[PATCH v8 08/10] pstore/ram: Add dynamic ramoops region support through commandline

Mukesh Ojha quic_mojha at quicinc.com
Mon Feb 12 05:34:03 PST 2024


Hi @Kees/@Tony/@Guilherme,

Wanted to get your early feedback, especially on 8th and 9th patch.
please suggest.

-Mukesh

On 1/31/2024 4:38 PM, Mukesh Ojha wrote:
> The reserved memory region for ramoops is assumed to be at a fixed
> and known location when read from the devicetree. This may not be
> required for something like Qualcomm's minidump which is interested
> in knowing addresses of ramoops region but it does not put hard
> requirement of address being fixed as most of its SoC does not
> support warm reset and does not use pstorefs at all instead it has
> firmware way of collecting ramoops region if it gets to know the
> address and register it with apss minidump table which is sitting
> in shared memory region in DDR and firmware will have access to
> these table during reset and collects it on crash of SoC.
> 
> So, add the support of reserving ramoops region to be dynamically
> allocated early during boot if it is request through command line
> via 'dyn_ramoops_size=<size>' and fill up reserved resource structure
> and export the structure, so that it can be read by ramoops driver.
> 
> Signed-off-by: Mukesh Ojha <quic_mojha at quicinc.com>
> ---
>   Documentation/admin-guide/ramoops.rst | 23 +++++++++-
>   fs/pstore/Kconfig                     | 15 ++++++
>   fs/pstore/ram.c                       | 66 +++++++++++++++++++++++++--
>   include/linux/pstore_ram.h            |  5 ++
>   init/main.c                           |  3 ++
>   5 files changed, 108 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-)
> 
> diff --git a/Documentation/admin-guide/ramoops.rst b/Documentation/admin-guide/ramoops.rst
> index e9f85142182d..6de61002f9e9 100644
> --- a/Documentation/admin-guide/ramoops.rst
> +++ b/Documentation/admin-guide/ramoops.rst
> @@ -33,6 +33,13 @@ memory are implementation defined, and won't work on many ARMs such as omaps.
>   Setting ``mem_type=2`` attempts to treat the memory region as normal memory,
>   which enables full cache on it. This can improve the performance.
>   
> +Ramoops supports its memory to be allocated dynamically during early boot
> +for plaforms that do not have support for warm boot i.e., no assurance
> +that Ram content will be preserved across boot and for these platforms
> +giving static Ramoops memory is not necessary as it has separate backend
> +mechanism to retrieve ramoops content on system failure. More about
> +how to enable Dynamic ramoops in ``Setting the parameters`` A.b section.
> +
>   The memory area is divided into ``record_size`` chunks (also rounded down to
>   power of two) and each kmesg dump writes a ``record_size`` chunk of
>   information.
> @@ -59,7 +66,7 @@ Setting the parameters
>   
>   Setting the ramoops parameters can be done in several different manners:
>   
> - A. Use the module parameters (which have the names of the variables described
> + A.a  Use the module parameters (which have the names of the variables described
>    as before). For quick debugging, you can also reserve parts of memory during
>    boot and then use the reserved memory for ramoops. For example, assuming a
>    machine with > 128 MB of memory, the following kernel command line will tell
> @@ -68,6 +75,20 @@ Setting the ramoops parameters can be done in several different manners:
>   
>   	mem=128M ramoops.mem_address=0x8000000 ramoops.ecc=1
>   
> + A.b  Ramoops memory can be also be dynamically reserved by Kernel and in such
> + scenario ``mem_address`` i.e., Ramoops base address can be anywhere in the RAM
> + instead of being fixed and predefined. A separate command line option
> + ``dyn_ramoops_size=<size>`` and kernel config CONFIG_PSTORE_DYNAMIC_RAMOOPS
> + are provided to facilitate Dynamic Ramoops memory reservation during early boot.
> + The command line option and the config should only be used in the presence of
> + separate backend which knows how to recover Dynamic Ramoops region otherwise
> + regular ramoops functionality will be impacted.
> + ``mem_size`` should not be used if Dynamic Ramoops support is requested and if
> + both are given ``mem_size`` value is overwritten with ``dyn_ramoops_size`` value
> + i.e., Dynamic Ramoops takes precedence::
> +
> +	dyn_ramoops_size=2M ramoops.console_size=2097152
> +
>    B. Use Device Tree bindings, as described in
>    ``Documentation/devicetree/bindings/reserved-memory/ramoops.yaml``.
>    For example::
> diff --git a/fs/pstore/Kconfig b/fs/pstore/Kconfig
> index 3acc38600cd1..b8bdbd2f0e73 100644
> --- a/fs/pstore/Kconfig
> +++ b/fs/pstore/Kconfig
