问题
Is there a way to determine, for some progamatically defined interval, if a SMM entry has occurred on the current core?
回答1:
Starting with Nehalem, the MSR register 0x34 (called MSR_SMI_COUNT
) counts the number of SMIs that occurred since the system was booted. It's read-only and Intel-specific. You can programmability read from this register (or any other MSR register) from user mode using the /dev/cpu/CPUNUM/msr
interface. There are several tools that use the interface to show the SMI count including msr-tools (sudo rdmsr -a 0x34
) and turbostat (sudo turbostat --msr 0x34
).
I've extracted this code from the turbostat source code (/source/tools/power/x86/turbostat/turbostat.c). The get_msr_fd
function returns the file descriptor of the msr
file. The get_msr
function accepts the CPU number, the MSR offset (0x34 for MSR_SMI_COUNT
), and a pointer to a 64-bit location that will hold the value of the MSR (although MSR_SMI_COUNT
is a 32-bit counter and the upper 32 bits are reserved).
int get_msr_fd(int cpu)
{
char pathname[32];
int fd;
fd = fd_percpu[cpu];
if (fd)
return fd;
sprintf(pathname, "/dev/cpu/%d/msr", cpu);
fd = open(pathname, O_RDONLY);
if (fd < 0)
err(-1, "%s open failed, try chown or chmod +r /dev/cpu/*/msr, or run as root", pathname);
fd_percpu[cpu] = fd;
return fd;
}
int get_msr(int cpu, off_t offset, unsigned long long *msr)
{
ssize_t retval;
retval = pread(get_msr_fd(cpu), msr, sizeof(*msr), offset);
if (retval != sizeof *msr)
err(-1, "cpu%d: msr offset 0x%llx read failed", cpu, (unsigned long long)offset);
return 0;
}
An SMI may occur multiple times per second or may not occur for a long period of time. But one way to observe a change in MSR_SMI_COUNT
is by issuing a synchronous SMI. Typically, this can be done by writing some 8-bit value to I/O port 0xB2 or 0xB3. You can refer to your chipset manual to determine which I/O ports may trigger an SMI.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/50790715/is-there-a-way-to-determine-that-smm-interrupt-has-occured