.
FreeBSD/i386 uses task switching to handle double fault exceptions and this
change enables that to work.

Reported by:	glebius
2014-07-16 21:26:26 +00:00
Neel Natu
ba6f5e23cc Allow vmx_getdesc() and vmx_setdesc() to be called for a vcpu that is in the
VCPU_RUNNING state. This will let the VMX exit handler inspect the vcpu's
segment descriptors without having to exit the critical section.
2014-05-22 17:22:37 +00:00
John Baldwin
a0efd3fb34 A first pass at adding support for injecting hardware exceptions for
emulated instructions.
- Add helper routines to inject interrupt information for a hardware
  exception from the VM exit callback routines.
- Use the new routines to inject GP and UD exceptions for invalid
  operations when emulating the xsetbv instruction.
- Don't directly manipulate the entry interrupt info when a user event
  is injected.  Instead, store the event info in the vmx state and
  only apply it during a VM entry if a hardware exception or NMI is
  not already pending.
- While here, use HANDLED/UNHANDLED instead of 1/0 in a couple of
  routines.

Reviewed by:	neel
2014-02-18 03:07:36 +00:00
Neel Natu
30b94db8c0 Support level triggered interrupts with VT-x virtual interrupt delivery.
The VMCS field EOI_bitmap[] is an array of 256 bits - one for each vector.
If a bit is set to '1' in the EOI_bitmap[] then the processor will trigger
an EOI-induced VM-exit when it is doing EOI virtualization.

The EOI-induced VM-exit results in the EOI being forwarded to the vioapic
so that level triggered interrupts can be properly handled.

Tested by:	Anish Gupta (akgupt3@gmail.com)
2014-01-25 20:58:05 +00:00
Neel Natu
e5a1d95089 If the guest exits due to a fault while it is executing IRET then restore
the state of "Virtual NMI blocking" in the guest's interruptibility-state
field before resuming the guest.
2014-01-18 02:20:10 +00:00
Neel Natu
160471d264 If a VM-exit happens during an NMI injection then clear the "NMI Blocking" bit
in the Guest Interruptibility-state VMCS field.

If we fail to do this then a subsequent VM-entry will fail because it is an
error to inject an NMI into the guest while "NMI Blocking" is turned on. This
is described in "Checks on Guest Non-Register State" in the Intel SDM.

Submitted by:	David Reed (david.reed@tidalscale.com)
2014-01-17 04:21:39 +00:00
Neel Natu
176666c2c9 Enable "Posted Interrupt Processing" if supported by the CPU. This lets us
inject interrupts into the guest without causing a VM-exit.

This feature can be disabled by setting the tunable "hw.vmm.vmx.use_apic_pir"
to "0".

The following sysctls provide information about this feature:
- hw.vmm.vmx.posted_interrupts (0 if disabled, 1 if enabled)
- hw.vmm.vmx.posted_interrupt_vector (vector number used for vcpu notification)

Tested on a Intel Xeon E5-2620v2 courtesy of Allan Jude at ScaleEngine.
2014-01-11 04:22:00 +00:00
Neel Natu
f7d4742540 Enable the "Acknowledge Interrupt on VM exit" VM-exit control.
This control is needed to enable "Posted Interrupts" and is present in all
the Intel VT-x implementations supported by bhyve so enable it as the default.

With this VM-exit control enabled the processor will acknowledge the APIC and
store the vector number in the "VM-Exit Interruption Information" field. We
now call the interrupt handler "by hand" through the IDT entry associated
with the vector.
2014-01-11 03:14:05 +00:00
Neel Natu
88c4b8d145 Use the 'Virtual Interrupt Delivery' feature of Intel VT-x if supported by
hardware. It is possible to turn this feature off and fall back to software
emulation of the APIC by setting the tunable hw.vmm.vmx.use_apic_vid to 0.

We now start handling two new types of VM-exits:

APIC-access: This is a fault-like VM-exit and is triggered when the APIC
register access is not accelerated (e.g. apic timer CCR). In response to
this we do emulate the instruction that triggered the APIC-access exit.

APIC-write: This is a trap-like VM-exit which does not require any instruction
emulation but it does require the hypervisor to emulate the access to the
specified register (e.g. icrlo register).

