On 26 August 2016 at 11:45, James Morse <james.morse@xxxxxxx> wrote: > Hi Ard, > > On 25/08/16 17:17, Ard Biesheuvel wrote: >> Currently, memory regions are only recorded in the memblock memory table >> if they have the EFI_MEMORY_WB memory type attribute set. In case the >> region is of a reserved type, it is also marked as MEMBLOCK_NOMAP, which >> will leave it out of the linear mapping. >> >> However, memory regions may legally have the EFI_MEMORY_WT or EFI_MEMORY_WC >> attributes set, and the EFI_MEMORY_WB cleared, in which case the region in >> question is obviously backed by normal memory, but is not recorded in the >> memblock memory table at all. > > I've been hitting this when applying weird (but permissible) attributes to the > ACPI regions. Currently without WB we map these as device memory, then let > acpica make unaligned accesses to it. > > This patch fixes all that, and from the conversation on irc, the 'UC only' case > for ACPI tables is x86-legacy, and should never happen. > Indeed, deliberately exposing a region containing ACPI tables as something that *requires* strongly ordered access does not make sense. The problem here is that the UEFI memory map describes both occupied and available regions, and in the 'available' case, it is obvious that these bits describe the nature of the physical backing of the region, i.e., whether the bus fabric, memory, etc allow writeback/writethrough caching, write buffering etc. This explains why most regions have all the bits set. In the occupied case, this can be misinterpreted as describing the nature of the content, like an ACPI table containing fields that are not naturally aligned. I.e, I don't think clearing the UC bit here should be interpreted to mean that the payload *requires* WB/WT/WC. It is up to the kernel to complain if it interprets a region, and notices that the only supported mapping type conflicts with the nature of the accesses we intend to perform. > >> diff --git a/drivers/firmware/efi/arm-init.c b/drivers/firmware/efi/arm-init.c >> index c49d50e68aee..c2ac5975fd5d 100644 >> --- a/drivers/firmware/efi/arm-init.c >> +++ b/drivers/firmware/efi/arm-init.c >> @@ -163,18 +163,22 @@ static __init int is_reserve_region(efi_memory_desc_t *md) >> case EFI_BOOT_SERVICES_DATA: >> case EFI_CONVENTIONAL_MEMORY: >> case EFI_PERSISTENT_MEMORY: >> - return 0; >> + /* >> + * According to the spec, these regions are no longer reserved >> + * after calling ExitBootServices(). However, we can only use >> + * them as System RAM if they can be mapped writeback cacheable. >> + */ >> + return (md->attribute & EFI_MEMORY_WB); >> default: >> break; > > Micro-nit: break here in order to immediately return false looks a bit odd... > Yes, I could not decide what to do with it so I left it. > >> } >> - return is_normal_ram(md); >> + return false; >> } > > > Tested-by: James Morse <james.morse@xxxxxxx> > Reviewed-by: James Morse <james.morse@xxxxxxx> > Thanks, Ard. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-efi" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html