Re: [PATCH 3/3 v3] x86/kdump: clean up all the code related to the backup region

From: Eric W. Biederman
Date: Wed Oct 16 2019 - 12:52:39 EST


lijiang <lijiang@xxxxxxxxxx> writes:

> å 2019å10æ15æ 19:04, Eric W. Biederman åé:
>> lijiang <lijiang@xxxxxxxxxx> writes:
>>
>>> å 2019å10æ13æ 11:54, Eric W. Biederman åé:
>>>> Dave Young <dyoung@xxxxxxxxxx> writes:
>>>>
>>>>> Hi Eric,
>>>>>
>>>>> On 10/12/19 at 06:26am, Eric W. Biederman wrote:
>>>>>> Lianbo Jiang <lijiang@xxxxxxxxxx> writes:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> When the crashkernel kernel command line option is specified, the
>>>>>>> low 1MiB memory will always be reserved, which makes that the memory
>>>>>>> allocated later won't fall into the low 1MiB area, thereby, it's not
>>>>>>> necessary to create a backup region and also no need to copy the first
>>>>>>> 640k content to a backup region.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Currently, the code related to the backup region can be safely removed,
>>>>>>> so lets clean up.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Signed-off-by: Lianbo Jiang <lijiang@xxxxxxxxxx>
>>>>>>> ---
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> diff --git a/arch/x86/kernel/crash.c b/arch/x86/kernel/crash.c
>>>>>>> index eb651fbde92a..cc5774fc84c0 100644
>>>>>>> --- a/arch/x86/kernel/crash.c
>>>>>>> +++ b/arch/x86/kernel/crash.c
>>>>>>> @@ -173,8 +173,6 @@ void native_machine_crash_shutdown(struct pt_regs *regs)
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> #ifdef CONFIG_KEXEC_FILE
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> -static unsigned long crash_zero_bytes;
>>>>>>> -
>>>>>>> static int get_nr_ram_ranges_callback(struct resource *res, void *arg)
>>>>>>> {
>>>>>>> unsigned int *nr_ranges = arg;
>>>>>>> @@ -234,9 +232,15 @@ static int prepare_elf64_ram_headers_callback(struct resource *res, void *arg)
>>>>>>> {
>>>>>>> struct crash_mem *cmem = arg;
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> - cmem->ranges[cmem->nr_ranges].start = res->start;
>>>>>>> - cmem->ranges[cmem->nr_ranges].end = res->end;
>>>>>>> - cmem->nr_ranges++;
>>>>>>> + if (res->start >= SZ_1M) {
>>>>>>> + cmem->ranges[cmem->nr_ranges].start = res->start;
>>>>>>> + cmem->ranges[cmem->nr_ranges].end = res->end;
>>>>>>> + cmem->nr_ranges++;
>>>>>>> + } else if (res->end > SZ_1M) {
>>>>>>> + cmem->ranges[cmem->nr_ranges].start = SZ_1M;
>>>>>>> + cmem->ranges[cmem->nr_ranges].end = res->end;
>>>>>>> + cmem->nr_ranges++;
>>>>>>> + }
>>>>>>
>>>>>> What is going on with this chunk? I can guess but this needs a clear
>>>>>> comment.
>>>>>
>>>>> Indeed it needs some code comment, this is based on some offline
>>>>> discussion. cat /proc/vmcore will give a warning because ioremap is
>>>>> mapping the system ram.
>>>>>
>>>>> We pass the first 1M to kdump kernel in e820 as system ram so that 2nd
>>>>> kernel can use the low 1M memory because for example the trampoline
>>>>> code.
>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> return 0;
>>>>>>> }
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> @@ -356,9 +337,12 @@ int crash_setup_memmap_entries(struct kimage *image, struct boot_params *params)
>>>>>>> memset(&cmd, 0, sizeof(struct crash_memmap_data));
>>>>>>> cmd.params = params;
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> - /* Add first 640K segment */
>>>>>>> - ei.addr = image->arch.backup_src_start;
>>>>>>> - ei.size = image->arch.backup_src_sz;
>>>>>>> + /*
>>>>>>> + * Add the low memory range[0x1000, SZ_1M], skip
>>>>>>> + * the first zero page.
>>>>>>> + */
>>>>>>> + ei.addr = PAGE_SIZE;
>>>>>>> + ei.size = SZ_1M - PAGE_SIZE;
>>>>>>> ei.type = E820_TYPE_RAM;
>>>>>>> add_e820_entry(params, &ei);
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Likewise here. Why do we need a special case?
>>>>>> Why the magic with PAGE_SIZE?
>>>>>
>>>>> Good catch, the zero page part is useless, I think no other special
>>>>> reason, just assumed zero page is not usable, but it should be ok to
>>>>> remove the special handling, just pass 0 - 1M is good enough.
>>>>
>>>> But if we have stopped special casing the low 1M. Why do we need a
>>>> special case here at all?
>>>>
>>> Here, need to pass the low memory range to kdump kernel, which will guarantee
>>> the availability of low memory in kdump kernel, otherwise, kdump kernel won't
>>> use the low memory region.
>>>
>>>> If you need the special case it is almost certainly wrong to say you
>>>> have ram above 640KiB and below 1MiB. That is the legacy ROM and video
>>>> MMIO area.
>>>>
>>>> There is a reason the original code said 640KiB.
>>>>
>>> Do you mean that the 640k region is good enough here instead of 1MiB?
>>
>> Reading through the code of crash_setup_memap_entries I see that what
>> the code is doing now. The code is repeating the e820 memory map with
>> the memory areas that were not reserved for the crash kernel removed.
>>
>> In which case what the code needs to be doing something like:
>>
>> cmd.type = E820_TYPE_RAM;
>> flags = IORESOURCE_MEM;
>> walk_iomem_res_desc(IORES_DESC_RESERVED, flags, 0, 1024*1024, &cmd,
>> memmap_entry_callback);
>>
> The above code does not get the results what we expected, it gets the reserved
> memory marked as 'IORES_DESC_RESERVED' in the low 1MiB range.
>
> Finally, kdump kernel happened the panic as follow:
> ......
> [ 3.555662] Kernel panic - not syncing: Real mode trampoline was not allocated
> [ 3.556660] CPU: 0 PID: 1 Comm: swapper/0 Not tainted 5.4.0-rc3+ #4
> [ 3.556660] Hardware name: AMD Corporation Speedway/Speedway, BIOS RSW1009C 07/27/2018
> [ 3.556660] Call Trace:
> [ 3.556660] dump_stack+0x46/0x60
> [ 3.556660] panic+0xfb/0x2d7
> [ 3.556660] ? hv_init_spinlocks+0x7f/0x7f
> [ 3.556660] init_real_mode+0x27/0x1fa
> [ 3.556660] ? hv_init_spinlocks+0x7f/0x7f
> [ 3.556660] ? do_one_initcall+0x46/0x1e4
> [ 3.556660] ? proc_register+0xd0/0x130
> [ 3.556660] ? kernel_init_freeable+0xe2/0x242
> [ 3.556660] ? rest_init+0xaa/0xaa
> [ 3.556660] ? kernel_init+0xa/0x106
> [ 3.556660] ? ret_from_fork+0x22/0x40
> [ 3.556660] Rebooting in 10 seconds..
> [ 3.556660] ACPI MEMORY or I/O RESET_REG.
>
> I modified the above code, and tested it. This can find out the system ram in
> the low 1MiB range. And it worked well.
>
> @@ -356,11 +338,11 @@ int crash_setup_memmap_entries(struct kimage *image, struct boot_params *params)
> memset(&cmd, 0, sizeof(struct crash_memmap_data));
> cmd.params = params;
>
> + /* Add the low 1MiB */
> + cmd.type = E820_TYPE_RAM;
> + flags = IORESOURCE_SYSTEM_RAM | IORESOURCE_BUSY;
> + walk_iomem_res_desc(IORES_DESC_NONE, flags, 0, 1024*1024 - 1, &cmd,
> + memmap_entry_callback);
>