Introduce 'vlapic_ops' which are function pointers to vector the various
vlapic operations into processor-dependent code. The 'Virtual Interrupt
Delivery' feature installs 'ops' for setting the IRR bits in the virtual
APIC page and to return whether any interrupts are pending for this vcpu.

Tested on an "Intel Xeon E5-2620 v2" courtesy of Allan Jude at ScaleEngine.
2014-01-07 21:04:49 +00:00
Neel Natu
c847a5062c Split the VMCS setup between 'vmcs_init()' that does initialization and
'vmx_vminit()' that does customization.

This makes it easier to turn on optional features (e.g. APICv) without
having to keep adding new parameters to 'vmcs_set_defaults()'.

Reviewed by:	grehan@
2014-01-06 23:16:39 +00:00
Neel Natu
3de8386283 Use vmcs_read() and vmcs_write() in preference to vmread() and vmwrite()
respectively. The vmcs_xxx() functions provide inline error checking of
all accesses to the VMCS.
2013-12-18 06:24:21 +00:00
Eitan Adler
7a22215c53 Fix undefined behavior: (1 << 31) is not defined as 1 is an int and this
shifts into the sign bit.  Instead use (1U << 31) which gets the
expected result.

This fix is not ideal as it assumes a 32 bit int, but does fix the issue
for most cases.

A similar change was made in OpenBSD.

Discussed with:	-arch, rdivacky
Reviewed by:	cperciva
2013-11-30 22:17:27 +00:00
Neel Natu
318224bbe6 Merge projects/bhyve_npt_pmap into head.
Make the amd64/pmap code aware of nested page table mappings used by bhyve
guests. This allows bhyve to associate each guest with its own vmspace and
deal with nested page faults in the context of that vmspace. This also
enables features like accessed/dirty bit tracking, swapping to disk and
transparent superpage promotions of guest memory.

Guest vmspace:
Each bhyve guest has a unique vmspace to represent the physical memory
allocated to the guest. Each memory segment allocated by the guest is
mapped into the guest's address space via the 'vmspace->vm_map' and is
backed by an object of type OBJT_DEFAULT.

pmap types:
The amd64/pmap now understands two types of pmaps: PT_X86 and PT_EPT.

The PT_X86 pmap type is used by the vmspace associated with the host kernel
as well as user processes executing on the host. The PT_EPT pmap is used by
the vmspace associated with a bhyve guest.

Page Table Entries:
The EPT page table entries as mostly similar in functionality to regular
page table entries although there are some differences in terms of what
bits are used to express that functionality. For e.g. the dirty bit is
represented by bit 9 in the nested PTE as opposed to bit 6 in the regular
x86 PTE. Therefore the bitmask representing the dirty bit is now computed
at runtime based on the type of the pmap. Thus PG_M that was previously a
macro now becomes a local variable that is initialized at runtime using
'pmap_modified_bit(pmap)'.

An additional wrinkle associated with EPT mappings is that older Intel
processors don't have hardware support for tracking accessed/dirty bits in
the PTE. This means that the amd64/pmap code needs to emulate these bits to
provide proper accounting to the VM subsystem. This is achieved by using
the following mapping for EPT entries that need emulation of A/D bits:
               Bit Position           Interpreted By
PG_V               52                 software (accessed bit emulation handler)
PG_RW              53                 software (dirty bit emulation handler)
PG_A               0                  hardware (aka EPT_PG_RD)
PG_M               1                  hardware (aka EPT_PG_WR)

The idea to use the mapping listed above for A/D bit emulation came from
Alan Cox (alc@).

The final difference with respect to x86 PTEs is that some EPT implementations
do not support superpage mappings. This is recorded in the 'pm_flags' field
of the pmap.

TLB invalidation:
The amd64/pmap code has a number of ways to do invalidation of mappings
that may be cached in the TLB: single page, multiple pages in a range or the
entire TLB. All of these funnel into a single EPT invalidation routine called
'pmap_invalidate_ept()'. This routine bumps up the EPT generation number and
sends an IPI to the host cpus that are executing the guest's vcpus. On a
subsequent entry into the guest it will detect that the EPT has changed and
invalidate the mappings from the TLB.

