diff mbox series

[for-9.2] kvm: Use 'unsigned long' for request argument in functions wrapping ioctl()

Message ID 20240815122747.3053871-1-peter.maydell@linaro.org
State Superseded
Headers show
Series [for-9.2] kvm: Use 'unsigned long' for request argument in functions wrapping ioctl() | expand

Commit Message

Peter Maydell Aug. 15, 2024, 12:27 p.m. UTC
From: Johannes Stoelp <johannes.stoelp@googlemail.com>

Change the data type of the ioctl _request_ argument from 'int' to
'unsigned long' for the various accel/kvm functions which are
essentially wrappers around the ioctl() syscall.

The correct type for ioctl()'s 'request' argument is confused:
 * POSIX defines the request argument as 'int'
 * glibc uses 'unsigned long' in the prototype in sys/ioctl.h
 * the glibc info documentation uses 'int'
 * the Linux manpage uses 'unsigned long'
 * the Linux implementation of the syscall uses 'unsigned int'

If we wrap ioctl() with another function which uses 'int' as the
type for the request argument, then requests with the 0x8000_0000
bit set will be sign-extended when the 'int' is cast to
'unsigned long' for the call to ioctl().

On x86_64 one such example is the KVM_IRQ_LINE_STATUS request.
Bit requests with the _IOC_READ direction bit set, will have the high
bit set.

Fortunately the Linux Kernel truncates the upper 32bit of the request
on 64bit machines (because it uses 'unsigned int', and see also Linus
Torvalds' comments in
  https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=14362 )
so this doesn't cause active problems for us.  However it is more
consistent to follow the glibc ioctl() prototype when we define
functions that are essentially wrappers around ioctl().

This resolves a Coverity issue where it points out that in
kvm_get_xsave() we assign a value (KVM_GET_XSAVE or KVM_GET_XSAVE2)
to an 'int' variable which can't hold it without overflow.

Resolves: Coverity CID 1547759
Signed-off-by: Johannes Stoelp <johannes.stoelp@gmail.com>
[PMM: Rebased patch, adjusted commit message, included note about
 Coverity fix, updated the type of the local var in kvm_get_xsave,
 updated the comment in the KVMState struct definition]
Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
---
This is a patch that was posted back in 2021, and I reviewed it
at the time
https://lore.kernel.org/qemu-devel/20210901213426.360748-1-johannes.stoelp@gmail.com/
but we never actually took it into the tree. I was reminded of it
by the Coverity issue, where a change to Coverity means it now
complains about the potential integer overflow when we put one
of these high-bit-set ioctls into an "int". So I thought it would
be worth dusting this off and getting it upstream.

For more discussion of the ioctl request datatype see also the
review thread on the previous version of the patch:
https://lore.kernel.org/qemu-devel/CAFEAcA8TRQdj33Ycm=XzmuUUNApaXVgeDexfS+3Ycg6kLnpmyg@mail.gmail.com/

Since this doesn't actually cause any incorrect behaviour this
is obviously for-9.2 material.
---
 include/sysemu/kvm.h     |  8 ++++----
 include/sysemu/kvm_int.h | 16 ++++++++++++----
 accel/kvm/kvm-all.c      |  8 ++++----
 target/i386/kvm/kvm.c    |  3 ++-
 accel/kvm/trace-events   |  8 ++++----
 5 files changed, 26 insertions(+), 17 deletions(-)

Comments

Peter Maydell Aug. 29, 2024, 12:25 p.m. UTC | #1
Ping for code review, please?

