On Wed, Jun 12, 2019 at 09:57:40PM +1000, Benjamin Herrenschmidt wrote: > On Wed, 2019-06-12 at 08:42 -0300, Mauro Carvalho Chehab wrote: > > > Yes, we do have different error reporting facilities but I still > > > think > > > that concentrating all the error information needed in order to do > > > proper recovery action is the better approach here. And make that > > > part > > > of the kernel so that it is robust. Userspace can still configure > > > it and > > > so on. > > > > If the error reporting facilities are for the same hardware "group" > > (like the machine's memory controllers), I agree with you: it makes > > sense to have a single driver. > > > > If they are for completely independent hardware then implementing > > as separate drivers would work equally well, with the advantage of > > making easier to maintain and make it generic enough to support > > different vendors using the same IP block. > > Right. And if you really want a platform orchestrator for recovery in > the kenrel, it should be a separate one, that consumes data from the > individual IP block drivers that report the raw errors anyway. Yap, I think we're in agreement here. I believe the important question is whether you need to get error information from multiple sources together in order to do proper recovery or doing it per error source suffices. And I think the actual use cases could/should dictate our drivers/orchestrators design. Thus my question how you guys are planning on tying all that error info the drivers report, into the whole system design? > But for the main case that really needs to be in the kernel, which is > DRAM, the recovery can usually be contained to the MC driver anyway. Right, if that is enough to handle the error properly. The memory-failure.c example I gave before is the error reporting mechanism (x86 MCA) calling into the mm subsystem to poison and isolate page frames which are known to contain errors. So you have two things talking to each other. -- Regards/Gruss, Boris. Good mailing practices for 400: avoid top-posting and trim the reply.