* Re: [PATCH v3 0/4] locking: contended_release tracepoint instrumentation
From: Dmitry Ilvokhin @ 2026-03-22 12:10 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Andrew Morton
Cc: Arnd Bergmann, Dennis Zhou, Tejun Heo, Christoph Lameter,
Steven Rostedt, Masami Hiramatsu, Mathieu Desnoyers,
Peter Zijlstra, Ingo Molnar, Will Deacon, Boqun Feng, Waiman Long,
linux-arch, linux-kernel, linux-mm, linux-trace-kernel,
kernel-team
In-Reply-To: <20260321171002.013ee5a9d8c789e2a4a53afc@linux-foundation.org>
On Sat, Mar 21, 2026 at 05:10:02PM -0700, Andrew Morton wrote:
> On Wed, 18 Mar 2026 18:45:17 +0000 Dmitry Ilvokhin <d@ilvokhin.com> wrote:
>
> > The existing contention_begin/contention_end tracepoints fire on the
> > waiter side. The lock holder's identity and stack can be captured at
> > contention_begin time (e.g. perf lock contention --lock-owner), but
> > this reflects the holder's state when a waiter arrives, not when the
> > lock is actually released.
> >
> > This series adds a contended_release tracepoint that fires on the
> > holder side when a lock with waiters is released. This provides:
> >
> > - Hold time estimation: when the holder's own acquisition was
> > contended, its contention_end (acquisition) and contended_release
> > can be correlated to measure how long the lock was held under
> > contention.
> >
> > - The holder's stack at release time, which may differ from what perf lock
> > contention --lock-owner captures if the holder does significant work between
> > the waiter's arrival and the unlock.
> >
> > The series is structured as follows:
> >
> > 1. Remove unnecessary linux/sched.h include from trace/events/lock.h.
> > 2. Extract __percpu_up_read() out of the inline percpu_up_read() to
> > avoid binary size increase from adding a tracepoint.
> > 3. Add contended_release tracepoint and instrument sleepable locks:
> > mutex, rtmutex, semaphore, rwsem, percpu-rwsem, and rwbase_rt.
>
> AI review:
> https://sashiko.dev/#/patchset/cover.1773858853.git.d@ilvokhin.com
Thanks, Andrew, appreciate you sharing the link.
The AI review looks reasonable. I'll go through it and address the
feedback in the next revision. The kernel test robot is also reporting
failures on some configs, which seem related to the Sashiko comments.
^ permalink raw reply
* Re: [PATCH v11 4/5] ring-buffer: Skip invalid sub-buffers when rewinding persistent ring buffer
From: kernel test robot @ 2026-03-22 23:18 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Masami Hiramatsu (Google), Steven Rostedt
Cc: llvm, oe-kbuild-all, Masami Hiramatsu, Mathieu Desnoyers,
linux-kernel, linux-trace-kernel, Ian Rogers
In-Reply-To: <177391156211.193994.7531495945584650297.stgit@mhiramat.tok.corp.google.com>
Hi Masami,
kernel test robot noticed the following build errors:
[auto build test ERROR on trace/for-next]
[also build test ERROR on geert-m68k/for-next geert-m68k/for-linus openrisc/for-next deller-parisc/for-next powerpc/next powerpc/fixes s390/features uml/next tip/x86/core uml/fixes v7.0-rc4 next-20260320]
[cannot apply to linus/master]
[If your patch is applied to the wrong git tree, kindly drop us a note.
And when submitting patch, we suggest to use '--base' as documented in
https://git-scm.com/docs/git-format-patch#_base_tree_information]
url: https://github.com/intel-lab-lkp/linux/commits/Masami-Hiramatsu-Google/ring-buffer-Fix-to-update-per-subbuf-entries-of-persistent-ring-buffer/20260322-122412
base: https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/trace/linux-trace for-next
patch link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/177391156211.193994.7531495945584650297.stgit%40mhiramat.tok.corp.google.com
patch subject: [PATCH v11 4/5] ring-buffer: Skip invalid sub-buffers when rewinding persistent ring buffer
config: x86_64-kexec (https://download.01.org/0day-ci/archive/20260323/202603230725.uMAZiKJx-lkp@intel.com/config)
compiler: clang version 20.1.8 (https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project 87f0227cb60147a26a1eeb4fb06e3b505e9c7261)
reproduce (this is a W=1 build): (https://download.01.org/0day-ci/archive/20260323/202603230725.uMAZiKJx-lkp@intel.com/reproduce)
If you fix the issue in a separate patch/commit (i.e. not just a new version of
the same patch/commit), kindly add following tags
| Reported-by: kernel test robot <lkp@intel.com>
| Closes: https://lore.kernel.org/oe-kbuild-all/202603230725.uMAZiKJx-lkp@intel.com/
All errors (new ones prefixed by >>):
>> kernel/trace/ring_buffer.c:1965:15: error: use of undeclared identifier 'bpage'
1965 | local_set(&bpage->entries, 0);
| ^
kernel/trace/ring_buffer.c:1966:15: error: use of undeclared identifier 'bpage'
1966 | local_set(&bpage->page->commit, 0);
| ^
2 errors generated.
vim +/bpage +1965 kernel/trace/ring_buffer.c
1910
1911 /* If the meta data has been validated, now validate the events */
1912 static void rb_meta_validate_events(struct ring_buffer_per_cpu *cpu_buffer)
1913 {
1914 struct ring_buffer_cpu_meta *meta = cpu_buffer->ring_meta;
1915 struct buffer_page *head_page, *orig_head;
1916 unsigned long entry_bytes = 0;
1917 unsigned long entries = 0;
1918 int discarded = 0;
1919 int ret;
1920 u64 ts;
1921 int i;
1922
1923 if (!meta || !meta->head_buffer)
1924 return;
1925
1926 orig_head = head_page = cpu_buffer->head_page;
1927
1928 /* Do the reader page first */
1929 ret = rb_validate_buffer(cpu_buffer->reader_page, cpu_buffer->cpu, meta);
1930 if (ret < 0) {
1931 pr_info("Ring buffer meta [%d] invalid reader page detected\n",
1932 cpu_buffer->cpu);
1933 discarded++;
1934 } else {
1935 entries += ret;
1936 entry_bytes += rb_page_size(cpu_buffer->reader_page);
1937 }
1938
1939 ts = head_page->page->time_stamp;
1940
1941 /*
1942 * Try to rewind the head so that we can read the pages which already
1943 * read in the previous boot.
1944 */
1945 if (head_page == cpu_buffer->tail_page)
1946 goto skip_rewind;
1947
1948 rb_dec_page(&head_page);
1949 for (i = 0; i < meta->nr_subbufs + 1; i++, rb_dec_page(&head_page)) {
1950
1951 /* Rewind until tail (writer) page. */
1952 if (head_page == cpu_buffer->tail_page)
1953 break;
1954
1955 /* Rewind until unused page (no timestamp, no commit). */
1956 if (!head_page->page->time_stamp && rb_page_commit(head_page) == 0)
1957 break;
1958
1959 /*
1960 * Skip if the page is invalid, or its timestamp is newer than the
1961 * previous valid page.
1962 */
1963 ret = rb_validate_buffer(head_page, cpu_buffer->cpu, meta);
1964 if (ret >= 0 && ts < head_page->page->time_stamp) {
> 1965 local_set(&bpage->entries, 0);
1966 local_set(&bpage->page->commit, 0);
1967 head_page->page->time_stamp = ts;
1968 ret = -1;
1969 }
1970 if (ret < 0) {
1971 if (!discarded)
1972 pr_info("Ring buffer meta [%d] invalid buffer page detected\n",
1973 cpu_buffer->cpu);
1974 discarded++;
1975 } else {
1976 entries += ret;
1977 entry_bytes += rb_page_size(head_page);
1978 if (ret > 0)
1979 local_inc(&cpu_buffer->pages_touched);
1980 ts = head_page->page->time_stamp;
1981 }
1982 }
1983 if (i)
1984 pr_info("Ring buffer [%d] rewound %d pages\n", cpu_buffer->cpu, i);
1985
1986 /* The last rewound page must be skipped. */
1987 if (head_page != orig_head)
1988 rb_inc_page(&head_page);
1989
1990 /*
1991 * If the ring buffer was rewound, then inject the reader page
1992 * into the location just before the original head page.
1993 */
1994 if (head_page != orig_head) {
1995 struct buffer_page *bpage = orig_head;
1996
1997 rb_dec_page(&bpage);
1998 /*
1999 * Insert the reader_page before the original head page.
2000 * Since the list encode RB_PAGE flags, general list
2001 * operations should be avoided.
2002 */
2003 cpu_buffer->reader_page->list.next = &orig_head->list;
2004 cpu_buffer->reader_page->list.prev = orig_head->list.prev;
2005 orig_head->list.prev = &cpu_buffer->reader_page->list;
2006 bpage->list.next = &cpu_buffer->reader_page->list;
2007
2008 /* Make the head_page the reader page */
2009 cpu_buffer->reader_page = head_page;
2010 bpage = head_page;
2011 rb_inc_page(&head_page);
2012 head_page->list.prev = bpage->list.prev;
2013 rb_dec_page(&bpage);
2014 bpage->list.next = &head_page->list;
2015 rb_set_list_to_head(&bpage->list);
2016 cpu_buffer->pages = &head_page->list;
2017
2018 cpu_buffer->head_page = head_page;
2019 meta->head_buffer = (unsigned long)head_page->page;
2020
2021 /* Reset all the indexes */
2022 bpage = cpu_buffer->reader_page;
2023 meta->buffers[0] = rb_meta_subbuf_idx(meta, bpage->page);
2024 bpage->id = 0;
2025
2026 for (i = 1, bpage = head_page; i < meta->nr_subbufs;
2027 i++, rb_inc_page(&bpage)) {
2028 meta->buffers[i] = rb_meta_subbuf_idx(meta, bpage->page);
2029 bpage->id = i;
2030 }
2031
2032 /* We'll restart verifying from orig_head */
2033 head_page = orig_head;
2034 }
2035
2036 skip_rewind:
2037 /* If the commit_buffer is the reader page, update the commit page */
2038 if (meta->commit_buffer == (unsigned long)cpu_buffer->reader_page->page) {
2039 cpu_buffer->commit_page = cpu_buffer->reader_page;
2040 /* Nothing more to do, the only page is the reader page */
2041 goto done;
2042 }
2043
2044 /* Iterate until finding the commit page */
2045 for (i = 0; i < meta->nr_subbufs + 1; i++, rb_inc_page(&head_page)) {
2046
2047 /* Reader page has already been done */
2048 if (head_page == cpu_buffer->reader_page)
2049 continue;
2050
2051 ret = rb_validate_buffer(head_page, cpu_buffer->cpu, meta);
2052 if (ret < 0) {
2053 if (!discarded)
2054 pr_info("Ring buffer meta [%d] invalid buffer page detected\n",
2055 cpu_buffer->cpu);
2056 discarded++;
2057 } else {
2058 /* If the buffer has content, update pages_touched */
2059 if (ret)
2060 local_inc(&cpu_buffer->pages_touched);
2061
2062 entries += ret;
2063 entry_bytes += rb_page_size(head_page);
2064 }
2065 if (head_page == cpu_buffer->commit_page)
2066 break;
2067 }
2068
2069 if (head_page != cpu_buffer->commit_page) {
2070 pr_info("Ring buffer meta [%d] commit page not found\n",
2071 cpu_buffer->cpu);
2072 goto invalid;
2073 }
2074 done:
2075 local_set(&cpu_buffer->entries, entries);
2076 local_set(&cpu_buffer->entries_bytes, entry_bytes);
2077
2078 pr_info("Ring buffer meta [%d] is from previous boot! (%d pages discarded)\n",
2079 cpu_buffer->cpu, discarded);
2080 return;
2081
2082 invalid:
2083 /* The content of the buffers are invalid, reset the meta data */
2084 meta->head_buffer = 0;
2085 meta->commit_buffer = 0;
2086
2087 /* Reset the reader page */
2088 local_set(&cpu_buffer->reader_page->entries, 0);
2089 local_set(&cpu_buffer->reader_page->page->commit, 0);
2090
2091 /* Reset all the subbuffers */
2092 for (i = 0; i < meta->nr_subbufs - 1; i++, rb_inc_page(&head_page)) {
2093 local_set(&head_page->entries, 0);
2094 rb_init_page(head_page->page);
2095 }
2096 }
2097
--
0-DAY CI Kernel Test Service
https://github.com/intel/lkp-tests/wiki
^ permalink raw reply
* Re: NULL pointer dereference when booting ppc64_guest_defconfig in QEMU on -next
From: Harry Yoo (Oracle) @ 2026-03-23 1:53 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Mathieu Desnoyers
Cc: Harry Yoo, Nathan Chancellor, Thomas Weißschuh,
Michal Clapinski, Andrew Morton, Thomas Gleixner, Steven Rostedt,
Masami Hiramatsu, linux-mm, linux-trace-kernel, linux-kernel
In-Reply-To: <7458d8fd-5922-4e0b-9cd5-91880282aaa3@efficios.com>
On Fri, Mar 20, 2026 at 09:31:57AM -0400, Mathieu Desnoyers wrote:
> On 2026-03-20 09:21, Harry Yoo (Oracle) wrote:
> > On Fri, Mar 20, 2026 at 08:35:46AM -0400, Mathieu Desnoyers wrote:
> > > On 2026-03-20 00:17, Harry Yoo wrote:
> > > [...]
