On Monday, August 15, 2016 11:15:18 PM CEST Mark Rutland wrote: > On Tue, Aug 16, 2016 at 08:02:53AM -0700, Guenter Roeck wrote: > > On Tue, Aug 16, 2016 at 6:21 AM, Will Deacon <will.dea...@arm.com> wrote: > > > On Tue, Aug 16, 2016 at 06:14:53AM -0700, Guenter Roeck wrote: > > >> On Tue, Aug 16, 2016 at 3:32 AM, Robin Murphy <robin.mur...@arm.com> > > >> wrote: > > >> > On 16/08/16 00:19, Guenter Roeck wrote: > > >> >> we are having a problem with atomic accesses in pstore on some ARM > > >> >> CPUs (specifically rk3288 and rk3399). With those chips, atomic > > >> >> accesses fail with both pgprot_noncached and pgprot_writecombine > > >> >> memory. Atomic accesses do work when selecting PAGE_KERNEL protection. > > >> > > > >> > What's the pstore backed by? I'm guessing it's not normal DRAM. > > >> > > > >> > > >> it is normal DRAM. > > > > > > In which case, why does it need to be mapped with weird attributes? > > > Is there an alias in the linear map you can use? > > > > > > > I don't really _want_ to do anything besides using pstore as-is, or, > > in other words, to have the upstream kernel work with the affected > > systems. > > > > The current pstore code runs the following code for memory with > > pfn_valid() = true. > > > > if (memtype) > > prot = pgprot_noncached(PAGE_KERNEL); > > else > > prot = pgprot_writecombine(PAGE_KERNEL); > > ... > > vaddr = vmap(pages, page_count, VM_MAP, prot); > > > > It then uses the memory pointed to by vaddr for atomic operations. > > This means that the generic ramoops / pstore code is making non-portable > assumptions about memory types. > > So _something_ has to happen to that code.
If we have both a cacheable and a noncacheable mapping for the same DRAM area, things get even worse across many architectures. IIRC PowerPC will trigger a checkstop if it encounters a valid cache line for a noncacheable mapping. If there is only one mapping, this is not a problem, but we probably want to avoid having a write-back cache here, in case something serious goes wrong and all the cache is invalidated but the pstore is used for post-mortem analysis. Arnd