Re: [PATCH] ACPI: Change wrong print type to display the real value for i386-PAE

From: Rafael J. Wysocki
Date: Fri Jan 11 2019 - 05:31:30 EST


On Wednesday, December 26, 2018 4:34:50 AM CET Chao Fan wrote:
> There is a wrong display for memory address of NUMA node in i386-PAE.
> That may mislead developers.
>
> Here is a debian9-32bit with PAE in QEMU guest whose total memory is
> more than 4G:
> qemu-system-i386 \
> -hda /var/lib/libvirt/images/debian32.qcow2 \
> -m 5G \
> -enable-kvm \
> -smp 10 \
> -numa node,mem=512M,nodeid=0,cpus=0 \
> -numa node,mem=512M,nodeid=1,cpus=1 \
> -numa node,mem=512M,nodeid=2,cpus=2 \
> -numa node,mem=512M,nodeid=3,cpus=3 \
> -numa node,mem=512M,nodeid=4,cpus=4 \
> -numa node,mem=512M,nodeid=5,cpus=5 \
> -numa node,mem=512M,nodeid=6,cpus=6 \
> -numa node,mem=512M,nodeid=7,cpus=7 \
> -numa node,mem=512M,nodeid=8,cpus=8 \
> -numa node,mem=512M,nodeid=9,cpus=9 \
> -serial stdio
>
> Because of the wrong value type, it prints as below:
> [ 0.021049] ACPI: SRAT Memory (0x0 length 0xa0000) in proximity domain 0 enabled
> [ 0.021740] ACPI: SRAT Memory (0x100000 length 0x1ff00000) in proximity domain 0 enabled
> [ 0.022425] ACPI: SRAT Memory (0x20000000 length 0x20000000) in proximity domain 1 enabled
> [ 0.023092] ACPI: SRAT Memory (0x40000000 length 0x20000000) in proximity domain 2 enabled
> [ 0.023764] ACPI: SRAT Memory (0x60000000 length 0x20000000) in proximity domain 3 enabled
> [ 0.024431] ACPI: SRAT Memory (0x80000000 length 0x20000000) in proximity domain 4 enabled
> [ 0.025104] ACPI: SRAT Memory (0xa0000000 length 0x20000000) in proximity domain 5 enabled
> [ 0.025791] ACPI: SRAT Memory (0x0 length 0x20000000) in proximity domain 6 enabled
> [ 0.026412] ACPI: SRAT Memory (0x20000000 length 0x20000000) in proximity domain 7 enabled
> [ 0.027118] ACPI: SRAT Memory (0x40000000 length 0x20000000) in proximity domain 8 enabled
> [ 0.027802] ACPI: SRAT Memory (0x60000000 length 0x20000000) in proximity domain 9 enabled
> The upper half of start address from domain 6 to domain 9 was cut so
> that developers get a wrong value.
>
> Fix the value type, it prints as below:
> [ 0.023698] ACPI: SRAT Memory (0x0 length 0xa0000) in proximity domain 0 enabled
> [ 0.024325] ACPI: SRAT Memory (0x100000 length 0x1ff00000) in proximity domain 0 enabled
> [ 0.024981] ACPI: SRAT Memory (0x20000000 length 0x20000000) in proximity domain 1 enabled
> [ 0.025659] ACPI: SRAT Memory (0x40000000 length 0x20000000) in proximity domain 2 enabled
> [ 0.026317] ACPI: SRAT Memory (0x60000000 length 0x20000000) in proximity domain 3 enabled
> [ 0.026980] ACPI: SRAT Memory (0x80000000 length 0x20000000) in proximity domain 4 enabled
> [ 0.027635] ACPI: SRAT Memory (0xa0000000 length 0x20000000) in proximity domain 5 enabled
> [ 0.028311] ACPI: SRAT Memory (0x100000000 length 0x20000000) in proximity domain 6 enabled
> [ 0.028985] ACPI: SRAT Memory (0x120000000 length 0x20000000) in proximity domain 7 enabled
> [ 0.029667] ACPI: SRAT Memory (0x140000000 length 0x20000000) in proximity domain 8 enabled
> [ 0.030334] ACPI: SRAT Memory (0x160000000 length 0x20000000) in proximity domain 9 enabled
> The start address from domain 6 to domain 9 is the real value.
>
> Signed-off-by: Chao Fan <fanc.fnst@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> ---
> drivers/acpi/numa.c | 6 +++---
> 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)
>
> diff --git a/drivers/acpi/numa.c b/drivers/acpi/numa.c
> index 274699463b4f..7bbbf8256a41 100644
> --- a/drivers/acpi/numa.c
> +++ b/drivers/acpi/numa.c
> @@ -146,9 +146,9 @@ acpi_table_print_srat_entry(struct acpi_subtable_header *header)
> {
> struct acpi_srat_mem_affinity *p =
> (struct acpi_srat_mem_affinity *)header;
> - pr_debug("SRAT Memory (0x%lx length 0x%lx) in proximity domain %d %s%s%s\n",
> - (unsigned long)p->base_address,
> - (unsigned long)p->length,
> + pr_debug("SRAT Memory (0x%llx length 0x%llx) in proximity domain %d %s%s%s\n",
> + (unsigned long long)p->base_address,
> + (unsigned long long)p->length,
> p->proximity_domain,
> (p->flags & ACPI_SRAT_MEM_ENABLED) ?
> "enabled" : "disabled",
>

Applied, thanks!