On Fri, 1 Nov 2024 at 18:49, Lorenzo Pieralisi <lpieralisi@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > [+Ard, Sami, for EFI] > > On Thu, Oct 31, 2024 at 06:55:43PM +0100, Lorenzo Pieralisi wrote: > > On Sat, Oct 19, 2024 at 06:15:47PM +0100, David Woodhouse wrote: > > > > [...] > > > > > +#ifdef CONFIG_HIBERNATION > > > +static int psci_sys_hibernate(struct sys_off_data *data) > > > +{ > > > + /* > > > + * Zero is an acceptable alternative to PSCI_1_3_OFF_TYPE_HIBERNATE_OFF > > > + * and is supported by hypervisors implementing an earlier version > > > + * of the pSCI v1.3 spec. > > > + */ > > > > It is obvious but with this patch applied a host kernel would start executing > > SYSTEM_OFF2 too if supported in firmware to hibernate, it is not a hypervisor > > only code path. > > > > Related to that: is it now always safe to override > > > > commit 60c0d45a7f7a ("efi/arm64: use UEFI for system reset and poweroff") > > > > for hibernation ? It is not very clear to me why overriding PSCI for > > poweroff was the right thing to do - tried to follow that patch history but > > the question remains (it is related to UpdateCapsule() but I don't know > > how that applies to the hibernation use case). > > RFC: It is unclear to me what happens in current mainline if we try to > hibernate with EFI runtime services enabled and a capsule update pending (we > issue EFI ResetSystem(EFI_RESET_SHUTDOWN,..) which might not be compatible > with the reset required by the pending capsule update request) what happens > in this case I don't know but at least the choice is all contained in > EFI firmware. > > Then if in the same scenario now we are switching to PSCI SYSTEM_OFF2 for the > hibernate reset I suspect that what happens to the in-flight capsule > update requests strictly depends on what "reset" PSCI SYSTEM_OFF2 will > end up doing ? > > I think this is just a corner case and it is unlikely it has been ever > tested (is it even possible ? Looking at EFI folks) - it would be good > to clarify it at least to make sure we understand this code path. > I'm not aware of any OS that actually uses capsule update at runtime (both Windows and Linux queue up the capsule and call the UpdateCapsule() runtime service at boot time after a reboot). So it is unlikely that this would break anything, and I'd actually be inclined to disable capsule update at runtime altogether. I will also note that hibernation with EFI is flaky in general, given that EFI memory regions may move around