qemu-e2k/target/arm/tcg/tlb_helper.c

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/*
* ARM TLB (Translation lookaside buffer) helpers.
*
* This code is licensed under the GNU GPL v2 or later.
*
* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-or-later
*/
#include "qemu/osdep.h"
#include "cpu.h"
#include "internals.h"
#include "cpu-features.h"
#include "exec/exec-all.h"
#include "exec/helper-proto.h"
/*
* Returns true if the stage 1 translation regime is using LPAE format page
* tables. Used when raising alignment exceptions, whose FSR changes depending
* on whether the long or short descriptor format is in use.
*/
bool arm_s1_regime_using_lpae_format(CPUARMState *env, ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx)
{
mmu_idx = stage_1_mmu_idx(mmu_idx);
return regime_using_lpae_format(env, mmu_idx);
}
static inline uint32_t merge_syn_data_abort(uint32_t template_syn,
ARMMMUFaultInfo *fi,
unsigned int target_el,
bool same_el, bool is_write,
int fsc)
{
uint32_t syn;
/*
* ISV is only set for stage-2 data aborts routed to EL2 and
* never for stage-1 page table walks faulting on stage 2
* or for stage-1 faults.
*
* Furthermore, ISV is only set for certain kinds of load/stores.
* If the template syndrome does not have ISV set, we should leave
* it cleared.
*
* See ARMv8 specs, D7-1974:
* ISS encoding for an exception from a Data Abort, the
* ISV field.
*
* TODO: FEAT_LS64/FEAT_LS64_V/FEAT_SL64_ACCDATA: Translation,
* Access Flag, and Permission faults caused by LD64B, ST64B,
* ST64BV, or ST64BV0 insns report syndrome info even for stage-1
* faults and regardless of the target EL.
*/
if (template_syn & ARM_EL_VNCR) {
/*
* FEAT_NV2 faults on accesses via VNCR_EL2 are a special case:
* they are always reported as "same EL", even though we are going
* from EL1 to EL2.
*/
assert(!fi->stage2);
syn = syn_data_abort_vncr(fi->ea, is_write, fsc);
} else if (!(template_syn & ARM_EL_ISV) || target_el != 2
|| fi->s1ptw || !fi->stage2) {
target-arm: kvm64: handle SIGBUS signal from kernel or KVM Add a SIGBUS signal handler. In this handler, it checks the SIGBUS type, translates the host VA delivered by host to guest PA, then fills this PA to guest APEI GHES memory, then notifies guest according to the SIGBUS type. When guest accesses the poisoned memory, it will generate a Synchronous External Abort(SEA). Then host kernel gets an APEI notification and calls memory_failure() to unmapped the affected page in stage 2, finally returns to guest. Guest continues to access the PG_hwpoison page, it will trap to KVM as stage2 fault, then a SIGBUS_MCEERR_AR synchronous signal is delivered to Qemu, Qemu records this error address into guest APEI GHES memory and notifes guest using Synchronous-External-Abort(SEA). In order to inject a vSEA, we introduce the kvm_inject_arm_sea() function in which we can setup the type of exception and the syndrome information. When switching to guest, the target vcpu will jump to the synchronous external abort vector table entry. The ESR_ELx.DFSC is set to synchronous external abort(0x10), and the ESR_ELx.FnV is set to not valid(0x1), which will tell guest that FAR is not valid and hold an UNKNOWN value. These values will be set to KVM register structures through KVM_SET_ONE_REG IOCTL. Signed-off-by: Dongjiu Geng <gengdongjiu@huawei.com> Signed-off-by: Xiang Zheng <zhengxiang9@huawei.com> Reviewed-by: Michael S. Tsirkin <mst@redhat.com> Acked-by: Xiang Zheng <zhengxiang9@huawei.com> Reviewed-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Igor Mammedov <imammedo@redhat.com> Message-id: 20200512030609.19593-10-gengdongjiu@huawei.com Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
2020-05-12 05:06:08 +02:00
syn = syn_data_abort_no_iss(same_el, 0,
fi->ea, 0, fi->s1ptw, is_write, fsc);
} else {
/*
* Fields: IL, ISV, SAS, SSE, SRT, SF and AR come from the template
* syndrome created at translation time.
* Now we create the runtime syndrome with the remaining fields.
*/
syn = syn_data_abort_with_iss(same_el,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
fi->ea, 0, fi->s1ptw, is_write, fsc,
true);
/* Merge the runtime syndrome with the template syndrome. */
syn |= template_syn;
}
return syn;
}
static uint32_t compute_fsr_fsc(CPUARMState *env, ARMMMUFaultInfo *fi,
int target_el, int mmu_idx, uint32_t *ret_fsc)
{
ARMMMUIdx arm_mmu_idx = core_to_arm_mmu_idx(env, mmu_idx);
uint32_t fsr, fsc;
target/arm: Explicitly select short-format FSR for M-profile For M-profile, there is no guest-facing A-profile format FSR, but we still use the env->exception.fsr field to pass fault information from the point where a fault is raised to the code in arm_v7m_cpu_do_interrupt() which interprets it and sets the M-profile specific fault status registers. So it doesn't matter whether we fill in env->exception.fsr in the short format or the LPAE format, as long as both sides agree. As it happens arm_v7m_cpu_do_interrupt() assumes short-form. In compute_fsr_fsc() we weren't explicitly choosing short-form for M-profile, but instead relied on it falling out in the wash because arm_s1_regime_using_lpae_format() would be false. This was broken in commit 452c67a4 when we added v8R support, because we said "PMSAv8 is always LPAE format" (as it is for v8R), forgetting that we were implicitly using this code path on M-profile. At that point we would hit a g_assert_not_reached(): ERROR:../../target/arm/internals.h:549:arm_fi_to_lfsc: code should not be reached #7 0x0000555555e055f7 in arm_fi_to_lfsc (fi=0x7fffecff9a90) at ../../target/arm/internals.h:549 #8 0x0000555555e05a27 in compute_fsr_fsc (env=0x555557356670, fi=0x7fffecff9a90, target_el=1, mmu_idx=1, ret_fsc=0x7fffecff9a1c) at ../../target/arm/tlb_helper.c:95 #9 0x0000555555e05b62 in arm_deliver_fault (cpu=0x555557354800, addr=268961344, access_type=MMU_INST_FETCH, mmu_idx=1, fi=0x7fffecff9a90) at ../../target/arm/tlb_helper.c:132 #10 0x0000555555e06095 in arm_cpu_tlb_fill (cs=0x555557354800, address=268961344, size=1, access_type=MMU_INST_FETCH, mmu_idx=1, probe=false, retaddr=0) at ../../target/arm/tlb_helper.c:260 The specific assertion changed when commit fcc7404eff24b4c added "assert not M-profile" to arm_is_secure_below_el3(), because the conditions being checked in compute_fsr_fsc() include arm_el_is_aa64(), which will end up calling arm_is_secure_below_el3() and asserting before we try to call arm_fi_to_lfsc(): #7 0x0000555555efaf43 in arm_is_secure_below_el3 (env=0x5555574665a0) at ../../target/arm/cpu.h:2396 #8 0x0000555555efb103 in arm_is_el2_enabled (env=0x5555574665a0) at ../../target/arm/cpu.h:2448 #9 0x0000555555efb204 in arm_el_is_aa64 (env=0x5555574665a0, el=1) at ../../target/arm/cpu.h:2509 #10 0x0000555555efbdfd in compute_fsr_fsc (env=0x5555574665a0, fi=0x7fffecff99e0, target_el=1, mmu_idx=1, ret_fsc=0x7fffecff996c) Avoid the assertion and the incorrect FSR format selection by explicitly making M-profile use the short-format in this function. Fixes: 452c67a42704 ("target/arm: Enable TTBCR_EAE for ARMv8-R AArch32")a Resolves: https://gitlab.com/qemu-project/qemu/-/issues/1658 Cc: qemu-stable@nongnu.org Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 20230523131726.866635-1-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2023-05-23 15:17:26 +02:00
/*
* For M-profile there is no guest-facing FSR. We compute a
* short-form value for env->exception.fsr which we will then
* examine in arm_v7m_cpu_do_interrupt(). In theory we could
* use the LPAE format instead as long as both bits of code agree
* (and arm_fi_to_lfsc() handled the M-profile specific
* ARMFault_QEMU_NSCExec and ARMFault_QEMU_SFault cases).
*/
if (!arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_M) &&
(target_el == 2 || arm_el_is_aa64(env, target_el) ||
arm_s1_regime_using_lpae_format(env, arm_mmu_idx))) {
/*
* LPAE format fault status register : bottom 6 bits are
* status code in the same form as needed for syndrome
*/
fsr = arm_fi_to_lfsc(fi);
fsc = extract32(fsr, 0, 6);
} else {
fsr = arm_fi_to_sfsc(fi);
/*
* Short format FSR : this fault will never actually be reported
* to an EL that uses a syndrome register. Use a (currently)
* reserved FSR code in case the constructed syndrome does leak
* into the guest somehow.
