[PATCH] arm64: kdump: retain reserved memory regions
James Morse
james.morse at arm.com
Fri Jan 19 03:39:58 PST 2018
Hi Akashi,
On 11/01/18 11:38, AKASHI Takahiro wrote:
> On Wed, Jan 10, 2018 at 11:26:55AM +0000, James Morse wrote:
>> On 10/01/18 10:09, AKASHI Takahiro wrote:
>>> This is a fix against the issue that crash dump kernel may hang up
>>> during booting, which can happen on any ACPI-based system with "ACPI
>>> Reclaim Memory."
>>> (diagnosis)
>>> * This fault is a data abort, alignment fault (ESR=0x96000021)
>>> during reading out ACPI table.
>>> * Initial ACPI tables are normally stored in system ram and marked as
>>> "ACPI Reclaim memory" by the firmware.
>>> * After the commit f56ab9a5b73c ("efi/arm: Don't mark ACPI reclaim
>>> memory as MEMBLOCK_NOMAP"), those regions' attribute were changed
>>> removing NOMAP bit and they are instead "memblock-reserved".
>>> * When crash dump kernel boots up, it tries to accesses ACPI tables by
>>> ioremap'ing them (through acpi_os_ioremap()).
>>> * Since those regions are not included in device tree's
>>> "usable-memory-range" and so not recognized as part of crash dump
>>> kernel's system ram, ioremap() will create a non-cacheable mapping here.
>>
>> Ugh, because acpi_os_ioremap() looks at the efi memory map through the prism of
>> what we pulled into memblock, which is different during kdump.
>>
>> Is an alternative to teach acpi_os_ioremap() to ask
>> efi_mem_attributes() directly for the attributes to use?
>> (e.g. arch_apei_get_mem_attribute())
>
> I didn't think of this approach.
> Do you mean a change like the patch below?
Yes. Aha, you can pretty much re-use the helper directly.
It was just a suggestion, removing the extra abstraction that is causing the bug
could be cleaner ...
> (I'm still debugging this code since the kernel fails to boot.)
... but might be too fragile.
There are points during boot when the EFI memory map isn't mapped. I think that
helper will return 'device memory' for everything when this happens.
Thanks,
James
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