Thread (10 messages) 10 messages, 4 authors, 2021-11-30

Re: [PATCH 0/2] of: remove reserved regions count restriction

From: Mike Rapoport <rppt@kernel.org>
Date: 2021-11-30 21:08:26
Also in: linux-mips, linux-riscv, linux-sh, linuxppc-dev, lkml

On Mon, Nov 29, 2021 at 06:08:10PM -0600, Rob Herring wrote:
On Sun, Nov 21, 2021 at 08:43:47AM +0200, Mike Rapoport wrote:
quoted
On Fri, Nov 19, 2021 at 03:58:17PM +0800, Calvin Zhang wrote:
quoted
The count of reserved regions in /reserved-memory was limited because
the struct reserved_mem array was defined statically. This series sorts
out reserved memory code and allocates that array from early allocator.

Note: reserved region with fixed location must be reserved before any
memory allocation. While struct reserved_mem array should be allocated
after allocator is activated. We make early_init_fdt_scan_reserved_mem()
do reservation only and add another call to initialize reserved memory.
So arch code have to change for it.
I think much simpler would be to use the same constant for sizing
memblock.reserved and reserved_mem arrays.
Do those arrays get shrunk? Or do we waste the memory forever?
Memblock arrays don't get shrunk, but they are __init unless an architecture
chose to keep them after boot, but most architectures that use device tree
actually keep memblock structures.
 
Maybe we can copy and shrink the initial array? Though I suspect struct 
reserved_mem pointers have already been given out.
I'm not sure. It seems that reserved_mem pointers are given out at initcall
time and AFAIU the reserved_mem array is created somewhere around
setup_arch(). So maybe it's possible to copy and shrink the initial array.
 
quoted
If there is too much reserved regions in the device tree, reserving them in
memblock will fail anyway because memblock also starts with static array
for memblock.reserved, so doing one pass with memblock_reserve() and
another to set up reserved_mem wouldn't help anyway.
quoted
I'm only familiar with arm and arm64 architectures. Approvals from arch
maintainers are required. Thank you all.
-- 
Sincerely yours,
Mike.
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