On Sun, Oct 20, 2024, at 17:39, Naresh Kamboju wrote: > On Fri, 18 Oct 2024 at 12:35, Naresh Kamboju <naresh.kamb...@linaro.org> > wrote: >> >> The QEMU-ARMv7 boot has failed with the Linux next-20241017 tag. >> The boot log is incomplete, and no kernel crash was detected. >> However, the system did not proceed far enough to reach the login prompt. >>
> Anders bisected this boot regressions and found, > # first bad commit: > [efe8419ae78d65e83edc31aad74b605c12e7d60c] > vdso: Introduce vdso/page.h > > We are investigating the reason for boot failure due to this commit. Anders and I did the analysis on this, the problem turned out to be the early_init_dt_add_memory_arch() function in drivers/of/fdt.c, which does bitwise operations on PAGE_MASK with a 'u64' instead of phys_addr_t: void __init __weak early_init_dt_add_memory_arch(u64 base, u64 size) { const u64 phys_offset = MIN_MEMBLOCK_ADDR; if (size < PAGE_SIZE - (base & ~PAGE_MASK)) { pr_warn("Ignoring memory block 0x%llx - 0x%llx\n", base, base + size); return; } if (!PAGE_ALIGNED(base)) { size -= PAGE_SIZE - (base & ~PAGE_MASK); base = PAGE_ALIGN(base); } On non-LPAE arm32, this broke the existing behavior for large 32-bit memory sizes. The obvious fix is to change back the PAGE_MASK definition for 32-bit arm to a signed number. mips32, ppc32 and hexagon had the same definition as well, so I think we should change at least those in order to restore the previous behavior in case they are affected by the same bug (or a different one). x86-32 and arc git flipped the other way by the patch, from unsigned to signed, when CONFIG_ARC_HAS_PAE40 or CONFIG_X86_PAE are set. I think we should keep the 'signed' behavior as this was a bugfix by itself, but we may want to change arc and x86-32 with short phys_addr_t the same way for consistency. On csky, m68k, microblaze, nios2, openrisc, parisc32, riscv32, sh, sparc32, um and xtensa, we've always used the 'unsigned' PAGE_MASK, and there is no 64-bit phys_addr_t, so I would lean towards staying with 'unsigned' in order to not introduce a regression. Alternatively we could choose to go with the 'signed' version on all 32-bit architectures unconditionally for consistency. Any preferences? Arnd