1================= 2KVM VCPU Requests 3================= 4 5Overview 6======== 7 8KVM supports an internal API enabling threads to request a VCPU thread to 9perform some activity. For example, a thread may request a VCPU to flush 10its TLB with a VCPU request. The API consists of the following functions:: 11 12 /* Check if any requests are pending for VCPU @vcpu. */ 13 bool kvm_request_pending(struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu); 14 15 /* Check if VCPU @vcpu has request @req pending. */ 16 bool kvm_test_request(int req, struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu); 17 18 /* Clear request @req for VCPU @vcpu. */ 19 void kvm_clear_request(int req, struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu); 20 21 /* 22 * Check if VCPU @vcpu has request @req pending. When the request is 23 * pending it will be cleared and a memory barrier, which pairs with 24 * another in kvm_make_request(), will be issued. 25 */ 26 bool kvm_check_request(int req, struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu); 27 28 /* 29 * Make request @req of VCPU @vcpu. Issues a memory barrier, which pairs 30 * with another in kvm_check_request(), prior to setting the request. 31 */ 32 void kvm_make_request(int req, struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu); 33 34 /* Make request @req of all VCPUs of the VM with struct kvm @kvm. */ 35 bool kvm_make_all_cpus_request(struct kvm *kvm, unsigned int req); 36 37Typically a requester wants the VCPU to perform the activity as soon 38as possible after making the request. This means most requests 39(kvm_make_request() calls) are followed by a call to kvm_vcpu_kick(), 40and kvm_make_all_cpus_request() has the kicking of all VCPUs built 41into it. 42 43VCPU Kicks 44---------- 45 46The goal of a VCPU kick is to bring a VCPU thread out of guest mode in 47order to perform some KVM maintenance. To do so, an IPI is sent, forcing 48a guest mode exit. However, a VCPU thread may not be in guest mode at the 49time of the kick. Therefore, depending on the mode and state of the VCPU 50thread, there are two other actions a kick may take. All three actions 51are listed below: 52 531) Send an IPI. This forces a guest mode exit. 542) Waking a sleeping VCPU. Sleeping VCPUs are VCPU threads outside guest 55 mode that wait on waitqueues. Waking them removes the threads from 56 the waitqueues, allowing the threads to run again. This behavior 57 may be suppressed, see KVM_REQUEST_NO_WAKEUP below. 583) Nothing. When the VCPU is not in guest mode and the VCPU thread is not 59 sleeping, then there is nothing to do. 60 61VCPU Mode 62--------- 63 64VCPUs have a mode state, ``vcpu->mode``, that is used to track whether the 65guest is running in guest mode or not, as well as some specific 66outside guest mode states. The architecture may use ``vcpu->mode`` to 67ensure VCPU requests are seen by VCPUs (see "Ensuring Requests Are Seen"), 68as well as to avoid sending unnecessary IPIs (see "IPI Reduction"), and 69even to ensure IPI acknowledgements are waited upon (see "Waiting for 70Acknowledgements"). The following modes are defined: 71 72OUTSIDE_GUEST_MODE 73 74 The VCPU thread is outside guest mode. 75 76IN_GUEST_MODE 77 78 The VCPU thread is in guest mode. 79 80EXITING_GUEST_MODE 81 82 The VCPU thread is transitioning from IN_GUEST_MODE to 83 OUTSIDE_GUEST_MODE. 84 85READING_SHADOW_PAGE_TABLES 86 87 The VCPU thread is outside guest mode, but it wants the sender of 88 certain VCPU requests, namely KVM_REQ_TLB_FLUSH, to wait until the VCPU 89 thread is done reading the page tables. 90 91VCPU Request Internals 92====================== 93 94VCPU requests are simply bit indices of the ``vcpu->requests`` bitmap. 95This means general bitops, like those documented in [atomic-ops]_ could 96also be used, e.g. :: 97 98 clear_bit(KVM_REQ_UNHALT & KVM_REQUEST_MASK, &vcpu->requests); 99 100However, VCPU request users should refrain from doing so, as it would 101break the abstraction. The first 8 bits are reserved for architecture 102independent requests, all additional bits are available for architecture 103dependent requests. 104 105Architecture Independent Requests 106--------------------------------- 107 108KVM_REQ_TLB_FLUSH 109 110 KVM's common MMU notifier may need to flush all of a guest's TLB 111 entries, calling kvm_flush_remote_tlbs() to do so. Architectures that 112 choose to use the common kvm_flush_remote_tlbs() implementation will 113 need to handle this VCPU request. 114 115KVM_REQ_VM_DEAD 116 117 This request informs all VCPUs that the VM is dead and unusable, e.g. due to 118 fatal error or because the VM's state has been intentionally destroyed. 