Critical Interrupt Input
Benjamin Herrenschmidt
benh at kernel.crashing.org
Tue Aug 20 06:56:39 EST 2013
On Mon, 2013-08-19 at 12:00 -0700, Henry Bausley wrote:
>
> Support does appear to be present but there is a problem returning
> back to user space I suspect.
Probably a problem with TLB misses vs. crit interrupts.
A critical interrupt can re-enter a TLB miss.
I can see two potential issues there:
- A bug where we don't properly restore "something" (I thought we did
save and restore MMUCR though, but that's worth dbl checking if it works
properly) accross the crit entry/exit
- Something in your crit code causing a TLB miss (the
kernel .text/.data/.bss should be bolted but anything else can). We
don't currently support re-entering the TLB miss that way.
If we were to support the latter, we'd need to detect on entering a crit
that the PC is within the TLB miss handler, and setup a return context
to the original instruction (replay the miss) rather than trying to
resume it..
Cheers,
Ben.
> What fails is it causes Linux user space programs to get Segmentation
> errors.
> Issuing a simple ls causes a segmentation fault sometimes. The shell
> gets terminated
> and you cannot log back in. INIT: Id "T0" respawning too fast:
> disabled for 5 minutes pops up.
>
> However, the critical interrupt handler keeps running. I know this by
> adding the reading
> of a physical I/O location in the handler and can see it is being read
> on the scope.
>
>
> The only code in the handler is below.
>
> void critintr_handler(void *dev)
> {
> critintrcount++; // increment a variable
> iodata = *piom; // read an I/O location
> mtdcr(0x0c0, 0x00002000); // clear critical interrupt
> }
>
>
> Below is a log of the type of crashes that occur:
>
> root at 10.34.9.213:/opt/ppmac/ktest# ls
> Segmentation fault
> root at 10.34.9.213:/opt/ppmac/ktest# ls
> Segmentation fault
> root at 10.34.9.213:/opt/ppmac/ktest# ls
> Makefile ktest.c ktest.ko ktest.mod.o modules.order
> Module.symvers ktest.cbp ktest.mod.c ktest.o
> root at 10.34.9.213:/opt/ppmac/ktest# ls
>
> Debian GNU/Linux 7 powerpmac ttyS0
>
> powerpmac login: root
>
> Debian GNU/Linux 7 powerpmac ttyS0
>
> powerpmac login: root
>
> Debian GNU/Linux 7 powerpmac ttyS0
>
> powerpmac login: root
>
> Debian GNU/Linux 7 powerpmac ttyS0
>
> powerpmac login: root
> Password:
> Last login: Thu Nov 30 20:42:16 UTC 1933 on ttyS0
> Linux powerpmac 3.2.21-aspen_2.01.09 #10 Mon Aug 19 08:49:12 PDT 2013
> ppc
>
> The programs included with the Debian GNU/Linux system are free
> software;
> the exact distribution terms for each program are described in the
> individual files in /usr/share/doc/*/copyright.
>
> Debian GNU/Linux comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY, to the extent
> permitted by applicable law.
> INIT: Id "T0" respawning too fast: disabled for 5 minutes
>
>
> ______________________________________________________________________
> From: "Benjamin Herrenschmidt" <benh at kernel.crashing.org>
> Sent: Saturday, August 17, 2013 3:05 PM
> To: "Kumar Gala" <galak at kernel.crashing.org>
> Cc: linuxppc-dev at lists.ozlabs.org, hbausley at deltatau.com
> Subject: Re: Critical Interrupt Input
>
> On Fri, 2013-08-16 at 06:04 -0500, Kumar Gala wrote:
> > The 44x low level code needs to handle exception stacks properly for
> > this to work. Since its possible to have a critical exception occur
> > while in a normal exception level, you have to have proper saving of
> > additional register state and a stack frame for the critical
> > exception, etc. I'm not sure if that was ever done for 44x.
>
> Don't 44x and FSL BookE share the same macros ? I would think 44x does
> indeed implement the same crit support as e500...
>
> What does the crash look like ?
>
> Ben.
>
>
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>
>
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