Re: S4 resume broken since 2.6.39 (3.1, too)

From: Yinghai Lu
Date: Mon Sep 26 2011 - 22:36:35 EST


On 09/26/2011 03:24 PM, Rafael J. Wysocki wrote:

> On Thursday, September 22, 2011, Yinghai Lu wrote:
>> On Wed, Sep 21, 2011 at 11:48 AM, Rafael J. Wysocki <rjw@xxxxxxx> wrote:
>>> It looks like init_memory_mapping() is sometimes called with "end"
>>> beyond the last mapped PFN and it explodes when we try to write stuff to
>>> that address during image restoration.
>>>
>>> IOW, the Yinghai's assumption that init_memory_mapping() would always be
>>> called with a "good end" on x86_64 was overomptimistic.
>>
>> for 64bit x86, kernel_physical_mapping_init() will use
>> map_low_page()/call early_memmap() to access ram for page_table that is above
>> rather last mapped PFN.
>>
>> the point is:
>> on system with 64g, usable ram will be [0,2048m), [4g, 64g)
>> init_memory_mapping will be called two times for them.
>> before putting page_table high,
>> page table will be two parts: one is just below 512M, and one below 2048m.
>> after putting page_table high,
>> page table will be two parts: one is just below 2048M, and one below 64G.
>>
>> one of the purposes is finding biggest continuous big range under
>> 1024m for kdump.
>
> This is all fine so long as we can ensure that the "end" value we're
> passing to init_memory_mapping() will always be a valid address, which
> evidently is not the case sometimes.


I don't understand why end is not valid could happen.

end should be always valid address. one is max_low_pfn under 4g, and another one is max_pfn...


>
> So, in my opinion we should simply apply the Takashi's patch at this
> point and revisit the kdump issue later, when we actually know how to do
> the right thing.


Takashi said: 2.6.37 with that commit is ok, only 2.6.39 somehow has the 1/20 chance has the reset problem.

so that commit should not the cause. could be some hidden assumption from restore code ?

Yinghai
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/