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| author | Christian Krinitsin <mail@krinitsin.com> | 2025-07-03 07:27:52 +0000 |
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| committer | Christian Krinitsin <mail@krinitsin.com> | 2025-07-03 07:27:52 +0000 |
| commit | d0c85e36e4de67af628d54e9ab577cc3fad7796a (patch) | |
| tree | f8f784b0f04343b90516a338d6df81df3a85dfa2 /results/classifier/deepseek-2/output/hypervisor/1152 | |
| parent | 7f4364274750eb8cb39a3e7493132fca1c01232e (diff) | |
| download | qemu-analysis-d0c85e36e4de67af628d54e9ab577cc3fad7796a.tar.gz qemu-analysis-d0c85e36e4de67af628d54e9ab577cc3fad7796a.zip | |
add deepseek and gemma results
Diffstat (limited to 'results/classifier/deepseek-2/output/hypervisor/1152')
| -rw-r--r-- | results/classifier/deepseek-2/output/hypervisor/1152 | 29 |
1 files changed, 29 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/results/classifier/deepseek-2/output/hypervisor/1152 b/results/classifier/deepseek-2/output/hypervisor/1152 new file mode 100644 index 000000000..e449acecd --- /dev/null +++ b/results/classifier/deepseek-2/output/hypervisor/1152 @@ -0,0 +1,29 @@ + +Windows crashes on resuming from sleep if hv-tlbflush is enabled +Description of problem: +The above steps cause my Windows VM to BSOD immediately upon waking up (even before restarting the display driver in my case). +Steps to reproduce: +1. Boot Windows +2. Tell Windows to go to sleep (observe that qemu's state switches to suspended) +3. Cause windows to wake up (e.g. using the `system_wakeup` HMP command) +Additional information: +Looking at the crash dumps always shows the "ATTEMPTED WRITE TO READONLY MEMORY" error, and always with this stack trace: + +``` +nt!KeBugCheckEx +nt!MiRaisedIrqlFault+0x1413a6 +nt!MmAccessFault+0x4ef +nt!KiPageFault+0x35e +nt!MiIncreaseUsedPtesCount+0x12 +nt!MiBuildForkPte+0xc6 +nt!MiCloneVads+0x4ab +nt!MiCloneProcessAddressSpace+0x261 +nt!MmInitializeProcessAddressSpace+0x1cb631 +nt!PspAllocateProcess+0x1d13 +nt!PspCreateProcess+0x242 +nt!NtCreateProcessEx+0x85 +nt!KiSystemServiceCopyEnd+0x25 +ntdll!NtCreateProcessEx+0x14 +``` + +However, the process that is being created here is always `WerFault.exe`, i.e. the crash reporter. The crashing process is seemingly random. Removing `hv-tlbflush` from the command line resolves the problem. Hence, my hypothesis is that due to improper TLB flushing during wakeup, a random application on the core will crash, which spawns `WerFault.exe` which then immediately crashes again inside the kernel (also because of bad/stale TLB contents) and causes the BSOD. Perhaps one core wakes up first, requests a TLB flush, which is then *not* propagated to sleeping cores due to hv-tlbflush. Then one of those cores wakes up without the TLB flush? |