linux-brain/arch/x86/kernel/aperture_64.c
Kairui Song ffc8599aa9 x86/gart: Exclude GART aperture from kcore
On machines where the GART aperture is mapped over physical RAM,
/proc/kcore contains the GART aperture range. Accessing the GART range via
/proc/kcore results in a kernel crash.

vmcore used to have the same issue, until it was fixed with commit
2a3e83c6f9 ("x86/gart: Exclude GART aperture from vmcore")', leveraging
existing hook infrastructure in vmcore to let /proc/vmcore return zeroes
when attempting to read the aperture region, and so it won't read from the
actual memory.

Apply the same workaround for kcore. First implement the same hook
infrastructure for kcore, then reuse the hook functions introduced in the
previous vmcore fix. Just with some minor adjustment, rename some functions
for more general usage, and simplify the hook infrastructure a bit as there
is no module usage yet.

Suggested-by: Baoquan He <bhe@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Kairui Song <kasong@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de>
Reviewed-by: Jiri Bohac <jbohac@suse.cz>
Acked-by: Baoquan He <bhe@redhat.com>
Cc: Borislav Petkov <bp@alien8.de>
Cc: "H. Peter Anvin" <hpa@zytor.com>
Cc: Alexey Dobriyan <adobriyan@gmail.com>
Cc: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
Cc: Omar Sandoval <osandov@fb.com>
Cc: Dave Young <dyoung@redhat.com>
Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20190308030508.13548-1-kasong@redhat.com
2019-03-23 12:11:49 +01:00

557 lines
16 KiB
C

// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
/*
* Firmware replacement code.
*
* Work around broken BIOSes that don't set an aperture, only set the
* aperture in the AGP bridge, or set too small aperture.
*
* If all fails map the aperture over some low memory. This is cheaper than
* doing bounce buffering. The memory is lost. This is done at early boot
* because only the bootmem allocator can allocate 32+MB.
*
* Copyright 2002 Andi Kleen, SuSE Labs.
*/
#define pr_fmt(fmt) "AGP: " fmt
#include <linux/kernel.h>
#include <linux/kcore.h>
#include <linux/types.h>
#include <linux/init.h>
#include <linux/memblock.h>
#include <linux/mmzone.h>
#include <linux/pci_ids.h>
#include <linux/pci.h>
#include <linux/bitops.h>
#include <linux/suspend.h>
#include <asm/e820/api.h>
#include <asm/io.h>
#include <asm/iommu.h>
#include <asm/gart.h>
#include <asm/pci-direct.h>
#include <asm/dma.h>
#include <asm/amd_nb.h>
#include <asm/x86_init.h>
#include <linux/crash_dump.h>
/*
* Using 512M as goal, in case kexec will load kernel_big
* that will do the on-position decompress, and could overlap with
* with the gart aperture that is used.
* Sequence:
* kernel_small
* ==> kexec (with kdump trigger path or gart still enabled)
* ==> kernel_small (gart area become e820_reserved)
* ==> kexec (with kdump trigger path or gart still enabled)
* ==> kerne_big (uncompressed size will be big than 64M or 128M)
* So don't use 512M below as gart iommu, leave the space for kernel
* code for safe.
*/
#define GART_MIN_ADDR (512ULL << 20)
#define GART_MAX_ADDR (1ULL << 32)
int gart_iommu_aperture;
int gart_iommu_aperture_disabled __initdata;
int gart_iommu_aperture_allowed __initdata;
int fallback_aper_order __initdata = 1; /* 64MB */
int fallback_aper_force __initdata;
int fix_aperture __initdata = 1;
#if defined(CONFIG_PROC_VMCORE) || defined(CONFIG_PROC_KCORE)
/*
* If the first kernel maps the aperture over e820 RAM, the kdump kernel will
* use the same range because it will remain configured in the northbridge.
* Trying to dump this area via /proc/vmcore may crash the machine, so exclude
* it from vmcore.
