OpenBSD Disables Intel CPU Hyper-Threading Due To Security Concerns (bleepingcomputer.com)
The OpenBSD project announced today plans to disable support for Intel CPU hyper-threading due to security concerns regarding the theoretical threat of more "Spectre-class bugs." Bleeping Computer reports: Hyper-threading (HT) is Intel's proprietary implementation of Simultaneous Multithreading (SMT), a technology that allows processors to run parallel operations on different cores of the same multi-core CPU. The feature has been added to all Intel CPUs released since 2002 and has come enabled by default, with Intel citing its performance boost as the main reason for its inclusion.
But today, Mark Kettenis of the OpenBSD project, said the OpenBSD team was removing support for Intel HT because, by design, this technology just opens the door for more timing attacks. Timing attacks are a class of cryptographic attacks through which a third-party observer can deduce the content of encrypted data by recording and analyzing the time taken to execute cryptographic algorithms. The OpenBSD team is now stepping in to provide a new setting to disable HT support because "many modern machines no longer provide the ability to disable hyper-threading in the BIOS setup."
But today, Mark Kettenis of the OpenBSD project, said the OpenBSD team was removing support for Intel HT because, by design, this technology just opens the door for more timing attacks. Timing attacks are a class of cryptographic attacks through which a third-party observer can deduce the content of encrypted data by recording and analyzing the time taken to execute cryptographic algorithms. The OpenBSD team is now stepping in to provide a new setting to disable HT support because "many modern machines no longer provide the ability to disable hyper-threading in the BIOS setup."
"a technology that allows processors to run parallel operations on different cores of the same multi-core CPU"
Not it's not. It's a technology that allows processors to present a single physical core as two logical cores. Two threads of software can run simultaneously on a single physical core.
It's mostly an optimization of the execution pipeline. When execution in one thread stalls, it can pick up processing in the other thread. It typically boosts performance by about 10-20%. And yes, I can see this could cause problems regarding timing if you can cause a pipeline stall based on a condition you want to test in the other thread on the same core. It'll be hard though. Maybe too hard to justify disabling HT altogether. Providing a switch to turn it off in case an exploit is discovered would be more wise I think.
This is your sig. There are thousands more, but this one is yours.
For AMD's SMT implementation, it's around 30% in heavy workloads. Hell, a Cinebench test by a Czech web site reported a 40% speed boost in Cinebench R15 for an 1800X. On Reddit, a 45% difference was reported for a 1600X.
Ezekiel 23:20
It's an option, you can change the setting with a syscall. That's not clear from the summary, you have to click through to the actual announcement.
"First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
First of all, it surely looks like OpenBSD developers don't even have a working spellchecker and perhaps they are correct, saying that it doesn't necessarily have a "posive" effect.
However, in all seriousness, I've seen at least two dozens tests of HT and in the worst case scenario it slows down your performance by less than a few percents, however, when we're talking servers, which nowadays run highly parallelized workloads where a single process may span several cores (nginx, mariadb, redis, mongodb, etc. etc. etc.) the performance gain from using HT may reach up to 30%, i.e. you're getting a third of your cores for free, which allows you to greatly cut expenditures and save on cooling.
Yes, HT poses security challenges in a multiuser environment (say, for a hosting provider) where people might run any code they want, however a typical application server almost always runs a tightly controlled software stack, which means your server processes cannot run any foreign code, which means Meltdown/Spectre class attacks might be safely disregarded.
It's true. OpenBSD does not benefit from hyper-threading, at least on all Intel platforms I have tried. Having it off happens to be a small net-win for performance as well (a few percent on compile tests). This isn't just true for OpenBSD or for every workload either. Your mileage obviously may vary and should be tested.
iPhone users:
Settings > General > Keyboard ... set "Smart Punctuation" to Off.
You're killing us with this shit, it's unreadable.