thanks
-- PMM

On Thu, 15 Aug 2024 at 13:27, Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> wrote:
>
> From: Johannes Stoelp <johannes.stoelp@googlemail.com>
>
> Change the data type of the ioctl _request_ argument from 'int' to
> 'unsigned long' for the various accel/kvm functions which are
> essentially wrappers around the ioctl() syscall.
>
> The correct type for ioctl()'s 'request' argument is confused:
>  * POSIX defines the request argument as 'int'
>  * glibc uses 'unsigned long' in the prototype in sys/ioctl.h
>  * the glibc info documentation uses 'int'
>  * the Linux manpage uses 'unsigned long'
>  * the Linux implementation of the syscall uses 'unsigned int'
>
> If we wrap ioctl() with another function which uses 'int' as the
> type for the request argument, then requests with the 0x8000_0000
> bit set will be sign-extended when the 'int' is cast to
> 'unsigned long' for the call to ioctl().
>
> On x86_64 one such example is the KVM_IRQ_LINE_STATUS request.
> Bit requests with the _IOC_READ direction bit set, will have the high
> bit set.
>
> Fortunately the Linux Kernel truncates the upper 32bit of the request
> on 64bit machines (because it uses 'unsigned int', and see also Linus
> Torvalds' comments in
>   https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=14362 )
> so this doesn't cause active problems for us.  However it is more
> consistent to follow the glibc ioctl() prototype when we define
> functions that are essentially wrappers around ioctl().
>
> This resolves a Coverity issue where it points out that in
> kvm_get_xsave() we assign a value (KVM_GET_XSAVE or KVM_GET_XSAVE2)
> to an 'int' variable which can't hold it without overflow.
>
> Resolves: Coverity CID 1547759
> Signed-off-by: Johannes Stoelp <johannes.stoelp@gmail.com>
> [PMM: Rebased patch, adjusted commit message, included note about
>  Coverity fix, updated the type of the local var in kvm_get_xsave,
>  updated the comment in the KVMState struct definition]
> Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
> ---
> This is a patch that was posted back in 2021, and I reviewed it
> at the time
> https://lore.kernel.org/qemu-devel/20210901213426.360748-1-johannes.stoelp@gmail.com/
> but we never actually took it into the tree. I was reminded of it
> by the Coverity issue, where a change to Coverity means it now
> complains about the potential integer overflow when we put one
> of these high-bit-set ioctls into an "int". So I thought it would
> be worth dusting this off and getting it upstream.
>
> For more discussion of the ioctl request datatype see also the
> review thread on the previous version of the patch:
> https://lore.kernel.org/qemu-devel/CAFEAcA8TRQdj33Ycm=XzmuUUNApaXVgeDexfS+3Ycg6kLnpmyg@mail.gmail.com/
>
> Since this doesn't actually cause any incorrect behaviour this
> is obviously for-9.2 material.
> ---
>  include/sysemu/kvm.h     |  8 ++++----
>  include/sysemu/kvm_int.h | 16 ++++++++++++----
>  accel/kvm/kvm-all.c      |  8 ++++----
>  target/i386/kvm/kvm.c    |  3 ++-
>  accel/kvm/trace-events   |  8 ++++----
>  5 files changed, 26 insertions(+), 17 deletions(-)
>
> diff --git a/include/sysemu/kvm.h b/include/sysemu/kvm.h
> index 9cf14ca3d5b..613d3f7581f 100644
> --- a/include/sysemu/kvm.h
> +++ b/include/sysemu/kvm.h
> @@ -235,11 +235,11 @@ static inline int kvm_update_guest_debug(CPUState *cpu, unsigned long reinject_t
>
>  /* internal API */
>
> -int kvm_ioctl(KVMState *s, int type, ...);
> +int kvm_ioctl(KVMState *s, unsigned long type, ...);
>
> -int kvm_vm_ioctl(KVMState *s, int type, ...);
> +int kvm_vm_ioctl(KVMState *s, unsigned long type, ...);
>
> -int kvm_vcpu_ioctl(CPUState *cpu, int type, ...);
> +int kvm_vcpu_ioctl(CPUState *cpu, unsigned long type, ...);
>
>  /**
>   * kvm_device_ioctl - call an ioctl on a kvm device
> @@ -248,7 +248,7 @@ int kvm_vcpu_ioctl(CPUState *cpu, int type, ...);
>   *
>   * Returns: -errno on error, nonnegative on success
>   */
> -int kvm_device_ioctl(int fd, int type, ...);
> +int kvm_device_ioctl(int fd, unsigned long type, ...);
>
>  /**
>   * kvm_vm_check_attr - check for existence of a specific vm attribute
> diff --git a/include/sysemu/kvm_int.h b/include/sysemu/kvm_int.h
> index 1d8fb1473bd..b52e3483511 100644
> --- a/include/sysemu/kvm_int.h
> +++ b/include/sysemu/kvm_int.h
> @@ -122,10 +122,18 @@ struct KVMState
>      bool sync_mmu;
