kexec-tools/SOURCES/kexec-tools-2.0.20-arm64-kexec-allocate-memory-space-avoiding-reserved-.patch

249 lines
6.9 KiB
Diff
Raw Normal View History

2020-12-15 15:59:59 +00:00
From f736104f533290b4ce6fbfbca74abde9ffd3888c Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: AKASHI Takahiro <takahiro.akashi@linaro.org>
Date: Wed, 18 Dec 2019 11:42:31 -0500
Subject: [PATCH 2/3] arm64: kexec: allocate memory space avoiding reserved
regions
On UEFI/ACPI-only system, some memory regions, including but not limited
to UEFI memory map and ACPI tables, must be preserved across kexec'ing.
Otherwise, they can be corrupted and result in early failure in booting
a new kernel.
In recent kernels, /proc/iomem now has an extended file format like:
40000000-5871ffff : System RAM
41800000-426affff : Kernel code
426b0000-42aaffff : reserved
42ab0000-42c64fff : Kernel data
54400000-583fffff : Crash kernel
58590000-585effff : reserved
58700000-5871ffff : reserved
58720000-58b5ffff : reserved
58b60000-5be3ffff : System RAM
58b61000-58b61fff : reserved
where the "reserved" entries at the top level or under System RAM (and
its descendant resources) are ones of such kind and should not be regarded
as usable memory ranges where several free spaces for loading kexec data
will be allocated.
With this patch, get_memory_ranges() will handle this format of file
correctly. Note that, for safety, unknown regions, in addition to
"reserved" ones, will also be excluded.
Signed-off-by: AKASHI Takahiro <takahiro.akashi@linaro.org>
Tested-by: Bhupesh Sharma <bhsharma@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Masayoshi Mizuma <m.mizuma@jp.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Simon Horman <horms@verge.net.au>
---
kexec/arch/arm64/kexec-arm64.c | 153 +++++++++++++++++++++++++----------------
1 file changed, 94 insertions(+), 59 deletions(-)
diff --git a/kexec/arch/arm64/kexec-arm64.c b/kexec/arch/arm64/kexec-arm64.c
index 6ad3b0a134b3..45ebc54a9b6f 100644
--- a/kexec/arch/arm64/kexec-arm64.c
+++ b/kexec/arch/arm64/kexec-arm64.c
@@ -10,7 +10,9 @@
#include <inttypes.h>
#include <libfdt.h>
#include <limits.h>
+#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
+#include <string.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <linux/elf-em.h>
#include <elf.h>
@@ -29,6 +31,7 @@
#include "fs2dt.h"
#include "iomem.h"
#include "kexec-syscall.h"
+#include "mem_regions.h"
#include "arch/options.h"
#define ROOT_NODE_ADDR_CELLS_DEFAULT 1
@@ -905,19 +908,33 @@ int get_phys_base_from_pt_load(unsigned long *phys_offset)
return 0;
}
+static bool to_be_excluded(char *str)
+{
+ if (!strncmp(str, SYSTEM_RAM, strlen(SYSTEM_RAM)) ||
+ !strncmp(str, KERNEL_CODE, strlen(KERNEL_CODE)) ||
+ !strncmp(str, KERNEL_DATA, strlen(KERNEL_DATA)) ||
+ !strncmp(str, CRASH_KERNEL, strlen(CRASH_KERNEL)))
+ return false;
+ else
+ return true;
+}
+
/**
- * get_memory_ranges_iomem_cb - Helper for get_memory_ranges_iomem.
+ * get_memory_ranges - Try to get the memory ranges from
+ * /proc/iomem.