> > > > > [1]: https://lore.kernel.org/20260227153730.1556542-4-mathieu.desnoyers@efficios.com/
> > > >
> > > > @Mathieu: In patch 1/3 description,
> > > > > Changes since v7:
> > > > > - Explicitly initialize the subsystem from start_kernel() right
> > > > > after mm_core_init() so it is up and running before the creation of
> > > > > the first mm at boot.
> > > >
> > > > But how does this work when someone calls mm_cpumask() on init_mm early?
> > > > Looks like it will behave incorrectly because get_rss_stat_items_size()
> > > > returns zero?
> > >
> > > It doesn't work as expected at all. I missed that all users of mm_cpumask()
> > > end up relying on get_rss_stat_items_size(), which now calls
> > > percpu_counter_tree_items_size(), which depends on initialization from
> > > percpu_counter_tree_subsystem_init().
> > >
> > > If you add a call to percpu_counter_tree_subsystem_init in
> > > arch/powerpc/kernel/setup_arch() just before:
> > >
> > > VM_WARN_ON(cpumask_test_cpu(smp_processor_id(), mm_cpumask(&init_mm)));
> > > cpumask_set_cpu(smp_processor_id(), mm_cpumask(&init_mm));
> > >
> > > Does the warning go away ?
> >
> > Hmm it goes away, but I'm not sure if it is it okay to use nr_cpu_ids
> > before setup_nr_cpu_ids() is called?
>
> AFAIU on powerpc setup_nr_cpu_ids() is called near the end of
> smp_setup_cpu_maps(), which is called early in setup_arch,
> at least before the two lines which use mm_cpumask.
Right.
> > > Alternatively, would could use a lazy initialization invoking
> > > percpu_counter_tree_subsystem_init from percpu_counter_tree_items_size
> > > when the initialization is not already done.
> >
> > So this probably isn't a way to go?
>
> I'd favor explicit initialization, so the inter-dependencies are clear.
Ack.
> > Hmm perhaps we should treat init_mm as a special case in
> > mm_cpus_allowed() and mm_cpumask().
>
> I'd prefer not to go there if boot sequence permits and keep things
> simple.
>
> I think we're in a situation very similar to tree RCU, here is what
> is done in rcu_init_geometry:
>
> static bool initialized;
>
> if (initialized) {
> /*
> * Warn if setup_nr_cpu_ids() had not yet been invoked,
> * unless nr_cpus_ids == NR_CPUS, in which case who cares?
> */
> WARN_ON_ONCE(old_nr_cpu_ids != nr_cpu_ids);
> return;
> }
>
> old_nr_cpu_ids = nr_cpu_ids;
> initialized = true;
Yeah, as long as nr_cpus_order doesn't change after init,
that will work for HPCC. powerpc seems to be a special case that calls
mm_cpumask() very early in the boot process, so explicitly calling the
init function seems to be fair.
By the way, thinking about it differently - it would probably be simpler
to just eliminate mm_cpumask's dependency on HPCC init dependency by
placing those cpumasks before percpu counter tree items... (but yeah,
that would make mm_struct a bit larger due to alignment requirements)
--
Cheers,
Harry / Hyeonggon
^ permalink raw reply
* Re: NULL pointer dereference when booting ppc64_guest_defconfig in QEMU on -next
From: Harry Yoo (Oracle) @ 2026-03-23 1:53 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Mathieu Desnoyers
Cc: Harry Yoo, Nathan Chancellor, Thomas Weißschuh,
Michal Clapinski, Andrew Morton, Thomas Gleixner, Steven Rostedt,
Masami Hiramatsu, linux-mm, linux-trace-kernel, linux-kernel
In-Reply-To: <7a8faee8-0eb5-4e58-a6d5-ef711791e3f4@efficios.com>
On Fri, Mar 20, 2026 at 10:20:37AM -0400, Mathieu Desnoyers wrote:
> On 2026-03-20 09:31, Mathieu Desnoyers wrote:
> > On 2026-03-20 09:21, Harry Yoo (Oracle) wrote:
> > > On Fri, Mar 20, 2026 at 08:35:46AM -0400, Mathieu Desnoyers wrote:
> > > > On 2026-03-20 00:17, Harry Yoo wrote:
> > > > [...]
> > > > > > [1]: https://lore.kernel.org/20260227153730.1556542-4-
> > > > > > mathieu.desnoyers@efficios.com/
> > > > >
> > > > > @Mathieu: In patch 1/3 description,
> > > > > > Changes since v7:
> > > > > > - Explicitly initialize the subsystem from start_kernel() right
> > > > > > after mm_core_init() so it is up and running before
> > > > > > the creation of
> > > > > > the first mm at boot.
> > > > >
> > > > > But how does this work when someone calls mm_cpumask() on
> > > > > init_mm early?
> > > > > Looks like it will behave incorrectly because get_rss_stat_items_size()
> > > > > returns zero?
> > > >
> > > > It doesn't work as expected at all. I missed that all users of
> > > > mm_cpumask()
> > > > end up relying on get_rss_stat_items_size(), which now calls
> > > > percpu_counter_tree_items_size(), which depends on initialization from
> > > > percpu_counter_tree_subsystem_init().
> > > >
> > > > If you add a call to percpu_counter_tree_subsystem_init in
> > > > arch/powerpc/kernel/setup_arch() just before:
>
> [...]
>
> One thing we could do to catch this kind of init sequence issue
> is to add a WARN_ON_ONCE in percpu_counter_tree_items_size:
>
> size_t percpu_counter_tree_items_size(void)
> {
> if (WARN_ON_ONCE(!nr_cpus_order))
> return 0;
> return counter_config->nr_items * sizeof(struct percpu_counter_tree_level_item);
Looks good!
--
Cheers,
Harry / Hyeonggon
^ permalink raw reply
* [PATCH v2 0/9] memblock: improve late freeing of reserved memory
From: Mike Rapoport @ 2026-03-23 7:48 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Andrew Morton
Cc: Alexander Potapenko, Alexander Viro, Andreas Larsson,
Ard Biesheuvel, Borislav Petkov, Brendan Jackman,
Christophe Leroy (CS GROUP), Catalin Marinas, Christian Brauner,
David S. Miller, Dave Hansen, David Hildenbrand, Dmitry Vyukov,
Ilias Apalodimas, Ingo Molnar, Jan Kara, Johannes Weiner,
Liam R. Howlett, Lorenzo Stoakes, Madhavan Srinivasan,
Marco Elver, Marek Szyprowski, Masami Hiramatsu, Michael Ellerman,
Michal Hocko, Mike Rapoport, Nicholas Piggin, H. Peter Anvin,
Rob Herring, Robin Murphy, Saravana Kannan, Suren Baghdasaryan,
Thomas Gleixner, Vlastimil Babka, Will Deacon, Zi Yan, devicetree,
iommu, kasan-dev, linux-arm-kernel, linux-efi, linux-fsdevel,
linux-kernel, linux-mm, linux-trace-kernel, linuxppc-dev,
sparclinux, x86
From: "Mike Rapoport (Microsoft)" <rppt@kernel.org>
Hi,
Following a recent discussion about leaks in x86 EFI [1], I audited usage of
memblock_free_late() and free_reserved_area() and made some imporovements how
we handle late freeing of the memory allocated with memblock.
[1] https://lore.kernel.org/all/ec2aaef14783869b3be6e3c253b2dcbf67dbc12a.camel@kernel.crashing.org/
v2 changes:
* fix UAF issue in memblock_discard() reported by 0day and sashiko
* address relevant sashiko comments
* squash memblock test stubs changes into the commit with core updates
v1: https://lore.kernel.org/all/20260318105827.1358927-1-rppt@kernel.org
Mike Rapoport (Microsoft) (9):
memblock: reserve_mem: fix end caclulation in reserve_mem_release_by_name()
powerpc: fadump: pair alloc_pages_exact() with free_pages_exact()
powerpc: opal-core: pair alloc_pages_exact() with free_pages_exact()
mm: move free_reserved_area() to mm/memblock.c
memblock: make free_reserved_area() more robust
memblock: extract page freeing from free_reserved_area() into a helper
memblock: make free_reserved_area() update memblock if ARCH_KEEP_MEMBLOCK=y
memblock, treewide: make memblock_free() handle late freeing
memblock: warn when freeing reserved memory before memory map is initialized
arch/arm64/mm/init.c | 3 -
arch/powerpc/kernel/fadump.c | 16 +--
arch/powerpc/platforms/powernv/opal-core.c | 11 +-
arch/sparc/kernel/mdesc.c | 4 +-
arch/x86/kernel/setup.c | 2 +-
arch/x86/platform/efi/memmap.c | 5 +-
arch/x86/platform/efi/quirks.c | 2 +-
drivers/firmware/efi/apple-properties.c | 2 +-
drivers/of/kexec.c | 2 +-
include/linux/memblock.h | 2 -
init/initramfs.c | 7 --
kernel/dma/swiotlb.c | 6 +-
lib/bootconfig.c | 2 +-
mm/internal.h | 10 ++
mm/kfence/core.c | 4 +-
mm/memblock.c | 124 +++++++++++++++------
mm/page_alloc.c | 46 --------
tools/include/linux/mm.h | 1 +
tools/testing/memblock/internal.h | 34 +++++-
19 files changed, 144 insertions(+), 139 deletions(-)
base-commit: 1f318b96cc84d7c2ab792fcc0bfd42a7ca890681
--
2.53.0
^ permalink raw reply
* [PATCH v2 1/9] memblock: reserve_mem: fix end caclulation in reserve_mem_release_by_name()
From: Mike Rapoport @ 2026-03-23 7:48 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Andrew Morton
Cc: Alexander Potapenko, Alexander Viro, Andreas Larsson,
Ard Biesheuvel, Borislav Petkov, Brendan Jackman,
Christophe Leroy (CS GROUP), Catalin Marinas, Christian Brauner,
David S. Miller, Dave Hansen, David Hildenbrand, Dmitry Vyukov,
Ilias Apalodimas, Ingo Molnar, Jan Kara, Johannes Weiner,
Liam R. Howlett, Lorenzo Stoakes, Madhavan Srinivasan,
Marco Elver, Marek Szyprowski, Masami Hiramatsu, Michael Ellerman,
Michal Hocko, Mike Rapoport, Nicholas Piggin, H. Peter Anvin,
Rob Herring, Robin Murphy, Saravana Kannan, Suren Baghdasaryan,
Thomas Gleixner, Vlastimil Babka, Will Deacon, Zi Yan, devicetree,
iommu, kasan-dev, linux-arm-kernel, linux-efi, linux-fsdevel,
linux-kernel, linux-mm, linux-trace-kernel, linuxppc-dev,
sparclinux, x86
In-Reply-To: <20260323074836.3653702-1-rppt@kernel.org>
From: "Mike Rapoport (Microsoft)" <rppt@kernel.org>
free_reserved_area() expects end parameter to point to the first address
after the area, but reserve_mem_release_by_name() passes it the last
address inside the area.
Remove subtraction of one in calculation of the area end.
Fixes: 74e2498ccf7b ("mm/memblock: Add reserved memory release function")
Signed-off-by: Mike Rapoport (Microsoft) <rppt@kernel.org>
---
mm/memblock.c | 2 +-
1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)
diff --git a/mm/memblock.c b/mm/memblock.c
index b3ddfdec7a80..d4a02f1750e9 100644
--- a/mm/memblock.c
+++ b/mm/memblock.c
@@ -2434,7 +2434,7 @@ int reserve_mem_release_by_name(const char *name)
return 0;
start = phys_to_virt(map->start);
- end = start + map->size - 1;
+ end = start + map->size;
snprintf(buf, sizeof(buf), "reserve_mem:%s", name);
free_reserved_area(start, end, 0, buf);
map->size = 0;
--
2.53.0
^ permalink raw reply related
* [PATCH v2 2/9] powerpc: fadump: pair alloc_pages_exact() with free_pages_exact()
From: Mike Rapoport @ 2026-03-23 7:48 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Andrew Morton
Cc: Alexander Potapenko, Alexander Viro, Andreas Larsson,
Ard Biesheuvel, Borislav Petkov, Brendan Jackman,
Christophe Leroy (CS GROUP), Catalin Marinas, Christian Brauner,
David S. Miller, Dave Hansen, David Hildenbrand, Dmitry Vyukov,
Ilias Apalodimas, Ingo Molnar, Jan Kara, Johannes Weiner,
Liam R. Howlett, Lorenzo Stoakes, Madhavan Srinivasan,
Marco Elver, Marek Szyprowski, Masami Hiramatsu, Michael Ellerman,
Michal Hocko, Mike Rapoport, Nicholas Piggin, H. Peter Anvin,
Rob Herring, Robin Murphy, Saravana Kannan, Suren Baghdasaryan,
Thomas Gleixner, Vlastimil Babka, Will Deacon, Zi Yan, devicetree,
iommu, kasan-dev, linux-arm-kernel, linux-efi, linux-fsdevel,
linux-kernel, linux-mm, linux-trace-kernel, linuxppc-dev,
sparclinux, x86
In-Reply-To: <20260323074836.3653702-1-rppt@kernel.org>
From: "Mike Rapoport (Microsoft)" <rppt@kernel.org>
fadump allocates buffers with alloc_pages_exact(), but then marks them
as reserved and frees using free_reserved_area().
This is completely unnecessary and the pages allocated with
alloc_pages_exact() can be naturally freed with free_pages_exact().
Replace freeing of memory in fadump_free_buffer() with
free_pages_exact() and simplify allocation code so that it won't mark
allocated pages as reserved.
Signed-off-by: Mike Rapoport (Microsoft) <rppt@kernel.org>
---
arch/powerpc/kernel/fadump.c | 16 ++--------------
1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 14 deletions(-)
diff --git a/arch/powerpc/kernel/fadump.c b/arch/powerpc/kernel/fadump.c
index 4ebc333dd786..501d43bf18f3 100644
--- a/arch/powerpc/kernel/fadump.c
+++ b/arch/powerpc/kernel/fadump.c
@@ -775,24 +775,12 @@ void __init fadump_update_elfcore_header(char *bufp)
static void *__init fadump_alloc_buffer(unsigned long size)
{
- unsigned long count, i;
- struct page *page;
- void *vaddr;
-
- vaddr = alloc_pages_exact(size, GFP_KERNEL | __GFP_ZERO);
- if (!vaddr)
- return NULL;
-
- count = PAGE_ALIGN(size) / PAGE_SIZE;
- page = virt_to_page(vaddr);
- for (i = 0; i < count; i++)
- mark_page_reserved(page + i);
- return vaddr;
+ return alloc_pages_exact(size, GFP_KERNEL | __GFP_ZERO);
}
static void fadump_free_buffer(unsigned long vaddr, unsigned long size)
{
- free_reserved_area((void *)vaddr, (void *)(vaddr + size), -1, NULL);
+ free_pages_exact((void *)vaddr, size);
}
s32 __init fadump_setup_cpu_notes_buf(u32 num_cpus)
--
2.53.0
^ permalink raw reply related
* [PATCH v2 3/9] powerpc: opal-core: pair alloc_pages_exact() with free_pages_exact()
From: Mike Rapoport @ 2026-03-23 7:48 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Andrew Morton
Cc: Alexander Potapenko, Alexander Viro, Andreas Larsson,
Ard Biesheuvel, Borislav Petkov, Brendan Jackman,
Christophe Leroy (CS GROUP), Catalin Marinas, Christian Brauner,
David S. Miller, Dave Hansen, David Hildenbrand, Dmitry Vyukov,
Ilias Apalodimas, Ingo Molnar, Jan Kara, Johannes Weiner,
Liam R. Howlett, Lorenzo Stoakes, Madhavan Srinivasan,
Marco Elver, Marek Szyprowski, Masami Hiramatsu, Michael Ellerman,
Michal Hocko, Mike Rapoport, Nicholas Piggin, H. Peter Anvin,
Rob Herring, Robin Murphy, Saravana Kannan, Suren Baghdasaryan,
Thomas Gleixner, Vlastimil Babka, Will Deacon, Zi Yan, devicetree,
iommu, kasan-dev, linux-arm-kernel, linux-efi, linux-fsdevel,
linux-kernel, linux-mm, linux-trace-kernel, linuxppc-dev,
sparclinux, x86
In-Reply-To: <20260323074836.3653702-1-rppt@kernel.org>
From: "Mike Rapoport (Microsoft)" <rppt@kernel.org>
opal-core allocates buffers with alloc_pages_exact(), but then
marks them as reserved and frees using free_reserved_area().
This is completely unnecessary and the pages allocated with
alloc_pages_exact() can be naturally freed with free_pages_exact().
Replace freeing of memory in opalcore_cleanup() with
free_pages_exact() and simplify allocation code so that it won't mark
allocated pages as reserved.
Signed-off-by: Mike Rapoport (Microsoft) <rppt@kernel.org>
---
arch/powerpc/platforms/powernv/opal-core.c | 11 +----------
1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 10 deletions(-)
diff --git a/arch/powerpc/platforms/powernv/opal-core.c b/arch/powerpc/platforms/powernv/opal-core.c
index e76e462f55f6..32662d30d70f 100644
--- a/arch/powerpc/platforms/powernv/opal-core.c
+++ b/arch/powerpc/platforms/powernv/opal-core.c
@@ -303,7 +303,6 @@ static int __init create_opalcore(void)
struct device_node *dn;
struct opalcore *new;
loff_t opalcore_off;
- struct page *page;
Elf64_Phdr *phdr;
Elf64_Ehdr *elf;
int i, ret;
@@ -328,11 +327,6 @@ static int __init create_opalcore(void)
oc_conf->opalcorebuf_sz = 0;
return -ENOMEM;
}
- count = oc_conf->opalcorebuf_sz / PAGE_SIZE;
- page = virt_to_page(oc_conf->opalcorebuf);
- for (i = 0; i < count; i++)
- mark_page_reserved(page + i);
-
pr_debug("opalcorebuf = 0x%llx\n", (u64)oc_conf->opalcorebuf);
/* Read OPAL related device-tree entries */
@@ -437,10 +431,7 @@ static void opalcore_cleanup(void)
/* free the buffer used for setting up OPAL core */
if (oc_conf->opalcorebuf) {
- void *end = (void *)((u64)oc_conf->opalcorebuf +
- oc_conf->opalcorebuf_sz);
-
- free_reserved_area(oc_conf->opalcorebuf, end, -1, NULL);
+ free_pages_exact(oc_conf->opalcorebuf, oc_conf->opalcorebuf_sz);
oc_conf->opalcorebuf = NULL;
oc_conf->opalcorebuf_sz = 0;
}
--
2.53.0
^ permalink raw reply related
* [PATCH v2 4/9] mm: move free_reserved_area() to mm/memblock.c
From: Mike Rapoport @ 2026-03-23 7:48 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Andrew Morton
Cc: Alexander Potapenko, Alexander Viro, Andreas Larsson,
Ard Biesheuvel, Borislav Petkov, Brendan Jackman,
Christophe Leroy (CS GROUP), Catalin Marinas, Christian Brauner,
David S. Miller, Dave Hansen, David Hildenbrand, Dmitry Vyukov,
Ilias Apalodimas, Ingo Molnar, Jan Kara, Johannes Weiner,
Liam R. Howlett, Lorenzo Stoakes, Madhavan Srinivasan,
Marco Elver, Marek Szyprowski, Masami Hiramatsu, Michael Ellerman,
Michal Hocko, Mike Rapoport, Nicholas Piggin, H. Peter Anvin,
Rob Herring, Robin Murphy, Saravana Kannan, Suren Baghdasaryan,
Thomas Gleixner, Vlastimil Babka, Will Deacon, Zi Yan, devicetree,
iommu, kasan-dev, linux-arm-kernel, linux-efi, linux-fsdevel,
linux-kernel, linux-mm, linux-trace-kernel, linuxppc-dev,
sparclinux, x86
In-Reply-To: <20260323074836.3653702-1-rppt@kernel.org>
From: "Mike Rapoport (Microsoft)" <rppt@kernel.org>
free_reserved_area() is related to memblock as it frees reserved memory
back to the buddy allocator, similar to what memblock_free_late() does.
Move free_reserved_area() to mm/memblock.c to prepare for further
consolidation of the functions that free reserved memory.
No functional changes.
Signed-off-by: Mike Rapoport (Microsoft) <rppt@kernel.org>
---
mm/memblock.c | 37 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-
mm/page_alloc.c | 36 ------------------------------
tools/include/linux/mm.h | 1 +
tools/testing/memblock/internal.h | 34 +++++++++++++++++++++++++---
4 files changed, 68 insertions(+), 40 deletions(-)
diff --git a/mm/memblock.c b/mm/memblock.c
index d4a02f1750e9..c0896efbee97 100644
--- a/mm/memblock.c
+++ b/mm/memblock.c
@@ -893,6 +893,42 @@ int __init_memblock memblock_remove(phys_addr_t base, phys_addr_t size)
return memblock_remove_range(&memblock.memory, base, size);
}
+unsigned long free_reserved_area(void *start, void *end, int poison, const char *s)
+{
+ void *pos;
+ unsigned long pages = 0;
+
+ start = (void *)PAGE_ALIGN((unsigned long)start);
+ end = (void *)((unsigned long)end & PAGE_MASK);
+ for (pos = start; pos < end; pos += PAGE_SIZE, pages++) {
+ struct page *page = virt_to_page(pos);
+ void *direct_map_addr;
+
+ /*
+ * 'direct_map_addr' might be different from 'pos'
+ * because some architectures' virt_to_page()
+ * work with aliases. Getting the direct map
+ * address ensures that we get a _writeable_
+ * alias for the memset().
+ */
+ direct_map_addr = page_address(page);
+ /*
+ * Perform a kasan-unchecked memset() since this memory
+ * has not been initialized.
+ */
+ direct_map_addr = kasan_reset_tag(direct_map_addr);
+ if ((unsigned int)poison <= 0xFF)
+ memset(direct_map_addr, poison, PAGE_SIZE);
+
+ free_reserved_page(page);
+ }
+
+ if (pages && s)
+ pr_info("Freeing %s memory: %ldK\n", s, K(pages));
+
+ return pages;
+}
+
/**
* memblock_free - free boot memory allocation
* @ptr: starting address of the boot memory allocation
@@ -1776,7 +1812,6 @@ void __init memblock_free_late(phys_addr_t base, phys_addr_t size)
totalram_pages_inc();
}
}
-
/*
* Remaining API functions
*/
diff --git a/mm/page_alloc.c b/mm/page_alloc.c
index 2d4b6f1a554e..df3d61253001 100644
--- a/mm/page_alloc.c
+++ b/mm/page_alloc.c
@@ -6234,42 +6234,6 @@ void adjust_managed_page_count(struct page *page, long count)
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(adjust_managed_page_count);
-unsigned long free_reserved_area(void *start, void *end, int poison, const char *s)
-{
- void *pos;
- unsigned long pages = 0;
-
- start = (void *)PAGE_ALIGN((unsigned long)start);
- end = (void *)((unsigned long)end & PAGE_MASK);
- for (pos = start; pos < end; pos += PAGE_SIZE, pages++) {
- struct page *page = virt_to_page(pos);
- void *direct_map_addr;
-
- /*
- * 'direct_map_addr' might be different from 'pos'
- * because some architectures' virt_to_page()
- * work with aliases. Getting the direct map
- * address ensures that we get a _writeable_
- * alias for the memset().
- */
- direct_map_addr = page_address(page);
- /*
- * Perform a kasan-unchecked memset() since this memory
- * has not been initialized.
- */
- direct_map_addr = kasan_reset_tag(direct_map_addr);
- if ((unsigned int)poison <= 0xFF)
- memset(direct_map_addr, poison, PAGE_SIZE);
-
- free_reserved_page(page);
- }
-
- if (pages && s)
- pr_info("Freeing %s memory: %ldK\n", s, K(pages));
-
- return pages;
-}
-
void free_reserved_page(struct page *page)
{
clear_page_tag_ref(page);
diff --git a/tools/include/linux/mm.h b/tools/include/linux/mm.h
index 028f3faf46e7..4407d8396108 100644
--- a/tools/include/linux/mm.h
+++ b/tools/include/linux/mm.h
@@ -17,6 +17,7 @@
#define __va(x) ((void *)((unsigned long)(x)))
#define __pa(x) ((unsigned long)(x))
+#define __pa_symbol(x) ((unsigned long)(x))
#define pfn_to_page(pfn) ((void *)((pfn) * PAGE_SIZE))
diff --git a/tools/testing/memblock/internal.h b/tools/testing/memblock/internal.h
index 009b97bbdd22..b72be2968104 100644
--- a/tools/testing/memblock/internal.h
+++ b/tools/testing/memblock/internal.h
@@ -11,9 +11,22 @@ static int memblock_debug = 1;
#define pr_warn_ratelimited(fmt, ...) printf(fmt, ##__VA_ARGS__)
+#define K(x) ((x) << (PAGE_SHIFT-10))
+
bool mirrored_kernelcore = false;
struct page {};
+static inline void *page_address(struct page *page)
+{
+ BUG();
+ return page;
+}
+
+static inline struct page *virt_to_page(void *virt)
+{
+ BUG();
+ return virt;
+}
void memblock_free_pages(unsigned long pfn, unsigned int order)
{
@@ -23,10 +36,25 @@ static inline void accept_memory(phys_addr_t start, unsigned long size)
{
}
-static inline unsigned long free_reserved_area(void *start, void *end,
- int poison, const char *s)
+unsigned long free_reserved_area(void *start, void *end, int poison, const char *s);
+void free_reserved_page(struct page *page);
+
+static inline bool deferred_pages_enabled(void)
+{
+ return false;
+}
+
+#define for_each_valid_pfn(pfn, start_pfn, end_pfn) \
+ for ((pfn) = (start_pfn); (pfn) < (end_pfn); (pfn)++)
+
+static inline void *kasan_reset_tag(const void *addr)
+{
+ return (void *)addr;
+}
+
+static inline bool __is_kernel(unsigned long addr)
{
- return 0;
+ return false;
}
#endif
--
2.53.0
^ permalink raw reply related
* [PATCH v2 5/9] memblock: make free_reserved_area() more robust
From: Mike Rapoport @ 2026-03-23 7:48 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Andrew Morton
Cc: Alexander Potapenko, Alexander Viro, Andreas Larsson,
Ard Biesheuvel, Borislav Petkov, Brendan Jackman,
Christophe Leroy (CS GROUP), Catalin Marinas, Christian Brauner,
David S. Miller, Dave Hansen, David Hildenbrand, Dmitry Vyukov,
Ilias Apalodimas, Ingo Molnar, Jan Kara, Johannes Weiner,
Liam R. Howlett, Lorenzo Stoakes, Madhavan Srinivasan,
Marco Elver, Marek Szyprowski, Masami Hiramatsu, Michael Ellerman,
Michal Hocko, Mike Rapoport, Nicholas Piggin, H. Peter Anvin,
Rob Herring, Robin Murphy, Saravana Kannan, Suren Baghdasaryan,
Thomas Gleixner, Vlastimil Babka, Will Deacon, Zi Yan, devicetree,
iommu, kasan-dev, linux-arm-kernel, linux-efi, linux-fsdevel,
linux-kernel, linux-mm, linux-trace-kernel, linuxppc-dev,
sparclinux, x86
In-Reply-To: <20260323074836.3653702-1-rppt@kernel.org>
From: "Mike Rapoport (Microsoft)" <rppt@kernel.org>
There are two potential problems in free_reserved_area():
* it may free a page with not-existent buddy page
* it may be passed a virtual address from an alias mapping that won't
be properly translated by virt_to_page(), for example a symbol on arm64
While first issue is quite theoretical and the second one does not manifest
itself because all the callers do the right thing, it is easy to make
free_reserved_area() robust enough to avoid these potential issues.
Replace the loop by virtual address with a loop by pfn that uses
for_each_valid_pfn() and use __pa() or __pa_symbol() depending on the
virtual mapping alias to correctly determine the loop boundaries.
Signed-off-by: Mike Rapoport (Microsoft) <rppt@kernel.org>
---
mm/memblock.c | 34 +++++++++++++++++++++++-----------
1 file changed, 23 insertions(+), 11 deletions(-)
diff --git a/mm/memblock.c b/mm/memblock.c
index c0896efbee97..eb086724802a 100644
--- a/mm/memblock.c
+++ b/mm/memblock.c
@@ -895,21 +895,32 @@ int __init_memblock memblock_remove(phys_addr_t base, phys_addr_t size)
unsigned long free_reserved_area(void *start, void *end, int poison, const char *s)
{
- void *pos;
- unsigned long pages = 0;
+ phys_addr_t start_pa, end_pa;
+ unsigned long pages = 0, pfn;
- start = (void *)PAGE_ALIGN((unsigned long)start);
- end = (void *)((unsigned long)end & PAGE_MASK);
- for (pos = start; pos < end; pos += PAGE_SIZE, pages++) {
- struct page *page = virt_to_page(pos);
+ /*
+ * end is the first address past the region and it may be beyond what
+ * __pa() or __pa_symbol() can handle.
+ * Use the address included in the range for the conversion and add
+ * back 1 afterwards.
+ */
+ if (__is_kernel((unsigned long)start)) {
+ start_pa = __pa_symbol(start);
+ end_pa = __pa_symbol(end - 1) + 1;
+ } else {
+ start_pa = __pa(start);
+ end_pa = __pa(end - 1) + 1;
+ }
+
+ for_each_valid_pfn(pfn, PFN_UP(start_pa), PFN_DOWN(end_pa)) {
+ struct page *page = pfn_to_page(pfn);
void *direct_map_addr;
/*
- * 'direct_map_addr' might be different from 'pos'
- * because some architectures' virt_to_page()
- * work with aliases. Getting the direct map
- * address ensures that we get a _writeable_
- * alias for the memset().
+ * 'direct_map_addr' might be different from the kernel virtual
+ * address because some architectures use aliases.
+ * Going via physical address, pfn_to_page() and page_address()
+ * ensures that we get a _writeable_ alias for the memset().
*/
direct_map_addr = page_address(page);
/*
@@ -921,6 +932,7 @@ unsigned long free_reserved_area(void *start, void *end, int poison, const char
memset(direct_map_addr, poison, PAGE_SIZE);
free_reserved_page(page);
+ pages++;
}
if (pages && s)
--
2.53.0
^ permalink raw reply related
* [PATCH v2 6/9] memblock: extract page freeing from free_reserved_area() into a helper
From: Mike Rapoport @ 2026-03-23 7:48 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Andrew Morton
Cc: Alexander Potapenko, Alexander Viro, Andreas Larsson,
Ard Biesheuvel, Borislav Petkov, Brendan Jackman,
Christophe Leroy (CS GROUP), Catalin Marinas, Christian Brauner,
David S. Miller, Dave Hansen, David Hildenbrand, Dmitry Vyukov,
Ilias Apalodimas, Ingo Molnar, Jan Kara, Johannes Weiner,
Liam R. Howlett, Lorenzo Stoakes, Madhavan Srinivasan,
Marco Elver, Marek Szyprowski, Masami Hiramatsu, Michael Ellerman,
Michal Hocko, Mike Rapoport, Nicholas Piggin, H. Peter Anvin,
Rob Herring, Robin Murphy, Saravana Kannan, Suren Baghdasaryan,
Thomas Gleixner, Vlastimil Babka, Will Deacon, Zi Yan, devicetree,
iommu, kasan-dev, linux-arm-kernel, linux-efi, linux-fsdevel,
linux-kernel, linux-mm, linux-trace-kernel, linuxppc-dev,
sparclinux, x86
In-Reply-To: <20260323074836.3653702-1-rppt@kernel.org>
From: "Mike Rapoport (Microsoft)" <rppt@kernel.org>
There are two functions that release pages to the buddy allocator late in
the boot: free_reserved_area() and memblock_free_late().
Currently they are using different underlying functionality,
free_reserved_area() runs each page being freed via free_reserved_page()
and memblock_free_late() uses memblock_free_pages() -> __free_pages_core(),
but in the end they both boil down to a loop that frees a range page by
page.
Extract the loop frees pages from free_reserved_area() into a helper and
use that helper in memblock_free_late().
Signed-off-by: Mike Rapoport (Microsoft) <rppt@kernel.org>
---
mm/memblock.c | 55 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++------------------------
1 file changed, 29 insertions(+), 26 deletions(-)
diff --git a/mm/memblock.c b/mm/memblock.c
index eb086724802a..ccdf3d225626 100644
--- a/mm/memblock.c
+++ b/mm/memblock.c
@@ -893,26 +893,12 @@ int __init_memblock memblock_remove(phys_addr_t base, phys_addr_t size)
return memblock_remove_range(&memblock.memory, base, size);
}
-unsigned long free_reserved_area(void *start, void *end, int poison, const char *s)
+static unsigned long __free_reserved_area(phys_addr_t start, phys_addr_t end,
+ int poison)
{
- phys_addr_t start_pa, end_pa;
unsigned long pages = 0, pfn;
- /*
- * end is the first address past the region and it may be beyond what
- * __pa() or __pa_symbol() can handle.
- * Use the address included in the range for the conversion and add
- * back 1 afterwards.
- */
- if (__is_kernel((unsigned long)start)) {
- start_pa = __pa_symbol(start);
- end_pa = __pa_symbol(end - 1) + 1;
- } else {
- start_pa = __pa(start);
- end_pa = __pa(end - 1) + 1;
- }
-
- for_each_valid_pfn(pfn, PFN_UP(start_pa), PFN_DOWN(end_pa)) {
+ for_each_valid_pfn(pfn, PFN_UP(start), PFN_DOWN(end)) {
struct page *page = pfn_to_page(pfn);
void *direct_map_addr;
@@ -934,7 +920,29 @@ unsigned long free_reserved_area(void *start, void *end, int poison, const char
free_reserved_page(page);
pages++;
}
+ return pages;
+}
+
+unsigned long free_reserved_area(void *start, void *end, int poison, const char *s)
+{
+ phys_addr_t start_pa, end_pa;
+ unsigned long pages;
+
+ /*
+ * end is the first address past the region and it may be beyond what
+ * __pa() or __pa_symbol() can handle.
+ * Use the address included in the range for the conversion and add back
+ * 1 afterwards.
+ */
+ if (__is_kernel((unsigned long)start)) {
+ start_pa = __pa_symbol(start);
+ end_pa = __pa_symbol(end - 1) + 1;
+ } else {
+ start_pa = __pa(start);
+ end_pa = __pa(end - 1) + 1;
+ }
+ pages = __free_reserved_area(start_pa, end_pa, poison);
if (pages && s)
pr_info("Freeing %s memory: %ldK\n", s, K(pages));
@@ -1810,20 +1818,15 @@ void *__init __memblock_alloc_or_panic(phys_addr_t size, phys_addr_t align,
*/
void __init memblock_free_late(phys_addr_t base, phys_addr_t size)
{
- phys_addr_t cursor, end;
+ phys_addr_t end = base + size - 1;
- end = base + size - 1;
memblock_dbg("%s: [%pa-%pa] %pS\n",
__func__, &base, &end, (void *)_RET_IP_);
- kmemleak_free_part_phys(base, size);
- cursor = PFN_UP(base);
- end = PFN_DOWN(base + size);
- for (; cursor < end; cursor++) {
- memblock_free_pages(cursor, 0);
- totalram_pages_inc();
- }
+ kmemleak_free_part_phys(base, size);
+ __free_reserved_area(base, base + size, -1);
}
+
/*
* Remaining API functions
*/
--
2.53.0
^ permalink raw reply related
* [PATCH v2 7/9] memblock: make free_reserved_area() update memblock if ARCH_KEEP_MEMBLOCK=y
From: Mike Rapoport @ 2026-03-23 7:48 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Andrew Morton
Cc: Alexander Potapenko, Alexander Viro, Andreas Larsson,
Ard Biesheuvel, Borislav Petkov, Brendan Jackman,
Christophe Leroy (CS GROUP), Catalin Marinas, Christian Brauner,
David S. Miller, Dave Hansen, David Hildenbrand, Dmitry Vyukov,
Ilias Apalodimas, Ingo Molnar, Jan Kara, Johannes Weiner,
Liam R. Howlett, Lorenzo Stoakes, Madhavan Srinivasan,
Marco Elver, Marek Szyprowski, Masami Hiramatsu, Michael Ellerman,
Michal Hocko, Mike Rapoport, Nicholas Piggin, H. Peter Anvin,
Rob Herring, Robin Murphy, Saravana Kannan, Suren Baghdasaryan,
Thomas Gleixner, Vlastimil Babka, Will Deacon, Zi Yan, devicetree,
iommu, kasan-dev, linux-arm-kernel, linux-efi, linux-fsdevel,
linux-kernel, linux-mm, linux-trace-kernel, linuxppc-dev,
sparclinux, x86
In-Reply-To: <20260323074836.3653702-1-rppt@kernel.org>
From: "Mike Rapoport (Microsoft)" <rppt@kernel.org>
On architectures that keep memblock after boot, freeing of reserved memory
with free_reserved_area() is paired with an update of memblock arrays,
usually by a call to memblock_free().
Make free_reserved_area() directly update memblock.reserved when
ARCH_KEEP_MEMBLOCK is enabled.
Remove the now-redundant explicit memblock_free() call from
arm64::free_initmem() and the #ifdef CONFIG_ARCH_KEEP_MEMBLOCK block
from the generic free_initrd_mem().
Signed-off-by: Mike Rapoport (Microsoft) <rppt@kernel.org>
---
arch/arm64/mm/init.c | 3 ---
init/initramfs.c | 7 -------
mm/memblock.c | 6 ++++++
3 files changed, 6 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-)
diff --git a/arch/arm64/mm/init.c b/arch/arm64/mm/init.c
index 96711b8578fd..07b17c708702 100644
--- a/arch/arm64/mm/init.c
+++ b/arch/arm64/mm/init.c
@@ -385,9 +385,6 @@ void free_initmem(void)
WARN_ON(!IS_ALIGNED((unsigned long)lm_init_begin, PAGE_SIZE));
WARN_ON(!IS_ALIGNED((unsigned long)lm_init_end, PAGE_SIZE));
- /* Delete __init region from memblock.reserved. */
- memblock_free(lm_init_begin, lm_init_end - lm_init_begin);
-
free_reserved_area(lm_init_begin, lm_init_end,
POISON_FREE_INITMEM, "unused kernel");
/*
diff --git a/init/initramfs.c b/init/initramfs.c
index 139baed06589..bca0922b2850 100644
--- a/init/initramfs.c
+++ b/init/initramfs.c
@@ -652,13 +652,6 @@ void __init reserve_initrd_mem(void)
void __weak __init free_initrd_mem(unsigned long start, unsigned long end)
{
-#ifdef CONFIG_ARCH_KEEP_MEMBLOCK
- unsigned long aligned_start = ALIGN_DOWN(start, PAGE_SIZE);
- unsigned long aligned_end = ALIGN(end, PAGE_SIZE);
-
- memblock_free((void *)aligned_start, aligned_end - aligned_start);
-#endif
-
free_reserved_area((void *)start, (void *)end, POISON_FREE_INITMEM,
"initrd");
}
diff --git a/mm/memblock.c b/mm/memblock.c
index ccdf3d225626..0ad968c2f2e8 100644
--- a/mm/memblock.c
+++ b/mm/memblock.c
@@ -942,6 +942,12 @@ unsigned long free_reserved_area(void *start, void *end, int poison, const char
end_pa = __pa(end - 1) + 1;
}
+ if (IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_ARCH_KEEP_MEMBLOCK)) {
+ if (start_pa < end_pa)
+ memblock_remove_range(&memblock.reserved,
+ start_pa, end_pa - start_pa);
+ }
+
pages = __free_reserved_area(start_pa, end_pa, poison);
if (pages && s)
pr_info("Freeing %s memory: %ldK\n", s, K(pages));
--
2.53.0
^ permalink raw reply related
* [PATCH v2 8/9] memblock, treewide: make memblock_free() handle late freeing
From: Mike Rapoport @ 2026-03-23 7:48 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Andrew Morton
Cc: Alexander Potapenko, Alexander Viro, Andreas Larsson,
Ard Biesheuvel, Borislav Petkov, Brendan Jackman,
Christophe Leroy (CS GROUP), Catalin Marinas, Christian Brauner,
David S. Miller, Dave Hansen, David Hildenbrand, Dmitry Vyukov,
Ilias Apalodimas, Ingo Molnar, Jan Kara, Johannes Weiner,
Liam R. Howlett, Lorenzo Stoakes, Madhavan Srinivasan,
Marco Elver, Marek Szyprowski, Masami Hiramatsu, Michael Ellerman,
Michal Hocko, Mike Rapoport, Nicholas Piggin, H. Peter Anvin,
Rob Herring, Robin Murphy, Saravana Kannan, Suren Baghdasaryan,
Thomas Gleixner, Vlastimil Babka, Will Deacon, Zi Yan, devicetree,
iommu, kasan-dev, linux-arm-kernel, linux-efi, linux-fsdevel,
linux-kernel, linux-mm, linux-trace-kernel, linuxppc-dev,
sparclinux, x86
In-Reply-To: <20260323074836.3653702-1-rppt@kernel.org>
From: "Mike Rapoport (Microsoft)" <rppt@kernel.org>
It shouldn't be responsibility of memblock users to detect if they free
memory allocated from memblock late and should use memblock_free_late().
Make memblock_free() and memblock_phys_free() take care of late memory
freeing and drop memblock_free_late().
Signed-off-by: Mike Rapoport (Microsoft) <rppt@kernel.org>
---
arch/sparc/kernel/mdesc.c | 4 +-
arch/x86/kernel/setup.c | 2 +-
arch/x86/platform/efi/memmap.c | 5 +--
arch/x86/platform/efi/quirks.c | 2 +-
drivers/firmware/efi/apple-properties.c | 2 +-
drivers/of/kexec.c | 2 +-
include/linux/memblock.h | 2 -
kernel/dma/swiotlb.c | 6 +--
lib/bootconfig.c | 2 +-
mm/kfence/core.c | 4 +-
mm/memblock.c | 49 ++++++++++---------------
11 files changed, 31 insertions(+), 49 deletions(-)
diff --git a/arch/sparc/kernel/mdesc.c b/arch/sparc/kernel/mdesc.c
index 30f171b7b00c..ecd6c8ae49c7 100644
--- a/arch/sparc/kernel/mdesc.c
+++ b/arch/sparc/kernel/mdesc.c
@@ -183,14 +183,12 @@ static struct mdesc_handle * __init mdesc_memblock_alloc(unsigned int mdesc_size
static void __init mdesc_memblock_free(struct mdesc_handle *hp)
{
unsigned int alloc_size;
- unsigned long start;
BUG_ON(refcount_read(&hp->refcnt) != 0);
BUG_ON(!list_empty(&hp->list));
alloc_size = PAGE_ALIGN(hp->handle_size);
- start = __pa(hp);
- memblock_free_late(start, alloc_size);
+ memblock_free(hp, alloc_size);
}
static struct mdesc_mem_ops memblock_mdesc_ops = {
diff --git a/arch/x86/kernel/setup.c b/arch/x86/kernel/setup.c
index eebcc9db1a1b..46882ce79c3a 100644
--- a/arch/x86/kernel/setup.c
+++ b/arch/x86/kernel/setup.c
@@ -426,7 +426,7 @@ int __init ima_free_kexec_buffer(void)
if (!ima_kexec_buffer_size)
return -ENOENT;
- memblock_free_late(ima_kexec_buffer_phys,
+ memblock_phys_free(ima_kexec_buffer_phys,
ima_kexec_buffer_size);
ima_kexec_buffer_phys = 0;
diff --git a/arch/x86/platform/efi/memmap.c b/arch/x86/platform/efi/memmap.c
index 023697c88910..697a9a26a005 100644
--- a/arch/x86/platform/efi/memmap.c
+++ b/arch/x86/platform/efi/memmap.c
@@ -34,10 +34,7 @@ static
void __init __efi_memmap_free(u64 phys, unsigned long size, unsigned long flags)
{
if (flags & EFI_MEMMAP_MEMBLOCK) {
- if (slab_is_available())
- memblock_free_late(phys, size);
- else
- memblock_phys_free(phys, size);
+ memblock_phys_free(phys, size);
} else if (flags & EFI_MEMMAP_SLAB) {
struct page *p = pfn_to_page(PHYS_PFN(phys));
unsigned int order = get_order(size);
diff --git a/arch/x86/platform/efi/quirks.c b/arch/x86/platform/efi/quirks.c
index 35caa5746115..a560bbcaa006 100644
--- a/arch/x86/platform/efi/quirks.c
+++ b/arch/x86/platform/efi/quirks.c
@@ -372,7 +372,7 @@ void __init efi_reserve_boot_services(void)
* doesn't make sense as far as the firmware is
* concerned, but it does provide us with a way to tag
* those regions that must not be paired with
- * memblock_free_late().
+ * memblock_phys_free().
*/
md->attribute |= EFI_MEMORY_RUNTIME;
}
diff --git a/drivers/firmware/efi/apple-properties.c b/drivers/firmware/efi/apple-properties.c
index 13ac28754c03..2e525e17fba7 100644
--- a/drivers/firmware/efi/apple-properties.c
+++ b/drivers/firmware/efi/apple-properties.c
@@ -226,7 +226,7 @@ static int __init map_properties(void)
*/
data->len = 0;
memunmap(data);
- memblock_free_late(pa_data + sizeof(*data), data_len);
+ memblock_phys_free(pa_data + sizeof(*data), data_len);
return ret;
}
diff --git a/drivers/of/kexec.c b/drivers/of/kexec.c
index c4cf3552c018..512d9be9d513 100644
--- a/drivers/of/kexec.c
+++ b/drivers/of/kexec.c
@@ -175,7 +175,7 @@ int __init ima_free_kexec_buffer(void)
if (ret)
return ret;
- memblock_free_late(addr, size);
+ memblock_phys_free(addr, size);
return 0;
}
#endif
diff --git a/include/linux/memblock.h b/include/linux/memblock.h
index 6ec5e9ac0699..6f6c5b5c4a4b 100644
--- a/include/linux/memblock.h
+++ b/include/linux/memblock.h
@@ -172,8 +172,6 @@ void __next_mem_range_rev(u64 *idx, int nid, enum memblock_flags flags,
struct memblock_type *type_b, phys_addr_t *out_start,
phys_addr_t *out_end, int *out_nid);
-void memblock_free_late(phys_addr_t base, phys_addr_t size);
-
#ifdef CONFIG_HAVE_MEMBLOCK_PHYS_MAP
static inline void __next_physmem_range(u64 *idx, struct memblock_type *type,
phys_addr_t *out_start,
diff --git a/kernel/dma/swiotlb.c b/kernel/dma/swiotlb.c
index d8e6f1d889d5..e44e039e00d3 100644
--- a/kernel/dma/swiotlb.c
+++ b/kernel/dma/swiotlb.c
@@ -546,10 +546,10 @@ void __init swiotlb_exit(void)
free_pages(tbl_vaddr, get_order(tbl_size));
free_pages((unsigned long)mem->slots, get_order(slots_size));
} else {
- memblock_free_late(__pa(mem->areas),
+ memblock_free(mem->areas,
array_size(sizeof(*mem->areas), mem->nareas));
- memblock_free_late(mem->start, tbl_size);
- memblock_free_late(__pa(mem->slots), slots_size);
+ memblock_phys_free(mem->start, tbl_size);
+ memblock_free(mem->slots, slots_size);
}
memset(mem, 0, sizeof(*mem));
diff --git a/lib/bootconfig.c b/lib/bootconfig.c
index 449369a60846..86a75bf636bc 100644
--- a/lib/bootconfig.c
+++ b/lib/bootconfig.c
@@ -64,7 +64,7 @@ static inline void __init xbc_free_mem(void *addr, size_t size, bool early)
if (early)
memblock_free(addr, size);
else if (addr)
- memblock_free_late(__pa(addr), size);
+ memblock_free(addr, size);
}
#else /* !__KERNEL__ */
diff --git a/mm/kfence/core.c b/mm/kfence/core.c
index 7393957f9a20..5c8268af533e 100644
--- a/mm/kfence/core.c
+++ b/mm/kfence/core.c
@@ -731,10 +731,10 @@ static bool __init kfence_init_pool_early(void)
* fails for the first page, and therefore expect addr==__kfence_pool in
* most failure cases.
*/
- memblock_free_late(__pa(addr), KFENCE_POOL_SIZE - (addr - (unsigned long)__kfence_pool));
+ memblock_free((void *)addr, KFENCE_POOL_SIZE - (addr - (unsigned long)__kfence_pool));
__kfence_pool = NULL;
- memblock_free_late(__pa(kfence_metadata_init), KFENCE_METADATA_SIZE);
+ memblock_free(kfence_metadata_init, KFENCE_METADATA_SIZE);
kfence_metadata_init = NULL;
return false;
diff --git a/mm/memblock.c b/mm/memblock.c
index 0ad968c2f2e8..dc8811861c11 100644
--- a/mm/memblock.c
+++ b/mm/memblock.c
@@ -384,26 +384,27 @@ static void __init_memblock memblock_remove_region(struct memblock_type *type, u
*/
void __init memblock_discard(void)
{
- phys_addr_t addr, size;
+ phys_addr_t size;
+ void *addr;
if (memblock.reserved.regions != memblock_reserved_init_regions) {
- addr = __pa(memblock.reserved.regions);
+ addr = memblock.reserved.regions;
size = PAGE_ALIGN(sizeof(struct memblock_region) *
memblock.reserved.max);
if (memblock_reserved_in_slab)
- kfree(memblock.reserved.regions);
+ kfree(addr);
else
- memblock_free_late(addr, size);
+ memblock_free(addr, size);
}
if (memblock.memory.regions != memblock_memory_init_regions) {
- addr = __pa(memblock.memory.regions);
+ addr = memblock.memory.regions;
size = PAGE_ALIGN(sizeof(struct memblock_region) *
memblock.memory.max);
if (memblock_memory_in_slab)
- kfree(memblock.memory.regions);
+ kfree(addr);
else
- memblock_free_late(addr, size);
+ memblock_free(addr, size);
}
memblock_memory = NULL;
@@ -961,7 +962,8 @@ unsigned long free_reserved_area(void *start, void *end, int poison, const char
* @size: size of the boot memory block in bytes
*
* Free boot memory block previously allocated by memblock_alloc_xx() API.
- * The freeing memory will not be released to the buddy allocator.
+ * If called after the buddy allocator is available, the memory is released to
+ * the buddy allocator.
*/
void __init_memblock memblock_free(void *ptr, size_t size)
{
@@ -975,17 +977,24 @@ void __init_memblock memblock_free(void *ptr, size_t size)
* @size: size of the boot memory block in bytes
*
* Free boot memory block previously allocated by memblock_phys_alloc_xx() API.
- * The freeing memory will not be released to the buddy allocator.
+ * If called after the buddy allocator is available, the memory is released to
+ * the buddy allocator.
*/
int __init_memblock memblock_phys_free(phys_addr_t base, phys_addr_t size)
{
phys_addr_t end = base + size - 1;
+ int ret;
memblock_dbg("%s: [%pa-%pa] %pS\n", __func__,
&base, &end, (void *)_RET_IP_);
kmemleak_free_part_phys(base, size);
- return memblock_remove_range(&memblock.reserved, base, size);
+ ret = memblock_remove_range(&memblock.reserved, base, size);
+
+ if (slab_is_available())
+ __free_reserved_area(base, base + size, -1);
+
+ return ret;
}
int __init_memblock __memblock_reserve(phys_addr_t base, phys_addr_t size,
@@ -1813,26 +1822,6 @@ void *__init __memblock_alloc_or_panic(phys_addr_t size, phys_addr_t align,
return addr;
}
-/**
- * memblock_free_late - free pages directly to buddy allocator
- * @base: phys starting address of the boot memory block
- * @size: size of the boot memory block in bytes
- *
- * This is only useful when the memblock allocator has already been torn
- * down, but we are still initializing the system. Pages are released directly
- * to the buddy allocator.
- */
-void __init memblock_free_late(phys_addr_t base, phys_addr_t size)
-{
- phys_addr_t end = base + size - 1;
-
- memblock_dbg("%s: [%pa-%pa] %pS\n",
- __func__, &base, &end, (void *)_RET_IP_);
-
- kmemleak_free_part_phys(base, size);
- __free_reserved_area(base, base + size, -1);
-}
-
/*
* Remaining API functions
*/
--
2.53.0
^ permalink raw reply related
* [PATCH v2 9/9] memblock: warn when freeing reserved memory before memory map is initialized
From: Mike Rapoport @ 2026-03-23 7:48 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Andrew Morton
Cc: Alexander Potapenko, Alexander Viro, Andreas Larsson,
Ard Biesheuvel, Borislav Petkov, Brendan Jackman,
Christophe Leroy (CS GROUP), Catalin Marinas, Christian Brauner,
David S. Miller, Dave Hansen, David Hildenbrand, Dmitry Vyukov,
Ilias Apalodimas, Ingo Molnar, Jan Kara, Johannes Weiner,
Liam R. Howlett, Lorenzo Stoakes, Madhavan Srinivasan,
Marco Elver, Marek Szyprowski, Masami Hiramatsu, Michael Ellerman,
Michal Hocko, Mike Rapoport, Nicholas Piggin, H. Peter Anvin,
Rob Herring, Robin Murphy, Saravana Kannan, Suren Baghdasaryan,
Thomas Gleixner, Vlastimil Babka, Will Deacon, Zi Yan, devicetree,
iommu, kasan-dev, linux-arm-kernel, linux-efi, linux-fsdevel,
linux-kernel, linux-mm, linux-trace-kernel, linuxppc-dev,
sparclinux, x86
In-Reply-To: <20260323074836.3653702-1-rppt@kernel.org>
From: "Mike Rapoport (Microsoft)" <rppt@kernel.org>
When CONFIG_DEFERRED_STRUCT_PAGE_INIT is enabled, freeing of reserved
memory before the memory map is fully initialized in deferred_init_memmap()
would cause access to uninitialized struct pages and may crash when
accessing spurious list pointers, like was recently discovered during
discussion about memory leaks in x86 EFI code [1].
The trace below is from an attempt to call free_reserved_page() before
page_alloc_init_late():
[ 0.076840] BUG: unable to handle page fault for address: ffffce1a005a0788
[ 0.078226] #PF: supervisor read access in kernel mode
[ 0.078226] #PF: error_code(0x0000) - not-present page
[ 0.078226] PGD 0 P4D 0
[ 0.078226] Oops: Oops: 0000 [#1] PREEMPT SMP NOPTI
[ 0.078226] CPU: 0 UID: 0 PID: 0 Comm: swapper/0 Not tainted 6.12.68-92.123.amzn2023.x86_64 #1
[ 0.078226] Hardware name: Amazon EC2 t3a.nano/, BIOS 1.0 10/16/2017
[ 0.078226] RIP: 0010:__list_del_entry_valid_or_report+0x32/0xb0
...
[ 0.078226] __free_one_page+0x170/0x520
[ 0.078226] free_pcppages_bulk+0x151/0x1e0
[ 0.078226] free_unref_page_commit+0x263/0x320
[ 0.078226] free_unref_page+0x2c8/0x5b0
[ 0.078226] ? srso_return_thunk+0x5/0x5f
[ 0.078226] free_reserved_page+0x1c/0x30
[ 0.078226] memblock_free_late+0x6c/0xc0
Currently there are not many callers of free_reserved_area() and they all
appear to be at the right timings.
Still, in order to protect against problematic code moves or additions of
new callers add a warning that will inform that reserved pages cannot be
freed until the memory map is fully initialized.
[1] https://lore.kernel.org/all/e5d5a1105d90ee1e7fe7eafaed2ed03bbad0c46b.camel@kernel.crashing.org/
Signed-off-by: Mike Rapoport (Microsoft) <rppt@kernel.org>
---
mm/internal.h | 10 ++++++++++
mm/memblock.c | 5 +++++
mm/page_alloc.c | 10 ----------
3 files changed, 15 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-)
diff --git a/mm/internal.h b/mm/internal.h
index cb0af847d7d9..f60c1edb2e02 100644
--- a/mm/internal.h
+++ b/mm/internal.h
@@ -1233,7 +1233,17 @@ static inline void vunmap_range_noflush(unsigned long start, unsigned long end)
#ifdef CONFIG_DEFERRED_STRUCT_PAGE_INIT
DECLARE_STATIC_KEY_TRUE(deferred_pages);
+static inline bool deferred_pages_enabled(void)
+{
+ return static_branch_unlikely(&deferred_pages);
+}
+
bool __init deferred_grow_zone(struct zone *zone, unsigned int order);
+#else
+static inline bool deferred_pages_enabled(void)
+{
+ return false;
+}
#endif /* CONFIG_DEFERRED_STRUCT_PAGE_INIT */
void init_deferred_page(unsigned long pfn, int nid);
diff --git a/mm/memblock.c b/mm/memblock.c
index dc8811861c11..ab8f35c3bd41 100644
--- a/mm/memblock.c
+++ b/mm/memblock.c
@@ -899,6 +899,11 @@ static unsigned long __free_reserved_area(phys_addr_t start, phys_addr_t end,
{
unsigned long pages = 0, pfn;
+ if (deferred_pages_enabled()) {
+ WARN(1, "Cannot free reserved memory because of deferred initialization of the memory map");
+ return 0;
+ }
+
for_each_valid_pfn(pfn, PFN_UP(start), PFN_DOWN(end)) {
struct page *page = pfn_to_page(pfn);
void *direct_map_addr;
diff --git a/mm/page_alloc.c b/mm/page_alloc.c
index df3d61253001..9ac47bab2ea7 100644
--- a/mm/page_alloc.c
+++ b/mm/page_alloc.c
@@ -331,11 +331,6 @@ int page_group_by_mobility_disabled __read_mostly;
*/
DEFINE_STATIC_KEY_TRUE(deferred_pages);
-static inline bool deferred_pages_enabled(void)
-{
- return static_branch_unlikely(&deferred_pages);
-}
-
/*
* deferred_grow_zone() is __init, but it is called from
* get_page_from_freelist() during early boot until deferred_pages permanently
@@ -348,11 +343,6 @@ _deferred_grow_zone(struct zone *zone, unsigned int order)
return deferred_grow_zone(zone, order);
}
#else
-static inline bool deferred_pages_enabled(void)
-{
- return false;
-}
-
static inline bool _deferred_grow_zone(struct zone *zone, unsigned int order)
{
return false;
--
2.53.0
^ permalink raw reply related
* Re: [PATCH v7 09/15] rv: Add enqueue/dequeue to snroc monitor
From: Nam Cao @ 2026-03-23 9:06 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Gabriele Monaco, linux-kernel, Steven Rostedt, Juri Lelli,
Gabriele Monaco, Jonathan Corbet, Masami Hiramatsu,
linux-trace-kernel, linux-doc
Cc: Tomas Glozar, Clark Williams, John Kacur
In-Reply-To: <20260310105627.332044-10-gmonaco@redhat.com>
Gabriele Monaco <gmonaco@redhat.com> writes:
> The snroc monitor is a simple monitor that validates set_state occurs
> only when a task is running. This implicitly validates switch in and out
> follow one another.
>
> Add enqueue/dequeue to validate they also follow one another without
> duplicated events. Although they are not necessary to define the
> task context, adding the check here saves from adding another simple
> per-task monitor, which would require another slot in the task struct.
>
> Signed-off-by: Gabriele Monaco <gmonaco@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Nam Cao <namcao@linutronix.de>
^ permalink raw reply
* Re: [PATCH] tracing: Adjust cmd_check_undefined to show unexpected undefined symbols
From: Vincent Donnefort @ 2026-03-23 9:15 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Nathan Chancellor
Cc: Marc Zyngier, Steven Rostedt, Masami Hiramatsu, Mathieu Desnoyers,
Arnd Bergmann, linux-kernel, linux-trace-kernel, kvmarm
In-Reply-To: <20260320-cmd_check_undefined-verbose-v1-1-54fc5b061f94@kernel.org>
On Fri, Mar 20, 2026 at 02:29:33PM -0700, Nathan Chancellor wrote:
> When the check_undefined command in kernel/trace/Makefile fails, there
> is no output, making it hard to understand why the build failed. Capture
> the output of the $(NM) + grep command and print it when failing to make
> it clearer what the problem is.
>
> Fixes: a717943d8ecc ("tracing: Check for undefined symbols in simple_ring_buffer")
> Signed-off-by: Nathan Chancellor <nathan@kernel.org>
Thanks!
Reviewed-by: Vincent Donnefort <vdonnefort@google.com>
> ---
> Commit a717943d8ecc ("tracing: Check for undefined symbols in
> simple_ring_buffer") and its follow up fixes are in the kvmarm tree so
> this should go there as well. This is the rebased version of my
> suggestion in the original thread:
>
> https://lore.kernel.org/20260311221816.GA316631@ax162/
> ---
> kernel/trace/Makefile | 8 +++++++-
> 1 file changed, 7 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)
>
> diff --git a/kernel/trace/Makefile b/kernel/trace/Makefile
> index c5e14ffd36ee..d662c1a64cd5 100644
> --- a/kernel/trace/Makefile
> +++ b/kernel/trace/Makefile
> @@ -174,7 +174,13 @@ UNDEFINED_ALLOWLIST = __asan __gcov __kasan __kcsan __hwasan __sancov __sanitize
> $(shell $(NM) -u $(obj)/undefsyms_base.o 2>/dev/null | awk '{print $$2}')
>
> quiet_cmd_check_undefined = NM $<
> - cmd_check_undefined = test -z "`$(NM) -u $< | grep -v $(addprefix -e , $(UNDEFINED_ALLOWLIST))`"
> + cmd_check_undefined = \
> + undefsyms=$$($(NM) -u $< | grep -v $(addprefix -e , $(UNDEFINED_ALLOWLIST)) || true); \
> + if [ -n "$$undefsyms" ]; then \
> + echo "Unexpected symbols in $<:" >&2; \
> + echo "$$undefsyms" >&2; \
> + false; \
> + fi
>
> $(obj)/%.o.checked: $(obj)/%.o $(obj)/undefsyms_base.o FORCE
> $(call if_changed,check_undefined)
>
> ---
> base-commit: e3d585ed3ff891a00c2284fef4be9cf8581735ab
> change-id: 20260320-cmd_check_undefined-verbose-7d15f13f615d
>
> Best regards,
> --
> Nathan Chancellor <nathan@kernel.org>
>
^ permalink raw reply
* Re: [PATCH] tracing: Adjust cmd_check_undefined to show unexpected undefined symbols
From: Marc Zyngier @ 2026-03-23 9:23 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Vincent Donnefort, Nathan Chancellor
Cc: Steven Rostedt, Masami Hiramatsu, Mathieu Desnoyers,
Arnd Bergmann, linux-kernel, linux-trace-kernel, kvmarm
In-Reply-To: <20260320-cmd_check_undefined-verbose-v1-1-54fc5b061f94@kernel.org>
On Fri, 20 Mar 2026 14:29:33 -0700, Nathan Chancellor wrote:
> When the check_undefined command in kernel/trace/Makefile fails, there
> is no output, making it hard to understand why the build failed. Capture
> the output of the $(NM) + grep command and print it when failing to make
> it clearer what the problem is.
>
>
Applied to next, thanks!
[1/1] tracing: Adjust cmd_check_undefined to show unexpected undefined symbols
commit: 58b4bd18390ec3118d8577e19bdee0d01d40c31e
Cheers,
M.
--
Without deviation from the norm, progress is not possible.
^ permalink raw reply
* [PATCH] tracing: fprobe: fix the length of unused fgraph_data
From: Martin Kaiser @ 2026-03-23 10:19 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Steven Rostedt, Masami Hiramatsu
Cc: Mathieu Desnoyers, linux-trace-kernel, linux-kernel,
Martin Kaiser, stable
If fprobe_entry does not fill the allocated fgraph_data completely, the
unused part is zeroed with memset.
Fix the length for this memset call. Both reserved_words and used are in
units of return stack words, but memset needs the number of bytes.
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Fixes: 4346ba160409 ("fprobe: Rewrite fprobe on function-graph tracer")
Signed-off-by: Martin Kaiser <martin@kaiser.cx>
---
kernel/trace/fprobe.c | 2 +-
1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)
diff --git a/kernel/trace/fprobe.c b/kernel/trace/fprobe.c
index dcadf1d23b8a..6a1192515afd 100644
--- a/kernel/trace/fprobe.c
+++ b/kernel/trace/fprobe.c
@@ -451,7 +451,7 @@ static int fprobe_fgraph_entry(struct ftrace_graph_ent *trace, struct fgraph_ops
}
}
if (used < reserved_words)
- memset(fgraph_data + used, 0, reserved_words - used);
+ memset(fgraph_data + used, 0, (reserved_words - used) * sizeof(long));
/* If any exit_handler is set, data must be used. */
return used != 0;
--
2.43.7
^ permalink raw reply related
* [PATCH] tracing: samples: avoid warning about __aeabi_unwind_cpp_pr1
From: Arnd Bergmann @ 2026-03-23 10:56 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Steven Rostedt, Masami Hiramatsu, Nathan Chancellor, Marc Zyngier,
Vincent Donnefort
Cc: Arnd Bergmann, Mathieu Desnoyers, linux-kernel,
linux-trace-kernel
From: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@arndb.de>
The now more verbose check found another symbol missing from the whitelist:
Unexpected symbols in kernel/trace/simple_ring_buffer.o:
U __aeabi_unwind_cpp_pr1
Add this to the Makefile.
Fixes: 1211907ac0b5 ("tracing: Generate undef symbols allowlist for simple_ring_buffer")
Signed-off-by: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@arndb.de>
---
kernel/trace/Makefile | 4 ++--
1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
diff --git a/kernel/trace/Makefile b/kernel/trace/Makefile
index d662c1a64cd5..aba6a25db17b 100644
--- a/kernel/trace/Makefile
+++ b/kernel/trace/Makefile
@@ -169,8 +169,8 @@ targets += undefsyms_base.o
# because it is not linked into vmlinux.
KASAN_SANITIZE_undefsyms_base.o := y
-UNDEFINED_ALLOWLIST = __asan __gcov __kasan __kcsan __hwasan __sancov __sanitizer __tsan __ubsan __x86_indirect_thunk \
- __msan simple_ring_buffer \
+UNDEFINED_ALLOWLIST = __asan __gcov __kasan __kcsan __hwasan __sancov __sanitizer __tsan __ubsan __msan \
+ __x86_indirect_thunk __aeabi_unwind_cpp simple_ring_buffer \
$(shell $(NM) -u $(obj)/undefsyms_base.o 2>/dev/null | awk '{print $$2}')
quiet_cmd_check_undefined = NM $<
--
2.39.5
^ permalink raw reply related
* Re: [PATCH] coredump: add tracepoint for coredump events
From: Breno Leitao @ 2026-03-23 11:41 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Steven Rostedt
Cc: Christian Brauner, Alexander Viro, Jan Kara, Masami Hiramatsu,
Mathieu Desnoyers, linux-kernel, linux-fsdevel,
linux-trace-kernel, bpf, kernel-team, Andrii Nakryiko
In-Reply-To: <20260320144834.079ba241@gandalf.local.home>
On Fri, Mar 20, 2026 at 02:48:34PM -0400, Steven Rostedt wrote:
> On Fri, 20 Mar 2026 14:21:23 +0100
> Christian Brauner <brauner@kernel.org> wrote:
>
> > > +TRACE_EVENT(coredump,
> > > +
> > > + TP_PROTO(int sig),
> > > +
> > > + TP_ARGS(sig),
> > > +
> > > + TP_STRUCT__entry(
> > > + __field(int, sig)
> > > + __array(char, comm, TASK_COMM_LEN)
> > > + __field(pid_t, pid)
> > > + ),
> > > +
> > > + TP_fast_assign(
> > > + __entry->sig = sig;
> > > + memcpy(__entry->comm, current->comm, TASK_COMM_LEN);
> > > + __entry->pid = current->pid;
> >
> > That's the TID as seen in the global pid namespace.
> > I assume this is what you want but worth noting.
>
> Not to mention the pid is saved in all trace events and is available for
> perf and bpf too. Even the change log showed it:
>
> sleep-634 [036] ..... 145.222206: coredump: sig=11 comm=sleep pid=634
>
> ^^^ ^^^
>
> So it should not be included. It's duplicate and only wastes space. Now if
> you wanted to save the name space pid, that may be useful.
In my use case, I don't need the namespace pid since I'm primarily
focused on system-wide monitoring, and the global pid is sufficient
for my purposes. Thanks for the heads-up.
I'll update the patch to remove the pid field.
Thanks,
--breno
^ permalink raw reply
* [PATCH v2] coredump: add tracepoint for coredump events
From: Breno Leitao @ 2026-03-23 11:46 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Alexander Viro, Christian Brauner, Jan Kara, Steven Rostedt,
Masami Hiramatsu, Mathieu Desnoyers
Cc: linux-kernel, linux-fsdevel, linux-trace-kernel, bpf, kernel-team,
song, Andrii Nakryiko, Breno Leitao
Coredump is a generally useful and interesting event in the lifetime
of a process. Add a tracepoint so it can be monitored through the
standard kernel tracing infrastructure.
BPF-based crash monitoring is an advanced approach that
allows real-time crash interception: by attaching a BPF program at
this point, tools can use bpf_get_stack() with BPF_F_USER_STACK to
capture the user-space stack trace at the exact moment of the crash,
before the process is fully terminated, without waiting for a
coredump file to be written and parsed.
However, there is currently no stable kernel API for this use case.
Existing tools rely on attaching fentry probes to do_coredump(),
which is an internal function whose signature changes across kernel
versions, breaking these tools.
Add a stable tracepoint that fires at the beginning of
do_coredump(), providing BPF programs a reliable attachment point.
At tracepoint time, the crashing process context is still live, so
BPF programs can call bpf_get_stack() with BPF_F_USER_STACK to
extract the user-space backtrace.
The tracepoint records:
- sig: signal number that triggered the coredump
- comm: process name
Example output:
$ echo 1 > /sys/kernel/tracing/events/coredump/coredump/enable
$ sleep 999 &
$ kill -SEGV $!
$ cat /sys/kernel/tracing/trace
# TASK-PID CPU# ||||| TIMESTAMP FUNCTION
# | | | ||||| | |
sleep-634 [036] ..... 145.222206: coredump: sig=11 comm=sleep
Suggested-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andrii@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Breno Leitao <leitao@debian.org>
---
Changes in v2:
- Remove the pid from the tracpoint message, given pid is saved in all
trace events (Christian, Steven)
- Link to v1:
https://patch.msgid.link/20260320-coredump_tracepoint-v1-1-34864746cbb3@debian.org
---
fs/coredump.c | 5 +++++
include/trace/events/coredump.h | 45 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
2 files changed, 50 insertions(+)
diff --git a/fs/coredump.c b/fs/coredump.c
index 29df8aa19e2e7..bb6fdb1f458e9 100644
--- a/fs/coredump.c
+++ b/fs/coredump.c
@@ -63,6 +63,9 @@
#include <trace/events/sched.h>
+#define CREATE_TRACE_POINTS
+#include <trace/events/coredump.h>
+
static bool dump_vma_snapshot(struct coredump_params *cprm);
static void free_vma_snapshot(struct coredump_params *cprm);
@@ -1090,6 +1093,8 @@ static inline bool coredump_skip(const struct coredump_params *cprm,
static void do_coredump(struct core_name *cn, struct coredump_params *cprm,
size_t **argv, int *argc, const struct linux_binfmt *binfmt)
{
+ trace_coredump(cprm->siginfo->si_signo);
+
if (!coredump_parse(cn, cprm, argv, argc)) {
coredump_report_failure("format_corename failed, aborting core");
return;
diff --git a/include/trace/events/coredump.h b/include/trace/events/coredump.h
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000000..c7b9c53fc4986
--- /dev/null
+++ b/include/trace/events/coredump.h
@@ -0,0 +1,45 @@
+/* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 */
+/*
+ * Copyright (c) 2026 Meta Platforms, Inc. and affiliates.
+ * Copyright (c) 2026 Breno Leitao <leitao@debian.org>
+ */
+#undef TRACE_SYSTEM
+#define TRACE_SYSTEM coredump
+
+#if !defined(_TRACE_COREDUMP_H) || defined(TRACE_HEADER_MULTI_READ)
+#define _TRACE_COREDUMP_H
+
+#include <linux/sched.h>
+#include <linux/tracepoint.h>
+
+/**
+ * coredump - called when a coredump starts
+ * @sig: signal number that triggered the coredump
+ *
+ * This tracepoint fires at the beginning of a coredump attempt,
+ * providing a stable interface for monitoring coredump events.
+ */
+TRACE_EVENT(coredump,
+
+ TP_PROTO(int sig),
+
+ TP_ARGS(sig),
+
+ TP_STRUCT__entry(
+ __field(int, sig)
+ __array(char, comm, TASK_COMM_LEN)
+ ),
+
+ TP_fast_assign(
+ __entry->sig = sig;
+ memcpy(__entry->comm, current->comm, TASK_COMM_LEN);
+ ),
+
+ TP_printk("sig=%d comm=%s",
+ __entry->sig, __entry->comm)
+);
+
+#endif /* _TRACE_COREDUMP_H */
+
+/* This part must be outside protection */
+#include <trace/define_trace.h>
---
base-commit: b5d083a3ed1e2798396d5e491432e887da8d4a06
change-id: 20260320-coredump_tracepoint-4de4399ce1b6
Best regards,
--
Breno Leitao <leitao@debian.org>
^ permalink raw reply related
* Re: [PATCH v11 4/5] ring-buffer: Skip invalid sub-buffers when rewinding persistent ring buffer
From: Masami Hiramatsu @ 2026-03-23 11:50 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: kernel test robot
Cc: Steven Rostedt, llvm, oe-kbuild-all, Mathieu Desnoyers,
linux-kernel, linux-trace-kernel, Ian Rogers
In-Reply-To: <202603230725.uMAZiKJx-lkp@intel.com>
On Mon, 23 Mar 2026 07:18:07 +0800
kernel test robot <lkp@intel.com> wrote:
> Hi Masami,
>
> kernel test robot noticed the following build errors:
>
> [auto build test ERROR on trace/for-next]
> [also build test ERROR on geert-m68k/for-next geert-m68k/for-linus openrisc/for-next deller-parisc/for-next powerpc/next powerpc/fixes s390/features uml/next tip/x86/core uml/fixes v7.0-rc4 next-20260320]
> [cannot apply to linus/master]
> [If your patch is applied to the wrong git tree, kindly drop us a note.
> And when submitting patch, we suggest to use '--base' as documented in
> https://git-scm.com/docs/git-format-patch#_base_tree_information]
>
> url: https://github.com/intel-lab-lkp/linux/commits/Masami-Hiramatsu-Google/ring-buffer-Fix-to-update-per-subbuf-entries-of-persistent-ring-buffer/20260322-122412
> base: https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/trace/linux-trace for-next
> patch link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/177391156211.193994.7531495945584650297.stgit%40mhiramat.tok.corp.google.com
> patch subject: [PATCH v11 4/5] ring-buffer: Skip invalid sub-buffers when rewinding persistent ring buffer
> config: x86_64-kexec (https://download.01.org/0day-ci/archive/20260323/202603230725.uMAZiKJx-lkp@intel.com/config)
> compiler: clang version 20.1.8 (https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project 87f0227cb60147a26a1eeb4fb06e3b505e9c7261)
> reproduce (this is a W=1 build): (https://download.01.org/0day-ci/archive/20260323/202603230725.uMAZiKJx-lkp@intel.com/reproduce)
>
> If you fix the issue in a separate patch/commit (i.e. not just a new version of
> the same patch/commit), kindly add following tags
> | Reported-by: kernel test robot <lkp@intel.com>
> | Closes: https://lore.kernel.org/oe-kbuild-all/202603230725.uMAZiKJx-lkp@intel.com/
>
> All errors (new ones prefixed by >>):
>
> >> kernel/trace/ring_buffer.c:1965:15: error: use of undeclared identifier 'bpage'
> 1965 | local_set(&bpage->entries, 0);
> | ^
> kernel/trace/ring_buffer.c:1966:15: error: use of undeclared identifier 'bpage'
> 1966 | local_set(&bpage->page->commit, 0);
> | ^
> 2 errors generated.
>
>
> vim +/bpage +1965 kernel/trace/ring_buffer.c
>
> 1910
> 1911 /* If the meta data has been validated, now validate the events */
> 1912 static void rb_meta_validate_events(struct ring_buffer_per_cpu *cpu_buffer)
> 1913 {
> 1914 struct ring_buffer_cpu_meta *meta = cpu_buffer->ring_meta;
> 1915 struct buffer_page *head_page, *orig_head;
> 1916 unsigned long entry_bytes = 0;
> 1917 unsigned long entries = 0;
> 1918 int discarded = 0;
> 1919 int ret;
> 1920 u64 ts;
> 1921 int i;
> 1922
> 1923 if (!meta || !meta->head_buffer)
> 1924 return;
> 1925
> 1926 orig_head = head_page = cpu_buffer->head_page;
> 1927
> 1928 /* Do the reader page first */
> 1929 ret = rb_validate_buffer(cpu_buffer->reader_page, cpu_buffer->cpu, meta);
> 1930 if (ret < 0) {
> 1931 pr_info("Ring buffer meta [%d] invalid reader page detected\n",
> 1932 cpu_buffer->cpu);
> 1933 discarded++;
> 1934 } else {
> 1935 entries += ret;
> 1936 entry_bytes += rb_page_size(cpu_buffer->reader_page);
> 1937 }
> 1938
> 1939 ts = head_page->page->time_stamp;
> 1940
> 1941 /*
> 1942 * Try to rewind the head so that we can read the pages which already
> 1943 * read in the previous boot.
