[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH v3 2/2] Xen: Use the ioreq-server API when available
Il 15/10/2014 19:30, Peter Maydell ha scritto: > On 15 October 2014 11:16, Paul Durrant <paul.durrant@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> The ioreq-server API added to Xen 4.5 offers better security than >> the existing Xen/QEMU interface because the shared pages that are >> used to pass emulation request/results back and forth are removed >> from the guest's memory space before any requests are serviced. >> This prevents the guest from mapping these pages (they are in a >> well known location) and attempting to attack QEMU by synthesizing >> its own request structures. Hence, this patch modifies configure >> to detect whether the API is available, and adds the necessary >> code to use the API if it is. > > This commit message doesn't mention it, but presumably this is > all x86-specific given it's in a file which is only used for > x86 Xen? > >> +static void xen_hvm_pre_save(void *opaque) >> +{ >> + XenIOState *state = opaque; >> + >> + /* Stop servicing emulation requests */ >> + xen_set_ioreq_server_state(xen_xc, xen_domid, state->ioservid, 0); >> + xen_destroy_ioreq_server(xen_xc, xen_domid, state->ioservid); >> +} >> + >> +static const VMStateDescription vmstate_xen_hvm = { >> + .name = "xen-hvm", >> + .version_id = 4, >> + .minimum_version_id = 4, > > This is new in upstream so why's it starting at version 4? > >> + .pre_save = xen_hvm_pre_save, >> + .fields = (VMStateField[]) { >> + VMSTATE_END_OF_LIST() >> + }, > > A vmstate which doesn't actually save any state? This seems > rather suspicious... > >> @@ -1060,12 +1185,19 @@ int xen_hvm_init(ram_addr_t *below_4g_mem_size, >> ram_addr_t *above_4g_mem_size, >> xen_ram_init(below_4g_mem_size, above_4g_mem_size, ram_size, >> ram_memory); >> >> qemu_add_vm_change_state_handler(xen_hvm_change_state_handler, state); >> + vmstate_register(NULL, 0, &vmstate_xen_hvm, state); > > Is the new use of vmstate_register() really necessary? > Usually the state you're saving corresponds to some QOM > device whose vmsd field you can use instead. In this case, it seems like a job for a vmstate change handler. Paolo _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xen.org/xen-devel
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