*/
fsc = 0x3f;
}
*ret_fsc = fsc;
return fsr;
}
static bool report_as_gpc_exception(ARMCPU *cpu, int current_el,
ARMMMUFaultInfo *fi)
{
bool ret;
switch (fi->gpcf) {
case GPCF_None:
return false;
case GPCF_AddressSize:
case GPCF_Walk:
case GPCF_EABT:
/* R_PYTGX: GPT faults are reported as GPC. */
ret = true;
break;
case GPCF_Fail:
/*
* R_BLYPM: A GPF at EL3 is reported as insn or data abort.
* R_VBZMW, R_LXHQR: A GPF at EL[0-2] is reported as a GPC
* if SCR_EL3.GPF is set, otherwise an insn or data abort.
*/
ret = (cpu->env.cp15.scr_el3 & SCR_GPF) && current_el != 3;
break;
default:
g_assert_not_reached();
}
assert(cpu_isar_feature(aa64_rme, cpu));
assert(fi->type == ARMFault_GPCFOnWalk ||
fi->type == ARMFault_GPCFOnOutput);
if (fi->gpcf == GPCF_AddressSize) {
assert(fi->level == 0);
} else {
assert(fi->level >= 0 && fi->level <= 1);
}
return ret;
}
static unsigned encode_gpcsc(ARMMMUFaultInfo *fi)
{
static uint8_t const gpcsc[] = {
[GPCF_AddressSize] = 0b000000,
[GPCF_Walk] = 0b000100,
[GPCF_Fail] = 0b001100,
[GPCF_EABT] = 0b010100,
};
/* Note that we've validated fi->gpcf and fi->level above. */
return gpcsc[fi->gpcf] | fi->level;
}
static G_NORETURN
void arm_deliver_fault(ARMCPU *cpu, vaddr addr,
MMUAccessType access_type,
int mmu_idx, ARMMMUFaultInfo *fi)
{
CPUARMState *env = &cpu->env;
int target_el = exception_target_el(env);
int current_el = arm_current_el(env);
bool same_el;
uint32_t syn, exc, fsr, fsc;
/*
* We know this must be a data or insn abort, and that
* env->exception.syndrome contains the template syndrome set
* up at translate time. So we can check only the VNCR bit
* (and indeed syndrome does not have the EC field in it,
* because we masked that out in disas_set_insn_syndrome())
*/
bool is_vncr = (access_type != MMU_INST_FETCH) &&
(env->exception.syndrome & ARM_EL_VNCR);
if (is_vncr) {
/* FEAT_NV2 faults on accesses via VNCR_EL2 go to EL2 */
target_el = 2;
}
if (report_as_gpc_exception(cpu, current_el, fi)) {
target_el = 3;
fsr = compute_fsr_fsc(env, fi, target_el, mmu_idx, &fsc);
syn = syn_gpc(fi->stage2 && fi->type == ARMFault_GPCFOnWalk,
access_type == MMU_INST_FETCH,
encode_gpcsc(fi), is_vncr,
0, fi->s1ptw,
access_type == MMU_DATA_STORE, fsc);
env->cp15.mfar_el3 = fi->paddr;
switch (fi->paddr_space) {
case ARMSS_Secure:
break;
case ARMSS_NonSecure:
env->cp15.mfar_el3 |= R_MFAR_NS_MASK;
break;
case ARMSS_Root:
env->cp15.mfar_el3 |= R_MFAR_NSE_MASK;
break;
case ARMSS_Realm:
env->cp15.mfar_el3 |= R_MFAR_NSE_MASK | R_MFAR_NS_MASK;
break;
default:
g_assert_not_reached();
}
exc = EXCP_GPC;
goto do_raise;
}
/* If SCR_EL3.GPF is unset, GPF may still be routed to EL2. */
if (fi->gpcf == GPCF_Fail && target_el < 2) {
if (arm_hcr_el2_eff(env) & HCR_GPF) {
target_el = 2;
}
}
if (fi->stage2) {
target_el = 2;
env->cp15.hpfar_el2 = extract64(fi->s2addr, 12, 47) << 4;
if (arm_is_secure_below_el3(env) && fi->s1ns) {
env->cp15.hpfar_el2 |= HPFAR_NS;
}
}
same_el = current_el == target_el;
fsr = compute_fsr_fsc(env, fi, target_el, mmu_idx, &fsc);
if (access_type == MMU_INST_FETCH) {
syn = syn_insn_abort(same_el, fi->ea, fi->s1ptw, fsc);
exc = EXCP_PREFETCH_ABORT;
} else {
syn = merge_syn_data_abort(env->exception.syndrome, fi, target_el,
same_el, access_type == MMU_DATA_STORE,
fsc);
if (access_type == MMU_DATA_STORE
&& arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V6)) {
fsr |= (1 << 11);
}
exc = EXCP_DATA_ABORT;
}
do_raise:
env->exception.vaddress = addr;
env->exception.fsr = fsr;
raise_exception(env, exc, syn, target_el);
}
/* Raise a data fault alignment exception for the specified virtual address */
void arm_cpu_do_unaligned_access(CPUState *cs, vaddr vaddr,
MMUAccessType access_type,
int mmu_idx, uintptr_t retaddr)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = ARM_CPU(cs);
ARMMMUFaultInfo fi = {};
/* now we have a real cpu fault */
cpu_restore_state(cs, retaddr);
fi.type = ARMFault_Alignment;
arm_deliver_fault(cpu, vaddr, access_type, mmu_idx, &fi);
}
void helper_exception_pc_alignment(CPUARMState *env, target_ulong pc)
{
ARMMMUFaultInfo fi = { .type = ARMFault_Alignment };
int target_el = exception_target_el(env);
int mmu_idx = cpu_mmu_index(env, true);
uint32_t fsc;
env->exception.vaddress = pc;
/*
* Note that the fsc is not applicable to this exception,
* since any syndrome is pcalignment not insn_abort.
