[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] Patches for stable
On 05/04/18 16:56, George Dunlap wrote: > On Thu, Apr 5, 2018 at 3:09 PM, Juergen Gross <jgross@xxxxxxxx> wrote: >> On 05/04/18 15:42, George Dunlap wrote: >>> On Thu, Apr 5, 2018 at 2:06 PM, Juergen Gross <jgross@xxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>> On 05/04/18 15:00, Boris Ostrovsky wrote: >>>>> On 04/05/2018 08:19 AM, Juergen Gross wrote: >>>>>> On 05/04/18 12:06, George Dunlap wrote: >>>>>> >>>>>>> Aren't there flags in the binary somewhere that could tell the >>>>>>> toolstack / Xen whether the kernel in question needs the RSDP table in >>>>>>> lowmem, or whether it can be put higher? >>>>>> Not really. Analyzing the binary whether it accesses the rsdp_addr in >>>>>> the start_info isn't the way to go, IMO. >>>>>> >>>>>> I've sent a patch to xen-devel adding a quirk flag to the domain's >>>>>> config to enable the admin special casing such an "old" kernel. >>>>> >>>>> Can we backport latest struct hvm_start_info changes (which bumped >>>>> interface version) to 4.11 and pass RSDP only for versions >=1? >>>> >>>> And this would help how? >>>> >>>> RSDP address is passed today, the kernel just doesn't read it. And >>>> how should Xen know which interface version the kernel is supporting? >>>> And Xen needs to know that in advance in order to place the RSDP in >>>> low memory in case the kernel isn't reading the RSDP address from >>>> start_info. >>> >>> But the kernel image has ELF notes, right? You can put one that >>> indicates that this binary *does* know how to read the RSDP from the >>> start_info, and if you don't find that, put it in lowmem. >> >> Sow you would hurt BSD which does read the RSDP address correctly but >> (today) has no such ELF note. >> >> I think extending the PVH interface in such a way is no good idea. > > Option 1: Put the RSDP in lowmem unless we know the guest will use the > address in start_info > Pro: Existing Linux instances boot > Con: Existing BSD instances whose memory is an exact multiple of 1 GiB > will have slightly slower TLB miss times. ... whose memory is >=1GiB ... > Option 2: Put the RSDP in highmem regardless > Pro: Existing BSD instances whose memory is an exact multiple of 1GiB ... whose memory is >=1GiB ... > will have slightly faster TLB miss times > Con: Existing Linux instances don't boot at all Option 3: add a config item to domain config for selecting the RSDP placement, defaulting to highmem (my patch) Pro: Existing BSD and new Linux instances whose memory is >=1GiB will have slightly faster TLB miss times Pro: Existing Linux instances can be made bootable by adding a new item to their domain config > This seems like a no-brainer to me. But anyway, maybe we should move > the discussion elsewhere and stop bothering Greg. :-) Greg and stable removed. Juergen _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.xenproject.org/mailman/listinfo/xen-devel
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