Re: [PATCH] scripts/kallsyms: filter symbols not in kernel address space

From: Arnd Bergmann
Date: Tue Jan 07 2014 - 09:13:22 EST


On Monday 28 October 2013, Ming Lei wrote:
> This patch uses CONFIG_PAGE_OFFSET to filter symbols which
> are not in kernel address space because these symbols are
> generally for generating code purpose and can't be run at
> kernel mode, so we needn't keep them in /proc/kallsyms.
>
> For example, on ARM there are some symbols which are
> linked in relocatable code section, then perf can't parse
> symbols any more from /proc/kallsyms, and this patch fixes
> the problem.
>
> Cc: Russell King <linux@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> Cc: linux-arm-kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Cc: Michal Marek <mmarek@xxxxxxx>
> Acked-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> Signed-off-by: Ming Lei <tom.leiming@xxxxxxxxx>

Sorry for the late report, but I seem to have encountered a problem with this
patch, now that it has made it into all stable kernels.

When linking an ARM nommu kernel, I get the output "No valid symbol." twice,
from scripts/kallsyms. The problem evidently is that PAGE_OFFSET is still
set to 0xC0000000 on ARM NOMMU builds but the kernel is linked to start at
PLAT_PHYS_OFFSET instead, which may be elsehwere. For most platforms,
this is defined in Kconfig these days, so we could get away with

diff --git a/arch/arm/Kconfig b/arch/arm/Kconfig
index d1e4098..c477a7c 100644
--- a/arch/arm/Kconfig
+++ b/arch/arm/Kconfig
@@ -1592,6 +1592,7 @@ endchoice

config PAGE_OFFSET
hex
+ default PHYS_OFFSET if !MMU
default 0x40000000 if VMSPLIT_1G
default 0x80000000 if VMSPLIT_2G
default 0xC0000000

but there are still a few ARM platforms that define their own PLAT_PHYS_OFFSET
in memory.h, and it wouldn't help on non-ARM systems that might have the same
problem.

Arnd
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