linux-arm-kernel.lists.infradead.org archive mirror
 help / color / mirror / Atom feed
From: takahiro.akashi@linaro.org (AKASHI Takahiro)
To: linux-arm-kernel@lists.infradead.org
Subject: [PATCH v26 0/7] arm64: add kdump support
Date: Wed, 5 Oct 2016 14:48:51 +0900	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <20161005054849.GB19531@linaro.org> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <70ca1b97-8de4-921f-0cef-e02a88691ccd@caviumnetworks.com>

Manish,

On Tue, Oct 04, 2016 at 06:53:28PM +0530, Manish Jaggi wrote:
> 
> On 10/04/2016 04:23 PM, James Morse wrote:
> > Hi Manish,
> > 
> > On 04/10/16 11:05, Manish Jaggi wrote:
> >> On 10/04/2016 03:16 PM, James Morse wrote:
> >>> On 03/10/16 13:41, Manish Jaggi wrote:
> >>>> On 10/03/2016 04:34 PM, AKASHI Takahiro wrote:
> >>>>> On Mon, Oct 03, 2016 at 01:24:34PM +0530, Manish Jaggi wrote:
> >>>>>> First kernel is booted with mem=2G crashkernel=1G command line option.
> >>>>>> While the system has 64G memory.
> >>>
> >>>>> Are you saying that "mem=..." doesn't have any effect?
> >>>> What I am saying it that If the first kernel is booted using mem= option and crashkernel= option
> >>>> the memory for second kernel has to be withing the crashkernel size.
> >>>> As per /proc/iomem System RAM the information is correct, but the /proc/meminfo is showing total memory
> >>>> much more than the first kernel had in first place.
> >>>
> >>> So your second crashkernel has 63G of memory? Unless you provide the same 'mem='
> >>> to the kdump kernel, this is the expected behaviour. The
> >>> DT:/reserved-memory/crash_dump describes the memory not to use.
> >>>
> >>> On your first boot with 'mem=2G' memblock_mem_limit_remove_map() called from
> >>> arm64_memblock_init() removed the top 62G of memory. Neither the first kernel
> >>> nor kexec-tools know about the top 62G.
> >>> When you run kexec-tools, it describes what it sees in /proc/iomem in the
> >>> DT:/reserved-memory/crash_dump, which is just the remaining 1G of memory.
> >>>
> >>> When we crash and reboot, the crash kernel discovers all 64G of memory from the
> >>> EFI memory map.
> > 
> >> So the iomem and meminfo should be same or different for the second kernel?
> >> Also i assumed that crashkernel=1G should restrict the second kernels to 1G.
> > 
> > Not with v26 of this series. What should it do with the 62G of memory that was
> > removed by booting with 'mem=2G'? It isn't part of the crashkernel reserved
> > area, and it isn't part of the vmcore described in elfcorehdr either...
> > 
> > 
> >> This is my understanding from the description. It should not require a second mem= option
> > 
> >>> kexec-tools described the 1G of memory that the first kernel was using in the
> >>> DT:/reserved-memory/crash_dump node, so early_init_fdt_scan_reserved_mem()
> >>> reserves the 1G of memory the first kernel used. This leaves us with 63G of memory.
> >>>
> >>> This may change with the next version of kdump if it switches back to using
> >>> DT:/chosen/linux,usable-memory-range.
> >>> If you need v26 to avoid the top 62G of memory, you need to provide the same
> >>> 'mem=' to the first and second kernel.
> > 
> >> If I provide for second kernel, I dont see any prints after Bye.
> >> Have you tired this anytime?
> > 
> > Yes, on juno-r1 passing 'mem=2G' to both the first and second kernel causes only
> > the first 2G of memory to be used with this pattern:
> > first kernel:		[1G used for linux]	[1G reserved for Crash kernel] 	[6G memory
> > hidden]
> > kdump kernel:	[1G vmcore]			[1G used for linux] 			[6G memory hidden]
> > 
> > 
> Oh, ok!
> I was giving mem=1G to crashkernel to test. with mem=2G it works.

I didn't know that you specified "mem=1G" in our local discussions ...

> >>>>>> 1.2 Live crash dump fails with error
> >>>
> >>> ... do we expect this to work? I don't think it has anything to do with this
> >>> series...
> >>>
> >> Why it should not?
> >> I saved the vmcore file while in second kernel. Since crash without vmcore file didnt run,
> >> Tried with vmcore file and it worked. Its just that if you want to boot a second kernel
> >>  with read only file system without network live crash dump analysis is handy.
> > 
> > Ah, you want to run /usr/bin/crash with the kdump boot of linux. You still need
> > to tell it where to find the memory image: "crash /path/to/vmlinux /proc/vmcore"
> > should do the trick.
> > 
> We should fix the documentation of kdump them.
> Since it is not supported, it should be removed.

