[RFC] arm64: extra entries in /proc/iomem for kexec
AKASHI Takahiro
takahiro.akashi at linaro.org
Wed Apr 25 02:20:13 PDT 2018
On Tue, Apr 24, 2018 at 05:08:57PM +0100, James Morse wrote:
> Hi Akashi,
>
> On 16/04/18 11:08, AKASHI Takahiro wrote:
> > On Thu, Apr 12, 2018 at 05:01:52PM +0100, James Morse wrote:
> >> On 05/04/18 03:42, AKASHI Takahiro wrote:
> >>> On Mon, Apr 02, 2018 at 10:53:32AM +0900, AKASHI Takahiro wrote:
> >>>> Basically, changes that I made on /proc/iomem in my new format D were:
> >>>> 1. to move NOMAP region entries, formerly named "reserved" and now named
> >>>> "reserved (no map)", under System RAM
> >>>> 2. to add new entries for firmware-reserved regions as "reserved" also
> >>>> under System RAM
> >>>>
> >>>> On the other hand, current kexec-tools, in particular kexec command,
> >>>> only scan top-level "System RAM" entries as well as "reserved" entries.
> >>
> >> as well as?
> >
> > I had few words here.
> > The current kexec-tools assumes that "reserved" entries appear only
> > at the top level. So,
> >
> >> Does this mean kexec will pick up the reserved region if its written as:
> >> | 00001000-0009d7ff : System RAM
> >> | 00001000-00001fff : reserved
> >
> > if this is the case, the range "0x1000-0x1fff" is added to an internal
> > list of memory ranges
>
> I found this in get_memory_ranges_iomem_cb()...
>
>
> > but will later be *ignored* by locate_hole() function
> > due to its memory type.
>
> Ugh. Great.
>
>
> > That is, the range can potentially be overwritten by loaded kernel/initrd.
>
> So two kernel bugs, one user-space bug, all conspiring.
>
>
> >>>> either because
> >>>> a. new kernel (or initrd/dtb) may have been allocated on a NOMAP region
> >>>> which are not suitable for usable memory, or
> >>>> b. new kernel (or initrd/dtb) may have been allocated on a reserved region
> >>>> whose contents can be overwritten.
> >>>>
> >>>> While we see (b) even today, (a) is a backward compatibility issue.
> >>
> >> (a) doesn't happen because request_standard_resources() checks
> >> memblock_is_nomap(), and reports those regions as 'reserved'.
> >
> > I might have confused you. The assumption here was that we adopt format (D),
> > where all NOMAP regions are sub nodes of "System RAM", but still use
> > the current kexec-tools.
> > As I said above, this will end up an un-expected behavior.
>
> I'd like to fix this without having to fix user-space at the same time. It looks
> like no-one else has second level reserved regions,
This was my assumption when I sent out a patch to kexec-tools.
> so we can't blame
> kexec-tools for looking straight at them, then ignoring them.
>
>
> >> We can't expect user-space to upgrade to fix this issue.
> >
> > I'm not sure what you mean here; we can't fix the issue anyway
> > without changing user-space/kexec-tools as kexec_load system call totally
> > relies on parameters passed by kexec-tools.
> > (The only difference is whether we need additional kernel changes or not.)
>
> It looks like this was always broken because the efi memory map isn't listed as
> 'reserved' in /proc/iomem. The fallout for the new stuff is secondary.
>
>
> >>> # I don't know yet whether people are happy with this fix, and also have
> >>> kernel patches for my other approaches. They are neither not much
> >>> complicated.
> >>
> >> I don't think we should fix this in userspace, exporting all the
> >> memblock_reserved() regions as 'reserved' in /proc/iomem looks like the right
> >> thing to do.
> >
> > Again, if you modify /proc/iomem, you have to update kexec-tools, too.
>
> If we squash the memblock_reserved() stuff down so it appears as a top level
> 'reserved' region too, I don't think we do.
If I correctly understand, you're talking about my format (E).
As I said, it will fix the issue without modifying user-space, but
|| This does not only look quite noisy but also ignores the fact that
|| reserved regions are part of System RAM (or memblock.memory).
> This prevents the efi-memory-map
> being overwritten on kernels since kexec was merged.
>
> Its horribly fiddly to do this. The kernel code/data are special reserved
> regions that we already describe as a subset of system-ram, even though they are
> both also fragments of a bigger memblock_reserved() block.
Actually, we don't have to avoid kernel code/data regions as copying
loaded data to the final destinations will be done at the very end of kexec.
> While we can walk memblock for regions that aren't reserved, allocating memory
> in the loop changes what is reserved. That one O(N) walk ends up being four...
At most O(n^2)?
Thanks,
-Takhairo AKASHI
> I'm almost done tearing my hair out, I should have a working patch soon...
>
>
> >> wasn't there going to be another version, with the core EFI
> >> stuff split out?
> >
> > ? I don't remember well ...
>
> https://lkml.org/lkml/2018/2/1/496
>
>
> Thanks,
>
> James
>
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