在 2024/10/30 04:48, Yazen Ghannam 写道:
On Mon, Oct 28, 2024 at 04:11:40PM +0800, Shuai Xue wrote:
Synchronous error was detected as a result of user-space process accessing
a 2-bit uncorrected error. The CPU will take a synchronous error exception
such as Synchronous External Abort (SEA) on Arm64. The kernel will queue a
memory_failure() work which poisons the related page, unmaps the page, and
then sends a SIGBUS to the process, so that a system wide panic can be
avoided.
However, no memory_failure() work will be queued when abnormal synchronous
errors occur. These errors can include situations such as invalid PA,
unexpected severity, no memory failure config support, invalid GUID
section, etc. In such case, the user-space process will trigger SEA again.
This loop can potentially exceed the platform firmware threshold or even
trigger a kernel hard lockup, leading to a system reboot.
Fix it by performing a force kill if no memory_failure() work is queued
for synchronous errors.
Signed-off-by: Shuai Xue <xueshuai@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Reviewed-by: Jarkko Sakkinen <jarkko@xxxxxxxxxx>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Cameron <Jonathan.Cameron@xxxxxxxxxx>
---
drivers/acpi/apei/ghes.c | 10 ++++++++++
1 file changed, 10 insertions(+)
diff --git a/drivers/acpi/apei/ghes.c b/drivers/acpi/apei/ghes.c
index ada93cfde9ba..f2ee28c44d7a 100644
--- a/drivers/acpi/apei/ghes.c
+++ b/drivers/acpi/apei/ghes.c
@@ -801,6 +801,16 @@ static bool ghes_do_proc(struct ghes *ghes,
}
}
+ /*
+ * If no memory failure work is queued for abnormal synchronous
+ * errors, do a force kill.
+ */
+ if (sync && !queued) {
+ pr_err("%s:%d: hardware memory corruption (SIGBUS)\n",
+ current->comm, task_pid_nr(current));
I think it would help to include the GHES_PFX to indicate where this
message is coming from. The pr_fmt() macro could also be introduced
instead.
Yes, GHES_PFX is a effective prefix and will be consistent to other
message in GHES driver. Will add it in next version.
What do you mean about pr_fmt()?
Also, you may want to include the HW_ERR prefix. Not all kernel messages
related to hardware errors have this prefix today. But maybe that should
be changed so there is more consistent messaging.
Do we really need a HW_ERR prefix? The other case which use HW_ERR
prefix are for hardware registers. The messages which send SIGBUS does
not include HW_ERR, e.g. in kill_proc(), kill_procs().
pr_err("%#lx: Sending SIGBUS to %s:%d due to hardware memory
corruption\n",...
pr_err("%#lx: forcibly killing %s:%d because of failure to unmap
corrupted page\n",...
Thanks,
Yazen
Thanks for valuable comments.
Best Regards,
Shuai