On 7/25/2023 11:32 PM, Douglas Anderson wrote:
The Qualcomm QSPI driver appears to require that any reads using DMA
are a mutliple of 4 bytes. If this isn't true then the controller will
clobber any extra bytes in memory following the last word. Let's
detect this and falback to PIO.
This fixes problems reported by slub_debug=FZPUA, which would complain
about "kmalloc Redzone overwritten". One such instance said:
0xffffff80c29d541a-0xffffff80c29d541b @offset=21530. First byte 0x0 instead of 0xcc
Allocated in mtd_kmalloc_up_to+0x98/0xac age=36 cpu=3 pid=6658
Tracing through what was happening I saw that, while we often did DMA
tranfers of 0x1000 bytes, sometimes we'd end up doing ones of 0x41a
bytes. Those 0x41a byte transfers were the problem.
NOTE: a future change will enable the SPI "mem ops" to help avoid this
case, but it still seems good to add the extra check in the transfer.
Fixes: b5762d95607e ("spi: spi-qcom-qspi: Add DMA mode support")
Signed-off-by: Douglas Anderson <dianders@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
Reviewed-by: Vijaya Krishna Nivarthi <quic_vnivarth@xxxxxxxxxxx>
Thank you for the fix,
Vijay/
---
drivers/spi/spi-qcom-qspi.c | 12 ++++++++++++
1 file changed, 12 insertions(+)
diff --git a/drivers/spi/spi-qcom-qspi.c b/drivers/spi/spi-qcom-qspi.c
index a0ad9802b606..39b4d8a8107a 100644
--- a/drivers/spi/spi-qcom-qspi.c
+++ b/drivers/spi/spi-qcom-qspi.c
@@ -355,10 +355,22 @@ static int qcom_qspi_setup_dma_desc(struct qcom_qspi *ctrl,
for (i = 0; i < sgt->nents; i++) {
dma_ptr_sg = sg_dma_address(sgt->sgl + i);
+ dma_len_sg = sg_dma_len(sgt->sgl + i);
if (!IS_ALIGNED(dma_ptr_sg, QSPI_ALIGN_REQ)) {
dev_warn_once(ctrl->dev, "dma_address not aligned to %d\n", QSPI_ALIGN_REQ);
return -EAGAIN;
}
+ /*
+ * When reading with DMA the controller writes to memory 1 word
+ * at a time. If the length isn't a multiple of 4 bytes then
+ * the controller can clobber the things later in memory.
+ * Fallback to PIO to be safe.
+ */
+ if (ctrl->xfer.dir == QSPI_READ && (dma_len_sg & 0x03)) {
+ dev_warn_once(ctrl->dev, "fallback to PIO for read of size %#010x\n",
+ dma_len_sg);
+ return -EAGAIN;
+ }
}
for (i = 0; i < sgt->nents; i++) {