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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH 7/7] x86emul: support SYSRET
On 24/03/2020 16:29, Jan Beulich wrote:
> This is to augment SYSCALL, which has been supported for quite some
> time.
>
> Signed-off-by: Jan Beulich <jbeulich@xxxxxxxx>
I've compared this to the in-progress version I have in my XSA-204
follow-on series. I'm afraid the behaviour has far more vendor specific
quirks than this.
>
> --- a/xen/arch/x86/x86_emulate/x86_emulate.c
> +++ b/xen/arch/x86/x86_emulate/x86_emulate.c
> @@ -5975,6 +5975,60 @@ x86_emulate(
> goto done;
> break;
>
> + case X86EMUL_OPC(0x0f, 0x07): /* sysret */
> + vcpu_must_have(syscall);
> + /* Inject #UD if syscall/sysret are disabled. */
> + fail_if(!ops->read_msr);
> + if ( (rc = ops->read_msr(MSR_EFER, &msr_val, ctxt)) != X86EMUL_OKAY )
> + goto done;
> + generate_exception_if((msr_val & EFER_SCE) == 0, EXC_UD);
(as with the SYSCALL side), no need for the vcpu_must_have(syscall) as
well as this check.
> + generate_exception_if(!amd_like(ctxt) && !mode_64bit(), EXC_UD);
> + generate_exception_if(!mode_ring0(), EXC_GP, 0);
> + generate_exception_if(!in_protmode(ctxt, ops), EXC_GP, 0);
> +
The Intel SYSRET vulnerability checks regs->rcx for canonicity here, and
raises #GP here.
I see you've got it below, but this is where the Intel pseudocode puts
it, before MSR_STAR gets read, and logically it should be grouped with
the other excpetions.
> + if ( (rc = ops->read_msr(MSR_STAR, &msr_val, ctxt)) != X86EMUL_OKAY )
> + goto done;
> + sreg.sel = ((msr_val >> 48) + 8) | 3; /* SELECTOR_RPL_MASK */
This would be the logical behaviour...
AMD CPUs |3 into %cs.sel, but don't make an equivalent adjustment for
%ss.sel, and simply take MSR_START.SYSRET_CS + 8.
If you aren't careful with MSR_STAR, SYSRET will return to userspace
with mismatching RPL/DPL and userspace can really find itself with an
%ss with an RPL of 0. (Of course, when you take an interrupt and
attempt to IRET back to this context, things fall apart).
I discovered this entirely by accident in XTF, but it is confirmed by
careful reading of the AMD SYSRET pseudocode.
> + cs.sel = op_bytes == 8 ? sreg.sel + 8 : sreg.sel - 8;
> +
> + cs.base = sreg.base = 0; /* flat segment */
> + cs.limit = sreg.limit = ~0u; /* 4GB limit */
> + cs.attr = 0xcfb; /* G+DB+P+DPL3+S+Code */
> + sreg.attr = 0xcf3; /* G+DB+P+DPL3+S+Data */
Again, that would be the logical behaviour...
AMD CPU's don't update anything but %ss.sel, and even comment the fact
in pseudocode now.
This was discovered by Andy Luto, where he found that taking an
interrupt (unconditionally sets %ss to NUL), and opportunistic sysret
back to 32bit userspace lets userspace see a sane %ss value, but with
the attrs still empty, and the stack unusable.
> +
> +#ifdef __x86_64__
> + if ( mode_64bit() )
> + {
> + if ( op_bytes == 8 )
> + {
> + cs.attr = 0xafb; /* L+DB+P+DPL3+S+Code */
> + generate_exception_if(!is_canonical_address(_regs.rcx) &&
> + !amd_like(ctxt), EXC_GP, 0);
Wherever this ends up living, I think it needs calling out with a
comment /* CVE-xxx, Intel privilege escalation hole */, as it is a very
subtle piece of vendor specific behaviour.
Do we have a Centaur/other CPU to try with? I'd err on the side of
going with == Intel rather than !AMD to avoid introducing known
vulnerabilities into models which stand half a chance of not being affected.
> + _regs.rip = _regs.rcx;
> + }
> + else
> + _regs.rip = _regs.ecx;
> +
> + _regs.eflags = _regs.r11 & ~(X86_EFLAGS_RF | X86_EFLAGS_VM);
> + }
> + else
> +#endif
> + {
> + _regs.r(ip) = _regs.ecx;
> + _regs.eflags |= X86_EFLAGS_IF;
> + }
> +
> + fail_if(!ops->write_segment);
> + if ( (rc = ops->write_segment(x86_seg_cs, &cs, ctxt)) !=
> X86EMUL_OKAY ||
> + (!amd_like(ctxt) &&
> + (rc = ops->write_segment(x86_seg_ss, &sreg,
> + ctxt)) != X86EMUL_OKAY) )
Oh - here is the AMD behaviour with %ss, but its not quite correct.
AFAICT, the correct behaviour is to read the old %ss on AMD-like, set
flat attributes on Intel, and write back normally, because %ss.sel does
get updated.
~Andrew
> + goto done;
> +
> + singlestep = _regs.eflags & X86_EFLAGS_TF;
> + break;
> +
> case X86EMUL_OPC(0x0f, 0x08): /* invd */
> case X86EMUL_OPC(0x0f, 0x09): /* wbinvd / wbnoinvd */
> generate_exception_if(!mode_ring0(), EXC_GP, 0);
>
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