i386/xen: consistent locking around Xen singleshot timers

Coverity points out (CID 1507534, 1507968) that we sometimes access
env->xen_singleshot_timer_ns under the protection of
env->xen_timers_lock and sometimes not.

This isn't always an issue. There are two modes for the timers; if the
kernel supports the EVTCHN_SEND capability then it handles all the timer
hypercalls and delivery internally, and all we use the field for is to
get/set the timer as part of the vCPU state via an ioctl(). If the
kernel doesn't have that support, then we do all the emulation within
qemu, and *those* are the code paths where we actually care about the
locking.

But it doesn't hurt to be a little bit more consistent and avoid having
to explain *why* it's OK.

Signed-off-by: David Woodhouse <dwmw@amazon.co.uk>
Reviewed-by: Paul Durrant <paul@xen.org>
Message-Id: <20230801175747.145906-3-dwmw2@infradead.org>
Signed-off-by: Philippe Mathieu-Daudé <philmd@linaro.org>
This commit is contained in:
David Woodhouse 2023-05-22 20:52:00 +02:00 committed by Philippe Mathieu-Daudé
parent cf885b1957
commit 19c417ec87

View file

@ -43,6 +43,7 @@
static void xen_vcpu_singleshot_timer_event(void *opaque);
static void xen_vcpu_periodic_timer_event(void *opaque);
static int vcpuop_stop_singleshot_timer(CPUState *cs);
#ifdef TARGET_X86_64
#define hypercall_compat32(longmode) (!(longmode))
@ -466,6 +467,7 @@ void kvm_xen_inject_vcpu_callback_vector(uint32_t vcpu_id, int type)
}
}
/* Must always be called with xen_timers_lock held */
static int kvm_xen_set_vcpu_timer(CPUState *cs)
{
X86CPU *cpu = X86_CPU(cs);
@ -483,6 +485,7 @@ static int kvm_xen_set_vcpu_timer(CPUState *cs)
static void do_set_vcpu_timer_virq(CPUState *cs, run_on_cpu_data data)
{
QEMU_LOCK_GUARD(&X86_CPU(cs)->env.xen_timers_lock);
kvm_xen_set_vcpu_timer(cs);
}
@ -545,7 +548,6 @@ static void do_vcpu_soft_reset(CPUState *cs, run_on_cpu_data data)
env->xen_vcpu_time_info_gpa = INVALID_GPA;
env->xen_vcpu_runstate_gpa = INVALID_GPA;
env->xen_vcpu_callback_vector = 0;
env->xen_singleshot_timer_ns = 0;
memset(env->xen_virq, 0, sizeof(env->xen_virq));
set_vcpu_info(cs, INVALID_GPA);
@ -555,8 +557,13 @@ static void do_vcpu_soft_reset(CPUState *cs, run_on_cpu_data data)
INVALID_GPA);
if (kvm_xen_has_cap(EVTCHN_SEND)) {
kvm_xen_set_vcpu_callback_vector(cs);
QEMU_LOCK_GUARD(&X86_CPU(cs)->env.xen_timers_lock);
env->xen_singleshot_timer_ns = 0;
kvm_xen_set_vcpu_timer(cs);
}
} else {
vcpuop_stop_singleshot_timer(cs);
};
}
@ -1059,6 +1066,10 @@ static int vcpuop_stop_periodic_timer(CPUState *target)
return 0;
}
/*
* Userspace handling of timer, for older kernels.
* Must always be called with xen_timers_lock held.
*/
static int do_set_singleshot_timer(CPUState *cs, uint64_t timeout_abs,
bool future, bool linux_wa)
{
@ -1086,12 +1097,8 @@ static int do_set_singleshot_timer(CPUState *cs, uint64_t timeout_abs,
timeout_abs = now + delta;
}
qemu_mutex_lock(&env->xen_timers_lock);
timer_mod_ns(env->xen_singleshot_timer, qemu_now + delta);
env->xen_singleshot_timer_ns = now + delta;
qemu_mutex_unlock(&env->xen_timers_lock);
return 0;
}
@ -1115,6 +1122,7 @@ static int vcpuop_set_singleshot_timer(CPUState *cs, uint64_t arg)
return -EFAULT;
}
QEMU_LOCK_GUARD(&X86_CPU(cs)->env.xen_timers_lock);
return do_set_singleshot_timer(cs, sst.timeout_abs_ns,
!!(sst.flags & VCPU_SSHOTTMR_future),
false);
@ -1141,6 +1149,7 @@ static bool kvm_xen_hcall_set_timer_op(struct kvm_xen_exit *exit, X86CPU *cpu,
if (unlikely(timeout == 0)) {
err = vcpuop_stop_singleshot_timer(CPU(cpu));
} else {
QEMU_LOCK_GUARD(&X86_CPU(cpu)->env.xen_timers_lock);
err = do_set_singleshot_timer(CPU(cpu), timeout, false, true);
}
exit->u.hcall.result = err;
@ -1826,6 +1835,7 @@ int kvm_put_xen_state(CPUState *cs)
* If the kernel has EVTCHN_SEND support then it handles timers too,
* so the timer will be restored by kvm_xen_set_vcpu_timer() below.
*/
QEMU_LOCK_GUARD(&env->xen_timers_lock);
if (env->xen_singleshot_timer_ns) {
ret = do_set_singleshot_timer(cs, env->xen_singleshot_timer_ns,
false, false);
@ -1844,10 +1854,8 @@ int kvm_put_xen_state(CPUState *cs)
}
if (env->xen_virq[VIRQ_TIMER]) {
ret = kvm_xen_set_vcpu_timer(cs);
if (ret < 0) {
return ret;
}
do_set_vcpu_timer_virq(cs,
RUN_ON_CPU_HOST_INT(env->xen_virq[VIRQ_TIMER]));
}
return 0;
}
@ -1896,6 +1904,15 @@ int kvm_get_xen_state(CPUState *cs)
if (ret < 0) {
return ret;
}
/*
* This locking is fairly pointless, and is here to appease Coverity.
* There is an unavoidable race condition if a different vCPU sets a
* timer for this vCPU after the value has been read out. But that's
* OK in practice because *all* the vCPUs need to be stopped before
* we set about migrating their state.
*/
QEMU_LOCK_GUARD(&X86_CPU(cs)->env.xen_timers_lock);
env->xen_singleshot_timer_ns = va.u.timer.expires_ns;
}