On Fri, Jun 15, 2018 at 1:31 AM, Stuart Hayes <stuart.w.hayes@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 6/14/2018 12:25 PM, Andy Shevchenko wrote: >> On Thu, Jun 14, 2018 at 5:22 PM, Stuart Hayes <stuart.w.hayes@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>> On 6/13/2018 3:54 AM, Andy Shevchenko wrote: >> >>>>> + * Provide physical address of command buffer field within >>>>> + * the struct smi_cmd... can't use virt_to_phys on smi_cmd >>>>> + * because address may be from memremap. >>>> >>>> Wait, memremap() might return a virtual address. How we be sure that >>>> we got still physical address here? >> >>> Before this patch, the address in smi_cmd always came from an alloc, so >>> virt_to_phys() was used to get the physical address here. With WSMT, we >>> could be using a BIOS-provided buffer for SMI, in which case the address in >>> smi_cmd will come from memremap(), so we can't use virt_to_phys() on it. >>> So instead I changed this to use the physical address of smi_data_buf that >>> is stored in smi_data_buf_phys_addr, which will be valid regardless of how >>> the address of smi_data_buf was generated. >> >> Yes, but what does guarantee that memremap() will return you still >> physical address? > Sorry, I'm not sure I understand the question. > > Up to now, this driver always just allocated a buffer from main memory that > it used to send/receive information from BIOS when it generated a SMI. That's > what smi_cmd points to where this comment is. And it was safe to use > virt_to_phys() on this address. > > With this patch, though, the driver may now be using a buffer that isn't part > of main memory--it could now be using a buffer that BIOS provided the physical > address for, and this would not be part of main memory. Hmm... But is it CPU address or bus address what BIOS provides? If it's a CPU address why do you need to call memremap() on it in the first place? I could guess that you want to access it from CPU side and rather would get faults. > So smi_cmd may contain > a virtual address that memremap() provided. And because memremap() is just > like ioremap(), the driver can no longer use virt_to_phys(smi_cmd) to get the > physical address of the buffer. Yes, and ioremap() is dedicated for the resources that are not available directly by the memory accesses, but rather require some bus transactions (like MMIO). > > My comment is just pointing that out... I was trying to say, "the code can't > use virt_to_phys(smi_cmd) to get the virtual address here". > Please, add bits from above paragraphs to elaborate this in the comment. > memremap() should always return a virtual address that points to the physical > address we send it (unless it fails of course). >>>>> + /* Scan for EPS (entry point structure) */ >>>>> + for (addr = (u8 *)__va(0xf0000); >>>>> + addr < (u8 *)__va(0x100000 - sizeof(struct smm_eps_table)); >>>> >>>>> + addr += 1) { >>>> >>>> This wasn't commented IIRC and changed. So, why? >> >>> I changed this is response to your earlier comment (7 june)... you had pointed >>> out that it would be better if I put an "if (eps) break;" inside the for loop >>> instead of having "&& !eps" in the condition of the for loop. I put the note >>> "Changed loop searching 0xf0000 to be more readable" in the list of changes for >>> patch version v3 to cover this change. >> >> Thanks, but here I meant += 1 vs += 16 step. >> > > Sorry, I thought I had answered this earlier. The spec does not say that the EPS > table will be on a 16-byte boundary. And I just added a printk in this driver to > see where it is on the system I had at hand, and it isn't on a 16-byte boundary: Oh, that's sad. Btw, does XSDT have a link to this table? > [ 4680.192542] dcdbas - EPS table at 000000005761efb7 Can you, by the way, dump some bytes around this address, using print_hex_dump_bytes(); where the adrress is aligned to let say 32 byte boundary and size like 64 bytes? > [ 4680.194012] dcdbas dcdbas: WSMT found, using firmware-provided SMI buffer. > [ 4680.195327] dcdbas dcdbas: Dell Systems Management Base Driver (version 5.6.0-3.3) OK, now the most important question, did you investigate "SMM Communication ACPI Table"? Can you utilize information in it? -- With Best Regards, Andy Shevchenko