[RFC v1 0/8] RFC v1: Kernel handling of CPU and memory hot un/plug for crash

Eric DeVolder eric.devolder at oracle.com
Mon Nov 29 11:42:13 PST 2021


Hi, see below.
eric

On 11/24/21 03:02, Baoquan He wrote:
> Hi,
> 
> On 11/18/21 at 12:49pm, Eric DeVolder wrote:
> ......
>> This patchset introduces a generic crash hot un/plug handler that
>> registers with the CPU and memory notifiers. Upon CPU or memory
>> changes, this generic handler is invoked and performs important
>> housekeeping, for example obtaining the appropriate lock, and then
>> invokes an architecture specific handler to do the appropriate
>> updates.
>>
>> In the case of x86_64, the arch specific handler generates a new
>> elfcorehdr, which reflects the current CPUs and memory regions, into a
>> buffer. Since purgatory also does an integrity check via hash digests
>> of the loaded segments, purgatory must also be updated with the new
> 
> When I tried to address this with a draft patch, I started with a
> different way in which udev rule triggers reloading and only elfcorehdr
> segment is updated. The update should be less time consuming. Seems
> internal notifier is better in your way. But I didn't update purgatory
> since I just skipped the elfcorehdr part when calculate the digest of
> segments. The reason from my mind is kernel text, initrd must contribute
> most part of the digest, elfcorehdr is much less, and it will simplify
> code change more. Doing so let us have no need to touch purgatory at
> all. What do you think?

Well certainly if purgatory did not need to be updated, then that simplifies
matters quite a bit!

I do not have any context on the history of including elfcorehdr in the purgatory
integrity check. I do agree with you that checking kernel, initrd, boot_params
is most important. Perhaps allowing the elfcorehdr data structure to change
isn't too bad without including in the integrity check is ok as there is some
sanity checking of it by the capture kernel as it reads it for /proc/vmcore setup.

> 
> Still reviewing.

Thank you!

> 
>> digests. The arch handler also generates a new purgatory into a
>> buffer, performs the hash digests of the new memory segments, and then
>> patches purgatory with the new digests.  If all succeeds, then the
>> elfcorehdr and purgatory buffers over write the existing buffers and
>> the new kdump image is live and ready to go. No involvement with
>> userspace at all.
> 



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