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From: mark.rutland@arm.com (Mark Rutland)
To: linux-arm-kernel@lists.infradead.org
Subject: [PATCH] efi/libstub/arm*: Set default address and size cells values for an empty dtb
Date: Tue, 7 Feb 2017 19:13:20 +0000	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <20170207191320.GI26173@leverpostej> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <c49cc64e-4ca1-8d82-5faf-74c0355c35ef@codeaurora.org>

On Tue, Feb 07, 2017 at 12:07:56PM -0700, Jeffrey Hugo wrote:
> On 2/7/2017 12:01 PM, Mark Rutland wrote:
> >On Tue, Feb 07, 2017 at 11:54:55AM -0700, Jeffrey Hugo wrote:
> >>On 2/7/2017 11:12 AM, Ard Biesheuvel wrote:
> >>>On 7 February 2017 at 17:59, Jeffrey Hugo <jhugo@codeaurora.org> wrote:
> >>>>From: Sameer Goel <sgoel@codeaurora.org>
> >>>>
> >>>>In cases where a device tree is not provided (ie ACPI based system), an
> >>>>empty fdt is generated by efistub.  Sets the address and size cell values
> >>>>in a generated fdt to support 64 bit addressing.
> >>>>
> >>>>This enables kexec/kdump on Qualcomm Technologies QDF24XX platforms as those
> >>>>utilities will read the address/size values from the fdt, and such values
> >>>>may exceed the range provided by the 32 bit default.
> >>>>
> >>>
> >>>As far as I know, those properties are explicitly associated with the
> >>>'reg' properties of subordinate nodes. So which nodes are we talking
> >>>about here? Are we producing an incorrect DT by not setting these? Or
> >>>is this simply a convenience to work around bugs in the tooling?
> >>
> >>I think we are producing an incorrect DT, in some instances.
> >>
> >>So we are starting from the same baseline, this is specific to ACPI
> >>systems, as an ACPI system won't have a DT from the bootloader.  DT
> >>based systems will already have a DT from the bootloader which is
> >>assumed to be correct.  On ACPI systems without a DT, efistub
> >>generates a default one.
> >>
> >>That default is assumed to be for a 32-bit system.  The cell width
> >>defaults to 1, which is 4 bytes.  You cannot represent a 64-bit
> >>value in that instance.
> >>
> >>What happens is that kexec inserts properties into the fdt which
> >>contain the start address and size on the crash kernel.  On our
> >>system, the start address is a 64-bit value, and while its not the
> >>case today, I see no reason why size could not also be a 64-bit
> >>value.  However the values that are inserted into the fdt are
> >>governed by the address and size cell values already present in the
> >>fdt.
> >>
> >>Kexec attempts to insert these values in the fdt.  The fdt only
> >>accepts 32-bit values, so it truncates what is put in.  Then later
> >>kexec/kdump read the values from the fdt, and get garbage.
> >
> >I take it this is specific to the kdump properties?
> >
> >I can't immediately see what would matter for the !kdump case.
> >properties inserted under /chosen are not truncated?
> 
> The kexec/kdump properties are added under /chosen, therefore yes,
> properties added under /chosen are truncated, per our observations.

Sorry for the dodgy (and confusing) reply above.

What I was trying to ask was does this *only* affect kdump properties?
I note that kdump is not yet upstream for arm64.

Or are there regular kexec properties that this affects?

Or !kdump && !kexec properties?

Can you please enumerate the set of properties for which this matters?

Thanks,
Mark.

  parent reply	other threads:[~2017-02-07 19:13 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 20+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2017-02-07 17:59 [PATCH] efi/libstub/arm*: Set default address and size cells values for an empty dtb Jeffrey Hugo
2017-02-07 18:12 ` Ard Biesheuvel
2017-02-07 18:54   ` Jeffrey Hugo
2017-02-07 19:01     ` Mark Rutland
2017-02-07 19:06       ` Mark Rutland
2017-02-07 19:07       ` Jeffrey Hugo
2017-02-07 19:12         ` Ard Biesheuvel
2017-02-07 19:13         ` Mark Rutland [this message]
2017-02-07 19:29           ` Jeffrey Hugo
2017-02-07 19:55             ` Mark Rutland
2017-02-08  7:43               ` AKASHI, Takahiro
2017-02-08 10:40                 ` Ard Biesheuvel
2017-02-09  8:27                   ` AKASHI, Takahiro
2017-02-13 20:55                     ` Timur Tabi
2017-02-13 20:51                   ` Timur Tabi
2017-02-08 11:35                 ` Mark Rutland
2017-02-07 18:15 ` Mark Rutland
2017-02-07 18:41   ` Jeffrey Hugo
2017-02-07 19:24   ` Timur Tabi
2017-02-07 19:37     ` Mark Rutland

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