On Thu, Jan 14, 2021, Maxim Levitsky wrote:
> On Tue, 2021-01-12 at 15:00 -0500, Bandan Das wrote:
> > Sean Christopherson <sea...@google.com> writes:
> > ...
> > > > -       if ((emulation_type & EMULTYPE_VMWARE_GP) &&
> > > > -           !is_vmware_backdoor_opcode(ctxt)) {
> > > > -               kvm_queue_exception_e(vcpu, GP_VECTOR, 0);
> > > > -               return 1;
> > > > +       if (emulation_type & EMULTYPE_PARAVIRT_GP) {
> > > > +               vminstr = is_vm_instr_opcode(ctxt);
> > > > +               if (!vminstr && !is_vmware_backdoor_opcode(ctxt)) {
> > > > +                       kvm_queue_exception_e(vcpu, GP_VECTOR, 0);
> > > > +                       return 1;
> > > > +               }
> > > > +               if (vminstr)
> > > > +                       return vminstr;
> > > 
> > > I'm pretty sure this doesn't correctly handle a VM-instr in L2 that hits 
> > > a bad
> > > L0 GPA and that L1 wants to intercept.  The intercept bitmap isn't 
> > > checked until
> > > x86_emulate_insn(), and the vm*_interception() helpers expect nested 
> > > VM-Exits to
> > > be handled further up the stack.
> 
> Actually IMHO this exactly what we want. We want L0 to always intercept
> these #GPs, and hide them from the guest.
> 
> What we do need to do (and I prepared and attached a patch for that, is that
> if we run a guest, we want to inject corresponding vmexit (like
> SVM_EXIT_VMRUN) instead of emulating the instruction.

Yes, lack of forwarding to L1 as a nested exit is what I meant by "doesn't
correctly handle".

Reply via email to