On Wed, May 11, 2022 at 04:15:35AM +0300, Kirill A. Shutemov wrote: > Okay. Fair enough. I will change it to > > panic("Cannot accept memory: unknown platform."); So I haven't went all the way in the patchset but what I see is: /* Platform-specific memory-acceptance call goes here */ if (cpu_feature_enabled(X86_FEATURE_TDX_GUEST)) { tdx_accept_memory(range_start * PMD_SIZE, range_end * PMD_SIZE); } else { panic("Cannot accept memory"); } so how would you decide for some other platform that it should panic? TDX should panic, that I get. But you can just as well WARN_ONCE() here so that it gets fixed. Panicking is counterproductive. > It checks if the range of memory requires accept_memory() call before it > can be accessed. > > If any part of the range is not accepted, the call is required. > accept_memory() knows what exactly has to be done. Note that > accept_memory() call is harmless for any valid memory range. > It can be called on already accepted memory. Aaah, so that's what I was missing. So this function definitely needs a comment ontop of it. And a name change to something like range_contains_unaccepted_memory() or so to actually state what it does. -- Regards/Gruss, Boris. https://people.kernel.org/tglx/notes-about-netiquette