[PATCH] of: of_reserved_mem: Increase limit for reserved_mem regions
Patrick Daly
quic_pdaly at quicinc.com
Mon Apr 25 15:32:21 PDT 2022
On Fri, Apr 22, 2022 at 08:48:25AM -0500, Rob Herring wrote:
> On Wed, Apr 20, 2022 at 4:09 PM Patrick Daly <quic_pdaly at quicinc.com> wrote:
> >
> > The reserved_mem array must be statically allocated because it is used
> > prior to memblock being aware of all "no-map" or otherwise reserved
> > regions which have fixed physical addresses. Due to this limitation,
> > if one architecture/board has a large number of reserved_mem regions,
> > this limit must be raised for all.
> >
> > In particular, certain new qcom boards currently have 63 reserved memory
> > regions, which when new features are added, pushes them over the existing
> > limit of 64.
>
> Please revive this instead:
>
> https://lore.kernel.org/all/20211119075844.2902592-3-calvinzhang.cool@gmail.com/
Looks interesting, thanks for pointing it out.
>
> >
> > A generalized breakdown by region type:
> > 13 for linux-loaded device firmware
>
> If loaded by linux, why do you need fixed carveouts in DT? The devices
> can't be told what address their fw is at?
>
These are good questions, but I don't know enough about the various usecases to
give complete answers.
> > 9 for guest-vms or inter-vm communication
>
> Why does that need to be in DT?
Its a type-one hypervisor, so the guest VMs don't run in userspace. We want
to use largely physically contiguous memory to reduce TLB pressure - so a
devicetree carveout seemed to be a simple way of realizing this.
>
> > 15 cma heaps/dma-buf heaps
>
> Sounds like not trusting the OS to allocate memory itself. From what
> I've read, the kernel's memory allocation abilities are better now
> than when CMA was added.
Greater than MAX_ORDER physically contiguous memory is only available through
CMA. So it comes down to whether the usecase supports scattered memory or not.
I believe there is also a concern that placing many usecases in the same
CMA area could lead to fragmentation & allocation failures for sizes which
are a large percentage of the total CMA area size.
>
> > 24 for bootloaders/hypervisor/secure-world devices or software
> > 2 misc
> >
> > Although this number could be reduced by a minor amount by combining
> > physically adjacent regions, this comes at the cost of losing
> > documention on what/who the regions are used by. In addition, combining
> > adjacent regions is not possible if there are phandles in devicetree
> > referring to the regions in question, such as "memory-region".
> >
> > Vmlinux before:
> > text data bss dec hex filename
> > 31030829 15807732 588524 47427085 2d3ae0d dist/vmlinux
> >
> > Vmlinux after:
> > text data bss dec hex filename
> > 31030877 15807668 592108 47430653 2d3bbfd dist/vmlinux
> >
> > Signed-off-by: Patrick Daly <quic_pdaly at quicinc.com>
> > ---
> > drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c | 2 +-
> > 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)
> >
> > diff --git a/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c b/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
> > index 75caa6f..de0cdda 100644
> > --- a/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
> > +++ b/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
> > @@ -26,7 +26,7 @@
> >
> > #include "of_private.h"
> >
> > -#define MAX_RESERVED_REGIONS 64
> > +#define MAX_RESERVED_REGIONS 128
> > static struct reserved_mem reserved_mem[MAX_RESERVED_REGIONS];
> > static int reserved_mem_count;
> >
> > --
> > 2.7.4
> >
More information about the linux-arm-kernel
mailing list