x86/sev-es: Use __put_user()/__get_user() for data accesses
The put_user() and get_user() functions do checks on the address which is passed to them. They check whether the address is actually a user-space address and whether its fine to access it. They also call might_fault() to indicate that they could fault and possibly sleep. All of these checks are neither wanted nor needed in the #VC exception handler, which can be invoked from almost any context and also for MMIO instructions from kernel space on kernel memory. All the #VC handler wants to know is whether a fault happened when the access was tried. This is provided by __put_user()/__get_user(), which just do the access no matter what. Also add comments explaining why __get_user() and __put_user() are the best choice here and why it is safe to use them in this context. Also explain why copy_to/from_user can't be used. In addition, also revert commit7024f60d65
("x86/sev-es: Handle string port IO to kernel memory properly") because using __get_user()/__put_user() fixes the same problem while the above commit introduced several problems: 1) It uses access_ok() which is only allowed in task context. 2) It uses memcpy() which has no fault handling at all and is thus unsafe to use here. [ bp: Fix up commit ID of the reverted commit above. ] Fixes:f980f9c31a
("x86/sev-es: Compile early handler code into kernel image") Signed-off-by: Joerg Roedel <jroedel@suse.de> Signed-off-by: Borislav Petkov <bp@suse.de> Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org # v5.10+ Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20210519135251.30093-4-joro@8bytes.org
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@ -315,31 +315,44 @@ static enum es_result vc_write_mem(struct es_em_ctxt *ctxt,
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u16 d2;
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u8 d1;
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/* If instruction ran in kernel mode and the I/O buffer is in kernel space */
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if (!user_mode(ctxt->regs) && !access_ok(target, size)) {
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memcpy(dst, buf, size);
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return ES_OK;
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}
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/*
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* This function uses __put_user() independent of whether kernel or user
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* memory is accessed. This works fine because __put_user() does no
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* sanity checks of the pointer being accessed. All that it does is
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* to report when the access failed.
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*
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* Also, this function runs in atomic context, so __put_user() is not
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* allowed to sleep. The page-fault handler detects that it is running
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* in atomic context and will not try to take mmap_sem and handle the
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* fault, so additional pagefault_enable()/disable() calls are not
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* needed.
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*
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* The access can't be done via copy_to_user() here because
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* vc_write_mem() must not use string instructions to access unsafe
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* memory. The reason is that MOVS is emulated by the #VC handler by
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* splitting the move up into a read and a write and taking a nested #VC
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* exception on whatever of them is the MMIO access. Using string
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* instructions here would cause infinite nesting.
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*/
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switch (size) {
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case 1:
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memcpy(&d1, buf, 1);
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if (put_user(d1, target))
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if (__put_user(d1, target))
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goto fault;
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break;
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case 2:
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memcpy(&d2, buf, 2);
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if (put_user(d2, target))
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if (__put_user(d2, target))
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goto fault;
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break;
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case 4:
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memcpy(&d4, buf, 4);
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if (put_user(d4, target))
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if (__put_user(d4, target))
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goto fault;
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break;
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case 8:
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memcpy(&d8, buf, 8);
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if (put_user(d8, target))
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if (__put_user(d8, target))
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goto fault;
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break;
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default:
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@ -370,30 +383,43 @@ static enum es_result vc_read_mem(struct es_em_ctxt *ctxt,
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u16 d2;
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u8 d1;
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/* If instruction ran in kernel mode and the I/O buffer is in kernel space */
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if (!user_mode(ctxt->regs) && !access_ok(s, size)) {
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memcpy(buf, src, size);
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return ES_OK;
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}
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/*
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* This function uses __get_user() independent of whether kernel or user
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* memory is accessed. This works fine because __get_user() does no
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* sanity checks of the pointer being accessed. All that it does is
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* to report when the access failed.
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*
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* Also, this function runs in atomic context, so __get_user() is not
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* allowed to sleep. The page-fault handler detects that it is running
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* in atomic context and will not try to take mmap_sem and handle the
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* fault, so additional pagefault_enable()/disable() calls are not
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* needed.
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*
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* The access can't be done via copy_from_user() here because
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* vc_read_mem() must not use string instructions to access unsafe
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* memory. The reason is that MOVS is emulated by the #VC handler by
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* splitting the move up into a read and a write and taking a nested #VC
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* exception on whatever of them is the MMIO access. Using string
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* instructions here would cause infinite nesting.
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*/
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switch (size) {
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case 1:
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if (get_user(d1, s))
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if (__get_user(d1, s))
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goto fault;
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memcpy(buf, &d1, 1);
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break;
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case 2:
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if (get_user(d2, s))
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if (__get_user(d2, s))
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goto fault;
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memcpy(buf, &d2, 2);
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break;
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case 4:
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if (get_user(d4, s))
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if (__get_user(d4, s))
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goto fault;
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memcpy(buf, &d4, 4);
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break;
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case 8:
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if (get_user(d8, s))
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if (__get_user(d8, s))
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goto fault;
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memcpy(buf, &d8, 8);
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break;
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