[PATCH v2 2/6] arm64: Add .mmuoff.text section

James Morse james.morse at arm.com
Thu Jun 16 06:22:21 PDT 2016


Hi Mark,

On 16/06/16 12:10, Mark Rutland wrote:
> On Wed, Jun 15, 2016 at 06:35:44PM +0100, James Morse wrote:
>> Resume from hibernate needs to clean any text executed by the kernel with
>> the MMU off to the PoC. Collect these functions together into a new
>> .mmuoff.text section.
>>
>> This covers booting of secondary cores and the cpu_suspend() path used
>> by cpu-idle and suspend-to-ram.
>>
>> The bulk of head.S is not included, as the primary boot code is only ever
>> executed once, the kernel never needs to ensure it is cleaned to a
>> particular point in the cache.


>> diff --git a/arch/arm64/kernel/head.S b/arch/arm64/kernel/head.S
>> index 2c6e598a94dc..ff37231e2054 100644
>> --- a/arch/arm64/kernel/head.S
>> +++ b/arch/arm64/kernel/head.S
>> @@ -656,6 +657,7 @@ ENDPROC(secondary_holding_pen)
>>  	 * Secondary entry point that jumps straight into the kernel. Only to
>>  	 * be used where CPUs are brought online dynamically by the kernel.
>>  	 */
>> +	.pushsection ".mmuoff.text", "ax"
>>  ENTRY(secondary_entry)
>>  	bl	el2_setup			// Drop to EL1
>>  	bl	set_cpu_boot_mode_flag
>> @@ -687,7 +689,7 @@ __secondary_switched:
>>  	mov	x29, #0
>>  	b	secondary_start_kernel
>>  ENDPROC(__secondary_switched)
>> -
>> +	.popsection
> 
> I think we also need to cover set_cpu_boot_mode_flag and
> __boot_cpu_mode.

Bother, yes.
How come cpu_resume doesn't call this? I guess we assume
psci_cpu_suspend_enter() will bring the core back at the same EL


> Likewise secondary_holding_pen and secondary_holding_pen_release, in
> case you booted with maxcpus=1, suspended, resumed, then tried to bring
> secondaries up with spin-table.

Whoa! This must never happen!
With KASLR:
* relocate to location-1,
* release the secondary cores from firmware into
  location-1:secondary_holding_pen,
* resume from hibernate, at which point we are running from location-2,
  as the kaslr values are now from the hibernate kernel.
* location-2:secondary_holding_pen is empty,
* location-1:secondary_holding_pen now contains a user-space string, or some
  other horror.


This didn't come up during testing because maxcpus=1 was permanent before v4.7,
and we can't bundle cores back into the secondary_holding_pen. Hibernate without
PSCI (or some other cpu_die()) mechanism fails in the core code:
> [70648.097242] Disabling non-boot CPUs ...
> [70648.117277] Error taking CPU1 down: -95
> [70648.117286] Non-boot CPUs are not disabled

... but if we never tried to boot those cpus, we don't hit this check, and the
cores are left in secondary_holding_pen after smp_prepare_cpus(), called well
before the late_initcall that kicks of resume.

This is broken on systems that load the kernel at a different address over a
reboot, (using KASLR or a fancy boot loader), and use spin-table for secondary
cores. (probably none in practice, but still worth fixing)


Thinking aloud:
cpus_stuck_in_kernel only indicates cores that we failed to fully bring up.
(incompatible translation granule etc). There could still be cores in the
kernel's secondary holding pen. We should prevent kexec/hibernate in this case.
(hibernate because we can't safely resume on such a machine)

kexec[0] currently checks for a cpu_die() call:
> if (num_online_cpus() > 1)

Changing this to 'num_possible_cpus() > 1' will cover the above case.
Similar code will need to be added to hibernate.


An alternative is to increase cpus_stuck_in_kernel in
smp_spin_table_cpu_prepare(), but it stops being a counter at this point.


Thoughts? Does this make sense, or do I have the wrong end of the stick somewhere!



James


[0] http://www.spinics.net/lists/arm-kernel/msg510097.html




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