That looks like a very reasonable fix.

>> Depending on which bugs exist it might make sense to limit this to
>> the low 640KiB. But finding something the kernel already recognizes
>> as RAM should prevent most of those problems already. Barring bugs
>> I admit it doesn't make sense to repeat the work that someone else
>> has already done.
>>
>> This bit:
>> /* Add e820 reserved ranges */
>> cmd.type = E820_TYPE_RESERVED;
>> flags = IORESOURCE_MEM;
>> walk_iomem_res_desc(IORES_DESC_RESERVED, flags, 0, -1, &cmd,
>> memmap_entry_callback);
>>
>> Should probably start at 1MiB instead of 0. Just so we don't report the
> If so, it can not find out the reserved memory marked as 'IORES_DESC_RESERVED' in
> the low 1MiB range, finally, it doesn't pass the reserved memory in the low 1MiB to
> kdump kernel, which could cause some problems, such as SME or PCI MMCONFIG issue.

Good point. For some reason I was thinking IORESOURCE_MEM and
IORESOURCE_SYSTEM_RAM were the same thing. It has been way to long
since I have been in that part of the code.

So yes let's leave that part alone.

>> memory below 1MiB as unconditionally reserved. I don't properly
>> understand the IORES_DESC_RESERVED flag, and how that differs from
> I found three commits about 'IORES_DESC_RESERVED' flag, hope this helps.
> 1.ae9e13d621d6 ("x86/e820, ioport: Add a new I/O resource descriptor IORES_DESC_RESERVED")
> 2.5da04cc86d12 ("x86/mm: Rework ioremap resource mapping determination")
> 3.980621daf368 ("x86/crash: Add e820 reserved ranges to kdump kernel's e820 table")
>
>> flags. So please test my suggestions to verify the code works as
>> expected.
>>
> I have tested the two changes that you mentioned, please refer to the
> reply above.

Thank you. It looks like you have figured out how these things should
work.

Eric