[PATCH 05/11] of: reserved_mem: add linux,no-dump property support for reserved memory regions

Rob Herring robh at kernel.org
Wed May 6 07:45:42 PDT 2026


On Wed, Apr 29, 2026 at 02:58:25PM +0800, Chen Wandun wrote:
> Add a 'no_dump' field to struct reserved_mem and parse the
> 'linux,no-dump' device tree property during reserved memory node
> initialization. This property allows device tree authors to mark
> specific reserved memory regions that should be excluded from kdump
> vmcore dumps.
> 
> Reserved memory regions used by device firmware (e.g., GPU, DSP, modem)
> typically contain data that is not useful for kernel crash analysis and
> can significantly increase vmcore size. The 'linux,no-dump' property
> provides a declarative way to indicate these regions should be filtered
> out when constructing the elfcorehdr for kdump.
> 
> The property is named with a 'linux,' prefix because kdump/vmcore is
> Linux-specific and the property is an OS hint rather than a hardware
> description, matching existing properties such as 'linux,cma-default'
> and 'linux,usable-memory-range'.
> 
> The 'linux,no-dump' property is only effective when the region:
>  - Does not have 'no-map': these regions are already excluded from
>    vmcore since they are removed from the linear mapping (MEMBLOCK_NOMAP).
>  - Does not have 'reusable': CMA reusable regions are actively used by
>    the kernel for movable page allocations, and their contents are
>    valuable for crash analysis.
> 
> The no-dump status is also printed in the boot log alongside the
> existing nomap and reusable flags for diagnostic purposes.

I think this property is the wrong way around and probably not needed. 
The default should be exclude the regions, but if Linux is using the 
regions (like CMA) then it can decide on its own to include them.

With the restructuring that went into 7.1, it should be possible for the 
CMA code (and code for any other regions) to set some flag for the 
region.

Rob



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