3a1258399b
Currently, when using a true R/O NVDIMM (ROM memory backend) with a label area, the VM can easily crash QEMU by trying to write to the label area, because the ROM memory is mmap'ed without PROT_WRITE. [root@vm-0 ~]# ndctl disable-region region0 disabled 1 region [root@vm-0 ~]# ndctl zero-labels nmem0 -> QEMU segfaults Let's remember whether we have a ROM memory backend and properly reject the write request: [root@vm-0 ~]# ndctl disable-region region0 disabled 1 region [root@vm-0 ~]# ndctl zero-labels nmem0 zeroed 0 nmem In comparison, on a system with a R/W NVDIMM: [root@vm-0 ~]# ndctl disable-region region0 disabled 1 region [root@vm-0 ~]# ndctl zero-labels nmem0 zeroed 1 nmem For ACPI, just return "unsupported", like if no label exists. For spapr, return "H_P2", similar to when no label area exists. Could we rely on the "unarmed" property? Maybe, but it looks cleaner to only disallow what certainly cannot work. After all "unarmed=on" primarily means: cannot accept persistent writes. In theory, there might be setups where devices with "unarmed=on" set could be used to host non-persistent data (temporary files, system RAM, ...); for example, in Linux, admins can overwrite the "readonly" setting and still write to the device -- which will work as long as we're not using ROM. Allowing writing label data in such configurations can make sense. Message-ID: <20230906120503.359863-2-david@redhat.com> Fixes: dbd730e85987 ("nvdimm: check -object memory-backend-file, readonly=on option") Reviewed-by: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: David Hildenbrand <david@redhat.com>