119 120KVM_REQ_UNBLOCK 121 122 This request informs the vCPU to exit kvm_vcpu_block. It is used for 123 example from timer handlers that run on the host on behalf of a vCPU, 124 or in order to update the interrupt routing and ensure that assigned 125 devices will wake up the vCPU. 126 127KVM_REQ_UNHALT 128 129 This request may be made from the KVM common function kvm_vcpu_block(), 130 which is used to emulate an instruction that causes a CPU to halt until 131 one of an architectural specific set of events and/or interrupts is 132 received (determined by checking kvm_arch_vcpu_runnable()). When that 133 event or interrupt arrives kvm_vcpu_block() makes the request. This is 134 in contrast to when kvm_vcpu_block() returns due to any other reason, 135 such as a pending signal, which does not indicate the VCPU's halt 136 emulation should stop, and therefore does not make the request. 137 138KVM_REQ_OUTSIDE_GUEST_MODE 139 140 This "request" ensures the target vCPU has exited guest mode prior to the 141 sender of the request continuing on. No action needs be taken by the target, 142 and so no request is actually logged for the target. This request is similar 143 to a "kick", but unlike a kick it guarantees the vCPU has actually exited 144 guest mode. A kick only guarantees the vCPU will exit at some point in the 145 future, e.g. a previous kick may have started the process, but there's no 146 guarantee the to-be-kicked vCPU has fully exited guest mode. 147 148KVM_REQUEST_MASK 149---------------- 150 151VCPU requests should be masked by KVM_REQUEST_MASK before using them with 152bitops. This is because only the lower 8 bits are used to represent the 153request's number. The upper bits are used as flags. Currently only two 154flags are defined. 155 156VCPU Request Flags 157------------------ 158 159KVM_REQUEST_NO_WAKEUP 160 161 This flag is applied to requests that only need immediate attention 162 from VCPUs running in guest mode. That is, sleeping VCPUs do not need 163 to be awaken for these requests. Sleeping VCPUs will handle the 164 requests when they are awaken later for some other reason. 165 166KVM_REQUEST_WAIT 167 168 When requests with this flag are made with kvm_make_all_cpus_request(), 169 then the caller will wait for each VCPU to acknowledge its IPI before 170 proceeding. This flag only applies to VCPUs that would receive IPIs. 171 If, for example, the VCPU is sleeping, so no IPI is necessary, then 172 the requesting thread does not wait. This means that this flag may be 173 safely combined with KVM_REQUEST_NO_WAKEUP. See "Waiting for 174 Acknowledgements" for more information about requests with 175 KVM_REQUEST_WAIT. 176 177VCPU Requests with Associated State 178=================================== 179 180Requesters that want the receiving VCPU to handle new state need to ensure 181the newly written state is observable to the receiving VCPU thread's CPU 182by the time it observes the request. This means a write memory barrier 183must be inserted after writing the new state and before setting the VCPU 184request bit. Additionally, on the receiving VCPU thread's side, a 185corresponding read barrier must be inserted after reading the request bit 186and before proceeding to read the new state associated with it. See 187scenario 3, Message and Flag, of [lwn-mb]_ and the kernel documentation 188[memory-barriers]_. 189 190The pair of functions, kvm_check_request() and kvm_make_request(), provide 191the memory barriers, allowing this requirement to be handled internally by 192the API. 193 194Ensuring Requests Are Seen 195========================== 196 197When making requests to VCPUs, we want to avoid the receiving VCPU 198executing in guest mode for an arbitrary long time without handling the 199request. We can be sure this won't happen as long as we ensure the VCPU 200thread checks kvm_request_pending() before entering guest mode and that a 201kick will send an IPI to force an exit from guest mode when necessary. 202Extra care must be taken to cover the period after the VCPU thread's last 203kvm_request_pending() check and before it has entered guest mode, as kick 204IPIs will only trigger guest mode exits for VCPU threads that are in guest 205mode or at least have already disabled interrupts in order to prepare to 206enter guest mode. This means that an optimized implementation (see "IPI 207Reduction") must be certain when it's safe to not send the IPI. One 208solution, which all architectures except s390 apply, is to: 209 210- set ``vcpu->mode`` to IN_GUEST_MODE between disabling the interrupts and 211 the last kvm_request_pending() check; 212- enable interrupts atomically when entering the guest. 