On Thu, 2015-05-07 at 00:49 +0200, Borislav Petkov wrote: > On Wed, May 06, 2015 at 10:00:30AM -0600, Toshi Kani wrote: > > Ingo asked me to describe this info here in his review... > > Ok. > > > mtrr_type_lookup_fixed() checks the above conditions at entry, and > > returns immediately with TYPE_INVALID. I think it is safer to have such > > checks in mtrr_type_lookup_fixed() in case there will be multiple > > callers. > > This is not what I mean - I mean to call mtrr_type_lookup_fixed() based > on @start and not unconditionally, like you do. > > And there most likely won't be multiple callers because we're phasing > out MTRR use. > > And even if there are, they better look at how this function is being > called before calling it. Which I seriously doubt - it is a static > function which you *just* came up with. Well, creating mtrr_type_lookup_fixed() is one of the comments I had in the previous code review. Anyway, let me make sure if I understand your comment correctly. Do the following changes look right to you? 1) Change the caller responsible for the condition checks. if ((start < 0x100000) && (mtrr_state.have_fixed) && (mtrr_state.enabled & MTRR_STATE_MTRR_FIXED_ENABLED)) return mtrr_type_lookup_fixed(start, end); 2) Delete the checks with mtrr_state in mtrr_type_lookup_fixed() as they are done by the caller. Keep the check with '(start >= 0x100000)' to assure that the code handles the range [0xC0000 - 0xFFFFF] correctly. static u8 mtrr_type_lookup_fixed(u64 start, u64 end) { int idx; if (start >= 0x100000) return MTRR_TYPE_INVALID; - if (!(mtrr_state.have_fixed) || - !(mtrr_state.enabled & MTRR_STATE_MTRR_FIXED_ENABLED)) - return MTRR_TYPE_INVALID; > > Right, and there is more. As the original code had comment "Just return > > the type as per start", which I noticed that I had accidentally removed, > > the code only returns the type of the start address. The fixed ranges > > have multiple entries with different types. Hence, a given range may > > overlap with multiple fixed entries. I will restore the comment in the > > function header to clarify this limitation. > > Ok, let's cleanup this function first and then consider fixing other > possible bugs which haven't been fixed since forever. Again, we might > not even need to address them because we won't be using MTRRs once we > switch to PAT completely, which is what Luis is working on. Right. Thanks, -Toshi -- To unsubscribe, send a message with 'unsubscribe linux-mm' in the body to majordomo@xxxxxxxxx. For more info on Linux MM, see: http://www.linux-mm.org/ . Don't email: <a href=mailto:"dont@xxxxxxxxx"> email@xxxxxxxxx </a>