On Tue, Mar 07, 2023 at 01:35:11PM +0200, Mike Rapoport wrote: > Hi Conor, > > Sorry for the delay, somehow this slipped between the cracks. No worries. > On Thu, Feb 02, 2023 at 10:01:26PM +0000, Conor Dooley wrote: > > Hullo Palmer, Mike & whoever else may read this, > > > > Just reviving this thread from a little while ago as I have been in the > > area again recently... > > TBH, I didn't really dig deep into the issues, I only preserved most of the context here to point out that it wasn't an isolated issue, the top-down/bottom-up bit is the main part that I was interested in. The others are fixed, or workaround-able without "harming" anyone else. > but the thought I had was > what if DT was mapped via fixmap until the setup_vm_final() and then it > would be possible to call DT methods early. From my memory, this would be more along the lines of what arm64 does. I'll give it a shot and see how it goes. I figure it'll take me some time! > Could be I'm shooting in the dark :) A pointer on where to start is helpful, even if it is "rewrite a bunch of stuff". Cheers, Conor. > > On Tue, Aug 16, 2022 at 08:41:05PM +0000, Conor.Dooley@xxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote: > > > Hey all, > > > We've run into a bit of a problem with reserved memory on PolarFire, or > > > more accurately a pair of problems that seem to have opposite fixes. > > > > > > The first of these problems is triggered when trying to implement a > > > remoteproc driver. To get the reserved memory buffer, remoteproc > > > does an of_reserved_mem_lookup(), something like: > > > > > > np = of_parse_phandle(pdev->of_node, "memory-region", 0); > > > if (!np) > > > return -EINVAL; > > > > > > rmem = of_reserved_mem_lookup(np); > > > if (!rmem) > > > return -EINVAL; > > > > > > of_reserved_mem_lookup() then uses reserved_mem[i].name to try and find > > > a match - but this was triggering kernel panics for us. We did some > > > debugging and found that the name string's pointer was pointing to an > > > address in the 0x4000_0000 range. The minimum reproduction for this > > > crash is attached - it hacks in some print_reserved_mem()s into > > > setup_vm_final() around a tlb flush so you can see the before/after. > > > (You'll need a reserved memory node in your dts to replicate) > > > > > > The output is like so, with the same crash as in the remoteproc driver: > > > > > > [ 0.000000] Linux version 6.0.0-rc1-00001-g0d9d6953d834 (conor@wendy) (riscv64-unknown-linux-gnu-gcc (g5964b5cd727) 11.1.0, GNU ld (GNU Binutils) 2.37) #1 SMP Tue Aug 16 13:42:09 IST 2022 > > > > [...] > > > > > [ 0.000000] ---[ end Kernel panic - not syncing: Attempted to kill the idle task! ]--- > > > > > > We traced this back to early_init_fdt_scan_reserved_mem() in > > > setup_bootmem() - moving it later back up the boot sequence to > > > after the dt has been remapped etc has fixed the problem for us. > > > > > > The least movement to get it working is attached, and also pushed > > > here: git.kernel.org/conor/c/1735589baefc > > > > This one is fixed now, as of commit 50e63dd8ed92 ("riscv: fix reserved > > memory setup"). > > > > > The second problem is a bit more complicated to explain - but we > > > found the solution conflicted with the remoteproc fix as we had > > > to move early_init_fdt_scan_reserved_mem() _earlier_ in the boot > > > process to solve this one. > > > > > > We want to have a node in our devicetree that contains some memory > > > that is non-cached & marked as reserved-memory. Maybe we have just > > > missed something, but from what we've seen: > > > - the really early setup looks at the dtb, picks the highest bit > > > of memory and puts the dtb etc there so it can start using it > > > - early_init_fdt_scan_reserved_mem() is then called, which figures > > > out if memory is reserved or not. > > > > > > Unfortunately, the highest bit of memory is the non-cached bit so > > > everything falls over, but we can avoid this by moving the call to > > > early_init_fdt_scan_reserved_mem() above the dtb memblock alloc that > > > takes place right before it in setup_bootmem(). > > > > > > Obviously, both of these changes are moving the function call in > > > opposite directions and we can only really do one of them. We are not > > > sure if what we are doing with the non-cached reserved-memory section > > > is just not permitted & cannot work - or if this is something that > > > was overlooked for RISC-V specifically and works for other archs. > > > > We ended up working around this one by making sure that U-Boot loaded > > the dtb to somewhere that would be inside the kernel's memory map, thus > > avoiding the remapping in the first place. > > > > We did run into another problem recently though, and 50e63dd8ed92 is > > kinda at fault for it. > > This particular issue was encountered with a devicetree where the > > top-most memory region was entirely reserved & was not observed prior > > to my fix for the first issue. > > > > On RISC-V, the boot sequence is something like: > > setup_bootmem(); > > setup_vm_final(); > > unflatten_device_tree(); > > early_init_fdt_scan_reserved_mem(); > > > > Whereas, before my patch it used to be (give-or-take): > > setup_bootmem(); > > early_init_fdt_scan_reserved_mem(); > > setup_vm_final(); > > unflatten_device_tree(); > > > > The difference being that we used to have scanned the reserved memory > > regions before calling setup_vm_final() & therefore know which regions > > we cannot use. As a reminder, calling early_init_fdt_scan_reserved_mem() > > before we've got the dt in a proper virtual memory address will cause > > the kernel to panic if it tries to read a reserved memory node's label. > > > > As we are now calling setup_vm_final() *before* we know what the > > reserved memory regions are & as RISC-V allocates memblocks from the top > > down, the allocations in setup_vm_final() will be done in the highest > > memory region. > > When early_init_fdt_scan_reserved_mem() then tries to reserve the > > entirety of that top-most memory region, the reservation fails as part > > of this region has already been allocated. > > In the scenario where I found this bug, that top-most region is non- > > cached memory & the kernel ends up panicking. > > The memblock debug code made this pretty easy to spot, otherwise I'd > > probably have spent more than just a few hours trying to figure out why > > it was panicking! > > > > My "this needs to be fixed today" solution for this problem was calling > > memblock_set_bottom_up(true) in setup_bootmem() & that's what we are > > going to carry downstream for now. > > > > I haven't tested it (yet) but I suspect that it would also fix our > > problem of the dtb being remapped into a non-cached region of memory > > that we would later go on to reserve too. Non-cached being an issue > > mainly due to the panicking, but failing to reserve (and using!) memory > > regions that are meant to be reserved is very far from ideal even when > > they are memory that the kernel can actually use. > > > > I have no idea if that is an acceptable solution for upstream though, so > > I guess this is me putting out feelers as to whether this is something I > > should send a patch to do *OR* if this is another sign of the issues > > that you (Mike, Palmer) mentioned in the past. > > If it isn't an acceptable solution, I'm not really too sure how to > > proceed! > > > > Cheers, > > Conor. > > > > > > -- > Sincerely yours, > Mike. >
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