On 2024/8/7 3:10, Catalin Marinas wrote: > To Jinjie, if you make generic changes that affect other architectures, > please either cc the individual lists/maintainers or at least cross-post > to linux-arch. I don't follow lkml, there's just too much traffic there. Sorry, I forgot to Cc to the other architectures. > > On Fri, Aug 02, 2024 at 06:11:01PM +0800, Baoquan He wrote: >> On 08/02/24 at 05:01pm, Jinjie Ruan wrote: >>> On RISCV64 Qemu machine with 512MB memory, cmdline "crashkernel=500M,high" >>> will cause system stall as below: >>> >>> Zone ranges: >>> DMA32 [mem 0x0000000080000000-0x000000009fffffff] >>> Normal empty >>> Movable zone start for each node >>> Early memory node ranges >>> node 0: [mem 0x0000000080000000-0x000000008005ffff] >>> node 0: [mem 0x0000000080060000-0x000000009fffffff] >>> Initmem setup node 0 [mem 0x0000000080000000-0x000000009fffffff] >>> (stall here) >>> >>> commit 5d99cadf1568 ("crash: fix x86_32 crash memory reserve dead loop >>> bug") fix this on 32-bit architecture. However, the problem is not >>> completely solved. If `CRASH_ADDR_LOW_MAX = CRASH_ADDR_HIGH_MAX` on 64-bit >>> architecture, for example, when system memory is equal to >>> CRASH_ADDR_LOW_MAX on RISCV64, the following infinite loop will also occur: >> >> Interesting, I didn't expect risc-v defining them like these. >> >> #define CRASH_ADDR_LOW_MAX dma32_phys_limit >> #define CRASH_ADDR_HIGH_MAX memblock_end_of_DRAM() > > arm64 defines the high limit as PHYS_MASK+1, it doesn't need to be > dynamic and x86 does something similar (SZ_64T). Not sure why the > generic code and riscv define it like this. > >>> -> reserve_crashkernel_generic() and high is true >>> -> alloc at [CRASH_ADDR_LOW_MAX, CRASH_ADDR_HIGH_MAX] fail >>> -> alloc at [0, CRASH_ADDR_LOW_MAX] fail and repeatedly >>> (because CRASH_ADDR_LOW_MAX = CRASH_ADDR_HIGH_MAX). >>> >>> Before refactor in commit 9c08a2a139fe ("x86: kdump: use generic interface >>> to simplify crashkernel reservation code"), x86 do not try to reserve crash >>> memory at low if it fails to alloc above high 4G. However before refator in >>> commit fdc268232dbba ("arm64: kdump: use generic interface to simplify >>> crashkernel reservation"), arm64 try to reserve crash memory at low if it >>> fails above high 4G. For 64-bit systems, this attempt is less beneficial >>> than the opposite, remove it to fix this bug and align with native x86 >>> implementation. >> >> And I don't like the idea crashkernel=,high failure will fallback to >> attempt in low area, so this looks good to me. > > Well, I kind of liked this behaviour. One can specify ,high as a > preference rather than forcing a range. The arm64 land has different > platforms with some constrained memory layouts. Such fallback works well > as a default command line option shipped with distros without having to > guess the SoC memory layout. > > Something like below should fix the issue as well (untested): I tested it on QEMU and it is good to fix this dead loop problem. > > diff --git a/kernel/crash_reserve.c b/kernel/crash_reserve.c > index d3b4cd12bdd1..ae92d6745ef4 100644 > --- a/kernel/crash_reserve.c > +++ b/kernel/crash_reserve.c > @@ -420,7 +420,8 @@ void __init reserve_crashkernel_generic(char *cmdline, > * For crashkernel=size[KMG],high, if the first attempt was > * for high memory, fall back to low memory. > */ > - if (high && search_end == CRASH_ADDR_HIGH_MAX) { > + if (high && search_end == CRASH_ADDR_HIGH_MAX && > + CRASH_ADDR_LOW_MAX < CRASH_ADDR_HIGH_MAX) { > search_end = CRASH_ADDR_LOW_MAX; > search_base = 0; > goto retry; > _______________________________________________ kexec mailing list kexec@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.infradead.org/mailman/listinfo/kexec