[v2 0/5] arm64: add kdump support
AKASHI Takahiro
takahiro.akashi at linaro.org
Sun May 10 23:16:54 PDT 2015
Hi
Sorry for late response. I was on vacation.
On 04/24/2015 06:53 PM, Mark Rutland wrote:
> Hi,
>
> On Fri, Apr 24, 2015 at 08:53:03AM +0100, AKASHI Takahiro wrote:
>> This patch set enables kdump (crash dump kernel) support on arm64 on top of
>> Geoff's kexec patchset.
>>
>> In this version, there are some arm64-specific usage/constraints:
>> 1) "mem=" boot parameter must be specified on crash dump kernel
>> if the system starts on uefi.
>
> This sounds very painful. Why is this the case, and how do x86 and/or
> ia64 get around that?
As Dave (Young) said, x86 uses "memmap=XX" kernel commandline parameters
to specify usable memory for crash dump kernel.
On my arm64 implementation, "linux,usable-memory" property is added
to device tree blob by kexec-tools for this purpose.
This is because, when I first implemented kdump on arm64, ppc is the only
architecture that supports kdump AND utilizes device trees.
Since kexec-tools as well as the kernel already has this framework,
I believed that device-tree approach was smarter than a commandline
parameter.
However, uefi-based kernel ignores all the memory-related properties
in a device tree and so this "mem=" workaround was added.
>> 2) Kvm will not be enabled on crash dump kernel even if configured
>> See commit messages and Documentation/kdump/kdump.txt for details.
>>
>> The only concern I have is whether or not we can use the exact same kernel
>> as both system kernel and crash dump kernel. The current arm64 kernel is
>> not relocatable in the exact sense but I see no problems in using the same
>> binary when testing kdump.
>
> Ard has been working on decoupling the kernel text/data, FDT, and linear
> memory mappings, which would allow the kernel to be loaded anywhere and
> still be able to access all of memory [3]. I assume that's what you mean
> by "relocatable"?
I'm still trying to understand Ard's patchset, but I think yes.
>> I tested the code with
>> - ATF v1.1 + EDK2(UEFI) v3.0-rc0
>> - kernel v4.0 + Geoff' kexec v9
>> on
>> - Base fast model, and
>> - MediaTek MT8173-EVB
>> using my own kexec-tools [1], currently v0.12.
>>
>> You may want to start a kernel with the following boot parameter:
>> crashkernel=64M (or so, on model)
>> and try
>> $ kexec -p --load <vmlinux> --append ...
>> $ echo c > /proc/sysrq-trigger
>>
>> To examine vmcore (/proc/vmcore), you should use
>> - gdb v7.7 or later
>> - crash + a small patch (to recognize v4.0 kernel)
>>
>> Changes from v1:
>> * rebased to Geoff's v9
>> * tested this patchset on real hardware and fixed bugs:
>> - added cache flush operation in ipi_cpu_stop() when shutting down
>> the system. Otherwise, data saved in vmcore's note sections by
>> crash_save_cpu() might not be flushed to dumped memory and crash command
>> fail to fetch correct data.
>
> We'll need to give this a go on something with a system cache too (e.g.
> Seattle or X-Gene). Even if that's only UP it would give me much greater
> confidence in the cache maintenance.
Is there any genric interface to do so?
>> I will address Mark's commit[2] after Geoff takes care of it on kexec.
>> - modified to use ioremap_cache() instead of ioremap() when reading
>> crash memory. Otherwise, accessing /proc/vmcore on crash dump kernel
>> might cause an alignment fault.
>> * allows reserve_crashkernel() to handle "crashkernel=xyz[MG]" correctly,
>> thanks to Pratyush Anand. And it now also enforces memory limit.
>
> I worry that there could be potentially bad interaction between this and
> Ard's patches, depending on how the memory area to use is chosen. It is
> probably fine, but we should make sure that it is.
I'm not sure what the point is, but I will try to check it.
Thanks,
-Takahiro AKASHI
>> * moved reserve_crashkernel() and reserve_elfcorehdr() to
>> arm64_memblock_init() to clarify that they should be called before
>> dma_contignuous_reserve().
>>
>> [1] https://git.linaro.org/people/takahiro.akashi/kexec-tools.git
>> [2] http://lists.infradead.org/pipermail/linux-arm-kernel/2015-April/338171.html
>
> [3] http://lists.infradead.org/pipermail/linux-arm-kernel/2015-April/337596.html
>
> Thanks,
> Mark.
>
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