>      bool guest_state_protected;
>      uint64_t manual_dirty_log_protect;
> -    /* The man page (and posix) say ioctl numbers are signed int, but
> -     * they're not.  Linux, glibc and *BSD all treat ioctl numbers as
> -     * unsigned, and treating them as signed here can break things */
> -    unsigned irq_set_ioctl;
> +    /*
> +     * POSIX says that ioctl numbers are signed int, but in practice
> +     * they are not. Linux, glibc and *BSD all treat ioctl numbers as
> +     * unsigned, and real-world ioctl values like KVM_GET_XSAVE have
> +     * bit 31 set, which means that passing them via an 'int' will
> +     * result in sign-extension when they get converted back to the
> +     * 'unsigned long' which the ioctl() prototype uses. Luckily Linux
> +     * always treats the argument as an unsigned 32-bit int, so any
> +     * possible sign-extension is deliberately ignored, but for
> +     * consistency we keep to the same type that glibc is using.
> +     */
> +    unsigned long irq_set_ioctl;
>      unsigned int sigmask_len;
>      GHashTable *gsimap;
>  #ifdef KVM_CAP_IRQ_ROUTING
> diff --git a/accel/kvm/kvm-all.c b/accel/kvm/kvm-all.c
> index 75d11a07b2b..beb1988d12c 100644
> --- a/accel/kvm/kvm-all.c
> +++ b/accel/kvm/kvm-all.c
> @@ -3170,7 +3170,7 @@ int kvm_cpu_exec(CPUState *cpu)
>      return ret;
>  }
>
> -int kvm_ioctl(KVMState *s, int type, ...)
> +int kvm_ioctl(KVMState *s, unsigned long type, ...)
>  {
>      int ret;
>      void *arg;
> @@ -3188,7 +3188,7 @@ int kvm_ioctl(KVMState *s, int type, ...)
>      return ret;
>  }
>
> -int kvm_vm_ioctl(KVMState *s, int type, ...)
> +int kvm_vm_ioctl(KVMState *s, unsigned long type, ...)
>  {
>      int ret;
>      void *arg;
> @@ -3208,7 +3208,7 @@ int kvm_vm_ioctl(KVMState *s, int type, ...)
>      return ret;
>  }
>
> -int kvm_vcpu_ioctl(CPUState *cpu, int type, ...)
> +int kvm_vcpu_ioctl(CPUState *cpu, unsigned long type, ...)
>  {
>      int ret;
>      void *arg;
> @@ -3228,7 +3228,7 @@ int kvm_vcpu_ioctl(CPUState *cpu, int type, ...)
>      return ret;
>  }
>
> -int kvm_device_ioctl(int fd, int type, ...)
> +int kvm_device_ioctl(int fd, unsigned long type, ...)
>  {
>      int ret;
>      void *arg;
> diff --git a/target/i386/kvm/kvm.c b/target/i386/kvm/kvm.c
> index 2fa88ef1e37..ada581c5d6e 100644
> --- a/target/i386/kvm/kvm.c
> +++ b/target/i386/kvm/kvm.c
> @@ -4102,7 +4102,8 @@ static int kvm_get_xsave(X86CPU *cpu)
>  {
>      CPUX86State *env = &cpu->env;
>      void *xsave = env->xsave_buf;
> -    int type, ret;
> +    unsigned long type;
> +    int ret;
>
>      type = has_xsave2 ? KVM_GET_XSAVE2 : KVM_GET_XSAVE;
>      ret = kvm_vcpu_ioctl(CPU(cpu), type, xsave);
> diff --git a/accel/kvm/trace-events b/accel/kvm/trace-events
> index 37626c1ac5d..82c65fd2ab8 100644
> --- a/accel/kvm/trace-events
> +++ b/accel/kvm/trace-events
> @@ -1,11 +1,11 @@
>  # See docs/devel/tracing.rst for syntax documentation.
>
>  # kvm-all.c
> -kvm_ioctl(int type, void *arg) "type 0x%x, arg %p"
> -kvm_vm_ioctl(int type, void *arg) "type 0x%x, arg %p"
> -kvm_vcpu_ioctl(int cpu_index, int type, void *arg) "cpu_index %d, type 0x%x, arg %p"
> +kvm_ioctl(unsigned long type, void *arg) "type 0x%lx, arg %p"
> +kvm_vm_ioctl(unsigned long type, void *arg) "type 0x%lx, arg %p"
> +kvm_vcpu_ioctl(int cpu_index, unsigned long type, void *arg) "cpu_index %d, type 0x%lx, arg %p"
>  kvm_run_exit(int cpu_index, uint32_t reason) "cpu_index %d, reason %d"
> -kvm_device_ioctl(int fd, int type, void *arg) "dev fd %d, type 0x%x, arg %p"
> +kvm_device_ioctl(int fd, unsigned long type, void *arg) "dev fd %d, type 0x%lx, arg %p"
>  kvm_failed_reg_get(uint64_t id, const char *msg) "Warning: Unable to retrieve ONEREG %" PRIu64 " from KVM: %s"
>  kvm_failed_reg_set(uint64_t id, const char *msg) "Warning: Unable to set ONEREG %" PRIu64 " to KVM: %s"
>  kvm_init_vcpu(int cpu_index, unsigned long arch_cpu_id) "index: %d id: %lu"
> --
> 2.34.1
Eric Blake Aug. 29, 2024, 7:36 p.m. UTC | #2
On Thu, Aug 15, 2024 at 01:27:47PM GMT, Peter Maydell wrote:
> From: Johannes Stoelp <johannes.stoelp@googlemail.com>
> 
> Change the data type of the ioctl _request_ argument from 'int' to
> 'unsigned long' for the various accel/kvm functions which are
> essentially wrappers around the ioctl() syscall.
> 
> The correct type for ioctl()'s 'request' argument is confused:
>  * POSIX defines the request argument as 'int'

