vfio/pci: Fix SR-IOV VF handling with MMIO blocking

SR-IOV VFs do not implement the memory enable bit of the command
register, therefore this bit is not set in config space after
pci_enable_device().  This leads to an unintended difference
between PF and VF in hand-off state to the user.  We can correct
this by setting the initial value of the memory enable bit in our
virtualized config space.  There's really no need however to
ever fault a user on a VF though as this would only indicate an
error in the user's management of the enable bit, versus a PF
where the same access could trigger hardware faults.

Fixes: abafbc551f ("vfio-pci: Invalidate mmaps and block MMIO access on disabled memory")
Signed-off-by: Alex Williamson <alex.williamson@redhat.com>
This commit is contained in:
Alex Williamson 2020-06-25 11:04:23 -06:00
parent f751820bc3
commit ebfa440ce3
1 changed files with 16 additions and 1 deletions

View File

@ -398,9 +398,15 @@ static inline void p_setd(struct perm_bits *p, int off, u32 virt, u32 write)
/* Caller should hold memory_lock semaphore */
bool __vfio_pci_memory_enabled(struct vfio_pci_device *vdev)
{
struct pci_dev *pdev = vdev->pdev;
u16 cmd = le16_to_cpu(*(__le16 *)&vdev->vconfig[PCI_COMMAND]);
return cmd & PCI_COMMAND_MEMORY;
/*
* SR-IOV VF memory enable is handled by the MSE bit in the
* PF SR-IOV capability, there's therefore no need to trigger
* faults based on the virtual value.
*/
return pdev->is_virtfn || (cmd & PCI_COMMAND_MEMORY);
}
/*
@ -1728,6 +1734,15 @@ int vfio_config_init(struct vfio_pci_device *vdev)
vconfig[PCI_INTERRUPT_PIN]);
vconfig[PCI_INTERRUPT_PIN] = 0; /* Gratuitous for good VFs */
/*
* VFs do no implement the memory enable bit of the COMMAND
* register therefore we'll not have it set in our initial
* copy of config space after pci_enable_device(). For
* consistency with PFs, set the virtual enable bit here.
*/
*(__le16 *)&vconfig[PCI_COMMAND] |=
cpu_to_le16(PCI_COMMAND_MEMORY);
}
if (!IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_VFIO_PCI_INTX) || vdev->nointx)