Guest memory access:
Since the guest memory is no longer wired we need to hold the host physical
page that backs the guest physical page before we can access it. The helper
functions 'vm_gpa_hold()/vm_gpa_release()' are available for this purpose.

PCI passthru:
Guest's with PCI passthru devices will wire the entire guest physical address
space. The MMIO BAR associated with the passthru device is backed by a
vm_object of type OBJT_SG. An IOMMU domain is created only for guest's that
have one or more PCI passthru devices attached to them.

Limitations:
There isn't a way to map a guest physical page without execute permissions.
This is because the amd64/pmap code interprets the guest physical mappings as
user mappings since they are numerically below VM_MAXUSER_ADDRESS. Since PG_U
shares the same bit position as EPT_PG_EXECUTE all guest mappings become
automatically executable.

Thanks to Alan Cox and Konstantin Belousov for their rigorous code reviews
as well as their support and encouragement.

Thanks for John Baldwin for reviewing the use of OBJT_SG as the backing
object for pci passthru mmio regions.

Special thanks to Peter Holm for testing the patch on short notice.

Approved by:	re
Discussed with:	grehan
Reviewed by:	alc, kib
Tested by:	pho
2013-10-05 21:22:35 +00:00
Peter Grehan
d3c11f40a5 Add RIP-relative addressing to the instruction decoder.
Rework the guest register fetch code to allow the RIP to
be extracted from the VMCS while the kernel decoder is
functioning.

Hit by the OpenBSD local-apic code.

Submitted by:	neel
Reviewed by:	grehan
Obtained from:	NetApp
2013-04-25 04:56:43 +00:00
Neel Natu
ba9b7bf73a Revamp the x86 instruction emulation in bhyve.
On a nested page table fault the hypervisor will:
- fetch the instruction using the guest %rip and %cr3
- decode the instruction in 'struct vie'
- emulate the instruction in host kernel context for local apic accesses
- any other type of mmio access is punted up to user-space (e.g. ioapic)

The decoded instruction is passed as collateral to the user-space process
that is handling the PAGING exit.

The emulation code is fleshed out to include more addressing modes (e.g. SIB)
and more types of operands (e.g. imm8). The source code is unified into a
single file (vmm_instruction_emul.c) that is compiled into vmm.ko as well
as /usr/sbin/bhyve.

Reviewed by:	grehan
Obtained from:	NetApp
2012-11-28 00:02:17 +00:00
Neel Natu
a2da7af6bc Add support for trapping MMIO writes to local apic registers and emulating them.
The default behavior is still to present the local apic to the guest in the
x2apic mode.
2012-09-25 22:31:35 +00:00
Peter Grehan
cd942e0f25 MSI-x interrupt support for PCI pass-thru devices.
Includes instruction emulation for memory r/w access. This
opens the door for io-apic, local apic, hpet timer, and
legacy device emulation.

Submitted by:	ryan dot berryhill at sandvine dot com
Reviewed by:	grehan
Obtained from:	Sandvine
2012-04-28 16:28:00 +00:00
John Baldwin
b3996dd47c Add a 'show vmcs' DDB command to dump state about the current CPU's
current VMCS.
2011-06-02 13:49:19 +00:00
Neel Natu
3caf3beb5c Avoid unnecessary sign extension when promoted to a 64-bit integer.
This was benign because the interruption info field is a 32-bit quantity and
the hardware guarantees that the upper 32-bits are all zeros. But it did make
reading the objdump output very confusing.
2011-05-20 02:08:05 +00:00
Peter Grehan
366f60834f Import of bhyve hypervisor and utilities, part 1.
vmm.ko - kernel module for VT-x, VT-d and hypervisor control
  bhyve  - user-space sequencer and i/o emulation
  vmmctl - dump of hypervisor register state
  libvmm - front-end to vmm.ko chardev interface

bhyve was designed and implemented by Neel Natu.

Thanks to the following folk from NetApp who helped to make this available:
	Joe CaraDonna
	Peter Snyder
	Jeff Heller
	Sandeep Mann
	Steve Miller
	Brian Pawlowski
2011-05-13 04:54:01 +00:00