A bit of history: POSIX defined ioctl() because of the old Solaris
STREAMS interface, that ended up deprecated in Issue 7 (2004) and
removed in Issue 8 (just released this year).  So POSIX no longer
specified a signature for ioctl().  Admittedly, it DID add a new
interface posix_devctl() designed to be a "portable" replacement for
what ioctl() did (by being a new interface, there is no longer a
question on what type it has), with the intent that libraries will
eventually implement it (perhaps as a wrapper around the real ioctl),
and that one uses 'int' for the command, and replaces the varargs of
ioctl with a more direct specification of pointer and length.

https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9799919799/functions/posix_devctl.html

>  * glibc uses 'unsigned long' in the prototype in sys/ioctl.h
>  * the glibc info documentation uses 'int'

Arguably, that's a bug in glibc for being self-inconsistent.

>  * the Linux manpage uses 'unsigned long'
>  * the Linux implementation of the syscall uses 'unsigned int'

And there's more of the history, which didn't become apparent until
64-bit architectures became common, but where we now have fallout like
this thread.

> 
> If we wrap ioctl() with another function which uses 'int' as the
> type for the request argument, then requests with the 0x8000_0000
> bit set will be sign-extended when the 'int' is cast to
> 'unsigned long' for the call to ioctl().
> 
> On x86_64 one such example is the KVM_IRQ_LINE_STATUS request.
> Bit requests with the _IOC_READ direction bit set, will have the high
> bit set.
> 
> Fortunately the Linux Kernel truncates the upper 32bit of the request
> on 64bit machines (because it uses 'unsigned int', and see also Linus
> Torvalds' comments in
>   https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=14362 )
> so this doesn't cause active problems for us.  However it is more
> consistent to follow the glibc ioctl() prototype when we define
> functions that are essentially wrappers around ioctl().
> 
> This resolves a Coverity issue where it points out that in
> kvm_get_xsave() we assign a value (KVM_GET_XSAVE or KVM_GET_XSAVE2)
> to an 'int' variable which can't hold it without overflow.

For the record, despite POSIX having picked a signed type, I am
totally in favor of an unsigned type in any of our uses.

> 
> Resolves: Coverity CID 1547759
> Signed-off-by: Johannes Stoelp <johannes.stoelp@gmail.com>
> [PMM: Rebased patch, adjusted commit message, included note about
>  Coverity fix, updated the type of the local var in kvm_get_xsave,
>  updated the comment in the KVMState struct definition]
> Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
> ---
> This is a patch that was posted back in 2021, and I reviewed it
> at the time
> https://lore.kernel.org/qemu-devel/20210901213426.360748-1-johannes.stoelp@gmail.com/
> but we never actually took it into the tree. I was reminded of it
> by the Coverity issue, where a change to Coverity means it now
> complains about the potential integer overflow when we put one
> of these high-bit-set ioctls into an "int". So I thought it would
> be worth dusting this off and getting it upstream.
> 
> For more discussion of the ioctl request datatype see also the
> review thread on the previous version of the patch:
> https://lore.kernel.org/qemu-devel/CAFEAcA8TRQdj33Ycm=XzmuUUNApaXVgeDexfS+3Ycg6kLnpmyg@mail.gmail.com/
> 
> Since this doesn't actually cause any incorrect behaviour this
> is obviously for-9.2 material.
> ---
>  include/sysemu/kvm.h     |  8 ++++----
>  include/sysemu/kvm_int.h | 16 ++++++++++++----
>  accel/kvm/kvm-all.c      |  8 ++++----
>  target/i386/kvm/kvm.c    |  3 ++-
>  accel/kvm/trace-events   |  8 ++++----
>  5 files changed, 26 insertions(+), 17 deletions(-)