*/
env->exception.fsr = compute_fsr_fsc(env, &fi, target_el, mmu_idx, &fsc);
raise_exception(env, EXCP_PREFETCH_ABORT, syn_pcalignment(), target_el);
}
#if !defined(CONFIG_USER_ONLY)
/*
* arm_cpu_do_transaction_failed: handle a memory system error response
* (eg "no device/memory present at address") by raising an external abort
* exception
*/
void arm_cpu_do_transaction_failed(CPUState *cs, hwaddr physaddr,
vaddr addr, unsigned size,
MMUAccessType access_type,
int mmu_idx, MemTxAttrs attrs,
MemTxResult response, uintptr_t retaddr)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = ARM_CPU(cs);
ARMMMUFaultInfo fi = {};
/* now we have a real cpu fault */
cpu_restore_state(cs, retaddr);
fi.ea = arm_extabort_type(response);
fi.type = ARMFault_SyncExternal;
arm_deliver_fault(cpu, addr, access_type, mmu_idx, &fi);
}
bool arm_cpu_tlb_fill(CPUState *cs, vaddr address, int size,
MMUAccessType access_type, int mmu_idx,
bool probe, uintptr_t retaddr)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = ARM_CPU(cs);
GetPhysAddrResult res = {};
ARMMMUFaultInfo local_fi, *fi;
int ret;
/*
* Allow S1_ptw_translate to see any fault generated here.
* Since this may recurse, read and clear.
*/
fi = cpu->env.tlb_fi;
if (fi) {
cpu->env.tlb_fi = NULL;
} else {
fi = memset(&local_fi, 0, sizeof(local_fi));
}
/*
* Walk the page table and (if the mapping exists) add the page
* to the TLB. On success, return true. Otherwise, if probing,
* return false. Otherwise populate fsr with ARM DFSR/IFSR fault
* register format, and signal the fault.
*/
ret = get_phys_addr(&cpu->env, address, access_type,
core_to_arm_mmu_idx(&cpu->env, mmu_idx),
&res, fi);
if (likely(!ret)) {
/*
* Map a single [sub]page. Regions smaller than our declared
* target page size are handled specially, so for those we
* pass in the exact addresses.
*/
if (res.f.lg_page_size >= TARGET_PAGE_BITS) {
res.f.phys_addr &= TARGET_PAGE_MASK;
address &= TARGET_PAGE_MASK;
}
res.f.extra.arm.pte_attrs = res.cacheattrs.attrs;
res.f.extra.arm.shareability = res.cacheattrs.shareability;
tlb_set_page_full(cs, mmu_idx, address, &res.f);
return true;
} else if (probe) {
return false;
} else {
/* now we have a real cpu fault */
cpu_restore_state(cs, retaddr);
arm_deliver_fault(cpu, address, access_type, mmu_idx, fi);
}
}
#else
void arm_cpu_record_sigsegv(CPUState *cs, vaddr addr,
MMUAccessType access_type,
bool maperr, uintptr_t ra)
{
ARMMMUFaultInfo fi = {
.type = maperr ? ARMFault_Translation : ARMFault_Permission,
.level = 3,
};
ARMCPU *cpu = ARM_CPU(cs);
/*
* We report both ESR and FAR to signal handlers.
* For now, it's easiest to deliver the fault normally.
*/
cpu_restore_state(cs, ra);
arm_deliver_fault(cpu, addr, access_type, MMU_USER_IDX, &fi);
}
void arm_cpu_record_sigbus(CPUState *cs, vaddr addr,
MMUAccessType access_type, uintptr_t ra)
{
arm_cpu_do_unaligned_access(cs, addr, access_type, MMU_USER_IDX, ra);
}
#endif /* !defined(CONFIG_USER_ONLY) */