On 05/18/22 at 12:26pm, Michael Ellerman wrote: > "Eric W. Biederman" <ebiederm@xxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: > > Looking at this the pr_err is absolutely needed. If an unsupported case > > winds up in the purgatory blob and the code can't handle it things > > will fail silently much worse later. > > It won't fail later, it will fail the syscall. > > sys_kexec_file_load() > kimage_file_alloc_init() > kimage_file_prepare_segments() > arch_kexec_kernel_image_load() > kexec_image_load_default() > image->fops->load() > elf64_load() # powerpc > bzImage64_load() # x86 > kexec_load_purgatory() > kexec_apply_relocations() > > Which does: > > if (relsec->sh_type == SHT_RELA) > ret = arch_kexec_apply_relocations_add(pi, section, > relsec, symtab); > else if (relsec->sh_type == SHT_REL) > ret = arch_kexec_apply_relocations(pi, section, > relsec, symtab); > if (ret) > return ret; > > And that error is bubbled all the way back up. So as long as > arch_kexec_apply_relocations() returns an error the syscall will fail > back to userspace and there'll be an error message at that level. > > It's true that having nothing printed in dmesg makes it harder to work > out why the syscall failed. But it's a kernel bug if there are unhandled > relocations in the kernel-supplied purgatory code, so a user really has > no way to do anything about the error even if it is printed. > > > "Naveen N. Rao" <naveen.n.rao@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: > > > >> Baoquan He wrote: > >>> On 04/25/22 at 11:11pm, Naveen N. Rao wrote: > >>>> kexec_load_purgatory() can fail for many reasons - there is no need to > >>>> print an error when encountering unsupported relocations. > >>>> This solves a build issue on powerpc with binutils v2.36 and newer [1]. > >>>> Since commit d1bcae833b32f1 ("ELF: Don't generate unused section > >>>> symbols") [2], binutils started dropping section symbols that it thought > >>> I am not familiar with binutils, while wondering if this exists in other > >>> ARCHes except of ppc. Arm64 doesn't have the ARCH override either, do we > >>> have problem with it? > >> > >> I'm not aware of this specific file causing a problem on other architectures - > >> perhaps the config options differ enough. There are however more reports of > >> similar issues affecting other architectures with the llvm integrated assembler: > >> https://github.com/ClangBuiltLinux/linux/issues/981 > >> > >>> > >>>> were unused. This isn't an issue in general, but with kexec_file.c, gcc > >>>> is placing kexec_arch_apply_relocations[_add] into a separate > >>>> .text.unlikely section and the section symbol ".text.unlikely" is being > >>>> dropped. Due to this, recordmcount is unable to find a non-weak symbol > >>> But arch_kexec_apply_relocations_add is weak symbol on ppc. > >> > >> Yes. Note that it is just the section symbol that gets dropped. The section is > >> still present and will continue to hold the symbols for the functions > >> themselves. > > > > So we have a case where binutils thinks it is doing something useful > > and our kernel specific tool gets tripped up by it. > > It's not just binutils, the LLVM assembler has the same behavior. > > > Reading the recordmcount code it looks like it is finding any symbol > > within a section but ignoring weak symbols. So I suspect the only > > remaining symbol in the section is __weak and that confuses > > recordmcount. > > > > Does removing the __weak annotation on those functions fix the build > > error? If so we can restructure the kexec code to simply not use __weak > > symbols. > > > > Otherwise the fix needs to be in recordmcount or binutils, and we should > > loop whoever maintains recordmcount in to see what they can do. > > It seems that recordmcount is not really maintained anymore now that x86 > uses objtool? > > There've been several threads about fixing recordmcount, but none of > them seem to have lead to a solution. > > These weak symbol vs recordmcount problems have been worked around going > back as far as 2020: It gives me feeling that llvm or recordmcount should make adjustment, but not innocent kernel code, if there are a lot of places reported. I am curious how llvm or recordmcount dev respond to this. > > https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/include/linux/elfcore.h?id=6e7b64b9dd6d96537d816ea07ec26b7dedd397b9 > > cheers > _______________________________________________ kexec mailing list kexec@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.infradead.org/mailman/listinfo/kexec