Am 08.02.21 um 23:09 schrieb Andrey
Grodzovsky:
On 2/8/21 4:37 AM, Christian König wrote:
Am 07.02.21 um 22:50 schrieb Daniel Vetter:
[SNIP]
Clarification - as far as I know there are no page fault handlers for kernelmmiotrace can, but only for debug, and only on x86 platforms:
mappings. And we are talking about kernel mappings here, right ? If there were
I could solve all those issues the same as I do for user mappings, by
invalidating all existing mappings in the kernel (both kmaps and ioreamps)and
insert dummy zero or ~0 filled page instead.
Also, I assume forcefully remapping the IO BAR to ~0 filled page would involve
ioremap API and it's not something that I think can be easily done according to
am answer i got to a related topic a few weeks ago
https://nam11.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=""> (that was the only reply
i got)
https://nam11.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url="">
Should be feasible (but maybe not worth the effort) to extend this to
support fake unplug.
Mhm, interesting idea you guys brought up here.
We don't need a page fault for this to work, all we need to do is to insert dummy PTEs into the kernels page table at the place where previously the MMIO mapping has been.
But that exactly what Mathew from linux-mm says is not a trivial thing to do, quote:
"
ioremap() is done through the vmalloc space. It would, in theory, be possible to reprogram the page tables used for vmalloc to point to your magic page. I don't think we have such a mechanism today, and there are lots of problems with things like TLB flushes. It's probably going to be harder than you think. "
I haven't followed the full discussion, but I don't see much preventing this.
All you need is a new ioremap_dummy() function which takes the old start and length of the mapping.
Still a bit core and maybe even platform code, but rather useful I think.
Christian.
If you believe it's actually doable then it would be useful not only for simulating device unplugged situation with all MMIOs returning 0xff... but for actual handling of driver accesses to MMIO after device is gone and, we could then drop entirely this patch as there would be no need to guard against such accesses post device unplug.
Hm yeah if your really wrap them all, that should work too. SinceBut ugh ...Or I could just for validation purposes return ~0 from all reg reads in the code
Otoh validating an entire driver like amdgpu without such a trick
against 0xff reads is practically impossible. So maybe you need to add
this as one of the tasks here?
and ignore writes if drm_dev_unplugged, this could already easily validate a big
portion of the code flow under such scenario.
iommappings have __iomem pointer type, as long as amdgpu is sparse
warning free, should be doable to guarantee this.
Problem is that ~0 is not always a valid register value.
You would need to audit every register read that it doesn't use the returned value blindly as index or similar. That is quite a bit of work.
But ~0 is the value that will be returned for every read post device unplug, regardless if it's valid or not, and we have to cope with
it then, no ?Andrey
Regards,
Christian.
-Daniel
Andrey
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