Re: Re: [3.18+] Can't boot with commit bd809af1 ("x86: Enable PAT to use cache mode translation tables")

From: Jongman Heo
Date: Tue Dec 16 2014 - 21:46:21 EST



Hi,

I'm using VMWare workstation, version 10.0.3 build-1895310, on Windows 7 64-bit.
Guest is Fedora 21.

------- Original Message -------
Sender : Thomas Hellstrom<thellstrom@xxxxxxxxxx>
Date : 2014-12-17 00:12 (GMT+09:00)
Title : Re: [3.18+] Can't boot with commit bd809af1 ("x86: Enable PAT to use cache mode translation tables")

Jongman, what product (player, ws, esx) and version are you using?

Thanks,
Thomas


On 12/16/2014 02:08 PM, Peter Hurley wrote:
> VMware guys probably already know this but just in case
>
> [ +cc Thomas Hellstrom ]
>
> Jongman - you need to fix your mailer to use plaintext and not base64.
>
> On 12/16/2014 01:46 AM, Jongman Heo wrote:
>>> Sender : Juergen Gross
>>> On 12/16/2014 07:29 AM, Jongman Heo wrote:
>>>>> Sender : Juergen Gross
>>>>> On 12/16/2014 05:40 AM, Jongman Heo wrote:
>>>>>>> Sender : Juergen Gross
>>>>>>> On 12/15/2014 08:52 AM, Jongman Heo wrote:
>>>>>>>>> Sender : Juergen Gross
>>>>>>>>> On 12/14/2014 06:07 AM, 허종만 wrote:
>>>>>>>>>> Hi,
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> My Linux virtual machine on (Windows) VMWare workstation 10 can't boot with following commit.
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> commit bd809af16e3ab1f8d55b3e2928c47c67e2a865d2
>>>>>>>>>> Author: Juergen Gross
>>>>>>>>>> Date: Mon Nov 3 14:02:03 2014 +0100
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> x86: Enable PAT to use cache mode translation tables
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> Unfortunately I can't see any console log.
>>>>>>>>> Hmm, weird. Could you provide some more information?
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> Kernel config, hardware used, /proc/cpuinfo of working kernel?
>>>>>>>>> Anything you see with earlyprintk enabled?
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> Juergen
>>>>>>>> (Sorry for resending this email, previous one bounced from mailing list due to HTML format)
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Hi,
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> I'm using Fedora 21, with custom built kernel.
>>>>>>>> Host PC is windows 7 64-bit, and running VMWare workstation 10 for guest Fedora Linux.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> With earlyprintk, just following message is printed.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> early console in setup code
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> and nothing more...
>>>>>>> Can you try attached diagnostic patch, please? I suspect a problem
>>>>>>> regarding VMWares PAT emulation...
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Juergen
>>>>>> Hi,
>>>>>>
>>>>>> With the commit reverted, the patch doesn't apply.
>>>>> Sure.
>>>>>
>>>>>> Without revert, kernel (patch applied) doesn't boot and I can't see any message.
>>>>> What are your kernel parameters? There must be some message with the
>>>>> diagnostic patch, as the first pr_info() is called before any other
>>>>> part of the critical patch is becoming active. Could it be you have
>>>>> instructed the kernel to be "quiet"? I'd recommend:
>>>>>
>>>>> earlyprintk=vga ignore_loglevel
>>>>>
>>>>> and no quiet. I don't know VMWare settings, so may be you can use
>>>>> earlyprintk=ttyS0 instead of vga.
>>>>>
>>>>>> Let me show you my PAT values (the commit reverted)
>>>>>>
>>>>>> # dmesg | grep PAT
>>>>>> [ 0.000000] x86 PAT enabled: cpu 0, old 0x0, new 0x7010600070106
>>>>>> [ 0.314631] x86 PAT enabled: cpu 3, old 0x0, new 0x7010600070106
>>>>>> [ 0.314703] x86 PAT enabled: cpu 1, old 0x0, new 0x7010600070106
>>>>>> [ 0.314780] x86 PAT enabled: cpu 2, old 0x0, new 0x7010600070106
>>>>>> [ 0.314852] x86 PAT enabled: cpu 4, old 0x0, new 0x7010600070106
>>>>>> [ 0.314923] x86 PAT enabled: cpu 0, old 0x0, new 0x7010600070106
>>>>>> [ 0.314997] x86 PAT enabled: cpu 6, old 0x0, new 0x7010600070106
>>>>>> [ 0.315069] x86 PAT enabled: cpu 7, old 0x0, new 0x7010600070106
