Yeah yeah, I'm behind on email... On 01/29/2013 07:51:25 PM, tip-bot for Yinghai Lu wrote:
Commit-ID: 2cde8ae169982ad1d1023ac628bb54053d0e9d4dGitweb: http://git.kernel.org/tip/2cde8ae169982ad1d1023ac628bb54053d0e9d4dAuthor: Yinghai Lu <yinghai@xxxxxxxxxx> AuthorDate: Thu, 24 Jan 2013 12:20:11 -0800 Committer: H. Peter Anvin <hpa@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> CommitDate: Tue, 29 Jan 2013 15:31:59 -0800 x86: Add Crash kernel low reservation During kdump kernel's booting stage, it need to find low ram forswiotlb buffer when system does not support intel iommu/dmar remapping.kexed-tools is appending memmap=exactmap and range from /proc/iomem with "Crash kernel", and that range is above 4G for 64bit after boot protocol 2.12. We need to add another range in /proc/iomem like "Crash kernel low", so kexec-tools could find that info and append to kdump kernel command line. User could specify the size with crashkernel_low=XX[KMG]. -v2: fix warning that is found by Fengguang's test robot. -v3: move out get_mem_size change to another patch, to solve compiling warning that is found by Borislav Petkov <bp@xxxxxxxxx> -v4: user must specify crashkernel_low if system does not support intel or amd iommu.
I missed: why can we not autodetect the lack of support and DTRT?
Signed-off-by: Yinghai Lu <yinghai@xxxxxxxxxx>Link: http://lkml.kernel.org/r/1359058816-7615-31-git-send-email-yinghai@xxxxxxxxxxCc: Eric Biederman <ebiederm@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Cc: Rob Landley <rob@xxxxxxxxxxx> Signed-off-by: H. Peter Anvin <hpa@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> --- Documentation/kernel-parameters.txt | 3 +++arch/x86/kernel/setup.c | 42 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++--include/linux/kexec.h | 3 +++kernel/kexec.c | 34 +++++++++++++++++++++++++-----4 files changed, 75 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-)diff --git a/Documentation/kernel-parameters.txt b/Documentation/kernel-parameters.txtindex 363e348..da0e077 100644 --- a/Documentation/kernel-parameters.txt +++ b/Documentation/kernel-parameters.txt@@ -594,6 +594,9 @@ bytes respectively. Such letter suffixes can also be entirely omitted.is selected automatically. CheckDocumentation/kdump/kdump.txt for further details.+ crashkernel_low=size[KMG] + [KNL, x86] parts under 4G. + crashkernel=range1:size1[,range2:size2,...][@offset] [KNL] Same as above, but depends on the memory in the running system. The syntax of range is
I don't understand this documentation.The "parts under 4G." assumes you understand the context of this posting which isn't going into the docs. Above you say:
Try to reserve some under 4G if the normal "Crash kernel" is above 4G.
Which is much clearer. Adding this in the middle also makes the "Same as above" slightly confusing (you have two different aboves...)
The first version (crashkernel=onesize) strongly implies the reservation is physically contiguous. The comma separated version implies that there are discontiguous reservations, manually specified.
So is crashkernel_low=size a separate reservation from crashkernel=size, or a modifier on the existing contiguous allocation? Do you still need a crashkernel= entry if you've got a crashkernel_low= entry? If you can (or are required to) specify both, is one a constraint on part of the other or it an addition (so it reserves crashkernel+crashkernel_low)? I seems unlikely "parts under 4G" means it's trying to make one contiguous reservation straddle the high/low boundary to put parts in each while still being contiguous...
I have no idea from what you've added to kernel-parameters.txt.Looking at the code, I _think_ this adds an additional independent reservation. I.E. crashkernel=size says "allocate memory from anywhere", crashkernel_low=size says "allocate memory from low memory", and doing both allocates two chunks like the comma separated version.
Oh well. It's not hugely important that I understand a subsystem I don't use, but having to look at the code to figure out what the documentation is saying makes me uncomfortable.
Rob-- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-tip-commits" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html