On 2021/12/24 14:36, Leizhen (ThunderTown) wrote: > > > On 2021/12/24 1:26, Borislav Petkov wrote: >> On Wed, Dec 22, 2021 at 09:08:05PM +0800, Zhen Lei wrote: >>> From: Chen Zhou <chenzhou10@xxxxxxxxxx> >>> >>> We will make the functions reserve_crashkernel() as generic, the >>> xen_pv_domain() check in reserve_crashkernel() is relevant only to >>> x86, >> >> Why is that so? Is Xen-PV x86-only? >> >>> the same as insert_resource() in reserve_crashkernel[_low](). >> >> Why? >> >> Looking at >> >> 0212f9159694 ("x86: Add Crash kernel low reservation") >> >> it *surprisingly* explains why that resources thing is being added: >> >> We need to add another range in /proc/iomem like "Crash kernel low", >> so kexec-tools could find that info and append to kdump kernel >> command line. >> >> Then, >> >> 157752d84f5d ("kexec: use Crash kernel for Crash kernel low") >> >> renamed it because, as it states, kexec-tools was taught to handle >> multiple resources of the same name. >> >> So why does kexec-tools on arm *not* need those iomem resources? How >> does it parse the ranges there? Questions over questions... It's a good question worth figuring out. I'm going to dig into this. I admire your rigorous style and sharp vision. > > https://lkml.org/lkml/2019/4/4/1758 > > Chen Zhou has explained before, see below. I'll analyze why x86 and arm64 need > to process iomem resources at different times. > > < This very reminds what x86 does. Any chance some of the code can be reused > < rather than duplicated? > As i said in the comment, i transport reserve_crashkernel_low() from x86_64. There are minor > differences. In arm64, we don't need to do insert_resource(), we do request_resource() > in request_standard_resources() later. > >> >> So last time I told you to sit down and take your time with this cleanup. >> >From reading this here, it doesn't look like it. Rather, it looks like >> hastily done in a hurry and hurrying stuff doesn't help you one bit - it >> actually makes it worse. >> >> Your commit messages need to explain *why* a change is being done and >> why is that ok. This one doesn't. > > OK, I'll do this in follow-up patches. > >> >>> @@ -1120,7 +1109,17 @@ void __init setup_arch(char **cmdline_p) >>> * Reserve memory for crash kernel after SRAT is parsed so that it >>> * won't consume hotpluggable memory. >>> */ >>> - reserve_crashkernel(); >>> +#ifdef CONFIG_KEXEC_CORE >>> + if (xen_pv_domain()) >>> + pr_info("Ignoring crashkernel for a Xen PV domain\n"); Right, these two lines of code do not need to be moved. xen_pv_domain() is a friendly macro function. >> >> This is wrong - the check is currently being done inside >> reserve_crashkernel(), *after* it has parsed a crashkernel= cmdline >> correctly - and not before. >> >> Your change would print on Xen PV, regardless of whether it has received >> crashkernel= on the cmdline or not. > > Yes, you're right. There are changes in code logic, but the print doesn't > seem to cause any misunderstanding. > >> >> This is exactly why I say that making those functions generic and shared >> might not be such a good idea, after all, because then you'd have to >> sprinkle around arch-specific stuff. > > Yes, I'm thinking about that too. Perhaps they are not suitable for full > code sharing, but it looks like there's some code that can be shared. > For example, the function parse_crashkernel_in_order() that I extracted > based on your suggestion, it could also be parse_crashkernel_high_low(). > Or the function reserve_crashkernel_low(). > > There are two ways to reserve memory above 4G: > 1. Use crashkernel=X,high, with or without crashkernel=X,low > 2. Use crashkernel=X,[offset], but try low memory first. If failed, then > try high memory, and retry at least 256M low memory. > > I plan to only implement 2 in the next version so that there can be fewer > changes. Then implement 1 after 2 is applied. I tried it yesterday and it didn't work. I still have to deal with the problem of adjusting insert_resource(). How about I isolate some cleanup patches first? Strive for them to be merged into v5.17. This way, we can focus on the core changes in the next version. And I can also save some repetitive rebase workload. > >> >> One of the ways how to address this particular case here would be: >> >> 1. Add a x86-specific wrapper around parse_crashkernel() which does >> all the parsing. When that wrapper finishes, you should have parsed >> everything that has crashkernel= on the cmdline. >> >> 2. At the end of that wrapper, you do arch-specific checks and setup >> like the xen_pv_domain() one. >> >> 3. Now, you do reserve_crashkernel(), if those checks pass. >> >> The question is, whether the flow on arm64 can do the same. Probably but >> it needs careful auditing. >>