213 214This solution also requires memory barriers to be placed carefully in both 215the requesting thread and the receiving VCPU. With the memory barriers we 216can exclude the possibility of a VCPU thread observing 217!kvm_request_pending() on its last check and then not receiving an IPI for 218the next request made of it, even if the request is made immediately after 219the check. This is done by way of the Dekker memory barrier pattern 220(scenario 10 of [lwn-mb]_). As the Dekker pattern requires two variables, 221this solution pairs ``vcpu->mode`` with ``vcpu->requests``. Substituting 222them into the pattern gives:: 223 224 CPU1 CPU2 225 ================= ================= 226 local_irq_disable(); 227 WRITE_ONCE(vcpu->mode, IN_GUEST_MODE); kvm_make_request(REQ, vcpu); 228 smp_mb(); smp_mb(); 229 if (kvm_request_pending(vcpu)) { if (READ_ONCE(vcpu->mode) == 230 IN_GUEST_MODE) { 231 ...abort guest entry... ...send IPI... 232 } } 233 234As stated above, the IPI is only useful for VCPU threads in guest mode or 235that have already disabled interrupts. This is why this specific case of 236the Dekker pattern has been extended to disable interrupts before setting 237``vcpu->mode`` to IN_GUEST_MODE. WRITE_ONCE() and READ_ONCE() are used to 238pedantically implement the memory barrier pattern, guaranteeing the 239compiler doesn't interfere with ``vcpu->mode``'s carefully planned 240accesses. 241 242IPI Reduction 243------------- 244 245As only one IPI is needed to get a VCPU to check for any/all requests, 246then they may be coalesced. This is easily done by having the first IPI 247sending kick also change the VCPU mode to something !IN_GUEST_MODE. The 248transitional state, EXITING_GUEST_MODE, is used for this purpose. 249 250Waiting for Acknowledgements 251---------------------------- 252 253Some requests, those with the KVM_REQUEST_WAIT flag set, require IPIs to 254be sent, and the acknowledgements to be waited upon, even when the target 255VCPU threads are in modes other than IN_GUEST_MODE. For example, one case 256is when a target VCPU thread is in READING_SHADOW_PAGE_TABLES mode, which 257is set after disabling interrupts. To support these cases, the 258KVM_REQUEST_WAIT flag changes the condition for sending an IPI from 259checking that the VCPU is IN_GUEST_MODE to checking that it is not 260OUTSIDE_GUEST_MODE. 261 262Request-less VCPU Kicks 263----------------------- 264 265As the determination of whether or not to send an IPI depends on the 266two-variable Dekker memory barrier pattern, then it's clear that 267request-less VCPU kicks are almost never correct. Without the assurance 268that a non-IPI generating kick will still result in an action by the 269receiving VCPU, as the final kvm_request_pending() check does for 270request-accompanying kicks, then the kick may not do anything useful at 271all. If, for instance, a request-less kick was made to a VCPU that was 272just about to set its mode to IN_GUEST_MODE, meaning no IPI is sent, then 273the VCPU thread may continue its entry without actually having done 274whatever it was the kick was meant to initiate. 275 276One exception is x86's posted interrupt mechanism. In this case, however, 277even the request-less VCPU kick is coupled with the same 278local_irq_disable() + smp_mb() pattern described above; the ON bit 279(Outstanding Notification) in the posted interrupt descriptor takes the 280role of ``vcpu->requests``. When sending a posted interrupt, PIR.ON is 281set before reading ``vcpu->mode``; dually, in the VCPU thread, 282vmx_sync_pir_to_irr() reads PIR after setting ``vcpu->mode`` to 283IN_GUEST_MODE. 284 285Additional Considerations 286========================= 287 288Sleeping VCPUs 289-------------- 290 291VCPU threads may need to consider requests before and/or after calling 292functions that may put them to sleep, e.g. kvm_vcpu_block(). Whether they 293do or not, and, if they do, which requests need consideration, is 294architecture dependent. kvm_vcpu_block() calls kvm_arch_vcpu_runnable() 295to check if it should awaken. One reason to do so is to provide 296architectures a function where requests may be checked if necessary. 297 298Clearing Requests 299----------------- 300 301Generally it only makes sense for the receiving VCPU thread to clear a 302request. However, in some circumstances, such as when the requesting 303thread and the receiving VCPU thread are executed serially, such as when 304they are the same thread, or when they are using some form of concurrency 305control to temporarily execute synchronously, then it's possible to know 306that the request may be cleared immediately, rather than waiting for the 307receiving VCPU thread to handle the request in VCPU RUN. The only current 308examples of this are kvm_vcpu_block() calls made by VCPUs to block 309themselves. A possible side-effect of that call is to make the 310KVM_REQ_UNHALT request, which may then be cleared immediately when the 311VCPU returns from the call. 312 313References 314========== 315 316.. [atomic-ops] Documentation/atomic_bitops.txt and Documentation/atomic_t.txt 317.. [memory-barriers] Documentation/memory-barriers.txt 318.. [lwn-mb] https://lwn.net/Articles/573436/ 319