[PATCH] n_tty: use kmalloc() instead of vmalloc() to avoid crash on armada-xp
Vladimir Murzin
vladimir.murzin at arm.com
Thu Mar 12 08:34:05 PDT 2015
On 12/03/15 13:11, Stas Sergeev wrote:
> 12.03.2015 16:04, Russell King - ARM Linux пишет:
>> On Thu, Mar 12, 2015 at 03:47:35PM +0300, Stas Sergeev wrote:
>>> 12.03.2015 15:33, Peter Hurley пишет:
>>>> On 03/11/2015 10:24 AM, Stas Sergeev wrote:
>>>>> However, while testing, I've suddenly got another crash happened
>>>>> a bit earlier than the previous one used to happen: (OOM? How??)
>>>>> ---
>>>>> [ 0.000000] Booting Linux on physical CPU 0x0
>>>>> [ 0.000000] Linux version 4.0.0-rc2-00137-gb672c98-dirty
>>>>> (root at host-010-117) (gcc version 4.6.3 (Ubuntu/Linaro 4.6.3-1ubuntu5) )
>>>>> #2 SMP 5
>>>>> [ 0.000000] CPU: ARMv7 Processor [562f5842] revision 2 (ARMv7),
>>>>> cr=10c5387d
>>>>> [ 0.000000] CPU: PIPT / VIPT nonaliasing data cache, PIPT instruction
>>>>> cache
>>>>> [ 0.000000] Machine model: Marvell Armada XP Development Board
>>>>> DB-MV784MP-GP
>>>>> [ 0.000000] Ignoring memory block 0x100000000 - 0x200000000
>>>> Once you patch your bootloader, you'll want to configure your kernel
>>>> for CONFIG_ARM_LPAE=y to enable the high 4GB of memory you have, as
>>>> it's being ignored in this config right now (as shown above and in
>>>> the oom message below).
>>> Hi Peter, thanks for this hint.
>>> I actually already tried with lpae, and, except for the missing
>>> 256Mb, everything works properly. :)
>> How reproducable is the OOM? Have you tested LPAE as much as you did
>> without LPAE?
> Hi Russel, OOM is reproduceable quite fine only on old uboot
> and non-lpae mode.
> With lpae mode and old uboot OOM doesn't happen, but the board is not
> very reliable.
> With old uboot and mem=3G OOM is not reproduceable!
> With new uboot and whatever lpae more, OOM does not happen.
> So, after all, it still seems to be related to the problematic memory
> region. Let me know if you still suspect a bug and need more testing.
>
Hi Stas,
Recently, I've done some work on memtest kernel feature [1]. It helped
to track down an issue with memory corruption on arm64 platform.
I wonder if it is able to catch your case?
[1] http://comments.gmane.org/gmane.linux.kernel.mm/129669
Thanks
Vladimir
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