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* Re: kmemleak panic
       [not found] ` <20190118143434.GE118707@arrakis.emea.arm.com>
@ 2019-01-18 15:36   ` Marc Gonzalez
  2019-01-18 16:14     ` Qian Cai
                       ` (2 more replies)
  0 siblings, 3 replies; 39+ messages in thread
From: Marc Gonzalez @ 2019-01-18 15:36 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Catalin Marinas
  Cc: Robin Murphy, Mark Rutland, Arnd Bergmann, Ard Biesheuvel,
	Oscar Salvador, Wei Yang, Michal Hocko, Andrew Morton,
	Linus Torvalds, Sri Krishna chowdary, Qian Cai, LKML

On 18/01/2019 15:34, Catalin Marinas wrote:

> On Fri, Jan 18, 2019 at 02:36:46PM +0100, Marc Gonzalez wrote:
>
>> Trying to diagnose a separate issue, I enabled a raft of debugging options,
>> including kmemleak. However, it looks like kmemleak itself is crashing?
>>
>> We seem to be crashing on this code:
>>
>> 		kasan_disable_current();
>> 		pointer = *ptr;
>> 		kasan_enable_current();
> 
> There was another regression reported recently:
> 
> http://lkml.kernel.org/r/51e79597-21ef-3073-9036-cfc33291f395@lca.pw
> 
> See if reverting commit 9f1eb38e0e113 (mm, kmemleak: little optimization while
> scanning) fixes it.
> 

[Drop LAKML, add LKML, add recipients]

Bug is easy to reproduce:

boot
mount -t debugfs nodev /sys/kernel/debug/ 
echo scan > /sys/kernel/debug/kmemleak

Unable to handle kernel paging request at virtual address ffffffc021e00000
Mem abort info:
  ESR = 0x96000006
  Exception class = DABT (current EL), IL = 32 bits
  SET = 0, FnV = 0
  EA = 0, S1PTW = 0
Data abort info:
  ISV = 0, ISS = 0x00000006
  CM = 0, WnR = 0
swapper pgtable: 4k pages, 39-bit VAs, pgdp = (____ptrval____)
[ffffffc021e00000] pgd=000000017e3ba803, pud=000000017e3ba803, pmd=0000000000000000
Internal error: Oops: 96000006 [#1] PREEMPT SMP
Modules linked in:
CPU: 0 PID: 635 Comm: exe Not tainted 5.0.0-rc1 #16
Hardware name: Qualcomm Technologies, Inc. MSM8998 v1 MTP (DT)
pstate: 80000085 (Nzcv daIf -PAN -UAO)
pc : scan_block+0x70/0x190
lr : scan_block+0x6c/0x190
sp : ffffff80133b3b20
x29: ffffff80133b3b20 x28: ffffffc0fdbaf018 
x27: ffffffc022000000 x26: 0000000000000080 
x25: ffffff80118bdf70 x24: ffffffc0f8cc8000 
x23: ffffff8010bd8000 x22: ffffff8010bd8830 
x21: ffffffc021e00ff9 x20: ffffffc0f8cc8050 
x19: ffffffc021e00000 x18: 00000000000025fd 
x17: 0000000000000200 x16: 0000000000000000 
x15: ffffff8010c24dd8 x14: 00000000000025f9 
x13: 00000000445b0e6c x12: ffffffc0f5a96658 
x11: 0000000000000001 x10: ffffff8010bae688 
x9 : ffffff8010baf000 x8 : ffffff8010bae688 
x7 : 0000000000000003 x6 : 0000000000000000 
x5 : ffffff801133ad60 x4 : 0000000000002878 
x3 : ffffff8010c24d88 x2 : 7c512d102eca1300 
x1 : ffffffc0f5a81b00 x0 : 0000000000000000 
Process exe (pid: 635, stack limit = 0x(____ptrval____))
Call trace:
 scan_block+0x70/0x190
 scan_gray_list+0x108/0x1c0
 kmemleak_scan+0x33c/0x7c0
 kmemleak_write+0x410/0x4b0
 full_proxy_write+0x68/0xa0
 __vfs_write+0x60/0x190
 vfs_write+0xac/0x1a0
 ksys_write+0x6c/0xe0
 __arm64_sys_write+0x24/0x30
 el0_svc_handler+0xc0/0x160
 el0_svc+0x8/0xc
Code: f9000fb4 d503201f 97ffffd2 35000580 (f9400260) 
---[ end trace 8797ac2fea89abd6 ]---
note: exe[635] exited with preempt_count 2



Reverting 9f1eb38e0e1131e75cc4ac684391b25d70282589 does not help:

Unable to handle kernel paging request at virtual address ffffffc021e00000
Mem abort info:
  ESR = 0x96000006
  Exception class = DABT (current EL), IL = 32 bits
  SET = 0, FnV = 0
  EA = 0, S1PTW = 0
Data abort info:
  ISV = 0, ISS = 0x00000006
  CM = 0, WnR = 0
swapper pgtable: 4k pages, 39-bit VAs, pgdp = (____ptrval____)
[ffffffc021e00000] pgd=000000017e3ba803, pud=000000017e3ba803, pmd=0000000000000000
Internal error: Oops: 96000006 [#1] PREEMPT SMP
Modules linked in:
CPU: 0 PID: 636 Comm: exe Not tainted 5.0.0-rc1 #18
Hardware name: Qualcomm Technologies, Inc. MSM8998 v1 MTP (DT)
pstate: 80000085 (Nzcv daIf -PAN -UAO)
pc : scan_block+0x70/0x190
lr : scan_block+0x6c/0x190
sp : ffffff8013303b20
x29: ffffff8013303b20 x28: ffffffc0fdbaf018 
x27: ffffffc022000000 x26: 0000000000000080 
x25: ffffff80118bdf70 x24: ffffffc0f8cc8000 
x23: ffffff8010bd8000 x22: ffffff8010bd8830 
x21: ffffffc021e00ff9 x20: ffffffc0f8cc8050 
x19: ffffffc021e00000 x18: 0000000000002704 
x17: 0000000000000200 x16: 0000000000000000 
x15: ffffff8010c24dd8 x14: 0000000000002700 
x13: 0000000068ed2dfa x12: ffffffc0f5a39a58 
x11: 0000000000000001 x10: ffffff8010bae688 
x9 : ffffff8010baf000 x8 : ffffff8010bae688 
x7 : 0000000000000003 x6 : 0000000000000000 
x5 : ffffff80113223a0 x4 : 00000000000029c8 
x3 : ffffff8010c24d88 x2 : 7c512d102eca1300 
x1 : ffffffc0f59f9200 x0 : 0000000000000000 
Process exe (pid: 636, stack limit = 0x(____ptrval____))
Call trace:
 scan_block+0x70/0x190
 scan_gray_list+0x108/0x1c0
 kmemleak_scan+0x338/0x7c0
 kmemleak_write+0x410/0x4b0
 full_proxy_write+0x68/0xa0
 __vfs_write+0x60/0x190
 vfs_write+0xac/0x1a0
 ksys_write+0x6c/0xe0
 __arm64_sys_write+0x24/0x30
 el0_svc_handler+0xc0/0x160
 el0_svc+0x8/0xc
Code: f9000fb4 d503201f 97ffffd2 35000580 (f9400260) 
---[ end trace 65933b4754c5cee7 ]---
note: exe[636] exited with preempt_count 2


Regards.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

* Re: kmemleak panic
  2019-01-18 15:36   ` kmemleak panic Marc Gonzalez
@ 2019-01-18 16:14     ` Qian Cai
  2019-01-18 17:05       ` Marc Gonzalez
  2019-01-18 19:12     ` Robin Murphy
  2019-01-19 13:28     ` Catalin Marinas
  2 siblings, 1 reply; 39+ messages in thread
From: Qian Cai @ 2019-01-18 16:14 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Marc Gonzalez, Catalin Marinas
  Cc: Robin Murphy, Mark Rutland, Arnd Bergmann, Ard Biesheuvel,
	Oscar Salvador, Wei Yang, Michal Hocko, Andrew Morton,
	Linus Torvalds, Sri Krishna chowdary, LKML



On 1/18/19 10:36 AM, Marc Gonzalez wrote:
> On 18/01/2019 15:34, Catalin Marinas wrote:
> 
>> On Fri, Jan 18, 2019 at 02:36:46PM +0100, Marc Gonzalez wrote:
>>
>>> Trying to diagnose a separate issue, I enabled a raft of debugging options,
>>> including kmemleak. However, it looks like kmemleak itself is crashing?
>>>
>>> We seem to be crashing on this code:
>>>
>>> 		kasan_disable_current();
>>> 		pointer = *ptr;
>>> 		kasan_enable_current();
>>
>> There was another regression reported recently:
>>
>> http://lkml.kernel.org/r/51e79597-21ef-3073-9036-cfc33291f395@lca.pw
>>
>> See if reverting commit 9f1eb38e0e113 (mm, kmemleak: little optimization while
>> scanning) fixes it.
>>
> 
> [Drop LAKML, add LKML, add recipients]
> 
> Bug is easy to reproduce:
> 
> boot
> mount -t debugfs nodev /sys/kernel/debug/ 
> echo scan > /sys/kernel/debug/kmemleak
> 
> Unable to handle kernel paging request at virtual address ffffffc021e00000
> Mem abort info:
>   ESR = 0x96000006
>   Exception class = DABT (current EL), IL = 32 bits
>   SET = 0, FnV = 0
>   EA = 0, S1PTW = 0
> Data abort info:
>   ISV = 0, ISS = 0x00000006
>   CM = 0, WnR = 0
> swapper pgtable: 4k pages, 39-bit VAs, pgdp = (____ptrval____)
> [ffffffc021e00000] pgd=000000017e3ba803, pud=000000017e3ba803, pmd=0000000000000000
> Internal error: Oops: 96000006 [#1] PREEMPT SMP
> Modules linked in:
> CPU: 0 PID: 635 Comm: exe Not tainted 5.0.0-rc1 #16
> Hardware name: Qualcomm Technologies, Inc. MSM8998 v1 MTP (DT)
> pstate: 80000085 (Nzcv daIf -PAN -UAO)
> pc : scan_block+0x70/0x190
> lr : scan_block+0x6c/0x190
> sp : ffffff80133b3b20
> x29: ffffff80133b3b20 x28: ffffffc0fdbaf018 
> x27: ffffffc022000000 x26: 0000000000000080 
> x25: ffffff80118bdf70 x24: ffffffc0f8cc8000 
> x23: ffffff8010bd8000 x22: ffffff8010bd8830 
> x21: ffffffc021e00ff9 x20: ffffffc0f8cc8050 
> x19: ffffffc021e00000 x18: 00000000000025fd 
> x17: 0000000000000200 x16: 0000000000000000 
> x15: ffffff8010c24dd8 x14: 00000000000025f9 
> x13: 00000000445b0e6c x12: ffffffc0f5a96658 
> x11: 0000000000000001 x10: ffffff8010bae688 
> x9 : ffffff8010baf000 x8 : ffffff8010bae688 
> x7 : 0000000000000003 x6 : 0000000000000000 
> x5 : ffffff801133ad60 x4 : 0000000000002878 
> x3 : ffffff8010c24d88 x2 : 7c512d102eca1300 
> x1 : ffffffc0f5a81b00 x0 : 0000000000000000 
> Process exe (pid: 635, stack limit = 0x(____ptrval____))
> Call trace:
>  scan_block+0x70/0x190
>  scan_gray_list+0x108/0x1c0
>  kmemleak_scan+0x33c/0x7c0
>  kmemleak_write+0x410/0x4b0
>  full_proxy_write+0x68/0xa0
>  __vfs_write+0x60/0x190
>  vfs_write+0xac/0x1a0
>  ksys_write+0x6c/0xe0
>  __arm64_sys_write+0x24/0x30
>  el0_svc_handler+0xc0/0x160
>  el0_svc+0x8/0xc
> Code: f9000fb4 d503201f 97ffffd2 35000580 (f9400260) 
> ---[ end trace 8797ac2fea89abd6 ]---
> note: exe[635] exited with preempt_count 2
> 
> 
> 
> Reverting 9f1eb38e0e1131e75cc4ac684391b25d70282589 does not help:

This looks like something different from the original "invalid PFNs from
pfn_to_online_page()" issue. What's your .config ?

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

* Re: kmemleak panic
  2019-01-18 16:14     ` Qian Cai
@ 2019-01-18 17:05       ` Marc Gonzalez
  2019-01-18 17:38         ` Qian Cai
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 39+ messages in thread
From: Marc Gonzalez @ 2019-01-18 17:05 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Qian Cai, Catalin Marinas
  Cc: Robin Murphy, Mark Rutland, Arnd Bergmann, Ard Biesheuvel,
	Oscar Salvador, Wei Yang, Michal Hocko, Andrew Morton,
	Linus Torvalds, Sri Krishna chowdary, LKML

On 18/01/2019 17:14, Qian Cai wrote:

> This looks like something different from the original "invalid PFNs from
> pfn_to_online_page()" issue. What's your .config ?

Here's my defconfig:

# CONFIG_SWAP is not set
CONFIG_NO_HZ_IDLE=y
CONFIG_HIGH_RES_TIMERS=y
CONFIG_PREEMPT=y
CONFIG_IKCONFIG=y
CONFIG_IKCONFIG_PROC=y
CONFIG_LOG_BUF_SHIFT=20
CONFIG_BLK_DEV_INITRD=y
CONFIG_ARCH_QCOM=y
# CONFIG_EFI is not set
# CONFIG_SUSPEND is not set
CONFIG_PM=y
# CONFIG_MQ_IOSCHED_DEADLINE is not set
# CONFIG_MQ_IOSCHED_KYBER is not set
CONFIG_UEVENT_HELPER_PATH="/sbin/hotplug"
CONFIG_DEVTMPFS=y
CONFIG_DEVTMPFS_MOUNT=y
# CONFIG_BLK_DEV is not set
# CONFIG_INPUT_KEYBOARD is not set
# CONFIG_INPUT_MOUSE is not set
# CONFIG_SERIO_SERPORT is not set
CONFIG_VT_HW_CONSOLE_BINDING=y
CONFIG_LEGACY_PTY_COUNT=16
CONFIG_SERIAL_8250=y
CONFIG_SERIAL_MSM=y
CONFIG_SERIAL_MSM_CONSOLE=y
CONFIG_SERIAL_DEV_BUS=y
# CONFIG_HW_RANDOM is not set
# CONFIG_HWMON is not set
CONFIG_REGULATOR=y
CONFIG_REGULATOR_FIXED_VOLTAGE=y
CONFIG_REGULATOR_QCOM_SMD_RPM=y
# CONFIG_HID is not set
# CONFIG_USB_SUPPORT is not set
# CONFIG_COMMON_CLK_XGENE is not set
CONFIG_COMMON_CLK_QCOM=y
# CONFIG_QCOM_A53PLL is not set
# CONFIG_QCOM_CLK_APCS_MSM8916 is not set
CONFIG_QCOM_CLK_SMD_RPM=y
CONFIG_MSM_GCC_8998=y
CONFIG_HWSPINLOCK=y
CONFIG_HWSPINLOCK_QCOM=y
CONFIG_MAILBOX=y
CONFIG_QCOM_APCS_IPC=y
CONFIG_RPMSG_QCOM_GLINK_RPM=y
CONFIG_RPMSG_QCOM_GLINK_SMEM=y
CONFIG_RPMSG_QCOM_SMD=y
CONFIG_RPMSG_VIRTIO=y
CONFIG_QCOM_COMMAND_DB=y
CONFIG_QCOM_SMEM=y
CONFIG_QCOM_SMD_RPM=y
CONFIG_TMPFS=y
CONFIG_DEBUG_INFO=y
CONFIG_DEBUG_KERNEL=y
CONFIG_DEBUG_KMEMLEAK=y
CONFIG_DEBUG_KMEMLEAK_EARLY_LOG_SIZE=4000
CONFIG_FUNCTION_TRACER=y

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

* Re: kmemleak panic
  2019-01-18 17:05       ` Marc Gonzalez
@ 2019-01-18 17:38         ` Qian Cai
  2019-01-19 10:21           ` Marc Gonzalez
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 39+ messages in thread
From: Qian Cai @ 2019-01-18 17:38 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Marc Gonzalez, Catalin Marinas
  Cc: Robin Murphy, Mark Rutland, Arnd Bergmann, Ard Biesheuvel,
	Oscar Salvador, Wei Yang, Michal Hocko, Andrew Morton,
	Linus Torvalds, Sri Krishna chowdary, LKML



On 1/18/19 12:05 PM, Marc Gonzalez wrote:
> On 18/01/2019 17:14, Qian Cai wrote:
> 
>> This looks like something different from the original "invalid PFNs from
>> pfn_to_online_page()" issue. What's your .config ?
> 
> Here's my defconfig:
> 
> # CONFIG_SWAP is not set
> CONFIG_NO_HZ_IDLE=y
> CONFIG_HIGH_RES_TIMERS=y
> CONFIG_PREEMPT=y
> CONFIG_IKCONFIG=y
> CONFIG_IKCONFIG_PROC=y
> CONFIG_LOG_BUF_SHIFT=20
> CONFIG_BLK_DEV_INITRD=y
> CONFIG_ARCH_QCOM=y
> # CONFIG_EFI is not set
> # CONFIG_SUSPEND is not set
> CONFIG_PM=y
> # CONFIG_MQ_IOSCHED_DEADLINE is not set
> # CONFIG_MQ_IOSCHED_KYBER is not set
> CONFIG_UEVENT_HELPER_PATH="/sbin/hotplug"
> CONFIG_DEVTMPFS=y
> CONFIG_DEVTMPFS_MOUNT=y
> # CONFIG_BLK_DEV is not set
> # CONFIG_INPUT_KEYBOARD is not set
> # CONFIG_INPUT_MOUSE is not set
> # CONFIG_SERIO_SERPORT is not set
> CONFIG_VT_HW_CONSOLE_BINDING=y
> CONFIG_LEGACY_PTY_COUNT=16
> CONFIG_SERIAL_8250=y
> CONFIG_SERIAL_MSM=y
> CONFIG_SERIAL_MSM_CONSOLE=y
> CONFIG_SERIAL_DEV_BUS=y
> # CONFIG_HW_RANDOM is not set
> # CONFIG_HWMON is not set
> CONFIG_REGULATOR=y
> CONFIG_REGULATOR_FIXED_VOLTAGE=y
> CONFIG_REGULATOR_QCOM_SMD_RPM=y
> # CONFIG_HID is not set
> # CONFIG_USB_SUPPORT is not set
> # CONFIG_COMMON_CLK_XGENE is not set
> CONFIG_COMMON_CLK_QCOM=y
> # CONFIG_QCOM_A53PLL is not set
> # CONFIG_QCOM_CLK_APCS_MSM8916 is not set
> CONFIG_QCOM_CLK_SMD_RPM=y
> CONFIG_MSM_GCC_8998=y
> CONFIG_HWSPINLOCK=y
> CONFIG_HWSPINLOCK_QCOM=y
> CONFIG_MAILBOX=y
> CONFIG_QCOM_APCS_IPC=y
> CONFIG_RPMSG_QCOM_GLINK_RPM=y
> CONFIG_RPMSG_QCOM_GLINK_SMEM=y
> CONFIG_RPMSG_QCOM_SMD=y
> CONFIG_RPMSG_VIRTIO=y
> CONFIG_QCOM_COMMAND_DB=y
> CONFIG_QCOM_SMEM=y
> CONFIG_QCOM_SMD_RPM=y
> CONFIG_TMPFS=y
> CONFIG_DEBUG_INFO=y
> CONFIG_DEBUG_KERNEL=y
> CONFIG_DEBUG_KMEMLEAK=y
> CONFIG_DEBUG_KMEMLEAK_EARLY_LOG_SIZE=4000
> CONFIG_FUNCTION_TRACER=y
> 

This is truncated. I'll need your whole .config file, so I can try to reproduce
it here on an arm64 ThunderX2 server.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

* Re: kmemleak panic
  2019-01-18 15:36   ` kmemleak panic Marc Gonzalez
  2019-01-18 16:14     ` Qian Cai
@ 2019-01-18 19:12     ` Robin Murphy
  2019-01-19 13:28     ` Catalin Marinas
  2 siblings, 0 replies; 39+ messages in thread
From: Robin Murphy @ 2019-01-18 19:12 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Marc Gonzalez, Catalin Marinas
  Cc: Mark Rutland, Arnd Bergmann, Ard Biesheuvel, Oscar Salvador,
	Wei Yang, Michal Hocko, Andrew Morton, Linus Torvalds,
	Sri Krishna chowdary, Qian Cai, LKML

On 2019-01-18 3:36 pm, Marc Gonzalez wrote:
> Unable to handle kernel paging request at virtual address ffffffc021e00000

I can't help but notice that you seem to get the same address in 4 
different logs - if it really is that deterministic then that's quite 
the boon for debugging (FWIW my first thought is that it looks a lot 
like a phys_to_virt() of something bogus). I've never used kmemleak 
myself, but looking at where it's crashing it appears to think that that 
address is a valid object - if I'm reading the docs correctly then I 
guess the "dump" command ought to be able to tell you where it thinks 
that object came from.

Robin.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

* Re: kmemleak panic
  2019-01-18 17:38         ` Qian Cai
@ 2019-01-19 10:21           ` Marc Gonzalez
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 39+ messages in thread
From: Marc Gonzalez @ 2019-01-19 10:21 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Qian Cai
  Cc: Catalin Marinas, Robin Murphy, Mark Rutland, Arnd Bergmann,
	Ard Biesheuvel, Oscar Salvador, Wei Yang, Michal Hocko,
	Andrew Morton, Linus Torvalds, Sri Krishna chowdary, LKML

On 18/01/2019 18:38, Qian Cai wrote:

> On 1/18/19 12:05 PM, Marc Gonzalez wrote:
>
>> On 18/01/2019 17:14, Qian Cai wrote:
>>
>>> This looks like something different from the original "invalid PFNs from
>>> pfn_to_online_page()" issue. What's your .config ?
>>
>> Here's my defconfig:
>>
>> # CONFIG_SWAP is not set
>> CONFIG_NO_HZ_IDLE=y
>> CONFIG_HIGH_RES_TIMERS=y
>> CONFIG_PREEMPT=y
>> CONFIG_IKCONFIG=y
>> CONFIG_IKCONFIG_PROC=y
>> CONFIG_LOG_BUF_SHIFT=20
>> CONFIG_BLK_DEV_INITRD=y
>> CONFIG_ARCH_QCOM=y
>> # CONFIG_EFI is not set
>> # CONFIG_SUSPEND is not set
>> CONFIG_PM=y
>> # CONFIG_MQ_IOSCHED_DEADLINE is not set
>> # CONFIG_MQ_IOSCHED_KYBER is not set
>> CONFIG_UEVENT_HELPER_PATH="/sbin/hotplug"
>> CONFIG_DEVTMPFS=y
>> CONFIG_DEVTMPFS_MOUNT=y
>> # CONFIG_BLK_DEV is not set
>> # CONFIG_INPUT_KEYBOARD is not set
>> # CONFIG_INPUT_MOUSE is not set
>> # CONFIG_SERIO_SERPORT is not set
>> CONFIG_VT_HW_CONSOLE_BINDING=y
>> CONFIG_LEGACY_PTY_COUNT=16
>> CONFIG_SERIAL_8250=y
>> CONFIG_SERIAL_MSM=y
>> CONFIG_SERIAL_MSM_CONSOLE=y
>> CONFIG_SERIAL_DEV_BUS=y
>> # CONFIG_HW_RANDOM is not set
>> # CONFIG_HWMON is not set
>> CONFIG_REGULATOR=y
>> CONFIG_REGULATOR_FIXED_VOLTAGE=y
>> CONFIG_REGULATOR_QCOM_SMD_RPM=y
>> # CONFIG_HID is not set
>> # CONFIG_USB_SUPPORT is not set
>> # CONFIG_COMMON_CLK_XGENE is not set
>> CONFIG_COMMON_CLK_QCOM=y
>> # CONFIG_QCOM_A53PLL is not set
>> # CONFIG_QCOM_CLK_APCS_MSM8916 is not set
>> CONFIG_QCOM_CLK_SMD_RPM=y
>> CONFIG_MSM_GCC_8998=y
>> CONFIG_HWSPINLOCK=y
>> CONFIG_HWSPINLOCK_QCOM=y
>> CONFIG_MAILBOX=y
>> CONFIG_QCOM_APCS_IPC=y
>> CONFIG_RPMSG_QCOM_GLINK_RPM=y
>> CONFIG_RPMSG_QCOM_GLINK_SMEM=y
>> CONFIG_RPMSG_QCOM_SMD=y
>> CONFIG_RPMSG_VIRTIO=y
>> CONFIG_QCOM_COMMAND_DB=y
>> CONFIG_QCOM_SMEM=y
>> CONFIG_QCOM_SMD_RPM=y
>> CONFIG_TMPFS=y
>> CONFIG_DEBUG_INFO=y
>> CONFIG_DEBUG_KERNEL=y
>> CONFIG_DEBUG_KMEMLEAK=y
>> CONFIG_DEBUG_KMEMLEAK_EARLY_LOG_SIZE=4000
>> CONFIG_FUNCTION_TRACER=y
> 
> This is truncated. I'll need your whole .config file, so I can try to reproduce
> it here on an arm64 ThunderX2 server.

Smirk. It's not truncated, it's condensed ;-)

It's a defconfig, as generated by make savedefconfig.

https://stackoverflow.com/questions/27899104/how-to-create-a-defconfig-file-from-a-config

Save it to e.g. arch/arm64/configs/marc_defconfig and then you can
just run 'make marc_defconfig' to generate the .config

Regards.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

* Re: kmemleak panic
  2019-01-18 15:36   ` kmemleak panic Marc Gonzalez
  2019-01-18 16:14     ` Qian Cai
  2019-01-18 19:12     ` Robin Murphy
@ 2019-01-19 13:28     ` Catalin Marinas
  2019-01-21 11:57       ` Marc Gonzalez
  2 siblings, 1 reply; 39+ messages in thread
From: Catalin Marinas @ 2019-01-19 13:28 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Marc Gonzalez
  Cc: Robin Murphy, Mark Rutland, Arnd Bergmann, Ard Biesheuvel,
	Oscar Salvador, Wei Yang, Michal Hocko, Andrew Morton,
	Linus Torvalds, Sri Krishna chowdary, Qian Cai, LKML

On Fri, Jan 18, 2019 at 04:36:59PM +0100, Marc Gonzalez wrote:
> mount -t debugfs nodev /sys/kernel/debug/ 
> echo scan > /sys/kernel/debug/kmemleak
> 
> Unable to handle kernel paging request at virtual address ffffffc021e00000
[...]
> Call trace:
>  scan_block+0x70/0x190
>  scan_gray_list+0x108/0x1c0
>  kmemleak_scan+0x33c/0x7c0
>  kmemleak_write+0x410/0x4b0

As per Robin's remark, this address seems to be pretty easy to
reproduce. It also happens via scan_gray_list() which indicates an
object kmemleak was informed about via kmemleak_alloc() (so this
excludes the pfn that Qian noticed).

Can you configure the kernel with CONFIG_DEBUG_KMEMLEAK_AUTO_SCAN off
just to avoid the bug being triggered early and run:

  mount -t debugfs nodev /sys/kernel/debug/
  echo dump=0xffffffc021e00000 > /sys/kernel/debug/kmemleak

Then run another scan to make sure this is the address that triggered
the page fault:

  echo scan > /sys/kernel/debug/kmemleak

The above should tell us where the object that kmemleak is trying to
scan came from.

Of course, ideally we should bisect this but I haven't been able to
reproduce it.

-- 
Catalin

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

* Re: kmemleak panic
  2019-01-19 13:28     ` Catalin Marinas
@ 2019-01-21 11:57       ` Marc Gonzalez
  2019-01-21 12:19         ` Robin Murphy
  2019-01-21 12:22         ` kmemleak panic Marc Gonzalez
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 39+ messages in thread
From: Marc Gonzalez @ 2019-01-21 11:57 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Catalin Marinas, Rob Herring, Frank Rowand, Marek Szyprowski,
	Bjorn Andersson
  Cc: Robin Murphy, Mark Rutland, Arnd Bergmann, Ard Biesheuvel,
	Oscar Salvador, Wei Yang, Michal Hocko, Andrew Morton,
	Linus Torvalds, Sri Krishna chowdary, Qian Cai, LKML

On 19/01/2019 14:28, Catalin Marinas wrote:

> As per Robin's remark, this address seems to be pretty easy to
> reproduce. It also happens via scan_gray_list() which indicates an
> object kmemleak was informed about via kmemleak_alloc() (so this
> excludes the pfn that Qian noticed).
> 
> Can you configure the kernel with CONFIG_DEBUG_KMEMLEAK_AUTO_SCAN off
> just to avoid the bug being triggered early and run:
> 
>   mount -t debugfs nodev /sys/kernel/debug/
>   echo dump=0xffffffc021e00000 > /sys/kernel/debug/kmemleak
> 
> Then run another scan to make sure this is the address that triggered
> the page fault:
> 
>   echo scan > /sys/kernel/debug/kmemleak
> 
> The above should tell us where the object that kmemleak is trying to
> scan came from.

Here are the remap requests on my system:

REMAP: PA=17a00000 VA=ffffff8010040000 SIZE=10000
REMAP: PA=17b00000 VA=ffffff8010c00000 SIZE=100000
REMAP: PA=17920000 VA=ffffff8010005000 SIZE=1000
REMAP: PA=17921000 VA=ffffff801000d000 SIZE=1000
REMAP: PA=17921000 VA=ffffff8010015000 SIZE=1000
REMAP: PA=01f40000 VA=ffffff8010fa0000 SIZE=20000
REMAP: PA=86000000 VA=ffffff8011000000 SIZE=200000
REMAP: PA=00100000 VA=ffffff8011300000 SIZE=b0000
REMAP: PA=17911000 VA=ffffff8010025000 SIZE=1000
REMAP: PA=00778000 VA=ffffff80115d0000 SIZE=7000
REMAP: PA=0c1b0000 VA=ffffff801002d000 SIZE=1000


# echo dump=0xffffffc021e00000 > /sys/kernel/debug/kmemleak
kmemleak: Object 0xffffffc021e00000 (size 2097152):
kmemleak:   comm "swapper/0", pid 0, jiffies 4294892296
kmemleak:   min_count = 0
kmemleak:   count = 0
kmemleak:   flags = 0x1
kmemleak:   checksum = 0
kmemleak:   backtrace:
     kmemleak_alloc_phys+0x48/0x60
     memblock_alloc_range_nid+0x8c/0xa4
     memblock_alloc_base_nid+0x4c/0x60
     __memblock_alloc_base+0x3c/0x4c
     early_init_dt_alloc_reserved_memory_arch+0x54/0xa4
     fdt_init_reserved_mem+0x308/0x3ec
     early_init_fdt_scan_reserved_mem+0x88/0xb0
     arm64_memblock_init+0x1dc/0x254
     setup_arch+0x1c8/0x4ec
     start_kernel+0x84/0x44c
     0xffffffffffffffff

# echo scan > /sys/kernel/debug/kmemleak
Unable to handle kernel paging request at virtual address ffffffc021e00000
Mem abort info:
  ESR = 0x96000006
  Exception class = DABT (current EL), IL = 32 bits
  SET = 0, FnV = 0
  EA = 0, S1PTW = 0
Data abort info:
  ISV = 0, ISS = 0x00000006
  CM = 0, WnR = 0
swapper pgtable: 4k pages, 39-bit VAs, pgdp = (____ptrval____)
[ffffffc021e00000] pgd=000000017e3ba803, pud=000000017e3ba803, pmd=0000000000000000
Internal error: Oops: 96000006 [#1] PREEMPT SMP
CPU: 4 PID: 508 Comm: sh Tainted: G S                5.0.0-rc1 #11
Hardware name: Qualcomm Technologies, Inc. MSM8998 v1 MTP (DT)
pstate: 80000085 (Nzcv daIf -PAN -UAO)
pc : scan_block+0x70/0x180
lr : scan_block+0x6c/0x180
sp : ffffff8011a2bb40
x29: ffffff8011a2bb40 x28: ffffffc0f8375e80 
x27: ffffff8010b8a000 x26: 0000000000000080 
x25: ffffff8010b8a668 x24: ffffffc0f8cc0000 
x23: ffffff8010b8a000 x22: ffffff8010a4b8c8 
x21: ffffffc021e00ff9 x20: ffffffc021e01000 
x19: ffffffc021e00000 x18: 0000000000000000 
x17: 0000000000000200 x16: 0000000000000000 
x15: ffffffffffffffff x14: ffffffff00000000 
x13: ffffffffffffffff x12: 0000000000000020 
x11: 0101010101010101 x10: 00000000004bfd20 
x9 : 7f7f7f7f7f7f7f7f x8 : fefeff096d606272 
x7 : 00000000dc3c0000 x6 : 0000000000000018 
x5 : ffffffbf03f8efc8 x4 : ffffffbf03f8efc7 
x3 : 5b36396f4e7d4000 x2 : ffffffc0f8cc0000 
x1 : ffffffc0f6689880 x0 : 0000000000000000 
Process sh (pid: 508, stack limit = 0x(____ptrval____))
Call trace:
 scan_block+0x70/0x180
 scan_gray_list+0xe0/0x190
 kmemleak_scan+0x2bc/0x540
 kmemleak_write+0x328/0x3d0
 full_proxy_write+0x68/0xa0
 __vfs_write+0x60/0x190
 vfs_write+0xac/0x1a0
 ksys_write+0x6c/0xe0
 __arm64_sys_write+0x24/0x30
 el0_svc_handler+0xb8/0x140
 el0_svc+0x8/0xc
Code: f9000fb4 d503201f 97ffffd2 35000540 (f9400260) 
---[ end trace 754cbd2624bb2b91 ]---
note: sh[508] exited with preempt_count 2


__reserved_mem_alloc_size() printed:
OF: reserved mem: allocated memory for 'rmtfs' node: base 0x00000000a1e00000, size 2 MiB

See git show c7833949564ec

The corresponding node is:

	reserved-memory {
		#address-cells = <2>;
		#size-cells = <2>;
		ranges;

		memory@85800000 {
			reg = <0x0 0x85800000 0x0 0x800000>;
			no-map;
		};

		smem_mem: smem-mem@86000000 {
			reg = <0x0 0x86000000 0x0 0x200000>;
			no-map;
		};

		memory@86200000 {
			reg = <0x0 0x86200000 0x0 0x2600000>;
			no-map;
		};

		rmtfs {
			compatible = "qcom,rmtfs-mem";

			size = <0x0 0x200000>;
			alloc-ranges = <0x0 0xa0000000 0x0 0x2000000>;
			no-map;

			qcom,client-id = <1>;
			qcom,vmid = <15>;
		};
	};

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

* Re: kmemleak panic
  2019-01-21 11:57       ` Marc Gonzalez
@ 2019-01-21 12:19         ` Robin Murphy
  2019-01-21 13:35           ` Rob Herring
  2019-01-21 12:22         ` kmemleak panic Marc Gonzalez
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 39+ messages in thread
From: Robin Murphy @ 2019-01-21 12:19 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Marc Gonzalez, Catalin Marinas, Rob Herring, Frank Rowand,
	Marek Szyprowski, Bjorn Andersson
  Cc: Mark Rutland, Arnd Bergmann, Ard Biesheuvel, Oscar Salvador,
	Wei Yang, Michal Hocko, Andrew Morton, Linus Torvalds,
	Sri Krishna chowdary, Qian Cai, LKML

On 21/01/2019 11:57, Marc Gonzalez wrote:
[...]
> # echo dump=0xffffffc021e00000 > /sys/kernel/debug/kmemleak
> kmemleak: Object 0xffffffc021e00000 (size 2097152):
> kmemleak:   comm "swapper/0", pid 0, jiffies 4294892296
> kmemleak:   min_count = 0
> kmemleak:   count = 0
> kmemleak:   flags = 0x1
> kmemleak:   checksum = 0
> kmemleak:   backtrace:
>       kmemleak_alloc_phys+0x48/0x60
>       memblock_alloc_range_nid+0x8c/0xa4
>       memblock_alloc_base_nid+0x4c/0x60
>       __memblock_alloc_base+0x3c/0x4c
>       early_init_dt_alloc_reserved_memory_arch+0x54/0xa4
>       fdt_init_reserved_mem+0x308/0x3ec
>       early_init_fdt_scan_reserved_mem+0x88/0xb0
>       arm64_memblock_init+0x1dc/0x254
>       setup_arch+0x1c8/0x4ec
>       start_kernel+0x84/0x44c
>       0xffffffffffffffff

OK, so via the __va(phys) call in kmemleak_alloc_phys(), you end up with 
the linear map address of a no-map reservation, which unsurprisingly 
turns out not to be mapped. Is there a way to tell kmemleak that it 
can't scan within a particular object?

Robin.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

* Re: kmemleak panic
  2019-01-21 11:57       ` Marc Gonzalez
  2019-01-21 12:19         ` Robin Murphy
@ 2019-01-21 12:22         ` Marc Gonzalez
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 39+ messages in thread
From: Marc Gonzalez @ 2019-01-21 12:22 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Catalin Marinas, Rob Herring, Frank Rowand, Marek Szyprowski,
	Bjorn Andersson
  Cc: Robin Murphy, Mark Rutland, Arnd Bergmann, Ard Biesheuvel,
	Oscar Salvador, Wei Yang, Michal Hocko, Andrew Morton,
	Linus Torvalds, Sachin Nikam, Qian Cai, LKML

On 21/01/2019 12:57, Marc Gonzalez wrote:

> On 19/01/2019 14:28, Catalin Marinas wrote:
> 
>> As per Robin's remark, this address seems to be pretty easy to
>> reproduce. It also happens via scan_gray_list() which indicates an
>> object kmemleak was informed about via kmemleak_alloc() (so this
>> excludes the pfn that Qian noticed).
>>
>> Can you configure the kernel with CONFIG_DEBUG_KMEMLEAK_AUTO_SCAN off
>> just to avoid the bug being triggered early and run:
>>
>>   mount -t debugfs nodev /sys/kernel/debug/
>>   echo dump=0xffffffc021e00000 > /sys/kernel/debug/kmemleak
>>
>> Then run another scan to make sure this is the address that triggered
>> the page fault:
>>
>>   echo scan > /sys/kernel/debug/kmemleak
>>
>> The above should tell us where the object that kmemleak is trying to
>> scan came from.
> 
> Here are the remap requests on my system:
> 
> REMAP: PA=17a00000 VA=ffffff8010040000 SIZE=10000
> REMAP: PA=17b00000 VA=ffffff8010c00000 SIZE=100000
> REMAP: PA=17920000 VA=ffffff8010005000 SIZE=1000
> REMAP: PA=17921000 VA=ffffff801000d000 SIZE=1000
> REMAP: PA=17921000 VA=ffffff8010015000 SIZE=1000
> REMAP: PA=01f40000 VA=ffffff8010fa0000 SIZE=20000
> REMAP: PA=86000000 VA=ffffff8011000000 SIZE=200000
> REMAP: PA=00100000 VA=ffffff8011300000 SIZE=b0000
> REMAP: PA=17911000 VA=ffffff8010025000 SIZE=1000
> REMAP: PA=00778000 VA=ffffff80115d0000 SIZE=7000
> REMAP: PA=0c1b0000 VA=ffffff801002d000 SIZE=1000
> 
> 
> # echo dump=0xffffffc021e00000 > /sys/kernel/debug/kmemleak
> kmemleak: Object 0xffffffc021e00000 (size 2097152):
> kmemleak:   comm "swapper/0", pid 0, jiffies 4294892296
> kmemleak:   min_count = 0
> kmemleak:   count = 0
> kmemleak:   flags = 0x1
> kmemleak:   checksum = 0
> kmemleak:   backtrace:
>      kmemleak_alloc_phys+0x48/0x60
>      memblock_alloc_range_nid+0x8c/0xa4
>      memblock_alloc_base_nid+0x4c/0x60
>      __memblock_alloc_base+0x3c/0x4c
>      early_init_dt_alloc_reserved_memory_arch+0x54/0xa4
>      fdt_init_reserved_mem+0x308/0x3ec
>      early_init_fdt_scan_reserved_mem+0x88/0xb0
>      arm64_memblock_init+0x1dc/0x254
>      setup_arch+0x1c8/0x4ec
>      start_kernel+0x84/0x44c
>      0xffffffffffffffff
> 
> # echo scan > /sys/kernel/debug/kmemleak
> Unable to handle kernel paging request at virtual address ffffffc021e00000
> Mem abort info:
>   ESR = 0x96000006
>   Exception class = DABT (current EL), IL = 32 bits
>   SET = 0, FnV = 0
>   EA = 0, S1PTW = 0
> Data abort info:
>   ISV = 0, ISS = 0x00000006
>   CM = 0, WnR = 0
> swapper pgtable: 4k pages, 39-bit VAs, pgdp = (____ptrval____)
> [ffffffc021e00000] pgd=000000017e3ba803, pud=000000017e3ba803, pmd=0000000000000000
> Internal error: Oops: 96000006 [#1] PREEMPT SMP
> CPU: 4 PID: 508 Comm: sh Tainted: G S                5.0.0-rc1 #11
> Hardware name: Qualcomm Technologies, Inc. MSM8998 v1 MTP (DT)
> pstate: 80000085 (Nzcv daIf -PAN -UAO)
> pc : scan_block+0x70/0x180
> lr : scan_block+0x6c/0x180
> sp : ffffff8011a2bb40
> x29: ffffff8011a2bb40 x28: ffffffc0f8375e80 
> x27: ffffff8010b8a000 x26: 0000000000000080 
> x25: ffffff8010b8a668 x24: ffffffc0f8cc0000 
> x23: ffffff8010b8a000 x22: ffffff8010a4b8c8 
> x21: ffffffc021e00ff9 x20: ffffffc021e01000 
> x19: ffffffc021e00000 x18: 0000000000000000 
> x17: 0000000000000200 x16: 0000000000000000 
> x15: ffffffffffffffff x14: ffffffff00000000 
> x13: ffffffffffffffff x12: 0000000000000020 
> x11: 0101010101010101 x10: 00000000004bfd20 
> x9 : 7f7f7f7f7f7f7f7f x8 : fefeff096d606272 
> x7 : 00000000dc3c0000 x6 : 0000000000000018 
> x5 : ffffffbf03f8efc8 x4 : ffffffbf03f8efc7 
> x3 : 5b36396f4e7d4000 x2 : ffffffc0f8cc0000 
> x1 : ffffffc0f6689880 x0 : 0000000000000000 
> Process sh (pid: 508, stack limit = 0x(____ptrval____))
> Call trace:
>  scan_block+0x70/0x180
>  scan_gray_list+0xe0/0x190
>  kmemleak_scan+0x2bc/0x540
>  kmemleak_write+0x328/0x3d0
>  full_proxy_write+0x68/0xa0
>  __vfs_write+0x60/0x190
>  vfs_write+0xac/0x1a0
>  ksys_write+0x6c/0xe0
>  __arm64_sys_write+0x24/0x30
>  el0_svc_handler+0xb8/0x140
>  el0_svc+0x8/0xc
> Code: f9000fb4 d503201f 97ffffd2 35000540 (f9400260) 
> ---[ end trace 754cbd2624bb2b91 ]---
> note: sh[508] exited with preempt_count 2
> 
> 
> __reserved_mem_alloc_size() printed:
> OF: reserved mem: allocated memory for 'rmtfs' node: base 0x00000000a1e00000, size 2 MiB
> 
> See git show c7833949564ec
> 
> The corresponding node is:
> 
> 	reserved-memory {
> 		#address-cells = <2>;
> 		#size-cells = <2>;
> 		ranges;
> 
> 		memory@85800000 {
> 			reg = <0x0 0x85800000 0x0 0x800000>;
> 			no-map;
> 		};
> 
> 		smem_mem: smem-mem@86000000 {
> 			reg = <0x0 0x86000000 0x0 0x200000>;
> 			no-map;
> 		};
> 
> 		memory@86200000 {
> 			reg = <0x0 0x86200000 0x0 0x2600000>;
> 			no-map;
> 		};
> 
> 		rmtfs {
> 			compatible = "qcom,rmtfs-mem";
> 
> 			size = <0x0 0x200000>;
> 			alloc-ranges = <0x0 0xa0000000 0x0 0x2000000>;
> 			no-map;
> 
> 			qcom,client-id = <1>;
> 			qcom,vmid = <15>;
> 		};
> 	};

Complete boot log using 'loglevel=7 memblock=debug'
https://pastebin.ubuntu.com/p/2BN2csSYkx/

Regards.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

* Re: kmemleak panic
  2019-01-21 12:19         ` Robin Murphy
@ 2019-01-21 13:35           ` Rob Herring
  2019-01-21 13:54             ` Marc Gonzalez
  2019-01-21 14:37             ` Catalin Marinas
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 39+ messages in thread
From: Rob Herring @ 2019-01-21 13:35 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Robin Murphy
  Cc: Marc Gonzalez, Catalin Marinas, Frank Rowand, Marek Szyprowski,
	Bjorn Andersson, Mark Rutland, Arnd Bergmann, Ard Biesheuvel,
	Oscar Salvador, Wei Yang, Michal Hocko, Andrew Morton,
	Linus Torvalds, Sri Krishna chowdary, Qian Cai, LKML

On Mon, Jan 21, 2019 at 6:19 AM Robin Murphy <robin.murphy@arm.com> wrote:
>
> On 21/01/2019 11:57, Marc Gonzalez wrote:
> [...]
> > # echo dump=0xffffffc021e00000 > /sys/kernel/debug/kmemleak
> > kmemleak: Object 0xffffffc021e00000 (size 2097152):
> > kmemleak:   comm "swapper/0", pid 0, jiffies 4294892296
> > kmemleak:   min_count = 0
> > kmemleak:   count = 0
> > kmemleak:   flags = 0x1
> > kmemleak:   checksum = 0
> > kmemleak:   backtrace:
> >       kmemleak_alloc_phys+0x48/0x60
> >       memblock_alloc_range_nid+0x8c/0xa4
> >       memblock_alloc_base_nid+0x4c/0x60
> >       __memblock_alloc_base+0x3c/0x4c
> >       early_init_dt_alloc_reserved_memory_arch+0x54/0xa4
> >       fdt_init_reserved_mem+0x308/0x3ec
> >       early_init_fdt_scan_reserved_mem+0x88/0xb0
> >       arm64_memblock_init+0x1dc/0x254
> >       setup_arch+0x1c8/0x4ec
> >       start_kernel+0x84/0x44c
> >       0xffffffffffffffff
>
> OK, so via the __va(phys) call in kmemleak_alloc_phys(), you end up with
> the linear map address of a no-map reservation, which unsurprisingly
> turns out not to be mapped. Is there a way to tell kmemleak that it
> can't scan within a particular object?

There was this patch posted[1]. I never got a reply, so it hasn't been applied.

Rob

https://patchwork.ozlabs.org/patch/995367/

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

* Re: kmemleak panic
  2019-01-21 13:35           ` Rob Herring
@ 2019-01-21 13:54             ` Marc Gonzalez
  2019-01-22  8:20               ` Prateek Patel
  2019-01-21 14:37             ` Catalin Marinas
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 39+ messages in thread
From: Marc Gonzalez @ 2019-01-21 13:54 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Rob Herring, Robin Murphy, Sachin Nikam, Prateek, John Hubbard,
	Ralph Campbell
  Cc: Catalin Marinas, Frank Rowand, Marek Szyprowski, Bjorn Andersson,
	Mark Rutland, Arnd Bergmann, Ard Biesheuvel, Oscar Salvador,
	Wei Yang, Michal Hocko, Andrew Morton, Linus Torvalds, Qian Cai,
	LKML, Vinayak Menon

On 21/01/2019 14:35, Rob Herring wrote:

> On Mon, Jan 21, 2019 at 6:19 AM Robin Murphy wrote:
>>
>> On 21/01/2019 11:57, Marc Gonzalez wrote:
>> [...]
>>> # echo dump=0xffffffc021e00000 > /sys/kernel/debug/kmemleak
>>> kmemleak: Object 0xffffffc021e00000 (size 2097152):
>>> kmemleak:   comm "swapper/0", pid 0, jiffies 4294892296
>>> kmemleak:   min_count = 0
>>> kmemleak:   count = 0
>>> kmemleak:   flags = 0x1
>>> kmemleak:   checksum = 0
>>> kmemleak:   backtrace:
>>>       kmemleak_alloc_phys+0x48/0x60
>>>       memblock_alloc_range_nid+0x8c/0xa4
>>>       memblock_alloc_base_nid+0x4c/0x60
>>>       __memblock_alloc_base+0x3c/0x4c
>>>       early_init_dt_alloc_reserved_memory_arch+0x54/0xa4
>>>       fdt_init_reserved_mem+0x308/0x3ec
>>>       early_init_fdt_scan_reserved_mem+0x88/0xb0
>>>       arm64_memblock_init+0x1dc/0x254
>>>       setup_arch+0x1c8/0x4ec
>>>       start_kernel+0x84/0x44c
>>>       0xffffffffffffffff
>>
>> OK, so via the __va(phys) call in kmemleak_alloc_phys(), you end up with
>> the linear map address of a no-map reservation, which unsurprisingly
>> turns out not to be mapped. Is there a way to tell kmemleak that it
>> can't scan within a particular object?
> 
> There was this patch posted[1]. I never got a reply, so it hasn't been applied.
> 
> Rob
> 
> https://patchwork.ozlabs.org/patch/995367/

It is worth noting that the author's email address appears to be dead.
<schowdary@nvidia.com>: host hqemgate08.nvidia.com[216.228.121.117] said:
550 #5.1.0 Address rejected. (in reply to RCPT TO command)

Adding a few nvidia devs for comment.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

* Re: kmemleak panic
  2019-01-21 13:35           ` Rob Herring
  2019-01-21 13:54             ` Marc Gonzalez
@ 2019-01-21 14:37             ` Catalin Marinas
  2019-01-21 15:42               ` Rob Herring
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 39+ messages in thread
From: Catalin Marinas @ 2019-01-21 14:37 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Rob Herring
  Cc: Robin Murphy, Marc Gonzalez, Frank Rowand, Marek Szyprowski,
	Bjorn Andersson, Mark Rutland, Arnd Bergmann, Ard Biesheuvel,
	Oscar Salvador, Wei Yang, Michal Hocko, Andrew Morton,
	Linus Torvalds, Sri Krishna chowdary, Qian Cai, LKML

On Mon, Jan 21, 2019 at 07:35:11AM -0600, Rob Herring wrote:
> On Mon, Jan 21, 2019 at 6:19 AM Robin Murphy <robin.murphy@arm.com> wrote:
> >
> > On 21/01/2019 11:57, Marc Gonzalez wrote:
> > [...]
> > > # echo dump=0xffffffc021e00000 > /sys/kernel/debug/kmemleak
> > > kmemleak: Object 0xffffffc021e00000 (size 2097152):
> > > kmemleak:   comm "swapper/0", pid 0, jiffies 4294892296
> > > kmemleak:   min_count = 0
> > > kmemleak:   count = 0
> > > kmemleak:   flags = 0x1
> > > kmemleak:   checksum = 0
> > > kmemleak:   backtrace:
> > >       kmemleak_alloc_phys+0x48/0x60
> > >       memblock_alloc_range_nid+0x8c/0xa4
> > >       memblock_alloc_base_nid+0x4c/0x60
> > >       __memblock_alloc_base+0x3c/0x4c
> > >       early_init_dt_alloc_reserved_memory_arch+0x54/0xa4
> > >       fdt_init_reserved_mem+0x308/0x3ec
> > >       early_init_fdt_scan_reserved_mem+0x88/0xb0
> > >       arm64_memblock_init+0x1dc/0x254
> > >       setup_arch+0x1c8/0x4ec
> > >       start_kernel+0x84/0x44c
> > >       0xffffffffffffffff
> >
> > OK, so via the __va(phys) call in kmemleak_alloc_phys(), you end up with
> > the linear map address of a no-map reservation, which unsurprisingly
> > turns out not to be mapped. Is there a way to tell kmemleak that it
> > can't scan within a particular object?
> 
> There was this patch posted[1]. I never got a reply, so it hasn't been applied.
> 
> https://patchwork.ozlabs.org/patch/995367/

Thanks Rob, I wasn't aware of this patch (or I just missed it at the
time).

I wonder whether kmemleak should simply remove ranges passed to
memblock_remove(), or at least mark them as no-scan.

-- 
Catalin

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

* Re: kmemleak panic
  2019-01-21 14:37             ` Catalin Marinas
@ 2019-01-21 15:42               ` Rob Herring
  2019-01-21 15:53                 ` Robin Murphy
  2019-01-21 17:42                 ` Mike Rapoport
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 39+ messages in thread
From: Rob Herring @ 2019-01-21 15:42 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Catalin Marinas, Mike Rapoport
  Cc: Robin Murphy, Marc Gonzalez, Frank Rowand, Marek Szyprowski,
	Bjorn Andersson, Mark Rutland, Arnd Bergmann, Ard Biesheuvel,
	Oscar Salvador, Wei Yang, Michal Hocko, Andrew Morton,
	Linus Torvalds, Sri Krishna chowdary, Qian Cai, LKML

+Mike Rapoport

On Mon, Jan 21, 2019 at 8:37 AM Catalin Marinas <catalin.marinas@arm.com> wrote:
>
> On Mon, Jan 21, 2019 at 07:35:11AM -0600, Rob Herring wrote:
> > On Mon, Jan 21, 2019 at 6:19 AM Robin Murphy <robin.murphy@arm.com> wrote:
> > >
> > > On 21/01/2019 11:57, Marc Gonzalez wrote:
> > > [...]
> > > > # echo dump=0xffffffc021e00000 > /sys/kernel/debug/kmemleak
> > > > kmemleak: Object 0xffffffc021e00000 (size 2097152):
> > > > kmemleak:   comm "swapper/0", pid 0, jiffies 4294892296
> > > > kmemleak:   min_count = 0
> > > > kmemleak:   count = 0
> > > > kmemleak:   flags = 0x1
> > > > kmemleak:   checksum = 0
> > > > kmemleak:   backtrace:
> > > >       kmemleak_alloc_phys+0x48/0x60
> > > >       memblock_alloc_range_nid+0x8c/0xa4
> > > >       memblock_alloc_base_nid+0x4c/0x60
> > > >       __memblock_alloc_base+0x3c/0x4c
> > > >       early_init_dt_alloc_reserved_memory_arch+0x54/0xa4
> > > >       fdt_init_reserved_mem+0x308/0x3ec
> > > >       early_init_fdt_scan_reserved_mem+0x88/0xb0
> > > >       arm64_memblock_init+0x1dc/0x254
> > > >       setup_arch+0x1c8/0x4ec
> > > >       start_kernel+0x84/0x44c
> > > >       0xffffffffffffffff
> > >
> > > OK, so via the __va(phys) call in kmemleak_alloc_phys(), you end up with
> > > the linear map address of a no-map reservation, which unsurprisingly
> > > turns out not to be mapped. Is there a way to tell kmemleak that it
> > > can't scan within a particular object?
> >
> > There was this patch posted[1]. I never got a reply, so it hasn't been applied.
> >
> > https://patchwork.ozlabs.org/patch/995367/
>
> Thanks Rob, I wasn't aware of this patch (or I just missed it at the
> time).
>
> I wonder whether kmemleak should simply remove ranges passed to
> memblock_remove(), or at least mark them as no-scan.

Seems reasonable to me, but of course that impacts a lot of other
cases. Maybe Mike R has some thoughts?

Rob

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

* Re: kmemleak panic
  2019-01-21 15:42               ` Rob Herring
@ 2019-01-21 15:53                 ` Robin Murphy
  2019-01-21 17:42                 ` Mike Rapoport
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 39+ messages in thread
From: Robin Murphy @ 2019-01-21 15:53 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Rob Herring, Catalin Marinas, Mike Rapoport
  Cc: Marc Gonzalez, Frank Rowand, Marek Szyprowski, Bjorn Andersson,
	Mark Rutland, Arnd Bergmann, Ard Biesheuvel, Oscar Salvador,
	Wei Yang, Michal Hocko, Andrew Morton, Linus Torvalds,
	Sri Krishna chowdary, Qian Cai, LKML

On 21/01/2019 15:42, Rob Herring wrote:
> +Mike Rapoport
> 
> On Mon, Jan 21, 2019 at 8:37 AM Catalin Marinas <catalin.marinas@arm.com> wrote:
>>
>> On Mon, Jan 21, 2019 at 07:35:11AM -0600, Rob Herring wrote:
>>> On Mon, Jan 21, 2019 at 6:19 AM Robin Murphy <robin.murphy@arm.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> On 21/01/2019 11:57, Marc Gonzalez wrote:
>>>> [...]
>>>>> # echo dump=0xffffffc021e00000 > /sys/kernel/debug/kmemleak
>>>>> kmemleak: Object 0xffffffc021e00000 (size 2097152):
>>>>> kmemleak:   comm "swapper/0", pid 0, jiffies 4294892296
>>>>> kmemleak:   min_count = 0
>>>>> kmemleak:   count = 0
>>>>> kmemleak:   flags = 0x1
>>>>> kmemleak:   checksum = 0
>>>>> kmemleak:   backtrace:
>>>>>        kmemleak_alloc_phys+0x48/0x60
>>>>>        memblock_alloc_range_nid+0x8c/0xa4
>>>>>        memblock_alloc_base_nid+0x4c/0x60
>>>>>        __memblock_alloc_base+0x3c/0x4c
>>>>>        early_init_dt_alloc_reserved_memory_arch+0x54/0xa4
>>>>>        fdt_init_reserved_mem+0x308/0x3ec
>>>>>        early_init_fdt_scan_reserved_mem+0x88/0xb0
>>>>>        arm64_memblock_init+0x1dc/0x254
>>>>>        setup_arch+0x1c8/0x4ec
>>>>>        start_kernel+0x84/0x44c
>>>>>        0xffffffffffffffff
>>>>
>>>> OK, so via the __va(phys) call in kmemleak_alloc_phys(), you end up with
>>>> the linear map address of a no-map reservation, which unsurprisingly
>>>> turns out not to be mapped. Is there a way to tell kmemleak that it
>>>> can't scan within a particular object?
>>>
>>> There was this patch posted[1]. I never got a reply, so it hasn't been applied.
>>>
>>> https://patchwork.ozlabs.org/patch/995367/
>>
>> Thanks Rob, I wasn't aware of this patch (or I just missed it at the
>> time).
>>
>> I wonder whether kmemleak should simply remove ranges passed to
>> memblock_remove(), or at least mark them as no-scan.
> 
> Seems reasonable to me, but of course that impacts a lot of other
> cases. Maybe Mike R has some thoughts?

In particular, might that risk crippling kmemleak on EFI arm64 EFI, 
where we memblock_remove() the entire physical address space (but then 
rebuild the memblock list from scratch)?

FWIW, from the reserved-memory angle I think that patch looks reasonable 
as-is (modulo perhaps a kmemleak_no_scan_phys() wrapper for API 
symmetry). MEMBLOCK_NOMAP is already a massive pain in the bum and I'd 
really rather not introduce any more usage of it if at all possible.

Robin.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

* Re: kmemleak panic
  2019-01-21 15:42               ` Rob Herring
  2019-01-21 15:53                 ` Robin Murphy
@ 2019-01-21 17:42                 ` Mike Rapoport
  2019-01-22 14:02                   ` Marc Gonzalez
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 39+ messages in thread
From: Mike Rapoport @ 2019-01-21 17:42 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Rob Herring
  Cc: Catalin Marinas, Robin Murphy, Marc Gonzalez, Frank Rowand,
	Marek Szyprowski, Bjorn Andersson, Mark Rutland, Arnd Bergmann,
	Ard Biesheuvel, Oscar Salvador, Wei Yang, Michal Hocko,
	Andrew Morton, Linus Torvalds, Sri Krishna chowdary, Qian Cai,
	LKML

On Mon, Jan 21, 2019 at 09:42:07AM -0600, Rob Herring wrote:
> +Mike Rapoport
> 
> On Mon, Jan 21, 2019 at 8:37 AM Catalin Marinas <catalin.marinas@arm.com> wrote:
> >
> > On Mon, Jan 21, 2019 at 07:35:11AM -0600, Rob Herring wrote:
> > > On Mon, Jan 21, 2019 at 6:19 AM Robin Murphy <robin.murphy@arm.com> wrote:
> > > >
> > > > On 21/01/2019 11:57, Marc Gonzalez wrote:
> > > > [...]
> > > > > # echo dump=0xffffffc021e00000 > /sys/kernel/debug/kmemleak
> > > > > kmemleak: Object 0xffffffc021e00000 (size 2097152):
> > > > > kmemleak:   comm "swapper/0", pid 0, jiffies 4294892296
> > > > > kmemleak:   min_count = 0
> > > > > kmemleak:   count = 0
> > > > > kmemleak:   flags = 0x1
> > > > > kmemleak:   checksum = 0
> > > > > kmemleak:   backtrace:
> > > > >       kmemleak_alloc_phys+0x48/0x60
> > > > >       memblock_alloc_range_nid+0x8c/0xa4
> > > > >       memblock_alloc_base_nid+0x4c/0x60
> > > > >       __memblock_alloc_base+0x3c/0x4c
> > > > >       early_init_dt_alloc_reserved_memory_arch+0x54/0xa4
> > > > >       fdt_init_reserved_mem+0x308/0x3ec
> > > > >       early_init_fdt_scan_reserved_mem+0x88/0xb0
> > > > >       arm64_memblock_init+0x1dc/0x254
> > > > >       setup_arch+0x1c8/0x4ec
> > > > >       start_kernel+0x84/0x44c
> > > > >       0xffffffffffffffff
> > > >
> > > > OK, so via the __va(phys) call in kmemleak_alloc_phys(), you end up with
> > > > the linear map address of a no-map reservation, which unsurprisingly
> > > > turns out not to be mapped. Is there a way to tell kmemleak that it
> > > > can't scan within a particular object?
> > >
> > > There was this patch posted[1]. I never got a reply, so it hasn't been applied.
> > >
> > > https://patchwork.ozlabs.org/patch/995367/
> >
> > Thanks Rob, I wasn't aware of this patch (or I just missed it at the
> > time).
> >
> > I wonder whether kmemleak should simply remove ranges passed to
> > memblock_remove(), or at least mark them as no-scan.

I'm not sure that would be possible. Normal use of memblock_remove() is as
a counterpart of memblock_add() which does not involve kmemleak.
As memblock_remove() essentially hides range of the physical memory from
the system, it's not clear how it can communicate to kmemleak what region
should not be scanned.

> Seems reasonable to me, but of course that impacts a lot of other
> cases. Maybe Mike R has some thoughts?

If I understood correctly, the trouble comes from no-map range allocated in 
early_init_dt_alloc_reserved_memory_arch().

There's indeed imbalance, because memblock_alloc() does kmemleak_alloc(), but
memblock_remove() does not do kmemleak_free().

I think the best way is to replace __memblock_alloc_base() with
memblock_find_in_range(), e.g something like:


diff --git a/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c b/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
index 1977ee0adcb1..6807a1cffe55 100644
--- a/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
+++ b/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
@@ -37,21 +37,16 @@ int __init __weak early_init_dt_alloc_reserved_memory_arch(phys_addr_t size,
 	 */
 	end = !end ? MEMBLOCK_ALLOC_ANYWHERE : end;
 	align = !align ? SMP_CACHE_BYTES : align;
-	base = __memblock_alloc_base(size, align, end);
+	base = memblock_find_in_range(size, align, start, end);
 	if (!base)
 		return -ENOMEM;
 
-	/*
-	 * Check if the allocated region fits in to start..end window
-	 */
-	if (base < start) {
-		memblock_free(base, size);
-		return -ENOMEM;
-	}
-
 	*res_base = base;
 	if (nomap)
 		return memblock_remove(base, size);
+	else
+		return memblock_reserve(base, size);
+
 	return 0;
 }
 
 
> Rob
> 

-- 
Sincerely yours,
Mike.


^ permalink raw reply related	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

* Re: kmemleak panic
  2019-01-21 13:54             ` Marc Gonzalez
@ 2019-01-22  8:20               ` Prateek Patel
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 39+ messages in thread
From: Prateek Patel @ 2019-01-22  8:20 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Marc Gonzalez, Rob Herring, Robin Murphy, Sachin Nikam,
	John Hubbard, Ralph Campbell
  Cc: Catalin Marinas, Frank Rowand, Marek Szyprowski, Bjorn Andersson,
	Mark Rutland, Arnd Bergmann, Ard Biesheuvel, Oscar Salvador,
	Wei Yang, Michal Hocko, Andrew Morton, Linus Torvalds, Qian Cai,
	LKML, Vinayak Menon


On 1/21/2019 7:24 PM, Marc Gonzalez wrote:
> On 21/01/2019 14:35, Rob Herring wrote:
>
>> On Mon, Jan 21, 2019 at 6:19 AM Robin Murphy wrote:
>>> On 21/01/2019 11:57, Marc Gonzalez wrote:
>>> [...]
>>>> # echo dump=0xffffffc021e00000 > /sys/kernel/debug/kmemleak
>>>> kmemleak: Object 0xffffffc021e00000 (size 2097152):
>>>> kmemleak:   comm "swapper/0", pid 0, jiffies 4294892296
>>>> kmemleak:   min_count = 0
>>>> kmemleak:   count = 0
>>>> kmemleak:   flags = 0x1
>>>> kmemleak:   checksum = 0
>>>> kmemleak:   backtrace:
>>>>        kmemleak_alloc_phys+0x48/0x60
>>>>        memblock_alloc_range_nid+0x8c/0xa4
>>>>        memblock_alloc_base_nid+0x4c/0x60
>>>>        __memblock_alloc_base+0x3c/0x4c
>>>>        early_init_dt_alloc_reserved_memory_arch+0x54/0xa4
>>>>        fdt_init_reserved_mem+0x308/0x3ec
>>>>        early_init_fdt_scan_reserved_mem+0x88/0xb0
>>>>        arm64_memblock_init+0x1dc/0x254
>>>>        setup_arch+0x1c8/0x4ec
>>>>        start_kernel+0x84/0x44c
>>>>        0xffffffffffffffff
>>> OK, so via the __va(phys) call in kmemleak_alloc_phys(), you end up with
>>> the linear map address of a no-map reservation, which unsurprisingly
>>> turns out not to be mapped. Is there a way to tell kmemleak that it
>>> can't scan within a particular object?

Yes,  kmemleak_no_scan() do this which is done in patch 
https://patchwork.ozlabs.org/patch/995367/

This was done to avoid kmemleak scanning on the blocks which are nomaped 
and should not have linear mapping created in kernel page table.

>> There was this patch posted[1]. I never got a reply, so it hasn't been applied.
>>
>> Rob
>>
>> https://patchwork.ozlabs.org/patch/995367/
> It is worth noting that the author's email address appears to be dead.
> <schowdary@nvidia.com>: host hqemgate08.nvidia.com[216.228.121.117] said:
> 550 #5.1.0 Address rejected. (in reply to RCPT TO command)
>
> Adding a few nvidia devs for comment.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

* Re: kmemleak panic
  2019-01-21 17:42                 ` Mike Rapoport
@ 2019-01-22 14:02                   ` Marc Gonzalez
  2019-01-22 14:12                     ` Marc Gonzalez
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 39+ messages in thread
From: Marc Gonzalez @ 2019-01-22 14:02 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Mike Rapoport, Rob Herring, Catalin Marinas
  Cc: Robin Murphy, Frank Rowand, Marek Szyprowski, Bjorn Andersson,
	Mark Rutland, Arnd Bergmann, Ard Biesheuvel, Oscar Salvador,
	Wei Yang, Michal Hocko, Andrew Morton, Linus Torvalds,
	Sri Krishna chowdary, Qian Cai, LKML

On 21/01/2019 18:42, Mike Rapoport wrote:

> If I understood correctly, the trouble comes from no-map range allocated in 
> early_init_dt_alloc_reserved_memory_arch().
> 
> There's indeed imbalance, because memblock_alloc() does kmemleak_alloc(), but
> memblock_remove() does not do kmemleak_free().
> 
> I think the best way is to replace __memblock_alloc_base() with
> memblock_find_in_range(), e.g something like:
> 
> 
> diff --git a/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c b/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
> index 1977ee0adcb1..6807a1cffe55 100644
> --- a/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
> +++ b/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
> @@ -37,21 +37,16 @@ int __init __weak early_init_dt_alloc_reserved_memory_arch(phys_addr_t size,
>  	 */
>  	end = !end ? MEMBLOCK_ALLOC_ANYWHERE : end;
>  	align = !align ? SMP_CACHE_BYTES : align;
> -	base = __memblock_alloc_base(size, align, end);
> +	base = memblock_find_in_range(size, align, start, end);
>  	if (!base)
>  		return -ENOMEM;
>  
> -	/*
> -	 * Check if the allocated region fits in to start..end window
> -	 */
> -	if (base < start) {
> -		memblock_free(base, size);
> -		return -ENOMEM;
> -	}
> -
>  	*res_base = base;
>  	if (nomap)
>  		return memblock_remove(base, size);
> +	else
> +		return memblock_reserve(base, size);
> +
>  	return 0;
>  }
>  

Your patch solves the issue. \o/

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

* Re: kmemleak panic
  2019-01-22 14:02                   ` Marc Gonzalez
@ 2019-01-22 14:12                     ` Marc Gonzalez
  2019-01-23  5:54                       ` Mike Rapoport
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 39+ messages in thread
From: Marc Gonzalez @ 2019-01-22 14:12 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Mike Rapoport, Rob Herring, Catalin Marinas, Prateek Patel,
	Sachin Nikam, John Hubbard, Ralph Campbell
  Cc: Robin Murphy, Frank Rowand, Marek Szyprowski, Bjorn Andersson,
	Mark Rutland, Arnd Bergmann, Ard Biesheuvel, Oscar Salvador,
	Wei Yang, Michal Hocko, Andrew Morton, Linus Torvalds, Qian Cai,
	LKML

On 22/01/2019 15:02, Marc Gonzalez wrote:

> On 21/01/2019 18:42, Mike Rapoport wrote:
> 
>> If I understood correctly, the trouble comes from no-map range allocated in 
>> early_init_dt_alloc_reserved_memory_arch().
>>
>> There's indeed imbalance, because memblock_alloc() does kmemleak_alloc(), but
>> memblock_remove() does not do kmemleak_free().
>>
>> I think the best way is to replace __memblock_alloc_base() with
>> memblock_find_in_range(), e.g something like:
>>
>>
>> diff --git a/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c b/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
>> index 1977ee0adcb1..6807a1cffe55 100644
>> --- a/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
>> +++ b/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
>> @@ -37,21 +37,16 @@ int __init __weak early_init_dt_alloc_reserved_memory_arch(phys_addr_t size,
>>  	 */
>>  	end = !end ? MEMBLOCK_ALLOC_ANYWHERE : end;
>>  	align = !align ? SMP_CACHE_BYTES : align;
>> -	base = __memblock_alloc_base(size, align, end);
>> +	base = memblock_find_in_range(size, align, start, end);
>>  	if (!base)
>>  		return -ENOMEM;
>>  
>> -	/*
>> -	 * Check if the allocated region fits in to start..end window
>> -	 */
>> -	if (base < start) {
>> -		memblock_free(base, size);
>> -		return -ENOMEM;
>> -	}
>> -
>>  	*res_base = base;
>>  	if (nomap)
>>  		return memblock_remove(base, size);
>> +	else
>> +		return memblock_reserve(base, size);
>> +
>>  	return 0;
>>  }
>>  
> 
> Your patch solves the issue. \o/

[ Add nvidia devs, but drop schowdary@nvidia.com ]

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

* Re: kmemleak panic
  2019-01-22 14:12                     ` Marc Gonzalez
@ 2019-01-23  5:54                       ` Mike Rapoport
  2019-01-23  7:05                         ` Prateek Patel
  2019-01-23  7:28                         ` Marek Szyprowski
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 39+ messages in thread
From: Mike Rapoport @ 2019-01-23  5:54 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Marc Gonzalez
  Cc: Rob Herring, Catalin Marinas, Prateek Patel, