Hi, On 2024-08-30 18:28, Oreoluwa Babatunde wrote:
The reserved_mem array is used to store data for the different reserved memory regions defined in the DT of a device. The array stores information such as region name, node reference, start-address, and size of the different reserved memory regions. The array is currently statically allocated with a size of MAX_RESERVED_REGIONS(64). This means that any system that specifies a number of reserved memory regions greater than MAX_RESERVED_REGIONS(64) will not have enough space to store the information for all the regions. This can be fixed by making the reserved_mem array a dynamically sized array which is allocated using memblock_alloc() based on the exact number of reserved memory regions defined in the DT. On architectures such as arm64, memblock allocated memory is not writable until after the page tables have been setup. This is an issue because the current implementation initializes the reserved memory regions and stores their information in the array before the page tables are setup. Hence, dynamically allocating the reserved_mem array and attempting to write information to it at this point will fail. Therefore, the allocation of the reserved_mem array will need to be done after the page tables have been setup, which means that the reserved memory regions will also need to wait until after the page tables have been setup to be stored in the array. When processing the reserved memory regions defined in the DT, these regions are marked as reserved by calling memblock_reserve(base, size). Where: base = base address of the reserved region. size = the size of the reserved memory region. Depending on if that region is defined using the "no-map" property, memblock_mark_nomap(base, size) is also called. The "no-map" property is used to indicate to the operating system that a mapping of the specified region must NOT be created. This also means that no access (including speculative accesses) is allowed on this region of memory except when it is coming from the device driver that this region of memory is being reserved for.[1] Therefore, it is important to call memblock_reserve() and memblock_mark_nomap() on all the reserved memory regions before the system sets up the page tables so that the system does not unknowingly include any of the no-map reserved memory regions in the memory map. There are two ways to define how/where a reserved memory region is placed in memory: i) Statically-placed reserved memory regions i.e. regions defined with a set start address and size using the "reg" property in the DT. ii) Dynamically-placed reserved memory regions. i.e. regions defined by specifying a range of addresses where they can be placed in memory using the "alloc_ranges" and "size" properties in the DT. The dynamically-placed reserved memory regions get assigned a start address only at runtime. And this needs to be done before the page tables are setup so that memblock_reserve() and memblock_mark_nomap() can be called on the allocated region as explained above. Since the dynamically allocated reserved_mem array can only be available after the page tables have been setup, the information for the dynamically-placed reserved memory regions needs to be stored somewhere temporarily until the reserved_mem array is available. Therefore, this series makes use of a temporary static array to store the information of the dynamically-placed reserved memory regions until the reserved_mem array is allocated. Once the reserved_mem array is available, the information is copied over from the temporary array into the reserved_mem array, and the memory for the temporary array is freed back to the system. The information for the statically-placed reserved memory regions does not need to be stored in a temporary array because their starting address is already stored in the devicetree. Once the reserved_mem array is allocated, the information for the statically-placed reserved memory regions is added to the array. Note: Because of the use of a temporary array to store the information of the dynamically-placed reserved memory regions, there still exists a limitation of 64 for this particular kind of reserved memory regions. From my observation, these regions are typically small in number and hence I expect this to not be an issue for now.
I tested the series on the same systems as previously and did not see anything suspicious.
In addition I tested my x86_64 desktop with CONFIG_OF enabled and this new version boots fine for me and did not show any new issues from what I could tell.
Regards, Tested-by: Klara Modin <klarasmodin@xxxxxxxxx>