> 1944 */
> 1945 if (head_page == cpu_buffer->tail_page)
> 1946 goto skip_rewind;
> 1947
> 1948 rb_dec_page(&head_page);
> 1949 for (i = 0; i < meta->nr_subbufs + 1; i++, rb_dec_page(&head_page)) {
> 1950
> 1951 /* Rewind until tail (writer) page. */
> 1952 if (head_page == cpu_buffer->tail_page)
> 1953 break;
> 1954
> 1955 /* Rewind until unused page (no timestamp, no commit). */
> 1956 if (!head_page->page->time_stamp && rb_page_commit(head_page) == 0)
> 1957 break;
> 1958
> 1959 /*
> 1960 * Skip if the page is invalid, or its timestamp is newer than the
> 1961 * previous valid page.
> 1962 */
> 1963 ret = rb_validate_buffer(head_page, cpu_buffer->cpu, meta);
> 1964 if (ret >= 0 && ts < head_page->page->time_stamp) {
> > 1965 local_set(&bpage->entries, 0);
> 1966 local_set(&bpage->page->commit, 0);
Ooops, sorry, I made a copy & paste mistake. this should be head_page->entries and head_page->page_commit.
Let me send v12 on the latest tracing/fixes.
Thanks,
> 1967 head_page->page->time_stamp = ts;
> 1968 ret = -1;
> 1969 }
> 1970 if (ret < 0) {
> 1971 if (!discarded)
> 1972 pr_info("Ring buffer meta [%d] invalid buffer page detected\n",
> 1973 cpu_buffer->cpu);
> 1974 discarded++;
> 1975 } else {
> 1976 entries += ret;
> 1977 entry_bytes += rb_page_size(head_page);
> 1978 if (ret > 0)
> 1979 local_inc(&cpu_buffer->pages_touched);
> 1980 ts = head_page->page->time_stamp;
> 1981 }
> 1982 }
> 1983 if (i)
> 1984 pr_info("Ring buffer [%d] rewound %d pages\n", cpu_buffer->cpu, i);
> 1985
> 1986 /* The last rewound page must be skipped. */
> 1987 if (head_page != orig_head)
> 1988 rb_inc_page(&head_page);
> 1989
> 1990 /*
> 1991 * If the ring buffer was rewound, then inject the reader page
> 1992 * into the location just before the original head page.
> 1993 */
> 1994 if (head_page != orig_head) {
> 1995 struct buffer_page *bpage = orig_head;
> 1996
> 1997 rb_dec_page(&bpage);
> 1998 /*
> 1999 * Insert the reader_page before the original head page.
> 2000 * Since the list encode RB_PAGE flags, general list
> 2001 * operations should be avoided.
> 2002 */
> 2003 cpu_buffer->reader_page->list.next = &orig_head->list;
> 2004 cpu_buffer->reader_page->list.prev = orig_head->list.prev;
> 2005 orig_head->list.prev = &cpu_buffer->reader_page->list;
> 2006 bpage->list.next = &cpu_buffer->reader_page->list;
> 2007
> 2008 /* Make the head_page the reader page */
> 2009 cpu_buffer->reader_page = head_page;
> 2010 bpage = head_page;
> 2011 rb_inc_page(&head_page);
> 2012 head_page->list.prev = bpage->list.prev;
> 2013 rb_dec_page(&bpage);
> 2014 bpage->list.next = &head_page->list;
> 2015 rb_set_list_to_head(&bpage->list);
> 2016 cpu_buffer->pages = &head_page->list;
> 2017
> 2018 cpu_buffer->head_page = head_page;
> 2019 meta->head_buffer = (unsigned long)head_page->page;
> 2020
> 2021 /* Reset all the indexes */
> 2022 bpage = cpu_buffer->reader_page;
> 2023 meta->buffers[0] = rb_meta_subbuf_idx(meta, bpage->page);
> 2024 bpage->id = 0;
> 2025
> 2026 for (i = 1, bpage = head_page; i < meta->nr_subbufs;
> 2027 i++, rb_inc_page(&bpage)) {
> 2028 meta->buffers[i] = rb_meta_subbuf_idx(meta, bpage->page);
> 2029 bpage->id = i;
> 2030 }
> 2031
> 2032 /* We'll restart verifying from orig_head */
> 2033 head_page = orig_head;
> 2034 }
> 2035
> 2036 skip_rewind:
> 2037 /* If the commit_buffer is the reader page, update the commit page */
> 2038 if (meta->commit_buffer == (unsigned long)cpu_buffer->reader_page->page) {
> 2039 cpu_buffer->commit_page = cpu_buffer->reader_page;
> 2040 /* Nothing more to do, the only page is the reader page */
> 2041 goto done;
> 2042 }
> 2043
> 2044 /* Iterate until finding the commit page */
> 2045 for (i = 0; i < meta->nr_subbufs + 1; i++, rb_inc_page(&head_page)) {
> 2046
> 2047 /* Reader page has already been done */
> 2048 if (head_page == cpu_buffer->reader_page)
> 2049 continue;
> 2050
> 2051 ret = rb_validate_buffer(head_page, cpu_buffer->cpu, meta);
> 2052 if (ret < 0) {
> 2053 if (!discarded)
> 2054 pr_info("Ring buffer meta [%d] invalid buffer page detected\n",
> 2055 cpu_buffer->cpu);
> 2056 discarded++;
> 2057 } else {
> 2058 /* If the buffer has content, update pages_touched */
> 2059 if (ret)
> 2060 local_inc(&cpu_buffer->pages_touched);
> 2061
> 2062 entries += ret;
> 2063 entry_bytes += rb_page_size(head_page);
> 2064 }
> 2065 if (head_page == cpu_buffer->commit_page)
> 2066 break;
> 2067 }
> 2068
> 2069 if (head_page != cpu_buffer->commit_page) {
> 2070 pr_info("Ring buffer meta [%d] commit page not found\n",
> 2071 cpu_buffer->cpu);
> 2072 goto invalid;
> 2073 }
> 2074 done:
> 2075 local_set(&cpu_buffer->entries, entries);
> 2076 local_set(&cpu_buffer->entries_bytes, entry_bytes);
> 2077
> 2078 pr_info("Ring buffer meta [%d] is from previous boot! (%d pages discarded)\n",
> 2079 cpu_buffer->cpu, discarded);
> 2080 return;
> 2081
> 2082 invalid:
> 2083 /* The content of the buffers are invalid, reset the meta data */
> 2084 meta->head_buffer = 0;
> 2085 meta->commit_buffer = 0;
> 2086
> 2087 /* Reset the reader page */
> 2088 local_set(&cpu_buffer->reader_page->entries, 0);
> 2089 local_set(&cpu_buffer->reader_page->page->commit, 0);
> 2090
> 2091 /* Reset all the subbuffers */
> 2092 for (i = 0; i < meta->nr_subbufs - 1; i++, rb_inc_page(&head_page)) {
> 2093 local_set(&head_page->entries, 0);
> 2094 rb_init_page(head_page->page);
> 2095 }
> 2096 }
> 2097
>
> --
> 0-DAY CI Kernel Test Service
> https://github.com/intel/lkp-tests/wiki
>
--
Masami Hiramatsu (Google) <mhiramat@kernel.org>
^ permalink raw reply
* Re: [PATCH] tracing: fprobe: fix the length of unused fgraph_data
From: Masami Hiramatsu @ 2026-03-23 12:06 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Martin Kaiser
Cc: Steven Rostedt, Mathieu Desnoyers, linux-trace-kernel,
linux-kernel, stable
In-Reply-To: <20260323102020.239567-1-martin@kaiser.cx>
On Mon, 23 Mar 2026 11:19:36 +0100
Martin Kaiser <martin@kaiser.cx> wrote:
> If fprobe_entry does not fill the allocated fgraph_data completely, the
> unused part is zeroed with memset.
>
> Fix the length for this memset call. Both reserved_words and used are in
> units of return stack words, but memset needs the number of bytes.
>
> Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
> Fixes: 4346ba160409 ("fprobe: Rewrite fprobe on function-graph tracer")
> Signed-off-by: Martin Kaiser <martin@kaiser.cx>
Good catch!
Thanks,
> ---
> kernel/trace/fprobe.c | 2 +-
> 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)
>
> diff --git a/kernel/trace/fprobe.c b/kernel/trace/fprobe.c
> index dcadf1d23b8a..6a1192515afd 100644
> --- a/kernel/trace/fprobe.c
> +++ b/kernel/trace/fprobe.c
> @@ -451,7 +451,7 @@ static int fprobe_fgraph_entry(struct ftrace_graph_ent *trace, struct fgraph_ops
> }
> }
> if (used < reserved_words)
> - memset(fgraph_data + used, 0, reserved_words - used);
> + memset(fgraph_data + used, 0, (reserved_words - used) * sizeof(long));
>
> /* If any exit_handler is set, data must be used. */
> return used != 0;
> --
> 2.43.7
>
--
Masami Hiramatsu (Google) <mhiramat@kernel.org>
^ permalink raw reply
* Re: [PATCH v2] coredump: add tracepoint for coredump events
From: Christian Brauner @ 2026-03-23 12:16 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Breno Leitao
Cc: Christian Brauner, Alexander Viro, Jan Kara, Steven Rostedt,
Masami Hiramatsu, Mathieu Desnoyers, linux-kernel, linux-fsdevel,
linux-trace-kernel, bpf, kernel-team, song, Andrii Nakryiko
In-Reply-To: <20260323-coredump_tracepoint-v2-1-afced083b38d@debian.org>
On Mon, 23 Mar 2026 04:46:27 -0700, Breno Leitao wrote:
> Coredump is a generally useful and interesting event in the lifetime
> of a process. Add a tracepoint so it can be monitored through the
> standard kernel tracing infrastructure.
>
> BPF-based crash monitoring is an advanced approach that
> allows real-time crash interception: by attaching a BPF program at
> this point, tools can use bpf_get_stack() with BPF_F_USER_STACK to
> capture the user-space stack trace at the exact moment of the crash,
> before the process is fully terminated, without waiting for a
> coredump file to be written and parsed.
>
> [...]
Applied to the vfs-7.1.misc branch of the vfs/vfs.git tree.
Patches in the vfs-7.1.misc branch should appear in linux-next soon.
Please report any outstanding bugs that were missed during review in a
new review to the original patch series allowing us to drop it.
It's encouraged to provide Acked-bys and Reviewed-bys even though the
patch has now been applied. If possible patch trailers will be updated.
Note that commit hashes shown below are subject to change due to rebase,
trailer updates or similar. If in doubt, please check the listed branch.
tree: https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/vfs/vfs.git
branch: vfs-7.1.misc
[1/1] coredump: add tracepoint for coredump events
https://git.kernel.org/vfs/vfs/c/f30186b0c782
^ permalink raw reply
* [PATCH v11 0/4] ring-buffer: Making persistent ring buffers robust
From: Masami Hiramatsu (Google) @ 2026-03-23 12:30 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Steven Rostedt
Cc: Masami Hiramatsu, Mathieu Desnoyers, linux-kernel,
linux-trace-kernel, Ian Rogers
Hi,
Here is the 12th version of improvement patches for making persistent
ring buffers robust to failures.
The previous version is here:
https://lore.kernel.org/all/177391152793.193994.8986943289250629418.stgit@mhiramat.tok.corp.google.com/
In this version, I rebased it on tracing/fixes branch (thus
the first fix patch has been removed) and fixed
a build error which came from a copy-paste mistake.
Thank you,
---
Masami Hiramatsu (Google) (4):
ring-buffer: Flush and stop persistent ring buffer on panic
ring-buffer: Skip invalid sub-buffers when validating persistent ring buffer
ring-buffer: Skip invalid sub-buffers when rewinding persistent ring buffer
ring-buffer: Add persistent ring buffer selftest
arch/alpha/include/asm/Kbuild | 1
arch/arc/include/asm/Kbuild | 1
arch/arm/include/asm/Kbuild | 1
arch/arm64/include/asm/ring_buffer.h | 10 +
arch/csky/include/asm/Kbuild | 1
arch/hexagon/include/asm/Kbuild | 1
arch/loongarch/include/asm/Kbuild | 1
arch/m68k/include/asm/Kbuild | 1
arch/microblaze/include/asm/Kbuild | 1
arch/mips/include/asm/Kbuild | 1
arch/nios2/include/asm/Kbuild | 1
arch/openrisc/include/asm/Kbuild | 1
arch/parisc/include/asm/Kbuild | 1
arch/powerpc/include/asm/Kbuild | 1
arch/riscv/include/asm/Kbuild | 1
arch/s390/include/asm/Kbuild | 1
arch/sh/include/asm/Kbuild | 1
arch/sparc/include/asm/Kbuild | 1
arch/um/include/asm/Kbuild | 1
arch/x86/include/asm/Kbuild | 1
arch/xtensa/include/asm/Kbuild | 1
include/asm-generic/ring_buffer.h | 13 ++
include/linux/ring_buffer.h | 1
kernel/trace/Kconfig | 15 ++
kernel/trace/ring_buffer.c | 237 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++--------
kernel/trace/trace.c | 4 +
26 files changed, 241 insertions(+), 59 deletions(-)
create mode 100644 arch/arm64/include/asm/ring_buffer.h
create mode 100644 include/asm-generic/ring_buffer.h
--
Masami Hiramatsu (Google) <mhiramat@kernel.org>
^ permalink raw reply
page: next (older) | prev (newer) | latest
- recent:[subjects (threaded)|topics (new)|topics (active)]
This is a public inbox, see mirroring instructions
for how to clone and mirror all data and code used for this inbox