On Tue, Dec 29, 2020 at 02:30:56PM +0800, Leizhen (ThunderTown) wrote: > > > On 2020/12/26 20:13, Russell King - ARM Linux admin wrote: > > On Fri, Dec 25, 2020 at 07:44:58PM +0800, Zhen Lei wrote: > >> The outercache of some Hisilicon SOCs support physical addresses wider > >> than 32-bits. The unsigned long datatype is not sufficient for mapping > >> physical addresses >= 4GB. The commit ad6b9c9d78b9 ("ARM: 6671/1: LPAE: > >> use phys_addr_t instead of unsigned long in outercache functions") has > >> already modified the outercache functions. But the parameters of the > >> outercache hooks are not changed. This patch use phys_addr_t instead of > >> unsigned long in outercache hooks: inv_range, clean_range, flush_range. > >> > >> To ensure the outercache that does not support LPAE works properly, do > >> cast phys_addr_t to unsigned long by adding a middle-tier function. > > > > Please don't do that. The cast can be done inside the L2 functions > > themselves without needing all these additional functions. > > OK. At first, I wanted to fit in like this: > > -static void l2c220_inv_range(unsigned long start, unsigned long end) > +static void l2c220_inv_range(phys_addr_t lpae_start, phys_addr_t lpae_end) > { > + unsigned long start = lpae_start; > + unsigned long end = lpae_end;
It sounds like there should be a "but..." clause here. This is exactly what I'm suggesting you should be doing. Currently, there's a silent narrowing cast in every single caller of the outer_.*_range() functions and you're only moving it from the callsites to inside the called functions. > > We probably ought to also add some protection against addresses > 4GB, > > although these are hot paths, so we don't want to add tests in these > > functions. Maybe instead checking whether the system has memory above > > 4GB while the L2 cache is being initialised would be a good idea? > > I'm sorry, I didn't quite understand what you meant. Currently, the > biggest problem is the compilation problem. The sizeof(long) may be > 32, and the 64-bit physical address cannot be transferred from outcache > functions to outcache hooks. What I mean is that we really ought to warn if the L2C310 code tries to initialise on a system where memory is above 4GB. However, it's very unlikely that such a system exists, so it's probably fine not implement a check, but it just feels fragile to be truncating the 64-bit address to 32-bit on a kernel that _could_ support higher addresses, even though that's exactly what is happening today (kind of by accident - I don't think anyone realised.) -- RMK's Patch system: https://www.armlinux.org.uk/developer/patches/ FTTP is here! 40Mbps down 10Mbps up. Decent connectivity at last!