Re: linux-next: Tree for Sep 1

From: Marc Zyngier
Date: Wed Sep 10 2014 - 14:11:21 EST


Hi Russell,

On 10/09/14 18:41, Russell King - ARM Linux wrote:
> On Fri, Sep 05, 2014 at 03:27:51PM -0400, Nicolas Pitre wrote:
>> On Tue, 2 Sep 2014, Christoph Lameter wrote:
>>
>>> On Tue, 2 Sep 2014, Christoph Lameter wrote:
>>>
>>>> Oww.. This is double indirection deal there. A percpu offset pointing to
>>>> a pointer?
>>>>
>>>> Generally the following is true (definition from
>>>> include/asm-generic/percpu.h that is used for ARM for raw_cpu_read):
>>>>
>>>> #define raw_cpu_read_4(pcp) (*raw_cpu_ptr(&(pcp)))
>>>
>>> I think what the issue is that we dropped the fetch of the percpu offset
>>> in the patch. Instead we are using the address of the variable that
>>> contains the offset. Does this patch fix it?
>>>
>>>
>>> Subject: irqchip: Properly fetch the per cpu offset
>>>
>>> The raw_cpu_read() conversion dropped the fetch of the offset
>>> from base->percpu_base in gic_get_percpu_base.
>>>
>>> Signed-off-by: Christoph Lameter <cl@xxxxxxxxx>
>>>
>>> Index: linux/drivers/irqchip/irq-gic.c
>>> ===================================================================
>>> --- linux.orig/drivers/irqchip/irq-gic.c
>>> +++ linux/drivers/irqchip/irq-gic.c
>>> @@ -102,7 +102,7 @@ static struct gic_chip_data gic_data[MAX
>>> #ifdef CONFIG_GIC_NON_BANKED
>>> static void __iomem *gic_get_percpu_base(union gic_base *base)
>>> {
>>> - return raw_cpu_read(base->percpu_base);
>>> + return raw_cpu_read(*base->percpu_base);
>>
>> Isn't the pointer dereference supposed to be performed _outside_ the per
>> CPU accessor?
>
> I think this is correct.
>
> Let's start from the depths of raw_cpu_read(), where the pointer is
> verified to be the correct type:
>
> #define __verify_pcpu_ptr(ptr) \
> do { \
> const void __percpu *__vpp_verify = (typeof((ptr) + 0))NULL; \
> (void)__vpp_verify; \
> } while (0)
>
> So, "ptr" should be of type "const void __percpu *" (note the __percpu
> annotation there, which makes it sparse-checkable.)
>
> The next level up is this:
>
> #define __pcpu_size_call_return(stem, variable) \
> ({ \
> typeof(variable) pscr_ret__; \
> __verify_pcpu_ptr(&(variable)); \
>
> So, we pass the address of the variable to the verification function.
> That makes it a void-typed variable - "const void __percpu".
>
> #define raw_cpu_read(pcp) __pcpu_size_call_return(raw_cpu_read_, pcp)
>
> So this also makes "pcp" a "const void __percpu".
>
> Now, what type is base->percpu_base?
>
> void __percpu * __iomem *percpu_base;
>
> The thing we want to be per-cpu is a "void __iomem *" pointer. However,
> we have a pointer to the per-cpu instance. That's the "void __percpu *"
> bit.
>
> So, for this to match the requirements for raw_cpu_read(), we need to
> do one dereference to end up with "void __percpu".
>
> Hence, to me, the patch looks correct.
>
> Whether it works or not is a /completely/ different matter. As has been
> pointed out, the only place this code gets used is on a very small number
> of platforms, which I don't have, and that gives me zero way to test it.
> If it's Exynos which is affected by this, we need to call on Samsung to
> test this patch.
>
> Now, this code was introduced by Marc Zyngier in order to support Exynos,
> probably the result of another patch on the mailing list from Samsung.
> (I've added Marc and another Samsung guy to the Cc list.) Whatever,
> *someone* needs to verify this but it needs to be done with the affected
> hardware. Whether Marc can, or whether it has to be someone from Samsung,
> I don't care which.

Thanks for looping me in. I indeed introduced this as an alternative to
an utterly broken patch that was submitted at the time.

As far as I can tell, and by reading your analysis, this patch looks
perfectly sensible.

Now, I have long given up on trying to run *anything* on a Samsung
platform other than my Chromebook - the various maintainers don't seem
to care at all. I may be able to revive an Origen board though (I think
I have one collecting the proverbial dust in a cupboard), assuming I can
locate a bootloader for it.

> /Or/ we deem the code unmaintained, broken, and untestable, and we start
> considering ripping it out of the mainline kernel on the basis that no
> one cares about it anymore.

That's an alternative. I personally wouldn't shed a tear.

Thanks,

M.
--
Jazz is not dead. It just smells funny...

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