On 26/11/2025 4:55 pm, Andrew Cooper wrote:
> On 26/11/2025 3:07 pm, Jan Beulich wrote:
>> On 26.11.2025 14:22, Andrew Cooper wrote:
>>> @@ -1075,6 +966,112 @@ static void cf_check fam17_disable_c6(void *arg)
>>> wrmsrl(MSR_AMD_CSTATE_CFG, val & mask);
>>> }
>>>
>>> +static bool zenbleed_use_chickenbit(void)
>>> +{
>>> + unsigned int curr_rev;
>>> + uint8_t fixed_rev;
>>> +
>>> + /*
>>> + * If we're virtualised, we can't do family/model checks safely, and
>>> + * we likely wouldn't have access to DE_CFG even if we could see a
>>> + * microcode revision.
>>> + *
>>> + * A hypervisor may hide AVX as a stopgap mitigation. We're not in a
>>> + * position to care either way. An admin doesn't want to be disabling
>>> + * AVX as a mitigation on any build of Xen with this logic present.
>>> + */
>>> + if ( cpu_has_hypervisor || boot_cpu_data.family != 0x17 )
>>> + return false;
>>> +
>>> + curr_rev = this_cpu(cpu_sig).rev;
>>> + switch ( curr_rev >> 8 )
>>> + {
>>> + case 0x083010: fixed_rev = 0x7a; break;
>>> + case 0x086001: fixed_rev = 0x0b; break;
>>> + case 0x086081: fixed_rev = 0x05; break;
>>> + case 0x087010: fixed_rev = 0x32; break;
>>> + case 0x08a000: fixed_rev = 0x08; break;
>>> + default:
>>> + /*
>>> + * With the Fam17h check above, most parts getting here are Zen1.
>>> + * They're not affected. Assume Zen2 ones making it here are
>>> affected
>>> + * regardless of microcode version.
>>> + */
>>> + return is_zen2_uarch();
>>> + }
>>> +
>>> + return (uint8_t)curr_rev >= fixed_rev;
>>> +}
>>> +
>>> +void amd_init_de_cfg(const struct cpuinfo_x86 *c)
>>> +{
>>> + uint64_t val, new = 0;
>>> +
>>> + /* The MSR doesn't exist on Fam 0xf/0x11. */
>>> + if ( c->family != 0xf && c->family != 0x11 )
>>> + return;
>> Comment and code don't match. Did you mean
>>
>> if ( c->family == 0xf || c->family == 0x11 )
>> return;
>>
>> (along the lines of what you have in amd_init_lfence_dispatch())?
> Oh - that was a last minute refactor which I didn't do quite correctly.
> Yes, it should match amd_init_lfence_dispatch().
>
>>> + /*
>>> + * On Zen3 (Fam 0x19) and later CPUs, LFENCE is unconditionally
>>> dispatch
>>> + * serialising, and is enumerated in CPUID. Hypervisors may also
>>> + * enumerate it when the setting is in place and MSR_AMD64_DE_CFG isn't
>>> + * available.
>>> + */
>>> + if ( !test_bit(X86_FEATURE_LFENCE_DISPATCH, c->x86_capability) )
>>> + new |= AMD64_DE_CFG_LFENCE_SERIALISE;
>>> +
>>> + /*
>>> + * If vulnerable to Zenbleed and not mitigated in microcode, use the
>>> + * bigger hammer.
>>> + */
>>> + if ( zenbleed_use_chickenbit() )
>>> + new |= (1 << 9);
>>> +
>>> + if ( !new )
>>> + return;
>>> +
>>> + if ( rdmsr_safe(MSR_AMD64_DE_CFG, &val) ||
>>> + (val & new) == new )
>>> + return;
>>> +
>>> + /*
>>> + * DE_CFG is a Core-scoped MSR, and this write is racy. However, both
>>> + * threads calculate the new value from state which expected to be
>>> + * consistent across CPUs and unrelated to the old value, so the result
>>> + * should be consistent.
>>> + */
>>> + wrmsr_safe(MSR_AMD64_DE_CFG, val | new);
>> Either of the bits may be the cause of #GP. In that case we wouldn't set the
>> other bit, even if it may be possible to set it.
> This MSR does not #GP on real hardware.
>
> Also, both of these bits come from instructions AMD have provided,
> saying "set $X in case $Y", which we have honoured as part of the
> conditions for setting up new, which I consider to be a reasonable
> guarantee that no #GP will ensue.
>
> This wrmsr_safe() is covering the virt case, because older Xen and
> Byhive used to disallow writes to it, and OpenBSD would explode as a
> consequence. Xen's fix was 4175fd3ccd17.
>
> I toyed with the idea of having a tristate de_cfg_writeable, but that
> got very ugly very quickly
>
> The other option would be to ignore DE_CFG entirely under virt. That's
> what we do for BP_CFG already, and no hypervisor is going to really let
> us have access to it, and it would downgrade to non-safe variants.
In fact, ignoring the virt case for DE_CFG makes this generally nicer.
~Andrew