> +/* > + * Platforms should define arch_get_mappable_range() that provides > + * maximum possible addressable physical memory range for which the > + * linear mapping could be created. The platform returned address > + * range must adhere to these following semantics. > + * > + * - range.start <= range.end > + * - Range includes both end points [range.start..range.end] > + * > + * There is also a fallback definition provided here, allowing the > + * entire possible physical address range in case any platform does > + * not define arch_get_mappable_range(). > + */ > +struct range __weak arch_get_mappable_range(void) > +{ > + struct range memhp_range = { > + .start = 0UL, > + .end = -1ULL, > + }; > + return memhp_range; > +} > + > +struct range memhp_get_pluggable_range(bool need_mapping) > +{ > + const u64 max_phys = (1ULL << (MAX_PHYSMEM_BITS + 1)) - 1; Sorry, thought about that line a bit more, and I think this is just wrong (took me longer to realize as it should). The old code used this calculation to print the limit only (in a wrong way), let's recap: Assume MAX_PHYSMEM_BITS=32 max_phys = (1ULL << (32 + 1)) - 1 = 0x1ffffffffull; Ehm, these are 33 bit. OTOH, old code checked for if (max_addr >> MAX_PHYSMEM_BITS) { Which makes sense, because 0x1ffffffffull >> 32 = 1 results in "true", meaning it's to big, while 0xffffffffull >> 32 = 0 correctly results in "false", meaning the address is fine. So, this should just be const u64 max_phys = 1ULL << MAX_PHYSMEM_BITS; (similarly as calculated in virito-mem code, or in kernel/resource.c) > + struct range memhp_range; > + > + if (need_mapping) { > + memhp_range = arch_get_mappable_range(); > + if (memhp_range.start > max_phys) { > + memhp_range.start = 0; > + memhp_range.end = 0; > + } > + memhp_range.end = min_t(u64, memhp_range.end, max_phys); > + } else { > + memhp_range.start = 0; > + memhp_range.end = max_phys; > + } > + return memhp_range; > +} > +EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(memhp_get_pluggable_range); -- Thanks, David / dhildenb