[PATCH v3 0/2] kexec-tools: arm64: Enable D-cache in purgatory

James Morse james.morse at arm.com
Wed Apr 4 06:28:52 PDT 2018


Hi Kostiantyn,

On 04/04/18 13:45, Kostiantyn Iarmak wrote:
> From: Pratyush Anand <panand at redhat.com>
>> Date: Fri, Jun 2, 2017 at 5:42 PM
>> Subject: Re: [PATCH v3 0/2] kexec-tools: arm64: Enable D-cache in purgatory
>> To: James Morse <james.morse at arm.com>
>> Cc: mark.rutland at arm.com, bhe at redhat.com, kexec at lists.infradead.org,
>> horms at verge.net.au, dyoung at redhat.com,
>> linux-arm-kernel at lists.infradead.org
>>
>> On Friday 02 June 2017 01:53 PM, James Morse wrote:
>>> On 23/05/17 06:02, Pratyush Anand wrote:
>>>> It takes more that 2 minutes to verify SHA in purgatory when vmlinuz image
>>>> is around 13MB and initramfs is around 30MB. It takes more than 20 second
>>>> even when we have -O2 optimization enabled. However, if dcache is enabled
>>>> during purgatory execution then, it takes just a second in SHA
>>>> verification.
>>>>
>>>> Therefore, these patches adds support for dcache enabling facility during
>>>> purgatory execution.

>>> I'm still not convinced we need this. Moving the SHA verification to happen
>>> before the dcache+mmu are disabled would also solve the delay problem,
>>
>> Humm..I am not sure, if we can do that.

>> When we leave kernel (and enter into purgatory), icache+dcache+mmu are
>> already disabled. I think, that would be possible when we will be in a
>> position to use in-kernel purgatory.
>>
>>> and we
>>> can print an error message or fail the syscall.
>>>
>>> For kexec we don't expect memory corruption, what are we testing for?
>>> I can see the use for kdump, but the kdump-kernel is unmapped so the kernel
>>> can't accidentally write over it.
>>>
>>> (we discussed all this last time, but it fizzled-out. If you and the
>>>   kexec-tools maintainer think its necessary, fine by me!)

>> Yes, there had already been discussion and MAINTAINERs have
>> discouraged none-purgatory implementation.
>>
>>> I have some comments on making this code easier to maintain..
>>>
>> Thanks.
>>
>> I have implemented your review comments and have archived the code in
>>
>> https://github.com/pratyushanand/kexec-tools.git : purgatory-enable-dcache
>>
>> I will be posting the next version only when someone complains about
>> ARM64 kdump behavior that it is not as fast as x86.

> On our ARM64-based platform we have very long main kernel-secondary kernel
> switch time.
> 
> This patch set fixes the issue (we are using 4.4 kernel and 2.0.13 kexec-tools
> version), we can get ~25x speedup, with this patch secondary kernel boots in ~3
> seconds while on 2.0.13-2.0.16 kexec-tools without this patch switch takes about
> 75 seconds.

This is slow because its generating a checksum of the kernel without the benefit
of the caches. This series generated page tables so that it could enable the MMU
and caches. But, the purgatory code also needs to be a simple as possible
because its practically impossible to debug.

The purgatory code does this checksum-ing because its worried the panic() was
because the kernel cause some memory corruption, and that memory corruption may
have affected the kdump kernel too.

This can't happen on arm64 as we unmap kdump's crash region, so not even the
kernel can accidentally write to it. 98d2e1539b84 ("arm64: kdump: protect crash
dump kernel memory") has all the details.

(we also needed to do this to avoid the risk of mismatched memory attributes if
kdump boots and some CPUs are still stuck in the old kernel)


> When do you plan merge this patch?

We ended up with the check-summing code because its the default behaviour of
kexec-tools on other architectures.

One alternative is to rip it out for arm64. Untested:
--------------------%<--------------------
diff --git a/purgatory/arch/arm64/Makefile b/purgatory/arch/arm64/Makefile
index 636abea..f10c148 100644
--- a/purgatory/arch/arm64/Makefile
+++ b/purgatory/arch/arm64/Makefile
@@ -7,7 +7,8 @@ arm64_PURGATORY_EXTRA_CFLAGS = \
        -Werror-implicit-function-declaration \
        -Wdeclaration-after-statement \
        -Werror=implicit-int \
-       -Werror=strict-prototypes
+       -Werror=strict-prototypes \
+       -DNO_SHA_IN_PURGATORY

 arm64_PURGATORY_SRCS += \
        purgatory/arch/arm64/entry.S \
diff --git a/purgatory/purgatory.c b/purgatory/purgatory.c
index 3bbcc09..44e792a 100644
--- a/purgatory/purgatory.c
+++ b/purgatory/purgatory.c
@@ -9,6 +9,8 @@
 struct sha256_region sha256_regions[SHA256_REGIONS] = {};
 sha256_digest_t sha256_digest = { };

+#ifndef NO_SHA_IN_PURGATORY
+
 int verify_sha256_digest(void)
 {
        struct sha256_region *ptr, *end;
@@ -39,14 +41,18 @@ int verify_sha256_digest(void)
        return 0;
 }

+#endif /* NO_SHA_IN_PURGATORY */
+
 void purgatory(void)
 {
        printf("I'm in purgatory\n");
        setup_arch();
+#ifndef NO_SHA_IN_PURGATORY
        if (verify_sha256_digest()) {
                for(;;) {
                        /* loop forever */
                }
        }
+#endif /* NO_SHA_IN_PURGATORY */
        post_verification_setup_arch();
 }
--------------------%<--------------------


Thanks,

James



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