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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH] x86: correct CPUID output for out of bounds input
On 24/08/16 16:31, Jan Beulich wrote:
> Another place where we should try to behave like real hardware; see
> the code comments.
>
> Signed-off-by: Jan Beulich <jbeulich@xxxxxxxx>
>
> --- a/xen/arch/x86/hvm/hvm.c
> +++ b/xen/arch/x86/hvm/hvm.c
> @@ -3358,6 +3358,31 @@ void hvm_cpuid(unsigned int input, unsig
> if ( !edx )
> edx = &dummy;
>
> + if ( input & 0xffff )
> + {
> + /*
> + * Requests beyond the highest supported leaf within a group return
> + * zero on AMD and the highest basic leaf output on others.
> + */
> + unsigned int lvl;
> +
> + hvm_cpuid(input & 0xffff0000, &lvl, NULL, NULL, NULL);
> + if ( ((lvl ^ input) >> 16) || input > lvl )
This logic isn't correct. It doesn't cope in the Intel case when lvl
aliases the upper 16 bits of input, despite input being an unknown group.
When I considered the problem before, the only functioning logic I came
up with was to know that for Intel, input = 0x8000xxxx is the only
special case which doesn't collapse into the highest basic leaf.
> + {
> + if ( d->arch.x86_vendor == X86_VENDOR_AMD )
> + {
> + *eax = 0;
> + *ebx = 0;
> + *ecx = 0;
> + *edx = 0;
> + return;
> + }
> + if ( input >> 16 )
> + hvm_cpuid(0, &lvl, NULL, NULL, NULL);
Is this really the right way round? The AMD method of "reserved always
as zero" is the more sane default to take.
I have looked at the Transmeta and Cyrix CPUID docs, and they are
non-specific as to what reserved means.
~Andrew
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