On 10/6/20 2:52 AM, Petr Mladek wrote: > On Mon 2020-10-05 20:35:59, Guenter Roeck wrote: >> On 10/5/20 7:59 PM, Sergey Senozhatsky wrote: >>> On (20/05/22 12:00), Petr Mladek wrote: >>>> On Fri 2020-05-22 16:53:06, Shreyas Joshi wrote: >>>>> If uboot passes a blank string to console_setup then it results in a >>>>> trashed memory. >>>>> Ultimately, the kernel crashes during freeing up the memory. This fix >>>>> checks if there >>>>> is a blank parameter being passed to console_setup from uboot. >>>>> In case it detects that the console parameter is blank then >>>>> it doesn't setup the serial device and it gracefully exits. >>>>> >>> Petr, this patch's causing regressions for us. We use blank console= boot >>> param to bypass dts. It appears that it'd be better to revert the change. >>> >> Not just to bypass dts, it was also possible to use console= to disable >> consoles >> passed as config option, as well as other default console options. A quick >> test >> confirms that this affects all platforms/architectures, not just Chromebooks. >> Prior to this patch, it was possible to disable a default console with an >> empty "console=" parameter. This is no longer possible. This means that >> this patch results in a substantial (and, as far as I can see, completely >> undiscussed) functionality change. > > Where is this behavior documented, please? >
I don't know. I didn't find it either. All I know is that Chromebooks apparently used it from day 1 to disable the console, and I always thought it was official behavior until I stumbled over the problem last weekend, tried to look it up, and failed to find it. > I do not see it anywhere (documentation, git log, google) and it is far from > obvious from the code. It seems that any random string would do the > same job, e.g. console=none. > Agreed about the "far from obvious". From looking at the code, it seems like an unintended (?) side effect to me. > Of course, we need to restore the original behavior when it breaks > existing systems. But I want to be sure that there is no better > solution. > > And it makes perfect sense to disable all consoles or drop all defined > by dts. But I would prefer to make it more obvious way, for > example by parameters like: > > + console=none > + no-console > + no-dtd-console > + no-default-console > Again, the problem isn't limited to dts provided consoles, or at least that was my understanding. I am still trying to understand how default consoles are defined, so I may get something wrong. Anyway, personally I liked "console=", but that is just me. Anything else should work for us as long as it is backward compatible (which excludes the no-xxx options). Whatever is decided, I'd like to have it made official and documented to avoid a similar problem in the future. > > JFYI, the console= parameter handling is a real historical mess. We are > always surprised what undefined behavior people depend on. For > example, see: > > + commit 33225d7b0ac9903c5701b ("printk: Correctly set CON_CONSDEV > even when preferred console was not registered") > > + commit e369d8227fd211be3624 ("printk: Fix preferred console > selection with multiple matches") > >> I don't understand why (yet), but the patch also causes regressions with >> seemingly unrelated functionality, specifically with dm-verity on at least >> one Chromebook platform. I filed crbug.com/1135157 to track the problem, >> and reverted the patch from all our stable releases immediately after >> the last round of stable release merges. >> >> On a side note, I don't see the problem presumably fixed with this >> patch in any of my tests. > > Console drivers might provide a custom match() callback to handle > various aliases. I guess that some driver wrongly matches the empty > string stored in the array of preferred consoles. > That might well be. Obviously all Chromebooks never had a problem with it. I'll keep trying; maybe I can find a qemu emulation that crashes with it. Unfortunately we don't have a traceback, so it is difficult to determine what actually caused the problem. Maybe Sergey can provide one. > There are likely other ways to fix the original problem. > Most definitely. Either case, again, I'd like to make sure that we get some official means to disable a pre-configured console using the command lime. Thanks, Guenter