arm64 boot requirements
Mark Rutland
mark.rutland at arm.com
Thu Dec 3 04:29:44 PST 2015
On Wed, Dec 02, 2015 at 11:03:48AM -0800, Geoff Levand wrote:
> Hi,
>
> On Tue, 2015-12-01 at 11:02 +0000, Mark Rutland wrote:
> > Pratyush, Geoff, I understood you were loading the kernel vmlinux for
> > kexec. Do you parse the Image header to figure out where to place
> > things?
>
> Yes, in the kexec user tools we use text_offset to make
> enough room for the kernel, but there is also the need for
> page_offset.
>
> We need to know the page_offset to be able to do virtual to
> physical address conversions. We can calculate the page_offset
> for a vmlinux image as page_offset = phdr->p_vaddr - text_offset.
I don't understadn why you need to do that.
Is that just just so you can figure out where to load the segments
physically?
> The binary Image currently has no info about page_offset or
> virtual addressing. We have a kexec-tools option for the
> user to specify a page_offset. If that option is not provided
> we try to look at the running kernel's symbols, and if that
> fails, fall back to a default page_offset. This is less than
> ideal, and certainly makes the binary Image less appealing to
> use with kexec.
I don't follow at all why this complication is necessary. I don't think
that the kexec tools should be looking at the kernel symbols in that
manner, and I don't think that we need to expose the page offset via the
Image header.
The first loaded address in the vmlinux corresponds to PHYS_OFFSET +
TEXT_OFFSET. If you know that, you can figure out an offset to apply to
VAs to convert them to PAs when loading.
What am I missing?
Thanks,
Mark.
More information about the linux-arm-kernel
mailing list