diff mbox

hw/arm/boot: Increase fdt alignment

Message ID 1436806255-175781-1-git-send-email-agraf@suse.de
State New
Headers show

Commit Message

Alexander Graf July 13, 2015, 4:50 p.m. UTC
The Linux kernel on aarch64 creates a page table entry at early bootup
that spans the 2MB range on memory spanning the fdt start address:

  [ ALIGN_DOWN(fdt, 2MB) ... ALIGN_DOWN(fdt, 2MB) + 2MB ]

This means that when our current 4k alignment happens to fall at the end
of the aligned region, Linux tries to access memory that is not mapped.

The easy fix is to instead increase the alignment to 2MB, making Linux's
logic always succeed.

We leave the existing 4k alignment for 32bit kernels to not cause any
regressions due to space constraints.

Reported-by: Andreas Schwab <schwab@suse.de>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Graf <agraf@suse.de>

--

v1 -> v2:

  - Restrict new alignment to AArch64 guests
---
 hw/arm/boot.c | 28 ++++++++++++++++++++++------
 1 file changed, 22 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-)

Comments

Peter Maydell July 14, 2015, 10:30 a.m. UTC | #1
On 13 July 2015 at 17:50, Alexander Graf <agraf@suse.de> wrote:
> The Linux kernel on aarch64 creates a page table entry at early bootup
> that spans the 2MB range on memory spanning the fdt start address:
>
>   [ ALIGN_DOWN(fdt, 2MB) ... ALIGN_DOWN(fdt, 2MB) + 2MB ]
>
> This means that when our current 4k alignment happens to fall at the end
> of the aligned region, Linux tries to access memory that is not mapped.
>
> The easy fix is to instead increase the alignment to 2MB, making Linux's
> logic always succeed.
>
> We leave the existing 4k alignment for 32bit kernels to not cause any
> regressions due to space constraints.
>
> Reported-by: Andreas Schwab <schwab@suse.de>
> Signed-off-by: Alexander Graf <agraf@suse.de>



Applied to target-arm.next, thanks.

-- PMM
Peter Maydell July 15, 2015, 4:45 p.m. UTC | #2
On 13 July 2015 at 17:50, Alexander Graf <agraf@suse.de> wrote:
> The Linux kernel on aarch64 creates a page table entry at early bootup
> that spans the 2MB range on memory spanning the fdt start address:
>
>   [ ALIGN_DOWN(fdt, 2MB) ... ALIGN_DOWN(fdt, 2MB) + 2MB ]
>
> This means that when our current 4k alignment happens to fall at the end
> of the aligned region, Linux tries to access memory that is not mapped.
>
> The easy fix is to instead increase the alignment to 2MB, making Linux's
> logic always succeed.
>
> We leave the existing 4k alignment for 32bit kernels to not cause any
> regressions due to space constraints.

...did you report the kernel bug?

thanks
-- PMM
diff mbox

Patch

diff --git a/hw/arm/boot.c b/hw/arm/boot.c
index f48ed2d..5b969cd 100644
--- a/hw/arm/boot.c
+++ b/hw/arm/boot.c
@@ -735,12 +735,28 @@  static void arm_load_kernel_notify(Notifier *notifier, void *data)
          * we point to the kernel args.
          */
         if (have_dtb(info)) {
-            /* Place the DTB after the initrd in memory. Note that some
-             * kernels will trash anything in the 4K page the initrd
-             * ends in, so make sure the DTB isn't caught up in that.
-             */
-            hwaddr dtb_start = QEMU_ALIGN_UP(info->initrd_start + initrd_size,
-                                             4096);
+            hwaddr align;
+            hwaddr dtb_start;
+
+            if (elf_machine == EM_AARCH64) {
+                /*
+                 * Some AArch64 kernels on early bootup map the fdt region as
+                 *
+                 *   [ ALIGN_DOWN(fdt, 2MB) ... ALIGN_DOWN(fdt, 2MB) + 2MB ]
+                 *
+                 * Let's play safe and prealign it to 2MB to give us some space.
+                 */
+                align = 2 * 1024 * 1024;
+            } else {
+                /*
+                 * Some 32bit kernels will trash anything in the 4K page the
+                 * initrd ends in, so make sure the DTB isn't caught up in that.
+                 */
+                align = 4096;
+            }
+
+            /* Place the DTB after the initrd in memory with alignment. */
+            dtb_start = QEMU_ALIGN_UP(info->initrd_start + initrd_size, align);
             if (load_dtb(dtb_start, info, 0) < 0) {
                 exit(1);
             }