On Tue, Aug 16, 2016 at 1:50 PM, Kees Cook <keesc...@chromium.org> wrote:
[ ... ] >>> persistent_ram uses atomic ops in uncached memory to store the start >>> and end positions in the ringbuffer so that the state of the >>> ringbuffer will be valid if the kernel crashes at any time. This was >>> inherited from Android's ram_console implementation, and worked >>> through armv7. It has been causing more and more problems recently, >>> see for example 027bc8b08242c59e19356b4b2c189f2d849ab660 (pstore-ram: >>> Allow optional mapping with pgprot_noncached) and >>> 7ae9cb81933515dc7db1aa3c47ef7653717e3090 (pstore-ram: Fix hangs by >>> using write-combine mappings). >>> >>> Maybe it should be replaced with a spinlock in normal ram protecting >>> writes to the uncached region. >> >> The necessary functions already exist, and are used for memory mapped >> with ioremap() / ioremap_wc(). They were introduced with commit >> 0405a5cec3 ("pstore/ram: avoid atomic accesses for ioremapped >> regions"), and the description in that patch sounds quite similar to >> the current problem. Given that, would it be acceptable to remove >> buffer_start_add_atomic() and buffer_size_add_atomic(), and always use >> buffer_start_add_locked() and buffer_size_add_locked() instead ? Those >> functions still use atomic_set() and atomic_read(), which works fine >> in my tests. The only difference is that a spinlock in main memory is >> used instead of atomic_cmpxchg(). > > I don't see much of a down side to this. ramoops isn't expected to be > high-bandwidth so trading for a single global lock doesn't really > bother me. > Sounds good. I'll submit a patch to address the problem as suggested above. Guenter