On 8/20/21 6:03 PM, Igor Mammedov wrote: > On Fri, 20 Aug 2021 17:47:01 +0200 > David Hildenbrand <da...@redhat.com> wrote: > >> On 20.08.21 17:44, Igor Mammedov wrote: >>> On Fri, 20 Aug 2021 15:39:27 +0100 >>> Peter Maydell <peter.mayd...@linaro.org> wrote: >>> >>>> On Fri, 20 Aug 2021 at 15:34, David Hildenbrand <da...@redhat.com> wrote: >>>>> >>>>> On 20.08.21 16:22, Bin Meng wrote: >>>>>> Hi Philippe, >>>>>> >>>>>> On Fri, Aug 20, 2021 at 10:10 PM Philippe Mathieu-Daudé >>>>>> <phi...@redhat.com> wrote: >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Hi Bin, >>>>>>> >>>>>>> On 8/20/21 4:04 PM, Bin Meng wrote: >>>>>>>> Hi, >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> The following command used to work on QEMU 4.2.0, but is now broken >>>>>>>> with QEMU head. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> $ qemu-system-arm -M xilinx-zynq-a9 -display none -m 40000000 >>>>>>>> -nographic -serial /dev/null -serial mon:stdio -monitor null -device >>>>>>>> loader,file=u-boot-dtb.bin,addr=0x4000000,cpu-num=0 >>>>>>>> qemu-system-arm: cannot set up guest memory 'zynq.ext_ram': Cannot >>>>>>>> allocate memory >>>> >>>>> -m 40000000 >>>>> >>>>> corresponds to 38 TB if I am not wrong. Is that really what you want? >>>> >>>> Probably not, because the zynq board's init function does: >>>> >>>> if (machine->ram_size > 2 * GiB) { >>>> error_report("RAM size more than 2 GiB is not supported"); >>>> exit(EXIT_FAILURE); >>>> } >>>> >>>> It seems a bit daft that we allocate the memory before we do >>>> the size check. This didn't use to be this way around... >>>> >>>> Anyway, I think the cause of this change is commit c9800965c1be6c39 >>>> from Igor. We used to silently cap the RAM size to 2GB; now we >>>> complain. Or at least we would complain if we hadn't already >>>> tried to allocate the memory and fallen over... >>> >>> That's because RAM (as host resource) is now separated >>> from device model (machine limits) and is allocated as >>> part of memory backend initialization (in this case >>> 'create_default_memdev') before machine_run_board_init() >>> is run. >>> >>> Maybe we can consolidate max limit checks in >>> create_default_memdev() by adding MachineClass::max_ram_size >>> but that can work only in default usecase (only '-m' is used). >> >> We do have a workaround for s390x already: mc->fixup_ram_size >> >> That should be called before the memory backend is created and seems to >> do just what we want, no? > > it's there for compat sake only if I recall correctly, > there should be no fixups ever. > If user asks for nonsence, QEMU should error out and force > user to correct CLI
Agreed, but this would be cheaper to run the checks *before* allocating the resources ;) > (fixups were one of items that were in > the way of splitting guest RAM into backend/frontend model) >