Reviewed-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>

> +++ b/include/sysemu/kvm_int.h
> @@ -122,10 +122,18 @@ struct KVMState
>      bool sync_mmu;
>      bool guest_state_protected;
>      uint64_t manual_dirty_log_protect;
> -    /* The man page (and posix) say ioctl numbers are signed int, but
> -     * they're not.  Linux, glibc and *BSD all treat ioctl numbers as
> -     * unsigned, and treating them as signed here can break things */
> -    unsigned irq_set_ioctl;
> +    /*
> +     * POSIX says that ioctl numbers are signed int, but in practice

Maybe s/POSIX/older POSIX/ (given that newer POSIX does not specify
ioctl at all)

> +     * they are not. Linux, glibc and *BSD all treat ioctl numbers as
> +     * unsigned, and real-world ioctl values like KVM_GET_XSAVE have
> +     * bit 31 set, which means that passing them via an 'int' will
> +     * result in sign-extension when they get converted back to the
> +     * 'unsigned long' which the ioctl() prototype uses. Luckily Linux
> +     * always treats the argument as an unsigned 32-bit int, so any
> +     * possible sign-extension is deliberately ignored, but for
> +     * consistency we keep to the same type that glibc is using.
> +     */
> +    unsigned long irq_set_ioctl;
>      unsigned int sigmask_len;
>      GHashTable *gsimap;
diff mbox series

Patch

diff --git a/include/sysemu/kvm.h b/include/sysemu/kvm.h
index 9cf14ca3d5b..613d3f7581f 100644
--- a/include/sysemu/kvm.h
+++ b/include/sysemu/kvm.h
@@ -235,11 +235,11 @@  static inline int kvm_update_guest_debug(CPUState *cpu, unsigned long reinject_t
 
 /* internal API */
 
-int kvm_ioctl(KVMState *s, int type, ...);
+int kvm_ioctl(KVMState *s, unsigned long type, ...);
 
-int kvm_vm_ioctl(KVMState *s, int type, ...);
+int kvm_vm_ioctl(KVMState *s, unsigned long type, ...);
 
-int kvm_vcpu_ioctl(CPUState *cpu, int type, ...);
+int kvm_vcpu_ioctl(CPUState *cpu, unsigned long type, ...);
 
 /**
  * kvm_device_ioctl - call an ioctl on a kvm device
@@ -248,7 +248,7 @@  int kvm_vcpu_ioctl(CPUState *cpu, int type, ...);
  *
  * Returns: -errno on error, nonnegative on success
  */
-int kvm_device_ioctl(int fd, int type, ...);
+int kvm_device_ioctl(int fd, unsigned long type, ...);
 
 /**
  * kvm_vm_check_attr - check for existence of a specific vm attribute
diff --git a/include/sysemu/kvm_int.h b/include/sysemu/kvm_int.h
index 1d8fb1473bd..b52e3483511 100644
--- a/include/sysemu/kvm_int.h
+++ b/include/sysemu/kvm_int.h
@@ -122,10 +122,18 @@  struct KVMState
     bool sync_mmu;
     bool guest_state_protected;
     uint64_t manual_dirty_log_protect;
-    /* The man page (and posix) say ioctl numbers are signed int, but
-     * they're not.  Linux, glibc and *BSD all treat ioctl numbers as
-     * unsigned, and treating them as signed here can break things */
-    unsigned irq_set_ioctl;
+    /*
+     * POSIX says that ioctl numbers are signed int, but in practice
+     * they are not. Linux, glibc and *BSD all treat ioctl numbers as
+     * unsigned, and real-world ioctl values like KVM_GET_XSAVE have
+     * bit 31 set, which means that passing them via an 'int' will
+     * result in sign-extension when they get converted back to the
+     * 'unsigned long' which the ioctl() prototype uses. Luckily Linux
+     * always treats the argument as an unsigned 32-bit int, so any
+     * possible sign-extension is deliberately ignored, but for
+     * consistency we keep to the same type that glibc is using.
+     */
+    unsigned long irq_set_ioctl;
     unsigned int sigmask_len;
     GHashTable *gsimap;
 #ifdef KVM_CAP_IRQ_ROUTING
diff --git a/accel/kvm/kvm-all.c b/accel/kvm/kvm-all.c
index 75d11a07b2b..beb1988d12c 100644
--- a/accel/kvm/kvm-all.c
+++ b/accel/kvm/kvm-all.c
@@ -3170,7 +3170,7 @@  int kvm_cpu_exec(CPUState *cpu)
     return ret;
 }
 
