[PATCH v3 0/2] kexec-tools: arm64: Enable D-cache in purgatory
AKASHI Takahiro
takahiro.akashi at linaro.org
Wed Apr 4 18:47:08 PDT 2018
On Wed, Apr 04, 2018 at 02:28:52PM +0100, James Morse wrote:
> Hi Kostiantyn,
>
> On 04/04/18 13:45, Kostiantyn Iarmak wrote:
> > From: Pratyush Anand <panand at redhat.com>
> >> Date: Fri, Jun 2, 2017 at 5:42 PM
> >> Subject: Re: [PATCH v3 0/2] kexec-tools: arm64: Enable D-cache in purgatory
> >> To: James Morse <james.morse at arm.com>
> >> Cc: mark.rutland at arm.com, bhe at redhat.com, kexec at lists.infradead.org,
> >> horms at verge.net.au, dyoung at redhat.com,
> >> linux-arm-kernel at lists.infradead.org
> >>
> >> On Friday 02 June 2017 01:53 PM, James Morse wrote:
> >>> On 23/05/17 06:02, Pratyush Anand wrote:
> >>>> It takes more that 2 minutes to verify SHA in purgatory when vmlinuz image
> >>>> is around 13MB and initramfs is around 30MB. It takes more than 20 second
> >>>> even when we have -O2 optimization enabled. However, if dcache is enabled
> >>>> during purgatory execution then, it takes just a second in SHA
> >>>> verification.
> >>>>
> >>>> Therefore, these patches adds support for dcache enabling facility during
> >>>> purgatory execution.
>
> >>> I'm still not convinced we need this. Moving the SHA verification to happen
> >>> before the dcache+mmu are disabled would also solve the delay problem,
> >>
> >> Humm..I am not sure, if we can do that.
>
> >> When we leave kernel (and enter into purgatory), icache+dcache+mmu are
> >> already disabled. I think, that would be possible when we will be in a
> >> position to use in-kernel purgatory.
> >>
> >>> and we
> >>> can print an error message or fail the syscall.
> >>>
> >>> For kexec we don't expect memory corruption, what are we testing for?
> >>> I can see the use for kdump, but the kdump-kernel is unmapped so the kernel
> >>> can't accidentally write over it.
> >>>
> >>> (we discussed all this last time, but it fizzled-out. If you and the
> >>> kexec-tools maintainer think its necessary, fine by me!)
>
> >> Yes, there had already been discussion and MAINTAINERs have
> >> discouraged none-purgatory implementation.
I don't remember the discussion like this quite well, but anyhow ...
> >>
> >>> I have some comments on making this code easier to maintain..
> >>>
> >> Thanks.
> >>
> >> I have implemented your review comments and have archived the code in
> >>
> >> https://github.com/pratyushanand/kexec-tools.git : purgatory-enable-dcache
> >>
> >> I will be posting the next version only when someone complains about
> >> ARM64 kdump behavior that it is not as fast as x86.
>
> > On our ARM64-based platform we have very long main kernel-secondary kernel
> > switch time.
> >
> > This patch set fixes the issue (we are using 4.4 kernel and 2.0.13 kexec-tools
> > version), we can get ~25x speedup, with this patch secondary kernel boots in ~3
> > seconds while on 2.0.13-2.0.16 kexec-tools without this patch switch takes about
> > 75 seconds.
>
> This is slow because its generating a checksum of the kernel without the benefit
> of the caches. This series generated page tables so that it could enable the MMU
> and caches. But, the purgatory code also needs to be a simple as possible
> because its practically impossible to debug.
Not impossible, but I admit that I occasionally had hard time in debugging.
> The purgatory code does this checksum-ing because its worried the panic() was
> because the kernel cause some memory corruption, and that memory corruption may
> have affected the kdump kernel too.
>
> This can't happen on arm64 as we unmap kdump's crash region, so not even the
> kernel can accidentally write to it. 98d2e1539b84 ("arm64: kdump: protect crash
> dump kernel memory") has all the details.
>
> (we also needed to do this to avoid the risk of mismatched memory attributes if
> kdump boots and some CPUs are still stuck in the old kernel)
>
>
> > When do you plan merge this patch?
>
> We ended up with the check-summing code because its the default behaviour of
> kexec-tools on other architectures.
>
> One alternative is to rip it out for arm64. Untested:
Thanks for the patch. This eventually eliminates "reason d'etre" of
purgatory on arm64 as I does in my kexec_file patch, although it would
require a small re-work.
-Takahiro AKASHI
> --------------------%<--------------------
> diff --git a/purgatory/arch/arm64/Makefile b/purgatory/arch/arm64/Makefile
> index 636abea..f10c148 100644
> --- a/purgatory/arch/arm64/Makefile
> +++ b/purgatory/arch/arm64/Makefile
> @@ -7,7 +7,8 @@ arm64_PURGATORY_EXTRA_CFLAGS = \
> -Werror-implicit-function-declaration \
> -Wdeclaration-after-statement \
> -Werror=implicit-int \
> - -Werror=strict-prototypes
> + -Werror=strict-prototypes \
> + -DNO_SHA_IN_PURGATORY
>
> arm64_PURGATORY_SRCS += \
> purgatory/arch/arm64/entry.S \
> diff --git a/purgatory/purgatory.c b/purgatory/purgatory.c
> index 3bbcc09..44e792a 100644
> --- a/purgatory/purgatory.c
> +++ b/purgatory/purgatory.c
> @@ -9,6 +9,8 @@
> struct sha256_region sha256_regions[SHA256_REGIONS] = {};
> sha256_digest_t sha256_digest = { };
>
> +#ifndef NO_SHA_IN_PURGATORY
> +
> int verify_sha256_digest(void)
> {
> struct sha256_region *ptr, *end;
> @@ -39,14 +41,18 @@ int verify_sha256_digest(void)
> return 0;
> }
>
> +#endif /* NO_SHA_IN_PURGATORY */
> +
> void purgatory(void)
> {
> printf("I'm in purgatory\n");
> setup_arch();
> +#ifndef NO_SHA_IN_PURGATORY
> if (verify_sha256_digest()) {
> for(;;) {
> /* loop forever */
> }
> }
> +#endif /* NO_SHA_IN_PURGATORY */
> post_verification_setup_arch();
> }
> --------------------%<--------------------
>
>
> Thanks,
>
> James
>
> _______________________________________________
> linux-arm-kernel mailing list
> linux-arm-kernel at lists.infradead.org
> http://lists.infradead.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-arm-kernel
More information about the linux-arm-kernel
mailing list