>>>>>> [ 0.315142] x86 PAT enabled: cpu 5, old 0x0, new 0x7010600070106
>>>>> These are the expected values. But these values are the ones which are
>>>>> written, not the ones which have been read from the PAT MSR again.
>>>>>
>>>>> Without applying the critical patch you could add:
>>>>>
>>>>> rdmsrl(MSR_IA32_CR_PAT, pat);
>>>>> printk(KERN_INFO "PAT read: cpu %d, 0x%Lx\n", smp_processor_id(), pat);
>>>>>
>>>>> at the end of pat_init() to verify VMWare is handling reads of the PAT
>>>>> MSR properly.
>>>>>
>>>>> Juergen
>>>>>
>>>> Hi,
>>>>
>>>> With earlyprintk=vga, I can see the log.
>>>> But due to call trace, I can't see what the pat value is.
>>>>
>>>> Call chain is as follows.
>>>>
>>>> i386_start_kernel -> start_kernel -> setup_arch ->
>>>> mtrr_bp_init -> get_mtrr_state -> pat_init ->
>>>> pat_init_cache_mode_entry -> update_cache_mode_entry ->
>>>> early_idt_handler -> dump_stack
>>>>
>>>> So, I blocked update_cache_mode_entry() call like below...
>>>>
>>>> --- a/arch/x86/mm/pat.c
>>>> +++ b/arch/x86/mm/pat.c
>>>> @@ -182,11 +182,12 @@ void pat_init_cache_modes(void)
>>>> u64 pat;
>>>>
>>>> rdmsrl(MSR_IA32_CR_PAT, pat);
>>>> + pr_info("read pat %0llx\n", pat);
>>>> pat_msg[32] = 0;
>>>> for (i = 7; i >= 0; i--) {
>>>> cache = pat_get_cache_mode((pat >> (i * 8)) & 7,
>>>> pat_msg + 4 * i);
>>>> - update_cache_mode_entry(i, cache);
>>>> + //update_cache_mode_entry(i, cache);
>>>> }
>>>> pr_info("PAT configuration [0-7]: %s\n", pat_msg);
>>>> }
>>>> @@ -238,9 +239,13 @@ void pat_init(void)
>>>> rdmsrl(MSR_IA32_CR_PAT, boot_pat_state);
>>>>
>>>> wrmsrl(MSR_IA32_CR_PAT, pat);
>>>> + pr_info("about to write pat %0llx\n", pat);
>>>>
>>>> if (boot_cpu)
>>>> pat_init_cache_modes();
>>>> +
>>>> + rdmsrl(MSR_IA32_CR_PAT, pat);
>>>> + printk(KERN_INFO "PAT read: cpu %d, 0x%Lx\n", smp_processor_id(), pat);
>>>> }
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Then boot is fine, and PAT values are as follows.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> # dmesg|grep -i "pat "
>>>> [ 0.000000] about to write pat 7010600070106
>>>> [ 0.000000] read pat 0
>>>> [ 0.000000] PAT configuration [0-7]: UC UC UC UC UC UC UC UC
>>>> [ 0.000000] PAT read: cpu 0, 0x0
>>>> [ 0.320559] about to write pat 7010600070106
>>>> [ 0.320876] read pat 0
>>>> [ 0.321090] PAT configuration [0-7]: UC UC UC UC UC UC UC UC
>>>> [ 0.321260] PAT read: cpu 5, 0x0
>>>> [ 0.321403] about to write pat 7010600070106
>>>> [ 0.321818] read pat 0
>>>> [ 0.322033] PAT configuration [0-7]: UC UC UC UC UC UC UC UC
>>>> [ 0.322205] PAT read: cpu 6, 0x0
>>>> [ 0.322334] about to write pat 7010600070106
>>>> [ 0.322417] read pat 0
>>>> [ 0.322479] PAT configuration [0-7]: UC UC UC UC UC UC UC UC
>>>> [ 0.322573] PAT read: cpu 0, 0x0
>>>> [ 0.322703] about to write pat 7010600070106
>>>> [ 0.323012] read pat 0
>>>> [ 0.323228] PAT configuration [0-7]: UC UC UC UC UC UC UC UC
>>>> [ 0.323400] PAT read: cpu 1, 0x0
>>>> [ 0.323537] about to write pat 7010600070106
>>>> [ 0.323833] read pat 0
>>>> [ 0.324055] PAT configuration [0-7]: UC UC UC UC UC UC UC UC
>>>> [ 0.324224] PAT read: cpu 7, 0x0
>>>> [ 0.324362] about to write pat 7010600070106
>>>> [ 0.324662] read pat 0
>>>> [ 0.324877] PAT configuration [0-7]: UC UC UC UC UC UC UC UC
>>>> [ 0.325048] PAT read: cpu 2, 0x0
>>>> [ 0.325185] about to write pat 7010600070106
>>>> [ 0.325483] read pat 0
>>>> [ 0.325695] PAT configuration [0-7]: UC UC UC UC UC UC UC UC
>>>> [ 0.325863] PAT read: cpu 4, 0x0
>>>> [ 0.325997] about to write pat 7010600070106
>>>> [ 0.326288] read pat 0
>>>> [ 0.326507] PAT configuration [0-7]: UC UC UC UC UC UC UC UC
>>>> [ 0.326677] PAT read: cpu 3, 0x0
>>> Okay, so VMWare doesn't seem to return the correct PAT MSR value.
>>>
>>> I suggest you try "nopat" as kernel option. This should disable all the
>>> PAT handling and VMWare can't wreck the kernel this way.
>>>
>>> I'll write a patch which detects this VMWare bug by checking the PAT
>>> value after writing it.
>>>
>>> Thanks for reporting that case,
>>>
>>>
>>> Juergen
>>>
>>>
>> OK, my VMWare works with "nopat" option.
>>
>> Thanks~.N
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