Explicitly clamp the exit code used to index KVM's exit handlers to guard against Spectre-like attacks, mainly to provide consistency between VMX and SVM (VMX was given the same treatment by commit c926f2f7230b ("KVM: x86: Protect exit_reason from being used in Spectre-v1/L1TF attacks"). For normal VMs, it's _extremely_ unlikely the exit code could be used to exploit a speculation vulnerability, as the exit code is set by hardware and unexpected/unknown exit codes should be quite well bounded (as is/was the case with VMX). But with SEV-ES+, the exit code is guest-controlled as it comes from the GHCB, not from hardware, i.e. an attack from the guest is at least somewhat plausible. Irrespective of SEV-ES+, hardening KVM is easy and inexpensive, and such an attack is theoretically possible. Signed-off-by: Sean Christopherson --- arch/x86/kvm/svm/svm.c | 1 + 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+) diff --git a/arch/x86/kvm/svm/svm.c b/arch/x86/kvm/svm/svm.c index b97e6763839b..a75cd832e194 100644 --- a/arch/x86/kvm/svm/svm.c +++ b/arch/x86/kvm/svm/svm.c @@ -3477,6 +3477,7 @@ int svm_invoke_exit_handler(struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu, u64 __exit_code) if (exit_code >= ARRAY_SIZE(svm_exit_handlers)) goto unexpected_vmexit; + exit_code = array_index_nospec(exit_code, ARRAY_SIZE(svm_exit_handlers)); if (!svm_exit_handlers[exit_code]) goto unexpected_vmexit; -- 2.52.0.351.gbe84eed79e-goog