On 08/24/2017 05:35 PM, Thomas Huth wrote: > On 24.08.2017 17:13, Cornelia Huck wrote: >> On Thu, 24 Aug 2017 11:05:08 -0400 >> Farhan Ali <al...@linux.vnet.ibm.com> wrote: >> >>> Hi, >>> >>> There is an issue in QEMU bios which is exposed by commit >>> >>> commit 198c0d1f9df8c429502cb744fc26b6ba6e71db74 >>> Author: Halil Pasic <pa...@linux.vnet.ibm.com> >>> Date: Thu Jul 27 17:48:42 2017 +0200 >>> >>> s390x/css: check ccw address validity >>> >>> According to the PoP channel command words (CCW) must be doubleword >>> aligned and 31 bit addressable for format 1 and 24 bit addressable for >>> format 0 CCWs. >>> >>> If the channel subsystem encounters a ccw address which does not >>> satisfy >>> this alignment requirement a program-check condition is recognised. >>> >>> The situation with 31 bit addressable is a bit more complicated: >>> both the >>> ORB and a format 1 CCW TIC hold the address of (the rest of) the >>> channel >>> program, that is the address of the next CCW in a word, and the PoP >>> mandates that bit 0 of that word shall be zero -- or a program-check >>> condition is to be recognized -- and does not belong to the field >>> holding >>> the ccw address. >>> >>> Since in code the corresponding fields span across the whole word >>> (unlike >>> in PoP where these are defined as 31 bit wide) we can check this by >>> applying a mask. The 24 addressable case isn't affecting TIC >>> because the >>> address is composed of a halfword and a byte portion (no additional >>> zero >>> bit requirements) and just slightly complicates the ORB case where also >>> bits 1-7 need to be zero. >>> >>> The same requirements (especially n-bit addressability) apply to the >>> ccw addresses generated while chaining. >>> >>> Let's make our CSS implementation follow the AR more closely. >>> >>> Signed-off-by: Halil Pasic <pa...@linux.vnet.ibm.com> >>> Message-Id: <20170727154842.23427-1-pa...@linux.vnet.ibm.com> >>> Reviewed-by: Dong Jia Shi <bjsdj...@linux.vnet.ibm.com> >>> Signed-off-by: Cornelia Huck <coh...@redhat.com> >>> >>> >>> It looks like the bios does not create a double word aligned CCW. >>> Looking at the bios code we the CCW1 struct is not aligned >>> >>> /* channel command word (type 1) */ >>> struct ccw1 { >>> __u8 cmd_code; >>> __u8 flags; >>> __u16 count; >>> __u32 cda; >>> } __attribute__ ((packed)); >>> >>> and it looks like the compiler does not guarantee a doubleword alignment. >> >> :( >> >>> >>> The weird thing about it is I see it break in one of my system and works >>> fine in another system. Trying a simple fix of aligning the struct also >>> doesn't seem to work all the time. >> >> I have not seen this problem on any of the systems I tested on (well, I >> would not have merged this if I did...) - RHEL 7 and F26. Do we need a >> dynamic allocation to guarantee alignment? > > I guess the problem is the __attribute__((packed)) here - AFAIK GCC then > sometimes assumes that these structs can be byte-aligned. Does it work > if you remove the __attribute__((packed)) here? If yes, I think that > would be a valid fix, since there should not be any padding in this > struct at all (and if you're afraid, you could add an > assert(sizeof(struct ccw1) == 8) somewhere). > > Thomas > >
I don't think this packed is doing us any good. But even with the packed removed I not sure we would end up being 8 byte aligned (dobuleword). Wouldn't it be just 4 byte aligned (according to the ELF ABI supplement for s390) as the most strictly aligned member is __u32? Halil