Hello Kees, On Mon, May 14, 2012 at 03:21:17PM -0700, Kees Cook wrote: [...] > > - buf = cxt->virt_addr + (id * cxt->record_size); > > - memset(buf, '\0', cxt->record_size); > > + persistent_ram_free_old(cxt->przs[id]); > > Hm, I don't think persistent_ram_free_old() is what's wanted here. > That appears to entirely release the region? I want to make sure the > memory is cleared first. And will this area come back on a write, or > does it stay released? It just releases ECC-restored memory region (a copy). The original (persistent) region is still fully reusable after that call. (It is a pity that pstore internals can't use the restored copy directly, as pstore expects that it will release the region itself after pstore_mkfile(), so we somewhat duplicate the memory during psi->read(). We'd better fix it some day, but it's a minor issue so far.) > > > > return 0; > > } > > @@ -200,6 +203,7 @@ static int __init ramoops_probe(struct platform_device *pdev) > > struct ramoops_platform_data *pdata = pdev->dev.platform_data; > > struct ramoops_context *cxt = &oops_cxt; > > int err = -EINVAL; > > + int i; > > > > /* Only a single ramoops area allowed at a time, so fail extra > > * probes. > > @@ -237,32 +241,37 @@ static int __init ramoops_probe(struct platform_device *pdev) > > cxt->record_size = pdata->record_size; > > cxt->dump_oops = pdata->dump_oops; > > > > + cxt->przs = kzalloc(sizeof(*cxt->przs) * cxt->max_count, GFP_KERNEL); > > + if (!cxt->przs) { > > + pr_err("failed to initialize a prz array\n"); > > + goto fail_przs; > > This should be fail_out. Thanks, will fix all of these error handling negligences. > > + } > > + > > + for (i = 0; i < cxt->max_count; i++) { > > + size_t sz = cxt->record_size; > > + phys_addr_t start = cxt->phys_addr + sz * i; > > + > > + cxt->przs[i] = persistent_ram_new(start, sz, 0); > > persistent_ram_new() is marked as __init, so this is unsafe to call if > built as a module. I think persistent_ram_new() will need to lose the > __init marking, or I'm misunderstanding something. Um. ramoops' probe routine is also __init. persistent_ram_new is a part of ramoops module, so their __init functions will be discarded at the same time. ram_console can't be a module, so it is also fine. So I think it's all fine. > > + if (IS_ERR(cxt->przs[i])) { > > + err = PTR_ERR(cxt->przs[i]); > > + pr_err("failed to initialize a prz\n"); > > Since neither persistent_ram_new() nor persistent_ram_buffer_map() > report the location of the failure, I'd like to keep the error report > (removed below "pr_err("request mem region (0x%lx@0x%llx) > failed\n",...") for failures, so there is something actionable in > dmesg when the platform data is mismatched for the hardware. Sure thing, will do. I'll also start using dev_err() for new code, that way it's more clearer which module reported the error. [...] > > cxt->pstore.data = cxt; > > - cxt->pstore.bufsize = cxt->record_size; > > - cxt->pstore.buf = kmalloc(cxt->pstore.bufsize, GFP_KERNEL); > > spin_lock_init(&cxt->pstore.buf_lock); > > + cxt->pstore.bufsize = cxt->przs[0]->buffer_size; > > + cxt->pstore.buf = kmalloc(cxt->pstore.bufsize, GFP_KERNEL); > > I don't see a reason to re-order these (nothing can use buf yet > because we haven't registered it with pstore yet). Yeah, this is a left over. Thank for catching. [...] > > +fail_przs: > > + for (i = 0; cxt->przs[i]; i++) > > + persistent_ram_free(cxt->przs[i]); > > This can lead to a BUG, since persistent_ram_free() doesn't handle > NULL arguments. The for loop has 'cxt->przs[i]' condition. :-) Thanks for the review! -- Anton Vorontsov Email: cbouatmailru@xxxxxxxxx _______________________________________________ devel mailing list devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://driverdev.linuxdriverproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel