Qiang Zhao points out that these offsets get written to 16-bit
registers, and there are some QE platforms with more than 64K
muram. So it is possible that qe_muram_alloc() gives us an allocation
that can't actually be used by the hardware, so detect and reject
that.

Reported-by: Qiang Zhao <qiang.z...@nxp.com>
Reviewed-by: Timur Tabi <ti...@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Rasmus Villemoes <li...@rasmusvillemoes.dk>
---
 drivers/net/wan/fsl_ucc_hdlc.c | 5 +++++
 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+)

diff --git a/drivers/net/wan/fsl_ucc_hdlc.c b/drivers/net/wan/fsl_ucc_hdlc.c
index 8d13586bb774..f029eaa7cfc0 100644
--- a/drivers/net/wan/fsl_ucc_hdlc.c
+++ b/drivers/net/wan/fsl_ucc_hdlc.c
@@ -245,6 +245,11 @@ static int uhdlc_init(struct ucc_hdlc_private *priv)
                ret = -ENOMEM;
                goto free_riptr;
        }
+       if (riptr != (u16)riptr || tiptr != (u16)tiptr) {
+               dev_err(priv->dev, "MURAM allocation out of addressable 
range\n");
+               ret = -ENOMEM;
+               goto free_tiptr;
+       }
 
        /* Set RIPTR, TIPTR */
        iowrite16be(riptr, &priv->ucc_pram->riptr);
-- 
2.23.0

Reply via email to