On 1/28/19 4:31 PM, Andrew Jones wrote: > On Mon, Jan 28, 2019 at 02:24:29PM +0000, Alexandru Elisei wrote: >> On 1/25/19 4:47 PM, Andrew Jones wrote: >>> On Fri, Jan 25, 2019 at 04:36:13PM +0000, Alexandru Elisei wrote: >>>> On 1/24/19 12:37 PM, Andrew Jones wrote: >>>>> On Thu, Jan 24, 2019 at 11:59:43AM +0000, Andre Przywara wrote: >>>>>> On Thu, 24 Jan 2019 11:16:29 +0000 >>>>>> Alexandru Elisei <alexandru.elisei@xxxxxxx> wrote: >>>>>> >>>>>>> A warning is displayed if uart0_base is different from what the code >>>>>>> expects qemu to generate for the pl011 UART in the device tree. >>>>>>> However, now we support the ns16550a UART emulated by kvmtool, which >>>>>>> has a different address. This leads to the warning being displayed >>>>>>> even though the UART is configured and working as expected. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Now that we support multiple UARTs, the warning serves no purpose, so >>>>>>> remove it. >>>>>> Mmh, but we use that address before, right? So for anything not >>>>>> emulating an UART at this QEMU specific address we write to some random >>>>>> (device) memory? >>>>>> >>>>>> Drew, how important is this early print feature for kvm-unit-tests? >>>>> The setup code passes through quite a few asserts before getting through >>>>> io_init() (including in uart0_init), so I think there's still value in >>>>> having a guessed UART address. Maybe we can provide guesses for both >>>>> QEMU and kvmtool, and some selection method, that would be used until >>>>> we've properly assigned uart0_base from DT? >>>>> >>>>>> Cheers, >>>>>> Andre. >>>>>> >>>>>>> Signed-off-by: Alexandru Elisei <alexandru.elisei@xxxxxxx> >>>>>>> --- >>>>>>> lib/arm/io.c | 6 ------ >>>>>>> 1 file changed, 6 deletions(-) >>>>>>> >>>>>>> diff --git a/lib/arm/io.c b/lib/arm/io.c >>>>>>> index 35fc05aeb4db..87435150f73e 100644 >>>>>>> --- a/lib/arm/io.c >>>>>>> +++ b/lib/arm/io.c >>>>>>> @@ -61,12 +61,6 @@ static void uart0_init(void) >>>>>>> } >>>>>>> >>>>>>> uart0_base = ioremap(base.addr, base.size); >>>>>>> - >>>>>>> - if (uart0_base != (u8 *)UART_EARLY_BASE) { >>>>>>> - printf("WARNING: early print support may not work. " >>>>>>> - "Found uart at %p, but early base is %p.\n", >>>>>>> - uart0_base, (u8 *)UART_EARLY_BASE); >>>>>>> - } >>>>>>> } >>>>> This warning is doing what it should, which is pointing out that the >>>>> UART_EARLY_BASE guess appears to be wrong. If we can provide a way >>>>> to support more than one guess, then we should keep this warning but >>>>> adjust it to match one of any of the guesses. >>>>> >>>>> Thanks, >>>>> drew >>>> I'm not really sure how to implement a selection method. I've looked at >>>> splitting io_init() into uart0_init() and chr_testdev_init() and calling >>>> uart0_init() very early in the setup process, but uart0_init() itself uses >>>> printf() and assert(). >>>> >>>> I've also thought about adding another function, something like >>>> uart0_early_init(), that is called very early in setup() and gets the base >>>> address from the dtb bootargs. But that means calling dt_init() and >>>> dt_get_bootargs(), which can fail. >>>> >>>> One other option that could work is to make it a compile-time configuration. >>>> >>>> What do you think? >>>> >>> Compile-time is fine, which I guess will result in a new configure script >>> option as well. I wonder if we shouldn't consider generating a config.h >>> file with stuff like this rather than adding another -D to the compile >>> line. >>> >>> drew >> I propose a new configuration option called --vmm, with possible values qemu and >> kvmtool, which defaults to qemu if not set. >> >> Another possibility would be to have an --uart-base option, but that means we >> are expecting the user to be aware of the uart base address for the virtual >> machine manager, which might be unreasonable. >> >> This is a quick prototype of how using -D for conditional compilation would look >> like (the configure changes are included too): >> >> diff --git a/configure b/configure >> index df8581e3a906..7a56ba47707f 100755 >> --- a/configure >> +++ b/configure >> @@ -70,6 +70,9 @@ while [[ "$1" = -* ]]; do >> ;; >> --ld) >> ld="$arg" >> + ;; >> + --vmm) >> + vmm="$arg" >> ;; >> --enable-pretty-print-stacks) >> pretty_print_stacks=yes >> @@ -108,6 +111,14 @@ if [ "$arch" = "i386" ] || [ "$arch" = "x86_64" ]; then >> testdir=x86 >> elif [ "$arch" = "arm" ] || [ "$arch" = "arm64" ]; then >> testdir=arm >> + if [ -z "$vmm" ] || [ "$vmm" = "qemu" ]; then >> + uart_early_base=0x09000000UL > You can drop the 'UL'. > >> + elif [ "$vmm" = "kvmtool" ]; then >> + uart_early_base=0x3f8 >> + else >> + echo '--vmm must be one of "qemu" or "kvmtool"' >> + usage > You're outputting usage here, but you didn't add vmm to the help text. > >> + fi >> elif [ "$arch" = "ppc64" ]; then >> testdir=powerpc >> firmware="$testdir/boot_rom.bin" >> @@ -197,4 +208,5 @@ PRETTY_PRINT_STACKS=$pretty_print_stacks >> ENVIRON_DEFAULT=$environ_default >> ERRATATXT=errata.txt >> U32_LONG_FMT=$u32_long >> +UART_EARLY_BASE=$uart_early_base >> EOF >> diff --git a/Makefile b/Makefile >> index e9f02272e156..225c2a525cdf 100644 >> --- a/Makefile >> +++ b/Makefile >> @@ -72,6 +72,10 @@ COMMON_CFLAGS += $(fno_pic) $(no_pie) >> CFLAGS += $(COMMON_CFLAGS) >> CFLAGS += -Wmissing-parameter-type -Wold-style-declaration -Woverride-init >> >> +ifneq ($(UART_EARLY_BASE),) >> +CFLAGS += -DUART_EARLY_BASE=$(UART_EARLY_BASE) >> +endif > This type of thing is what I would like to avoid by introducing a > config.h file. In the least we shouldn't add this -D to CFLAGS for > all architectures. It can be added to the %.elf rule in > arm/Makefile.common > >> + >> CXXFLAGS += $(COMMON_CFLAGS) >> >> autodepend-flags = -MMD -MF $(dir $*).$(notdir $*).d >> > You'll also want to patch lib/arm/io.c with > > -/* > - * Use this guess for the pl011 base in order to make an attempt at > - * having earlier printf support. We'll overwrite it with the real > - * base address that we read from the device tree later. This is > - * the address we expect QEMU's mach-virt machine type to put in > - * its generated device tree. > - */ > -#define UART_EARLY_BASE 0x09000000UL > - > static struct spinlock uart_lock; > -static volatile u8 *uart0_base = (u8 *)UART_EARLY_BASE; > +static volatile u8 *uart0_base = (u8 *)(unsigned long)UART_EARLY_BASE; > > > > This is all a bit on the ugly side, but I can't think of anything > better. > > Thanks, > drew I've also tried doing it by generating config.h This is what I came up with: diff --git a/configure b/configure index df8581e3a906..d77b8b0d82fa 100755 --- a/configure +++ b/configure @@ -16,6 +16,7 @@ endian="" pretty_print_stacks=yes environ_default=yes u32_long= +vmm=qemu usage() { cat <<-EOF @@ -23,6 +24,8 @@ usage() { Options include: --arch=ARCH architecture to compile for ($arch) + --vmm=VMM virtual machine monitor to compile for (qemu or kvmtool, + arm/arm64 only, default is qemu) --processor=PROCESSOR processor to compile for ($arch) --cross-prefix=PREFIX cross compiler prefix --cc=CC c compiler to use ($cc) @@ -71,6 +74,9 @@ while [[ "$1" = -* ]]; do --ld) ld="$arg" ;; + --vmm) + vmm="$arg" + ;; --enable-pretty-print-stacks) pretty_print_stacks=yes ;; @@ -108,6 +114,14 @@ if [ "$arch" = "i386" ] || [ "$arch" = "x86_64" ]; then testdir=x86 elif [ "$arch" = "arm" ] || [ "$arch" = "arm64" ]; then testdir=arm + if [ "$vmm" = "qemu" ]; then + uart_early_base=0x09000000 + elif [ "$vmm" = "kvmtool" ]; then + uart_early_base=0x3f8 + else + echo '--vmm must be one of "qemu" or "kvmtool"' + usage + fi elif [ "$arch" = "ppc64" ]; then testdir=powerpc firmware="$testdir/boot_rom.bin" @@ -198,3 +212,16 @@ ENVIRON_DEFAULT=$environ_default ERRATATXT=errata.txt U32_LONG_FMT=$u32_long EOF + +cat <<EOF > lib/config.h +#ifndef CONFIG_H +#define CONFIG_H 1 +EOF +if [ "$arch" = "arm" ] || [ "$arch" = "arm64" ]; then +cat <<EOF >> lib/config.h +#define UART_EARLY_BASE ${uart_early_base}UL +EOF +fi +cat <<EOF >> lib/config.h +#endif +EOF diff --git a/lib/arm/io.c b/lib/arm/io.c index 9fe9bd0bf659..0a3e8f237ab8 100644 --- a/lib/arm/io.c +++ b/lib/arm/io.c @@ -11,6 +11,7 @@ #include <libcflat.h> #include <devicetree.h> #include <chr-testdev.h> +#include <config.h> #include "arm/asm/psci.h" #include <asm/spinlock.h> #include <asm/io.h> @@ -21,15 +22,6 @@ extern void halt(int code); static bool testdev_enabled; -/* - * Use this guess for the pl011 base in order to make an attempt at - * having earlier printf support. We'll overwrite it with the real - * base address that we read from the device tree later. This is - * the address we expect QEMU's mach-virt machine type to put in - * its generated device tree. - */ -#define UART_EARLY_BASE 0x09000000UL - static struct spinlock uart_lock; static volatile u8 *uart0_base = (u8 *)UART_EARLY_BASE; Putting config.h in lib makes it available for other architectures, in case they want to implement something similar. Please suggest another location if there is a better one. I think this looks better than using architecture-specific compile-time defines buried in arm/Makefile.common, what do you think? _______________________________________________ kvmarm mailing list kvmarm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.cs.columbia.edu/mailman/listinfo/kvmarm