On 08/30/18 at 05:27pm, Kirill A. Shutemov wrote: > On Thu, Aug 30, 2018 at 02:12:02PM +0000, Baoquan He wrote: > > On 08/30/18 at 04:58pm, Kirill A. Shutemov wrote: > > > On Wed, Aug 29, 2018 at 10:16:21PM +0800, Baoquan He wrote: > > > > This was suggested by Kirill several months ago, I worked out several > > > > patches to fix, then interrupted by other issues. So sort them out > > > > now and post for reviewing. > > > > > > Thanks for doing this. > > > > > > > The current upstream kernel supports 5-level paging mode and supports > > > > dynamically choosing paging mode during bootup according to kernel > > > > image, hardware and kernel parameter setting. This flexibility brings > > > > several issues for kexec/kdump: > > > > 1) > > > > Switching between paging modes, requires changes into target kernel. > > > > It means you cannot kexec() 4-level paging kernel from 5-level paging > > > > kernel if 4-level paging kernel doesn't include changes. > > > > > > > > 2) > > > > Switching from 5-level paging to 4-level paging kernel would fail, if > > > > kexec() put kernel image above 64TiB of memory. > > > > > > I'm not entirely sure that 64TiB is the limit here. Technically, 4-level > > > paging allows to address 256TiB in 1-to-1 mapping. We just don't have > > > machines with that wide physical address space (which don't support > > > 5-level paging too). > > > > Hmm, afaik, the MAX_PHYSMEM_BITS limits the maximum address space > > which physical RAM can mapped to. We have 256TB for the whole address > > space for 4-level paging, that includes user space and kernel space, > > it might not allow 256TB entirely for the direct mapping. > > And the direct mapping is only for physical RAM mapping, and > > kexec/kdump only cares about the physical RAM space and load them > > inside. > > > > # define MAX_PHYSMEM_BITS (pgtable_l5_enabled() ? 52 : 46) > > > > Not sure if my understanding is right, please correct me if I am wrong. > > IIRC, we only care about the place kexec puts the kernel before it gets > decompressed. After the decompression kernel will be put into the right > spot. > > Decompression is done in early boot where we use 1-to-1 mapping (not a > usual kernel virtual memory layout). All 256TiB should be reachable. My understanding that is although it's 1:1 identity mapping, it still has to be inside available physical RAM region. I don't remember what the old code did, now in __startup_64(), you can see that there's a check like below, and at this time, it's still identity mapping. /* Is the address too large? */ if (physaddr >> MAX_PHYSMEM_BITS) for (;;); Thanks Baoquan _______________________________________________ kexec mailing list kexec@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.infradead.org/mailman/listinfo/kexec