On Tuesday, May 26, 2015 10:32:03 AM Boris Ostrovsky wrote: > On 05/25/2015 10:17 PM, Rafael J. Wysocki wrote: > > On Tuesday, May 26, 2015 03:08:17 AM Rafael J. Wysocki wrote: > >> On Tuesday, May 26, 2015 01:42:16 AM Rafael J. Wysocki wrote: > >>> On Tuesday, May 26, 2015 01:22:12 AM Rafael J. Wysocki wrote: > >>>> On Friday, May 22, 2015 09:53:37 PM Boris Ostrovsky wrote: > >>>>> On 05/22/2015 04:11 AM, Sander Eikelenboom wrote: > >>>>>> Hello Sander, > >>>>>> > >>> > >>> [cut] > >>> > >>>>> (+Rafael again) > >>>>> > >>>>> So the immediate cause of those errors is that pdev->evtchn is 0. > >>>>> Backend is not notified and things not go well then. > >>>>> > >>>>> And it is indeed caused by 97badf873ab60e841243b66133ff9eff2a46ef29: > >>>>> > >>>>> We allocate pcifront_sd in pcifront_scan_root() and then pass it to > >>>>> pci_scan_bus_parented() as sysdata. Eventually this sysdata is used in > >>>>> pcibios_root_bridge_prepare() as pci_sysdata. It is dereferenced as > >>>>> pci_sysdata->companion (which I believe is aliased to pcifront_sd->pdev) > >>> > >>> Well, there is an int node field between them, so I'm not sure. > >>> > >>>>> and then set_primary_fwnode() writes it, thus corrupting > >>>>> pcifront_sd->pdev (and I think this is what sets evtchn to zero). > >>> > >>> So the corruption happens when set_primary_fwnode() writes NULL to the > >>> 'secondary' field of object pointed to by 'fwnode'. > >>> > >>> This isn't strictly necessary and we might avoid the crash by only > >>> writing to fwnode->secondary if fn is not NULL. > >>> > >>> So, Sander please test the patch below too if possible. > >>> > >>> Of course, that doesn't solve a problem of passing an incorrect pointer > >>> to ACPI_COMPANION_SET() in pcibios_root_bridge_prepare(). > >> > >> And here's one more thing to test. > > > > And the below is how I'd fix it, so you can simply test this patch and skip the > > previous ones. > > > > --- > > From: Rafael J. Wysocki <rafael.j.wysocki@xxxxxxxxx> > > Subject: PCI / ACPI: Do not set ACPI companions for host bridges with parents > > > > Commit 97badf873ab6 (device property: Make it possible to use > > secondary firmware nodes) uncovered a bug in the x86 (and ia64) PCI > > host bridge initialization code that assumes bridge->bus->sysdata > > to always point to a struct pci_sysdata object which need not be > > the case (in particular, the Xen PCI frontend driver sets it to point > > to a different data type). If it is not the case, an incorrect > > pointer (or a piece of data that is not a pointer at all) will be > > passed to ACPI_COMPANION_SET() and that may cause interesting > > breakage to happen going forward. > > > > To work around this problem use the observation that the ACPI > > host bridge initialization always passes NULL as parent to > > pci_create_root_bus(), so if pcibios_root_bridge_prepare() sees > > a non-NULL parent of the bridge, it should not attempt to set > > an ACPI companion for it, because that means that > > pci_create_root_bus() has been called by someone else. > > > I am wondering whether at some point we might want to use companion > information in Xen as well. > > Another option might be to require that whoever creates their own > sysdata structure to have pci_sysdata as its first element, e.g. Well, I was thinking about that, but it would be x86-specific and I believe that Xen is supposed to work on other architectures too (or at least will be in the future). > --- a/drivers/pci/xen-pcifront.c > +++ b/drivers/pci/xen-pcifront.c > @@ -52,7 +52,12 @@ struct pcifront_device { > }; > > struct pcifront_sd { > + /* > + * Must be the first element of this structure since pcifront_sd > + * is assigned to bus' sysdata and may later be dereferenced as > + * pci_sysdata. > + */ > + struct pci_sysdata sd; > struct pcifront_device *pdev; > }; Also if you want to use an ACPI companion, it will be a good question *which* one. My half-way educated guess is that will be the ACPI companion of the parent, in which case it's better to modify pcibios_root_bridge_prepare(). In any case, we need to talk about that beforehand, so please let me know when you have more specific plans. As for 4.1 (which currently is broken for Sander), I think the $subject patch is the cleanest and least intrusive thing we can do. Thanks, Rafael -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-acpi" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html