*/
static unsigned long aperture_pfn_start, aperture_page_count;
static int gart_mem_pfn_is_ram(unsigned long pfn)
{
return likely((pfn < aperture_pfn_start) ||
(pfn >= aperture_pfn_start + aperture_page_count));
}
static void __init exclude_from_core(u64 aper_base, u32 aper_order)
{
aperture_pfn_start = aper_base >> PAGE_SHIFT;
aperture_page_count = (32 * 1024 * 1024) << aper_order >> PAGE_SHIFT;
#ifdef CONFIG_PROC_VMCORE
WARN_ON(register_oldmem_pfn_is_ram(&gart_mem_pfn_is_ram));
#endif
#ifdef CONFIG_PROC_KCORE
WARN_ON(register_mem_pfn_is_ram(&gart_mem_pfn_is_ram));
#endif
}
#else
static void exclude_from_core(u64 aper_base, u32 aper_order)
{
}
#endif
/* This code runs before the PCI subsystem is initialized, so just
access the northbridge directly. */
static u32 __init allocate_aperture(void)
{
u32 aper_size;
unsigned long addr;
/* aper_size should <= 1G */
if (fallback_aper_order > 5)
fallback_aper_order = 5;
aper_size = (32 * 1024 * 1024) << fallback_aper_order;
/*
* Aperture has to be naturally aligned. This means a 2GB aperture
* won't have much chance of finding a place in the lower 4GB of
* memory. Unfortunately we cannot move it up because that would
* make the IOMMU useless.
*/
addr = memblock_find_in_range(GART_MIN_ADDR, GART_MAX_ADDR,
aper_size, aper_size);
if (!addr) {
pr_err("Cannot allocate aperture memory hole [mem %#010lx-%#010lx] (%uKB)\n",
addr, addr + aper_size - 1, aper_size >> 10);
return 0;
}
memblock_reserve(addr, aper_size);
pr_info("Mapping aperture over RAM [mem %#010lx-%#010lx] (%uKB)\n",
addr, addr + aper_size - 1, aper_size >> 10);
register_nosave_region(addr >> PAGE_SHIFT,
(addr+aper_size) >> PAGE_SHIFT);
return (u32)addr;
}
/* Find a PCI capability */
static u32 __init find_cap(int bus, int slot, int func, int cap)
{
int bytes;
u8 pos;
if (!(read_pci_config_16(bus, slot, func, PCI_STATUS) &
PCI_STATUS_CAP_LIST))
return 0;
pos = read_pci_config_byte(bus, slot, func, PCI_CAPABILITY_LIST);
for (bytes = 0; bytes < 48 && pos >= 0x40; bytes++) {
u8 id;
pos &= ~3;
id = read_pci_config_byte(bus, slot, func, pos+PCI_CAP_LIST_ID);
if (id == 0xff)
break;
if (id == cap)
return pos;
pos = read_pci_config_byte(bus, slot, func,
pos+PCI_CAP_LIST_NEXT);
}
return 0;
}
/* Read a standard AGPv3 bridge header */
static u32 __init read_agp(int bus, int slot, int func, int cap, u32 *order)
{
u32 apsize;
u32 apsizereg;
int nbits;
u32 aper_low, aper_hi;
u64 aper;
u32 old_order;
pr_info("pci 0000:%02x:%02x:%02x: AGP bridge\n", bus, slot, func);
apsizereg = read_pci_config_16(bus, slot, func, cap + 0x14);
if (apsizereg == 0xffffffff) {
pr_err("pci 0000:%02x:%02x.%d: APSIZE unreadable\n",
bus, slot, func);
return 0;
}
/* old_order could be the value from NB gart setting */
old_order = *order;
apsize = apsizereg & 0xfff;
/* Some BIOS use weird encodings not in the AGPv3 table. */
if (apsize & 0xff)
apsize |= 0xf00;
nbits = hweight16(apsize);
*order = 7 - nbits;
if ((int)*order < 0) /* < 32MB */
*order = 0;
aper_low = read_pci_config(bus, slot, func, 0x10);
aper_hi = read_pci_config(bus, slot, func, 0x14);
aper = (aper_low & ~((1<<22)-1)) | ((u64)aper_hi << 32);
/*
* On some sick chips, APSIZE is 0. It means it wants 4G
* so let double check that order, and lets trust AMD NB settings:
*/
pr_info("pci 0000:%02x:%02x.%d: AGP aperture [bus addr %#010Lx-%#010Lx] (old size %uMB)\n",
bus, slot, func, aper, aper + (32ULL << (old_order + 20)) - 1,
32 << old_order);
if (aper + (32ULL<<(20 + *order)) > 0x100000000ULL) {
pr_info("pci 0000:%02x:%02x.%d: AGP aperture size %uMB (APSIZE %#x) is not right, using settings from NB\n",
bus, slot, func, 32 << *order, apsizereg);
*order = old_order;
}
pr_info("pci 0000:%02x:%02x.%d: AGP aperture [bus addr %#010Lx-%#010Lx] (%uMB, APSIZE %#x)\n",
bus, slot, func, aper, aper + (32ULL << (*order + 20)) - 1,
32 << *order, apsizereg);
if (!aperture_valid(aper, (32*1024*1024) << *order, 32<<20))
return 0;
return (u32)aper;
}
/*
* Look for an AGP bridge. Windows only expects the aperture in the
* AGP bridge and some BIOS forget to initialize the Northbridge too.
* Work around this here.
*
* Do an PCI bus scan by hand because we're running before the PCI
* subsystem.
*
* All AMD AGP bridges are AGPv3 compliant, so we can do this scan
* generically. It's probably overkill to always scan all slots because
* the AGP bridges should be always an own bus on the HT hierarchy,
* but do it here for future safety.
*/
static u32 __init search_agp_bridge(u32 *order, int *valid_agp)
{
int bus, slot, func;
/* Poor man's PCI discovery */
for (bus = 0; bus < 256; bus++) {
for (slot = 0; slot < 32; slot++) {
for (func = 0; func < 8; func++) {
u32 class, cap;
u8 type;
class = read_pci_config(bus, slot, func,
PCI_CLASS_REVISION);
if (class == 0xffffffff)
break;
switch (class >> 16) {
case PCI_CLASS_BRIDGE_HOST:
case PCI_CLASS_BRIDGE_OTHER: /* needed? */
/* AGP bridge? */
cap = find_cap(bus, slot, func,
PCI_CAP_ID_AGP);
if (!cap)
break;
*valid_agp = 1;
return read_agp(bus, slot, func, cap,
order);
}
/* No multi-function device? */
type = read_pci_config_byte(bus, slot, func,
PCI_HEADER_TYPE);
if (!(type & 0x80))
break;
}
}
}
pr_info("No AGP bridge found\n");
return 0;
}
static bool gart_fix_e820 __initdata = true;
static int __init parse_gart_mem(char *p)
{
return kstrtobool(p, &gart_fix_e820);
}
early_param("gart_fix_e820", parse_gart_mem);
/*
* With kexec/kdump, if the first kernel doesn't shut down the GART and the
* second kernel allocates a different GART region, there might be two
* overlapping GART regions present:
*
* - the first still used by the GART initialized in the first kernel.
* - (sub-)set of it used as normal RAM by the second kernel.
*
* which leads to memory corruptions and a kernel panic eventually.
*
* This can also happen if the BIOS has forgotten to mark the GART region
* as reserved.
*
* Try to update the e820 map to mark that new region as reserved.
*/
void __init early_gart_iommu_check(void)
{
u32 agp_aper_order = 0;
int i, fix, slot, valid_agp = 0;
u32 ctl;
u32 aper_size = 0, aper_order = 0, last_aper_order = 0;
u64 aper_base = 0, last_aper_base = 0;
int aper_enabled = 0, last_aper_enabled = 0, last_valid = 0;
if (!amd_gart_present())
return;
if (!early_pci_allowed())
return;
/* This is mostly duplicate of iommu_hole_init */
search_agp_bridge(&agp_aper_order, &valid_agp);
fix = 0;
for (i = 0; amd_nb_bus_dev_ranges[i].dev_limit; i++) {
int bus;
int dev_base, dev_limit;
bus = amd_nb_bus_dev_ranges[i].bus;
dev_base = amd_nb_bus_dev_ranges[i].dev_base;
dev_limit = amd_nb_bus_dev_ranges[i].dev_limit;
for (slot = dev_base; slot < dev_limit; slot++) {
if (!early_is_amd_nb(read_pci_config(bus, slot, 3, 0x00)))
continue;
ctl = read_pci_config(bus, slot, 3, AMD64_GARTAPERTURECTL);
aper_enabled = ctl & GARTEN;
aper_order = (ctl >> 1) & 7;
aper_size = (32 * 1024 * 1024) << aper_order;
aper_base = read_pci_config(bus, slot, 3, AMD64_GARTAPERTUREBASE) & 0x7fff;
aper_base <<= 25;
if (last_valid) {
if ((aper_order != last_aper_order) ||
(aper_base != last_aper_base) ||
(aper_enabled != last_aper_enabled)) {
fix = 1;
break;
}
}
last_aper_order = aper_order;
last_aper_base = aper_base;
last_aper_enabled = aper_enabled;
last_valid = 1;
}
}
if (!fix && !aper_enabled)
return;
if (!aper_base || !aper_size || aper_base + aper_size > 0x100000000UL)
fix = 1;
if (gart_fix_e820 && !fix && aper_enabled) {
if (e820__mapped_any(aper_base, aper_base + aper_size,
E820_TYPE_RAM)) {
/* reserve it, so we can reuse it in second kernel */
pr_info("e820: reserve [mem %#010Lx-%#010Lx] for GART\n",
aper_base, aper_base + aper_size - 1);
e820__range_add(aper_base, aper_size, E820_TYPE_RESERVED);
e820__update_table_print();
}
}
if (valid_agp)
return;
/* disable them all at first */
for (i = 0; i < amd_nb_bus_dev_ranges[i].dev_limit; i++) {
int bus;
int dev_base, dev_limit;
bus = amd_nb_bus_dev_ranges[i].bus;
dev_base = amd_nb_bus_dev_ranges[i].dev_base;
dev_limit = amd_nb_bus_dev_ranges[i].dev_limit;
for (slot = dev_base; slot < dev_limit; slot++) {
if (!early_is_amd_nb(read_pci_config(bus, slot, 3, 0x00)))
continue;
ctl = read_pci_config(bus, slot, 3, AMD64_GARTAPERTURECTL);
ctl &= ~GARTEN;
write_pci_config(bus, slot, 3, AMD64_GARTAPERTURECTL, ctl);
}
}
}
static int __initdata printed_gart_size_msg;
int __init gart_iommu_hole_init(void)
{
u32 agp_aper_base = 0, agp_aper_order = 0;
u32 aper_size, aper_alloc = 0, aper_order = 0, last_aper_order = 0;
u64 aper_base, last_aper_base = 0;
int fix, slot, valid_agp = 0;
int i, node;
if (!amd_gart_present())
return -ENODEV;
if (gart_iommu_aperture_disabled || !fix_aperture ||
!early_pci_allowed())
return -ENODEV;
pr_info("Checking aperture...\n");
if (!fallback_aper_force)
agp_aper_base = search_agp_bridge(&agp_aper_order, &valid_agp);
fix = 0;
node = 0;
for (i = 0; i < amd_nb_bus_dev_ranges[i].dev_limit; i++) {
int bus;
int dev_base, dev_limit;
u32 ctl;
bus = amd_nb_bus_dev_ranges[i].bus;
dev_base = amd_nb_bus_dev_ranges[i].dev_base;
dev_limit = amd_nb_bus_dev_ranges[i].dev_limit;
for (slot = dev_base; slot < dev_limit; slot++) {
if (!early_is_amd_nb(read_pci_config(bus, slot, 3, 0x00)))
continue;
iommu_detected = 1;
gart_iommu_aperture = 1;
x86_init.iommu.iommu_init = gart_iommu_init;
ctl = read_pci_config(bus, slot, 3,
AMD64_GARTAPERTURECTL);
/*
* Before we do anything else disable the GART. It may
* still be enabled if we boot into a crash-kernel here.
