On Fri, Apr 29, 2022 at 04:25:37PM +0800, Leizhen (ThunderTown) wrote: > On 2022/4/29 16:02, Leizhen (ThunderTown) wrote: > > On 2022/4/29 11:24, Baoquan He wrote: > >> On 04/28/22 at 05:33pm, Leizhen (ThunderTown) wrote: > >>> On 2022/4/28 11:52, Baoquan He wrote: > >>>> On 04/28/22 at 11:40am, Baoquan He wrote: > >>>>> On 04/27/22 at 05:04pm, Catalin Marinas wrote: > >>>>>> There will be some difference as the 4G limit doesn't always hold for > >>>>>> arm64 (though it's true in most cases). Anyway, we can probably simplify > >>>>>> things a bit while following the documented behaviour: > >>>>>> > >>>>>> crashkernel=Y - current behaviour within ZONE_DMA > >>>>>> crashkernel=Y,high - allocate from above ZONE_DMA > >>>>>> crashkernel=Y,low - allocate within ZONE_DMA [...] > >>>>> Sorry to interrupt. Seems the ,high ,low and fallback are main concerns > >>>>> about this version. And I have the same concerns about them which comes > >>>>> from below points: > >>>>> 1) we may need to take best effort to keep ,high, ,low behaviour > >>>>> consistent on all ARCHes. Otherwise user/admin may be confused when they > >>>>> deploy/configure kdump on different machines of different ARCHes in the > >>>>> same LAB. I think we should try to avoid the confusion. I guess by all arches you mean just x86 here. Since the code is not generic, all arches do their own stuff. > > OK, I plan to remove optimization, fallback and default low size, to follow the > > suggestion of Catalin first. But there's one minor point of contention. > > > > 1) Both "crashkernel=X,high" and "crashkernel=X,low" must be present. > > 2) Both "crashkernel=X,high" and "crashkernel=X,low" are present. > > or > > Allow "crashkernel=X,high" to be present alone. Unlike x86, the default low size is zero. > > > > I prefer 2), how about you? (2) works for me as well. We keep these simple as "expert" options and allow crashkernel= to fall back to 'high' if not sufficient memory in ZONE_DMA. That would be a slight change from the current behaviour but, as Zhen Lei said, with the old tools it's just moving the error around, the crashkernel wouldn't be available in either case. > >>>>> 2) Fallback behaviour is important to our distros. The reason is we will > >>>>> provide default value with crashkernel=xxxM along kernel of distros. In > >>>>> this case, we hope the reservation will succeed by all means. The ,high > >>>>> and ,low is an option if customer likes to take with expertise. OK, that's good feedback. So, to recap, IIUC you are fine with: crashkernel=Y - allocate within ZONE_DMA with fallback above with a default in ZONE_DMA (like x86, 256M or swiotlb size) crashkernel=Y,high - allocate from above ZONE_DMA crashkernel=Y,low - allocate within ZONE_DMA 'crashkernel' overrides the high and low while the latter two can be passed independently. > >>>>> After going through arm64 memory init code, I got below summary about > >>>>> arm64_dma_phys_limit which is the first zone's upper limit. I think we > >>>>> can make use of it to facilitate to simplify code. > >>>>> ================================================================================ > >>>>> DMA DMA32 NORMAL > >>>>> 1)Raspberry Pi4 0~1G 3G~4G (above 4G) > >>>>> 2)Normal machine 0~4G 0 (above 4G) > >>>>> 3)Special machine (above 4G)~MAX > >>>>> 4)No DMA|DMA32 (above 4G)~MAX > >>> > >>> arm64_memblock_init() > >>> reserve_crashkernel() --------------- 0a30c53573b0 ("arm64: mm: Move reserve_crashkernel() into mem_init()") > >> We don't need different code for this place of reservation as you are > >> doing in this patchset, since arm64_dma_phys_limit is initialized as > >> below. In fact, in arm64_memblock_init(), we have made memblock ready, > >> we can initialize arm64_dma_phys_limit as memblock_end_of_DRAM(). And if > >> memblock_start_of_DRAM() is bigger than 4G, we possibly can call > >> reserve_crashkernel() here too. > > > > Yes. Maybe all the devices in this environment are 64-bit. One way I > > know of allowing 32-bit devices to access high memory without SMMU > > is: Set a fixed value for the upper 32 bits. In this case, the DMA > > zone should be [phys_start, phys_start + 4G). We decided that this case doesn't really exists for arm64 platforms (no need for special ZONE_DMA). > I just read the message of commit 791ab8b2e3 ("arm64: Ignore any DMA > offsets in the max_zone_phys() calculation") > > Currently, the kernel assumes that if RAM starts above 32-bit (or > zone_bits), there is still a ZONE_DMA/DMA32 at the bottom of the RAM and > such constrained devices have a hardwired DMA offset. In practice, we > haven't noticed any such hardware so let's assume that we can expand > ZONE_DMA32 to the available memory if no RAM below 4GB. Similarly, > ZONE_DMA is expanded to the 4GB limit if no RAM addressable by > zone_bits. I think the above log is slightly confusing. If the DRAM starts above 4G, ZONE_DMA goes to the end of DRAM. If the DRAM starts below 4G but above the zone_bits for ZONE_DMA as specified in DT/ACPI, it pushes ZONE_DMA to 4G. I don't remember why we did this last part, maybe in case we get incorrect firmware tables, otherwise we could have extended ZONE_DMA to end of DRAM. Zhen Lei, if we agreed on the crashkernel behaviour, could you please post a series that does the above parsing allocation? Ignore the optimisations, we can look at them afterwards. Thanks. -- Catalin