On 04/12/17 at 04:24pm, Dave Young wrote: > On 04/07/17 at 10:41am, Jeff Moyer wrote: > > Hi, > > > > commit 021182e52fe01 ("x86/mm: Enable KASLR for physical mapping memory > > regions") causes some of my systems with persistent memory (whether real > > or emulated) to fail to boot with a couple of different crash > > signatures. The first signature is a NMI watchdog lockup of all but 1 > > cpu, which causes much difficulty in extracting useful information from > > the console. The second variant is an invalid paging request, listed > > below. > > > > On some systems, I haven't hit this problem at all. Other systems > > experience a failed boot maybe 20-30% of the time. To reproduce it, > > configure some emulated pmem on your system. You can find directions > > for that here: https://nvdimm.wiki.kernel.org/ > > > > Install ndctl (https://github.com/pmem/ndctl). > > Configure the namespace: > > # ndctl create-namespace -f -e namespace0.0 -m memory > > > > Then just reboot several times (5 should be enough), and hopefully > > you'll hit the issue. > > > > I've attached both my .config and the dmesg output from a successful > > boot at the end of this mail. > > > [snip] > > I did some tests about emulated pmem via memmap=, kdump kernel hangs or > just reboots early during compressing kernel, no clue how to handle it. s/compressing/uncompressing > Since for kdump kernel kaslr is pointless a workaround is use "nokaslr" > > In Fedora or RHEL, just add "nokaslr" in KDUMP_COMMANDLINE_APPEND > in /etc/sysconfig/kdump > > Can you try if this works? > > Thanks > Dave