[PATCH] Reserve memory for kdump kernel within RMO region

Bernhard Walle bernhard at bwalle.de
Fri Nov 27 06:26:44 EST 2009


M. Mohan Kumar schrieb:
> On 11/26/2009 12:22 AM, Bernhard Walle wrote:
>> M. Mohan Kumar schrieb:
>>> Reserve memory for kdump kernel within RMO region
>>>
>>> When the kernel size exceeds 32MB(observed with some distros), memory
>>> for kdump kernel can not be reserved as kdump kernel base is assumed to
>>> be 32MB always. When the kernel has CONFIG_RELOCATABLE option enabled,
>>> provide the feature to reserve the memory for kdump kernel anywhere in
>>> the RMO region.
> 
> Hi Bernhard,
> 
>> Correct me if I'm wrong, but: CONFIG_RELOCATABLE is for the kernel that
>> gets loaded as crashkernel, not for the kernel that loads the
>> crashkernel. So it would be perfectly fine that a kernel that has not
>> CONFIG_RELOCATABLE set would load another kernel that has
>> CONFIG_RELOCATABLE set on an address != 32 M.
> 
> No, with relocatable option, the same kernel is used as both production 
> and kdump kernel.

Can be, but it's not strictly necessary. It depends what userland does.
Especially it's possible that a non-relocatable, self-compiled kernel
loads a relocatable distribution kernel as capture kernel.

Also, it would make sense to make the behaviour symmetric across
platforms. Currently we have:

 - x86 and ia64: Without offset on command line, use any offset
                 With offset on command line, use that offset and fail
                 if no memory is available at that offset.
 - ppc64: Always use 32M and ignore the offset.

If your patch gets applied, we have:

 - ppc64: With CONFIG_RELOCATABLE, use any offset
          With offset on command

I don't see why the behaviour on ppc64 should be completely different.

Having maintained kdump for SUSE for x86, ia64 and partly ppc64 in the
past, I always felt that ppc64 is more different from x86 than ia64 is
from x86. That's one more step into that direction without a technical
reason.

Having that all said: If your patch gets in mainline kernel, than we
should change the behaviour also for x86 and ia64.



Regards,
Bernhard


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