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[34.76.240.140]) by smtp.gmail.com with ESMTPSA id 5b1f17b1804b1-493be4c9f78sm3528615e9.5.2026.06.30.08.33.15 (version=TLS1_3 cipher=TLS_AES_256_GCM_SHA384 bits=256/256); Tue, 30 Jun 2026 08:33:16 -0700 (PDT) Date: Tue, 30 Jun 2026 15:33:12 +0000 From: Mostafa Saleh To: Pranjal Shrivastava Cc: Nicolin Chen , will@kernel.org, robin.murphy@arm.com, jgg@nvidia.com, joro@8bytes.org, kees@kernel.org, baolu.lu@linux.intel.com, kevin.tian@intel.com, miko.lenczewski@arm.com, linux-arm-kernel@lists.infradead.org, iommu@lists.linux.dev, linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org, stable@vger.kernel.org, jamien@nvidia.com Subject: Re: [PATCH rc v7 0/7] iommu/arm-smmu-v3: Fix device crash on kdump kernel Message-ID: References: Precedence: bulk X-Mailing-List: linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org List-Id: List-Subscribe: List-Unsubscribe: MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Disposition: inline In-Reply-To: On Tue, Jun 30, 2026 at 02:51:40PM +0000, Pranjal Shrivastava wrote: > On Tue, Jun 30, 2026 at 01:17:30PM +0000, Mostafa Saleh wrote: > > On Mon, Jun 29, 2026 at 11:15:33PM -0700, Nicolin Chen wrote: > > > When transitioning to a kdump kernel, the primary kernel might have crashed > > > while endpoint devices were actively bus-mastering DMA. Currently, the SMMU > > > driver aggressively resets the hardware during probe by clearing CR0_SMMUEN > > > and setting the Global Bypass Attribute (GBPA) to ABORT. > > > > > > In a kdump scenario, this aggressive reset is highly destructive: > > > a) If GBPA is set to ABORT, in-flight DMA will be aborted, generating fatal > > > PCIe AER or SErrors that may panic the kdump kernel > > > > Can you please clarify more on those errors, what conditions will > > trigger that? > > For example, patch 4 disables the EVTQ to avoid events as there might > > be a lot, why are they not fatal also? > > > > > b) If GBPA is set to BYPASS, in-flight DMA targeting some IOVAs will bypass > > > the SMMU and corrupt the physical memory at those 1:1 mapped IOVAs. > > > > > > To safely absorb in-flight DMA, the kdump kernel must leave SMMUEN=1 intact > > > and avoid modifying STRTAB_BASE. This allows HW to continue translating in- > > > flight DMA using the crashed kernel's page tables until the endpoint device > > > drivers probe and quiesce their respective hardware. > > > > > > However, the ARM SMMUv3 architecture specification states that updating the > > > SMMU_STRTAB_BASE register while SMMUEN == 1 is UNPREDICTABLE or ignored. > > > > > > This leaves a kdump kernel no choice but to adopt the stream table from the > > > crashed kernel. > > > > In many cases the patches assume that the CDs/STE might be corrupted, > > but still attempt to retrieve them with some validation > > (log2size/split...) > > However, the base address might be broken, TLBs state is unknown... > > > > IMO, although that might improve the status quo, there are still > > heuristics, in addition to noticeable complexity to transition the > > stream tables. I wonder if FW can deal with AER in that case before > > booting the kdump kernel. > > I guess we're reading the base address from the HW register itself so > that should be fine? CDs are in-memory so that's why they could be > corrupted? For example patch#1 verifies log2size and split and both are read from HW registers. Same for the base address or other addresses as the page tables, they might be corrupted due to a buggy driver. My point is that, it is really hard to assume that the previous state of registers/STE/page-tables were valid or even consistent, when the kernel crashed and did not transition the state gracefully. > > About the TLB state, I'm not sure what might pollute it, since this is a > kexec, I don't expect any non-kernel entity to gain program control > before the kdump kernel.. Hence, IMO, we can't configure FW to deal with > AER here.. Similarly for TLBs, the kernel might have panicked in the middle of an unmap or free domain. (not to mention what that means for RPM where a device reset with unknown TLBs) Why can't the FW deal with it? As I mentioned above in the previous reply I am not sure I understand what situation leads into this, when does a device trigger SError to the system vs when not which is observed as an event in that case. Thanks, Mostafa > > Thanks, > Praan