[Bug 1882774] Autopkgtest regression report (qemu/1:4.2-3ubuntu6.3)

Ubuntu SRU Bot 1882774 at bugs.launchpad.net
Mon Jun 22 20:03:26 UTC 2020


All autopkgtests for the newly accepted qemu (1:4.2-3ubuntu6.3) for focal have finished running.
The following regressions have been reported in tests triggered by the package:

livecd-rootfs/2.664.2 (amd64)
systemd/245.4-4ubuntu3.1 (ppc64el)
edk2/0~20191122.bd85bf54-2ubuntu3 (amd64)


Please visit the excuses page listed below and investigate the failures, proceeding afterwards as per the StableReleaseUpdates policy regarding autopkgtest regressions [1].

https://people.canonical.com/~ubuntu-archive/proposed-
migration/focal/update_excuses.html#qemu

[1] https://wiki.ubuntu.com/StableReleaseUpdates#Autopkgtest_Regressions

Thank you!

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1882774

Title:
  issues with secondary VMX execution controls

Status in Ubuntu Cloud Archive:
  New
Status in qemu package in Ubuntu:
  Fix Released
Status in qemu source package in Focal:
  Fix Committed

Bug description:
  [Impact]

  In qemu 4.2 was a change [1] meant to improve the handling of MSRs vs CPUID.
  It was later identified [2] as an issue and fixed.
  This has to be backported to Focal to resolve that issue on several platforms.

  An example where this occurs is:
  - Azure instances with nested virt
  - GCP instances with nested virt

  We have seen a bunch of qemu named CPU types that can expose similar behavior when used on chips that pretend to be of some type e.g. Skylake but miss some of their features to be settable.
  It isn't entirely sure thou that this will be fixed by the same - yet worth to mention.

  The impact is that qemu 4.2 as in Ubuntu 20.04 doesn't work on those
  platforms bailing out.

  [1]: https://github.com/qemu/qemu/commit/048c95163b472ed737a2f0dca4f4e23a82ac2f8a
  [2]: https://github.com/qemu/qemu/commit/4a910e1f6ab4155ec8b24c49b2585cc486916985

  [Test Case]

   * Get a GCP or Azure instance with nested virtualization enabled
   * Spawn a KVM guest on it e.g. by using uvtool-libvirt using a named type 
     matching the cpu
     e.g. if the host reports as skylake use such a type.
     You can use `virsh domcapabilities` to check what the host is
     detected as.

  [Regression Potential]

   * It is a bit hard to guess, but it should not make things worse. But if I'd expect one then the
     VMX subfeatures could change on cases not intended to. Yet we should have one of two cases:
     a) the common one is that the host can set this and has done so, it will continue as before
     b) host was unable to set these and failed, this should now work with the fix in place
     Both seem ok to me.

  [Other Info]

   * there might be a local (non cloud) way to reproduce but I don't
  know it yet

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