*/
-
-static int get_memory_ranges_iomem_cb(void *data, int nr, char *str,
- unsigned long long base, unsigned long long length)
+int get_memory_ranges(struct memory_range **range, int *ranges,
+ unsigned long kexec_flags)
{
- int ret;
unsigned long phys_offset = UINT64_MAX;
- struct memory_range *r;
-
- if (nr >= KEXEC_SEGMENT_MAX)
- return -1;
+ FILE *fp;
+ const char *iomem = proc_iomem();
+ char line[MAX_LINE], *str;
+ unsigned long long start, end;
+ int n, consumed;
+ struct memory_ranges memranges;
+ struct memory_range *last, excl_range;
+ int ret;
if (!try_read_phys_offset_from_kcore) {
/* Since kernel version 4.19, 'kcore' contains
@@ -951,17 +968,72 @@ static int get_memory_ranges_iomem_cb(void *data, int nr, char *str,
try_read_phys_offset_from_kcore = true;
}
- r = (struct memory_range *)data + nr;
+ fp = fopen(iomem, "r");
+ if (!fp)
+ die("Cannot open %s\n", iomem);
+
+ memranges.ranges = NULL;
+ memranges.size = memranges.max_size = 0;
+
+ while (fgets(line, sizeof(line), fp) != 0) {
+ n = sscanf(line, "%llx-%llx : %n", &start, &end, &consumed);
+ if (n != 2)
+ continue;
+ str = line + consumed;
+
+ if (!strncmp(str, SYSTEM_RAM, strlen(SYSTEM_RAM))) {
+ ret = mem_regions_alloc_and_add(&memranges,
+ start, end - start + 1, RANGE_RAM);
+ if (ret) {
+ fprintf(stderr,
+ "Cannot allocate memory for ranges\n");
+ fclose(fp);
+ return -ENOMEM;
+ }
- if (!strncmp(str, SYSTEM_RAM, strlen(SYSTEM_RAM)))
- r->type = RANGE_RAM;
- else if (!strncmp(str, IOMEM_RESERVED, strlen(IOMEM_RESERVED)))
- r->type = RANGE_RESERVED;
- else
- return 1;
+ dbgprintf("%s:+[%d] %016llx - %016llx\n", __func__,
+ memranges.size - 1,
+ memranges.ranges[memranges.size - 1].start,
+ memranges.ranges[memranges.size - 1].end);
+ } else if (to_be_excluded(str)) {
+ if (!memranges.size)
+ continue;
+
+ /*
+ * Note: mem_regions_exclude() doesn't guarantee
+ * that the ranges are sorted out, but as long as
+ * we cope with /proc/iomem, we only operate on
+ * the last entry and so it is safe.
+ */
- r->start = base;
- r->end = base + length - 1;
+ /* The last System RAM range */
+ last = &memranges.ranges[memranges.size - 1];
+
+ if (last->end < start)
+ /* New resource outside of System RAM */
+ continue;
+ if (end < last->start)
+ /* Already excluded by parent resource */
+ continue;
+
+ excl_range.start = start;
+ excl_range.end = end;
+ ret = mem_regions_alloc_and_exclude(&memranges, &excl_range);
+ if (ret) {
+ fprintf(stderr,
+ "Cannot allocate memory for ranges (exclude)\n");
+ fclose(fp);
+ return -ENOMEM;
+ }
+ dbgprintf("%s:- %016llx - %016llx\n",
+ __func__, start, end);
+ }
+ }
+
+ fclose(fp);
+
+ *range = memranges.ranges;
+ *ranges = memranges.size;
/* As a fallback option, we can try determining the PHYS_OFFSET
* value from the '/proc/iomem' entries as well.
@@ -982,52 +1054,15 @@ static int get_memory_ranges_iomem_cb(void *data, int nr, char *str,
* between the user-space and kernel space 'PHYS_OFFSET'
* value.
*/
- set_phys_offset(r->start, "iomem");
-
- dbgprintf("%s: %016llx - %016llx : %s", __func__, r->start,
- r->end, str);
-
- return 0;
-}
-
-/**
- * get_memory_ranges_iomem - Try to get the memory ranges from
- * /proc/iomem.
- */
+ if (memranges.size)
+ set_phys_offset(memranges.ranges[0].start, "iomem");
-static int get_memory_ranges_iomem(struct memory_range *array,
- unsigned int *count)
-{
- *count = kexec_iomem_for_each_line(NULL,
- get_memory_ranges_iomem_cb, array);
-
- if (!*count) {
- dbgprintf("%s: failed: No RAM found.\n", __func__);
- return EFAILED;
- }
+ dbgprint_mem_range("System RAM ranges;",
+ memranges.ranges, memranges.size);
return 0;
}
-/**
- * get_memory_ranges - Try to get the memory ranges some how.
- */
-
-int get_memory_ranges(struct memory_range **range, int *ranges,
- unsigned long kexec_flags)
-{
- static struct memory_range array[KEXEC_SEGMENT_MAX];
- unsigned int count;
- int result;
-
- result = get_memory_ranges_iomem(array, &count);
-
- *range = result ? NULL : array;
- *ranges = result ? 0 : count;
-
- return result;
-}
-
int arch_compat_trampoline(struct kexec_info *info)
{
return 0;
--
2.7.4