We currently have the SCTLR_EL2.A bit set, trapping unaligned accesses
at EL2, but we're not really prepared to deal with it. So far, this
has been unnoticed, until GCC 7 started emitting those (in particular
64bit writes on a 32bit boundary).

Since the rest of the kernel is pretty happy about that, let's follow
its example and set SCTLR_EL2.A to zero. Modern CPUs don't really
care.

Cc: [email protected]
Reported-by: Alexander Graf <[email protected]>
Signed-off-by: Marc Zyngier <[email protected]>
---
 arch/arm64/kvm/hyp-init.S | 5 +++--
 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)

diff --git a/arch/arm64/kvm/hyp-init.S b/arch/arm64/kvm/hyp-init.S
index 4072d408a4b4..3f9615582377 100644
--- a/arch/arm64/kvm/hyp-init.S
+++ b/arch/arm64/kvm/hyp-init.S
@@ -108,9 +108,10 @@ __do_hyp_init:
 
        /*
         * Preserve all the RES1 bits while setting the default flags,
-        * as well as the EE bit on BE.
+        * as well as the EE bit on BE. Drop the A flag since the compiler
+        * is allowed to generate unaligned accesses.
         */
-       ldr     x4, =(SCTLR_EL2_RES1 | SCTLR_ELx_FLAGS)
+       ldr     x4, =(SCTLR_EL2_RES1 | (SCTLR_ELx_FLAGS & ~SCTLR_ELx_A))
 CPU_BE(        orr     x4, x4, #SCTLR_ELx_EE)
        msr     sctlr_el2, x4
        isb
-- 
2.11.0

_______________________________________________
kvmarm mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.cs.columbia.edu/mailman/listinfo/kvmarm

Reply via email to