Remove what?

And can you please double-check if you still have any problem
on a live system or with a saved core file?
(except for "mem=" stuff)

-Takahiro AKASHI

> > Thanks,
> > 
> > James
> > 

  reply	other threads:[~2016-10-05  5:48 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 44+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2016-09-07  4:29 [PATCH v26 0/7] arm64: add kdump support AKASHI Takahiro
2016-09-07  4:29 ` [PATCH v26 1/7] arm64: kdump: reserve memory for crash dump kernel AKASHI Takahiro
2016-09-22 10:23   ` Matthias Bruger
2016-09-23  8:37     ` AKASHI Takahiro
2016-09-07  4:29 ` [PATCH v26 2/7] arm64: kdump: implement machine_crash_shutdown() AKASHI Takahiro
2016-09-14 18:09   ` James Morse
2016-09-15  8:13     ` Marc Zyngier
2016-09-16  3:21     ` AKASHI Takahiro
2016-09-16 14:49       ` James Morse
2016-09-20  7:36         ` AKASHI Takahiro
2016-09-07  4:29 ` [PATCH v26 3/7] arm64: kdump: add kdump support AKASHI Takahiro
2016-09-16 14:50   ` James Morse
2016-09-20  7:46     ` AKASHI Takahiro
2016-09-22 15:50   ` Matthias Brugger
2016-09-07  4:29 ` [PATCH v26 4/7] arm64: kdump: add VMCOREINFO's for user-space coredump tools AKASHI Takahiro
2016-09-16 16:04   ` James Morse
2016-09-07  4:29 ` [PATCH v26 5/7] arm64: kdump: enable kdump in the arm64 defconfig AKASHI Takahiro
2016-09-07  4:29 ` [PATCH v26 6/7] arm64: kdump: update a kernel doc AKASHI Takahiro
2016-09-16 16:08   ` James Morse
2016-09-20  8:27     ` AKASHI Takahiro
2016-09-26 17:21     ` Matthias Brugger
2016-09-07  4:32 ` [PATCH v26 7/7] Documentation: dt: chosen properties for arm64 kdump AKASHI Takahiro
2016-09-16 13:03   ` Rob Herring
2016-09-07  4:37 ` [PATCH v26 0/7] arm64: add kdump support AKASHI Takahiro
2016-09-16 16:04 ` James Morse
2016-09-16 20:17   ` Ard Biesheuvel
2016-09-19 16:05     ` James Morse
2016-09-19 16:10       ` Ard Biesheuvel
2016-09-21  7:42       ` AKASHI Takahiro
2016-09-21  7:33   ` AKASHI Takahiro
2016-10-03  7:54 ` Manish Jaggi
2016-10-03 11:04   ` AKASHI Takahiro
2016-10-03 12:41     ` Manish Jaggi
2016-10-04  2:56       ` AKASHI Takahiro
2016-10-04  9:46       ` James Morse
2016-10-04 10:05         ` Manish Jaggi
2016-10-04 10:53           ` James Morse
2016-10-04 13:23             ` Manish Jaggi
2016-10-05  5:48               ` AKASHI Takahiro [this message]
2016-10-05  5:41         ` AKASHI Takahiro
2016-10-04 10:18       ` Mark Rutland
2016-10-17 15:41 ` Ruslan Bilovol
2016-10-18  6:26   ` AKASHI Takahiro
2016-11-01 12:19     ` Ruslan Bilovol

Reply instructions:

You may reply publicly to this message via plain-text email
using any one of the following methods:

* Save the following mbox file, import it into your mail client,
  and reply-to-all from there: mbox

  Avoid top-posting and favor interleaved quoting:
  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posting_style#Interleaved_style

* Reply using the --to, --cc, and --in-reply-to
  switches of git-send-email(1):

  git send-email \
    --in-reply-to=20161005054849.GB19531@linaro.org \
    --to=takahiro.akashi@linaro.org \
    --cc=linux-arm-kernel@lists.infradead.org \
    /path/to/YOUR_REPLY

  https://kernel.org/pub/software/scm/git/docs/git-send-email.html

* If your mail client supports setting the In-Reply-To header
  via mailto: links, try the mailto: link
Be sure your reply has a Subject: header at the top and a blank line before the message body.
This is a public inbox, see mirroring instructions
for how to clone and mirror all data and code used for this inbox;
as well as URLs for NNTP newsgroup(s).