Re: [RFC PATCH v2 3/7] arm64: alternative: Apply alternatives early in boot process

From: Daniel Thompson
Date: Wed Sep 16 2015 - 11:51:22 EST


On 16/09/15 14:05, Will Deacon wrote:
On Mon, Sep 14, 2015 at 02:26:17PM +0100, Daniel Thompson wrote:
Currently alternatives are applied very late in the boot process (and
a long time after we enable scheduling). Some alternative sequences,
such as those that alter the way CPU context is stored, must be applied
much earlier in the boot sequence.

Introduce apply_alternatives_early() to allow some alternatives to be
applied immediately after we detect the CPU features of the boot CPU.

Currently apply_alternatives_all() is not optimized and will re-patch
code that has already been updated. This is harmless but could be
removed by adding extra flags to the alternatives store.

Signed-off-by: Daniel Thompson <daniel.thompson@xxxxxxxxxx>
---
[snip]
/*
+ * This is called very early in the boot process (directly after we run
+ * a feature detect on the boot CPU). No need to worry about other CPUs
+ * here.
+ */
+void apply_alternatives_early(void)
+{
+ struct alt_region region = {
+ .begin = __alt_instructions,
+ .end = __alt_instructions_end,
+ };
+
+ __apply_alternatives(&region);
+}

How do you choose which alternatives are applied early and which are
applied later? AFAICT, this just applies everything before we've
established the capabilities of the CPUs in the system, which could cause
problems for big/little SoCs.

They are applied twice. This relies for correctness on the fact that cpufeatures can be set but not unset.

In other words the boot CPU does a feature detect and, as a result, a subset of the required alternatives will be applied. However after this the other CPUs will boot and the the remaining alternatives applied as before.

The current implementation is inefficient (because it will redundantly patch the same code twice) but I don't think it is broken.


Also, why do we need this for the NMI?

I was/am concerned that a context saved before the alternatives are applied might be restored afterwards. If that happens the bit that indicates what value to put into the PMR would read during the restore without having been saved first. Applying early ensures that the context save/restore code is updated before it is ever used.


Daniel.

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