mirror of
https://github.com/xemu-project/xemu.git
synced 2025-02-27 07:56:11 +00:00

SECURITY IMPLICATION: without this patch, any guest with both assigned device and a vIOMMU might encounter stale IO page mappings even if guest has already unmapped the page, which may lead to guest memory corruption. The stale mappings will only be limited to the guest's own memory range, so it should not affect the host memory or other guests on the host. During IOVA page table walking, there is a special case when the PSI covers one whole PDE (Page Directory Entry, which contains 512 Page Table Entries) or more. In the past, we skip that entry and we don't notify the IOMMU notifiers. This is not correct. We should send UNMAP notification to registered UNMAP notifiers in this case. For UNMAP only notifiers, this might cause IOTLBs cached in the devices even if they were already invalid. For MAP/UNMAP notifiers like vfio-pci, this will cause stale page mappings. This special case doesn't trigger often, but it is very easy to be triggered by nested device assignments, since in that case we'll possibly map the whole L2 guest RAM region into the device's IOVA address space (several GBs at least), which is far bigger than normal kernel driver usages of the device (tens of MBs normally). Without this patch applied to L1 QEMU, nested device assignment to L2 guests will dump some errors like: qemu-system-x86_64: VFIO_MAP_DMA: -17 qemu-system-x86_64: vfio_dma_map(0x557305420c30, 0xad000, 0x1000, 0x7f89a920d000) = -17 (File exists) CC: QEMU Stable <qemu-stable@nongnu.org> Acked-by: Jason Wang <jasowang@redhat.com> [peterx: rewrite the commit message] Signed-off-by: Peter Xu <peterx@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Michael S. Tsirkin <mst@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Michael S. Tsirkin <mst@redhat.com>