Documentation/hw-vuln: Add VMSCAPE documentation

VMSCAPE is a vulnerability that may allow a guest to influence the branch
prediction in host userspace, particularly affecting hypervisors like QEMU.

Add the documentation.

Signed-off-by: Pawan Gupta <pawan.kumar.gupta@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Hansen <dave.hansen@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Borislav Petkov (AMD) <bp@alien8.de>
Reviewed-by: Dave Hansen <dave.hansen@linux.intel.com>
This commit is contained in:
Pawan Gupta 2025-08-14 10:20:42 -07:00 committed by Dave Hansen
parent 8f5ae30d69
commit 9969779d08
2 changed files with 111 additions and 0 deletions

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rsb
old_microcode
indirect-target-selection
vmscape

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.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
VMSCAPE
=======
VMSCAPE is a vulnerability that may allow a guest to influence the branch
prediction in host userspace. It particularly affects hypervisors like QEMU.
Even if a hypervisor may not have any sensitive data like disk encryption keys,
guest-userspace may be able to attack the guest-kernel using the hypervisor as
a confused deputy.
Affected processors
-------------------
The following CPU families are affected by VMSCAPE:
**Intel processors:**
- Skylake generation (Parts without Enhanced-IBRS)
- Cascade Lake generation - (Parts affected by ITS guest/host separation)
- Alder Lake and newer (Parts affected by BHI)
Note that, BHI affected parts that use BHB clearing software mitigation e.g.
Icelake are not vulnerable to VMSCAPE.
**AMD processors:**
- Zen series (families 0x17, 0x19, 0x1a)
** Hygon processors:**
- Family 0x18
Mitigation
----------
Conditional IBPB
----------------
Kernel tracks when a CPU has run a potentially malicious guest and issues an
IBPB before the first exit to userspace after VM-exit. If userspace did not run
between VM-exit and the next VM-entry, no IBPB is issued.
Note that the existing userspace mitigation against Spectre-v2 is effective in
protecting the userspace. They are insufficient to protect the userspace VMMs
from a malicious guest. This is because Spectre-v2 mitigations are applied at
context switch time, while the userspace VMM can run after a VM-exit without a
context switch.
Vulnerability enumeration and mitigation is not applied inside a guest. This is
because nested hypervisors should already be deploying IBPB to isolate
themselves from nested guests.
SMT considerations
------------------
When Simultaneous Multi-Threading (SMT) is enabled, hypervisors can be
vulnerable to cross-thread attacks. For complete protection against VMSCAPE
attacks in SMT environments, STIBP should be enabled.
The kernel will issue a warning if SMT is enabled without adequate STIBP
protection. Warning is not issued when:
- SMT is disabled
- STIBP is enabled system-wide
- Intel eIBRS is enabled (which implies STIBP protection)
System information and options
------------------------------
The sysfs file showing VMSCAPE mitigation status is:
/sys/devices/system/cpu/vulnerabilities/vmscape
The possible values in this file are:
* 'Not affected':
The processor is not vulnerable to VMSCAPE attacks.
* 'Vulnerable':
The processor is vulnerable and no mitigation has been applied.
* 'Mitigation: IBPB before exit to userspace':
Conditional IBPB mitigation is enabled. The kernel tracks when a CPU has
run a potentially malicious guest and issues an IBPB before the first
exit to userspace after VM-exit.
* 'Mitigation: IBPB on VMEXIT':
IBPB is issued on every VM-exit. This occurs when other mitigations like
RETBLEED or SRSO are already issuing IBPB on VM-exit.
Mitigation control on the kernel command line
----------------------------------------------
The mitigation can be controlled via the ``vmscape=`` command line parameter:
* ``vmscape=off``:
Disable the VMSCAPE mitigation.
* ``vmscape=ibpb``:
Enable conditional IBPB mitigation (default when CONFIG_MITIGATION_VMSCAPE=y).
* ``vmscape=force``:
Force vulnerability detection and mitigation even on processors that are
not known to be affected.