Thread (30 messages) 30 messages, 6 authors, 2016-06-20
STALE3645d

[PATCH v2 1/2] efi: esrt: use memremap not ioremap to access ESRT table in memory

From: Ard Biesheuvel <hidden>
Date: 2016-02-18 14:21:25
Also in: linux-efi

On 18 February 2016 at 15:15, Matt Fleming [off-list ref] wrote:
On Thu, 18 Feb, at 02:44:02PM, Ard Biesheuvel wrote:
quoted
On 18 February 2016 at 14:43, Matt Fleming [off-list ref] wrote:
quoted
On Thu, 18 Feb, at 02:29:32PM, Ard Biesheuvel wrote:
quoted
On 18 February 2016 at 14:28, Matt Fleming [off-list ref] wrote:
quoted
On Thu, 18 Feb, at 01:16:05PM, Ard Biesheuvel wrote:
quoted
On 18 February 2016 at 11:44, Matt Fleming [off-list ref] wrote:
quoted
On Mon, 15 Feb, at 12:32:32PM, Ard Biesheuvel wrote:
quoted
On ARM and arm64, ioremap() and memremap() are not interchangeable like
on x86, and the use of ioremap() on ordinary RAM is typically flagged
as an error if the memory region being mapped is also covered by the
linear mapping, since that would lead to aliases with conflicting
cacheability attributes.

Since what we are dealing with is not an I/O region with side effects,
using ioremap() here is arguably incorrect anyway, so let's replace
it with memremap instead. Also add a missing unmap on the success path,
and drop a memblock_remove() call which does not belong here, this far
into the boot sequence.

Cc: Peter Jones <pjones@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Ard Biesheuvel <redacted>
---
 drivers/firmware/efi/esrt.c | 16 ++++++++--------
 1 file changed, 8 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-)
[...]
quoted
@@ -432,8 +434,6 @@ static int __init esrt_sysfs_init(void)
      if (error)
              goto err_cleanup_list;

-     memblock_remove(esrt_data, esrt_data_size);
-
      pr_debug("esrt-sysfs: loaded.\n");

      return 0;
Shouldn't we be replacing memblock_remove() with free_bootmem_late()?
The original ESRT region is still reserved at this point, so we should
do our best to release it to the page allocator.
I'd rather we keep it reserved. That way, the config table entry still
points to something valid, which could be useful for kexec(), I think?
At least, that is how I intended to handle config tables on ARM ...
If we're going to reserve it why do we need to copy the data out at
all in esrt_sysfs_init()?
Excellent question. I don't think there is any point to doing that.
... Unless the data is contained in an EFI Boot Services region ;-)

Peter?
Yes, it usually is. Is that a problem?
Yes, we free the Boot Services regions before hitting userspace on
x86, see efi_free_boot_services(). We do this map/copy/unmap trick in
the ACPI BGRT driver for that reason.

The Boot Services regions can be many gigabytes in size, which makes
leaving them alone impractical.

For kexec on x86 we simply discard the BGRT table, which isn't the end
of the world because who really needs access to the BGRT image on
kexec reboot? However, I can see the value of preserving the ESRT.

I guess we've got two options, 1) copy out the chunks of Boot Services
regions we're interested in and rewrite the EFI tables to point at
these new allocations and free/discard all of the original Boot
Services regions or 2) only selectively free the Boot Services
regions.

I've always stayed clear of 2) in case there exists cross-region
references in the data that isn't obvious. I'd like to think that
would never happen, but, you know, dragons lurk here, etc.

Though actually, now I think about it, cross-region references can't
possibly exist because they'd cause issues with the current code.

So maybe the best solution is actually 2), where we preserve the Boot
Services regions if any of the drivers (ESRT, BGRT) request them but
free all the others?

What are the lifetime rules for Boot Services regions on arm*?
We treat all Boot Services regions like Loader Code/Data or free
regions: it is all recorded in memblock as usable memory, and only the
regions that are explicitly reserved are protected from further
general use.

I am currently looking into the memory attribute table, and the use
case is very similar. It would be very useful from our pov to simply
memblock_reserve() the region right after having called
efi_config_parse_tables(), and actually consume its data when we get
around to it later. The ESRT handling is already split down the middle
in the same way.
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