* Reconfiguring the GART while it is enabled could have
* unknown side-effects.
*/
ctl &= ~GARTEN;
write_pci_config(bus, slot, 3, AMD64_GARTAPERTURECTL, ctl);
aper_order = (ctl >> 1) & 7;
aper_size = (32 * 1024 * 1024) << aper_order;
aper_base = read_pci_config(bus, slot, 3, AMD64_GARTAPERTUREBASE) & 0x7fff;
aper_base <<= 25;
pr_info("Node %d: aperture [bus addr %#010Lx-%#010Lx] (%uMB)\n",
node, aper_base, aper_base + aper_size - 1,
aper_size >> 20);
node++;
if (!aperture_valid(aper_base, aper_size, 64<<20)) {
if (valid_agp && agp_aper_base &&
agp_aper_base == aper_base &&
agp_aper_order == aper_order) {
/* the same between two setting from NB and agp */
if (!no_iommu &&
max_pfn > MAX_DMA32_PFN &&
!printed_gart_size_msg) {
pr_err("you are using iommu with agp, but GART size is less than 64MB\n");
pr_err("please increase GART size in your BIOS setup\n");
pr_err("if BIOS doesn't have that option, contact your HW vendor!\n");
printed_gart_size_msg = 1;
}
} else {
fix = 1;
goto out;
}
}
if ((last_aper_order && aper_order != last_aper_order) ||
(last_aper_base && aper_base != last_aper_base)) {
fix = 1;
goto out;
}
last_aper_order = aper_order;
last_aper_base = aper_base;
}
}
out:
if (!fix && !fallback_aper_force) {
if (last_aper_base) {
/*
* If this is the kdump kernel, the first kernel
* may have allocated the range over its e820 RAM
* and fixed up the northbridge
*/
exclude_from_core(last_aper_base, last_aper_order);
return 1;
}
return 0;
}
if (!fallback_aper_force) {
aper_alloc = agp_aper_base;
aper_order = agp_aper_order;
}
if (aper_alloc) {
/* Got the aperture from the AGP bridge */
} else if ((!no_iommu && max_pfn > MAX_DMA32_PFN) ||
force_iommu ||
valid_agp ||
fallback_aper_force) {
pr_info("Your BIOS doesn't leave an aperture memory hole\n");
pr_info("Please enable the IOMMU option in the BIOS setup\n");
pr_info("This costs you %dMB of RAM\n",
32 << fallback_aper_order);
aper_order = fallback_aper_order;
aper_alloc = allocate_aperture();
if (!aper_alloc) {
/*
* Could disable AGP and IOMMU here, but it's
* probably not worth it. But the later users
* cannot deal with bad apertures and turning
* on the aperture over memory causes very
* strange problems, so it's better to panic
* early.
*/
panic("Not enough memory for aperture");
}
} else {
return 0;
}
/*
* If this is the kdump kernel _and_ the first kernel did not
* configure the aperture in the northbridge, this range may
* overlap with the first kernel's memory. We can't access the
* range through vmcore even though it should be part of the dump.
*/
exclude_from_core(aper_alloc, aper_order);
/* Fix up the north bridges */
for (i = 0; i < amd_nb_bus_dev_ranges[i].dev_limit; i++) {
int bus, dev_base, dev_limit;
/*
* Don't enable translation yet but enable GART IO and CPU
* accesses and set DISTLBWALKPRB since GART table memory is UC.
*/
u32 ctl = aper_order << 1;
bus = amd_nb_bus_dev_ranges[i].bus;
dev_base = amd_nb_bus_dev_ranges[i].dev_base;
dev_limit = amd_nb_bus_dev_ranges[i].dev_limit;
for (slot = dev_base; slot < dev_limit; slot++) {
if (!early_is_amd_nb(read_pci_config(bus, slot, 3, 0x00)))
continue;
write_pci_config(bus, slot, 3, AMD64_GARTAPERTURECTL, ctl);
write_pci_config(bus, slot, 3, AMD64_GARTAPERTUREBASE, aper_alloc >> 25);
}
}
set_up_gart_resume(aper_order, aper_alloc);
return 1;
}