Once an exception has been injected, any side effects related to
the exception (such as setting CR2 or DR6) have been taked place.
Therefore, once KVM sets the VM-entry interruption information
field or the AMD EVENTINJ field, the next VM-entry must deliver that
exception.
Pending interrupts are processed after injected exceptions, so
in theory it would not be a problem to use KVM_INTERRUPT when
an injected exception is present. However, DOSEMU is using
run->ready_for_interrupt_injection to detect interrupt windows
and then using KVM_SET_SREGS/KVM_SET_REGS to inject the
interrupt manually. For this to work, the interrupt window
must be delayed after the completion of the previous event
injection.
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Reported-by: Stas Sergeev <stsp2@yandex.ru>
Tested-by: Stas Sergeev <stsp2@yandex.ru>
Fixes: 26ffeb5c5dcb ("KVM: x86: Fix split-irqchip vs interrupt injection window request")
Reviewed-by: Sean Christopherson <seanjc@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
static int kvm_vcpu_ready_for_interrupt_injection(struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu)
{
- return kvm_arch_interrupt_allowed(vcpu) &&
- kvm_cpu_accept_dm_intr(vcpu);
+ /*
+ * Do not cause an interrupt window exit if an exception
+ * is pending or an event needs reinjection; userspace
+ * might want to inject the interrupt manually using KVM_SET_REGS
+ * or KVM_SET_SREGS. For that to work, we must be at an
+ * instruction boundary and with no events half-injected.
+ */
+ return (kvm_arch_interrupt_allowed(vcpu) &&
+ kvm_cpu_accept_dm_intr(vcpu) &&
+ !kvm_event_needs_reinjection(vcpu) &&
+ !vcpu->arch.exception.pending);
}
static int kvm_vcpu_ioctl_interrupt(struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu,