Re: 5.6 regression caused by "ACPICA: Dispatcher: always generate buffer objects for ASL create_field() operator"

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On 5/6/2020 12:11 AM, Kaneda, Erik wrote:

-----Original Message-----
From: linux-acpi-owner@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx <linux-acpi-
owner@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> On Behalf Of Maximilian Luz
Sent: Tuesday, May 5, 2020 6:50 AM
To: Hans de Goede <hdegoede@xxxxxxxxxx>; Wysocki, Rafael J
<rafael.j.wysocki@xxxxxxxxx>; Moore, Robert <robert.moore@xxxxxxxxx>;
Kaneda, Erik <erik.kaneda@xxxxxxxxx>; Mattia Dongili <malattia@xxxxxxxx>;
William Bader <williambader@xxxxxxxxxxx>; Dominik Mierzejewski
<dominik@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Cc: linux-acpi <linux-acpi@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>; Darren Hart
<dvhart@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>; Andy Shevchenko <andy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>;
platform-driver-x86@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: 5.6 regression caused by "ACPICA: Dispatcher: always generate
buffer objects for ASL create_field() operator"

On 5/5/20 2:55 PM, Hans de Goede wrote:
Hi All,

Commit 6d232b29cfce ("ACPICA: Dispatcher: always generate buffer
objects for ASL create_field() operator") has dropped the automatic
conversion of small buffers into integers.

But some drivers relied on this automatic conversion, these drivers
have checks like this:

          if (object->type != ACPI_TYPE_INTEGER) {
                  pr_warn("Invalid acpi_object: expected 0x%x got 0x%x\n",
                                  ACPI_TYPE_INTEGER, object->type);
                  kfree(object);
                  return -EINVAL;
          }

This specific bit comes from the sony-laptop (platform/x86) code, the
ACPICA change has broken this code, causing systems using this driver
to hang on resume from suspend.

We have multiple bug-reports open for this already:

https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=207491
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1829096
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1830150

Mattia Dongili, the sony-laptop driver has already submitted a fix for
this upstream, adjusting the sony-laptop driver to deal with the
returned object type now being a BUFFER.

The goal of this email is to:

1. Make everyone involved aware of this breakage as we may see similar
breakage elsewhere.

2. Discuss if we should maybe revert the ACPICA change.

If you are reading this then 1. has been accomplished :)

Which leaves us with 2. I'm tending towards keeping the change, since
it seems the right thing to do and dealing with the fallout. But since
there is fallout we should also at least consider reverting the ACPICA
change.

So ACPI maintainers what is you take on this ?
What a mess. Several thoughts...

I think we should keep the internal AML interpreter behavior as is because it solves a problem.

I also would prefer to deal with the fallout rather than to revert the fix.

I think that the potential damage is limited and the affected driver code should be fixed anyway which may not happen if the change in question is reverted.


The ACPI spec says that buffers that are small enough to fit inside of integers should be treated as
integers. However, we found that this is not the case for CreateField operators. The internal
representation of this needs to be a buffer to match MS AML interpreter.

SNC is not a pre-defined method so we actually don't know what the return type is supposed
to be. At some point during the development of this driver, it's likely that someone made an observation
about what "SNC" returned at some point in time and continued to assume that it will use the same
type.

For methods that are not a part of the ACPI specification, buffers less than or equal to 8 bytes and
integers could be used interchangeably. I don't see a reason why the data inside the buffer should be
invalid.

Erik
Regards,

Hans
Hi,

I'd like to advise against reverting the commit. Quite honestly, I don't think
reverting the commit is a good idea. This will break things for devices that
assume Microsoft-like AML interpreter behavior _inside_ the DSDT. Such as
the MS Surface devices for example, which, as stated in the commit message,
depend on the type being Buffer via a check on ObjectType(...). There is no
fix for those devices other than a) accepting MS behavior in ACPICA, b)
introducing a quirk in ACPICA which switches between behaviors on a device
basis, or c) patching the DSDT of those devices specifically for Linux.

I'd also argue that since this is MS behavior, this is the behavior that almost all
consumer electronics devices with ACPI will expect. Case in point, the DSDT
of one of the affected Sony laptops, which contains the following code:

          CreateField (SNBF, Zero, 0x20, SNBD)
          CreateWordField (SNBF, 0x02, CPW0)
          CreateWordField (SNBF, 0x04, CPW1)
          CreateWordField (SNBF, Zero, RCW0)
          CreateWordField (SNBF, 0x02, RCW1)

They explicitly create a Buffer field of 32 bits via CreateField and not a 32 bit
Integer field via CreateDWordField. I'd argue that if they wanted this field to
be an Integer, CreateDWordField would be the straight-forward approach.

Unfortunately, I also don't see a way to identify all affected calls to ACPI
functions automatically or easily, as this requires to look at the DSDTs and the
code behind those calls. If you have DSDTs, here's a way to identify if that
particular DSDT/driver combo is affected:

If a call to an ACPI function expects an Integer and the ACPI function returns
a field created with CreateField(...) and the field is smaller than 64 bits (on
64bit machines), then this call is affected.

The only semi-reasonable way, as far as I can see, to identify this on a broad
scale is to get this information out to the respective maintainers of drivers
with apci_evaluate_{integer,object,dsm,..?} calls and ask them to check
those calls against DSDTs. Also maybe help them by introducing a function
which does Buffer-to-Integer conversion.

Regards,
Maximilian





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