> @@ -81,6 +81,21 @@ config PSTORE_RAM
>   
>   	  For more information, see Documentation/admin-guide/ramoops.rst.
>   
> +config PSTORE_DYNAMIC_RAMOOPS
> +	bool "Reserve ramoops region dynamically"
> +	select PSTORE_RAM
> +	help
> +	  This enables the dynamic reservation of ramoops region for a special case
> +	  where there is no need to access the logs from pstorefs on next boot;
> +	  instead there is separate backend mechanism like minidump present which has
> +	  awareness about the dynamic ramoops region and can recover the logs. This is
> +	  enabled via command line parameter dyn_ramoops_size=<size> and should not be
> +	  used in absence of separate backend which knows how to recover this dynamic
> +	  region.
> +
> +	  Note whenever this config is selected ramoops driver will be built statically
> +	  into kernel.
> +
>   config PSTORE_ZONE
>   	tristate
>   	depends on PSTORE
> diff --git a/fs/pstore/ram.c b/fs/pstore/ram.c
> index 88b34fdbf759..1faf0835700b 100644
> --- a/fs/pstore/ram.c
> +++ b/fs/pstore/ram.c
> @@ -20,6 +20,7 @@
>   #include <linux/compiler.h>
>   #include <linux/of.h>
>   #include <linux/of_address.h>
> +#include <linux/memblock.h>
>   #include <linux/mm.h>
>   
>   #include "internal.h"
> @@ -103,6 +104,59 @@ struct ramoops_context {
>   };
>   
>   static struct platform_device *dummy;
> +static struct resource dyn_ramoops_res = {
> +	.name  = "ramoops",
> +	.start = 0,
> +	.end   = 0,
> +	.flags = IORESOURCE_BUSY | IORESOURCE_SYSTEM_RAM,
> +	.desc  = IORES_DESC_NONE,
> +};
> +static int dyn_ramoops_size;
> +
> +#ifdef CONFIG_PSTORE_DYNAMIC_RAMOOPS
> +static int __init parse_dyn_ramoops_size(char *p)
> +{
> +	char *tmp;
> +
> +	dyn_ramoops_size = memparse(p, &tmp);
> +	if (p == tmp) {
> +		pr_err("ramoops: memory size expected\n");
> +		dyn_ramoops_size = 0;
> +		return -EINVAL;
> +	}
> +
> +	return 0;
> +}
> +early_param("dyn_ramoops_size", parse_dyn_ramoops_size);
> +
> +/*
> + * setup_dynamic_ramoops() - Reserve memory for dynamic ramoops
> + *
> + * Enables dynamic reserve memory support for ramoops through
> + * command line.
> + */
> +void __init setup_dynamic_ramoops(void)
> +{
> +	unsigned long long ramoops_base;
> +	unsigned long long ramoops_size;
> +
> +	if (!dyn_ramoops_size)
> +		return;
> +
> +	ramoops_base = memblock_phys_alloc_range(dyn_ramoops_size, SMP_CACHE_BYTES,
> +						 0, MEMBLOCK_ALLOC_NOLEAKTRACE);
> +	if (!ramoops_base) {
> +		pr_err("cannot allocate ramoops dynamic memory (size:0x%llx).\n",
> +			ramoops_size);
> +		dyn_ramoops_size = 0;
> +		return;
> +	}
> +
> +	dyn_ramoops_res.start = ramoops_base;
> +	dyn_ramoops_res.end = ramoops_base + dyn_ramoops_size - 1;
> +	insert_resource(&iomem_resource, &dyn_ramoops_res);
> +}
> +#endif
>   
>   static int ramoops_pstore_open(struct pstore_info *psi)
>   {
> @@ -915,13 +969,19 @@ static void __init ramoops_register_dummy(void)
>   
>   	/*
>   	 * Prepare a dummy platform data structure to carry the module
> -	 * parameters. If mem_size isn't set, then there are no module
> -	 * parameters, and we can skip this.
> +	 * parameters.
> +	 *
> +	 * dyn_ramoops_size takes precedence over mem_size if it is
> +	 * enabled and valid.
>   	 */
> -	if (!mem_size)
> +	if (!dyn_ramoops_size && !mem_size)
>   		return;
>   
>   	pr_info("using module parameters\n");
> +	if (dyn_ramoops_size) {
> +		mem_size = dyn_ramoops_size;
> +		mem_address = dyn_ramoops_res.start;
> +	}
>   
>   	memset(&pdata, 0, sizeof(pdata));
>   	pdata.mem_size = mem_size;
> diff --git a/include/linux/pstore_ram.h b/include/linux/pstore_ram.h
> index 9d65ff94e216..1efff7a38333 100644
> --- a/include/linux/pstore_ram.h
> +++ b/include/linux/pstore_ram.h
> @@ -39,4 +39,9 @@ struct ramoops_platform_data {
>   	struct persistent_ram_ecc_info ecc_info;
>   };
>   
> +#ifdef CONFIG_PSTORE_DYNAMIC_RAMOOPS
> +void __init setup_dynamic_ramoops(void);
> +#else
> +static inline void __init setup_dynamic_ramoops(void) {}
> +#endif
>   #endif
> diff --git a/init/main.c b/init/main.c
> index ef3ce41b8fc5..3d74241bcb2b 100644
> --- a/init/main.c
> +++ b/init/main.c
> @@ -99,6 +99,8 @@
>   #include <linux/init_syscalls.h>
>   #include <linux/stackdepot.h>
>   #include <linux/randomize_kstack.h>
> +#include <linux/moduleloader.h>
> +#include <linux/pstore_ram.h>
>   #include <net/net_namespace.h>
>   
>   #include <asm/io.h>
> @@ -890,6 +892,7 @@ void start_kernel(void)
>   	pr_notice("%s", linux_banner);
>   	early_security_init();
>   	setup_arch(&command_line);
> +	setup_dynamic_ramoops();
>   	setup_boot_config();
>   	setup_command_line(command_line);
>   	setup_nr_cpu_ids();



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