-int kvm_ioctl(KVMState *s, int type, ...)
+int kvm_ioctl(KVMState *s, unsigned long type, ...)
 {
     int ret;
     void *arg;
@@ -3188,7 +3188,7 @@  int kvm_ioctl(KVMState *s, int type, ...)
     return ret;
 }
 
-int kvm_vm_ioctl(KVMState *s, int type, ...)
+int kvm_vm_ioctl(KVMState *s, unsigned long type, ...)
 {
     int ret;
     void *arg;
@@ -3208,7 +3208,7 @@  int kvm_vm_ioctl(KVMState *s, int type, ...)
     return ret;
 }
 
-int kvm_vcpu_ioctl(CPUState *cpu, int type, ...)
+int kvm_vcpu_ioctl(CPUState *cpu, unsigned long type, ...)
 {
     int ret;
     void *arg;
@@ -3228,7 +3228,7 @@  int kvm_vcpu_ioctl(CPUState *cpu, int type, ...)
     return ret;
 }
 
-int kvm_device_ioctl(int fd, int type, ...)
+int kvm_device_ioctl(int fd, unsigned long type, ...)
 {
     int ret;
     void *arg;
diff --git a/target/i386/kvm/kvm.c b/target/i386/kvm/kvm.c
index 2fa88ef1e37..ada581c5d6e 100644
--- a/target/i386/kvm/kvm.c
+++ b/target/i386/kvm/kvm.c
@@ -4102,7 +4102,8 @@  static int kvm_get_xsave(X86CPU *cpu)
 {
     CPUX86State *env = &cpu->env;
     void *xsave = env->xsave_buf;
-    int type, ret;
+    unsigned long type;
+    int ret;
 
     type = has_xsave2 ? KVM_GET_XSAVE2 : KVM_GET_XSAVE;
     ret = kvm_vcpu_ioctl(CPU(cpu), type, xsave);
diff --git a/accel/kvm/trace-events b/accel/kvm/trace-events
index 37626c1ac5d..82c65fd2ab8 100644
--- a/accel/kvm/trace-events
+++ b/accel/kvm/trace-events
@@ -1,11 +1,11 @@ 
 # See docs/devel/tracing.rst for syntax documentation.
 
 # kvm-all.c
-kvm_ioctl(int type, void *arg) "type 0x%x, arg %p"
-kvm_vm_ioctl(int type, void *arg) "type 0x%x, arg %p"
-kvm_vcpu_ioctl(int cpu_index, int type, void *arg) "cpu_index %d, type 0x%x, arg %p"
+kvm_ioctl(unsigned long type, void *arg) "type 0x%lx, arg %p"
+kvm_vm_ioctl(unsigned long type, void *arg) "type 0x%lx, arg %p"
+kvm_vcpu_ioctl(int cpu_index, unsigned long type, void *arg) "cpu_index %d, type 0x%lx, arg %p"
 kvm_run_exit(int cpu_index, uint32_t reason) "cpu_index %d, reason %d"
-kvm_device_ioctl(int fd, int type, void *arg) "dev fd %d, type 0x%x, arg %p"
+kvm_device_ioctl(int fd, unsigned long type, void *arg) "dev fd %d, type 0x%lx, arg %p"
 kvm_failed_reg_get(uint64_t id, const char *msg) "Warning: Unable to retrieve ONEREG %" PRIu64 " from KVM: %s"
 kvm_failed_reg_set(uint64_t id, const char *msg) "Warning: Unable to set ONEREG %" PRIu64 " to KVM: %s"
 kvm_init_vcpu(int cpu_index, unsigned long arch_cpu_id) "index: %d id: %lu"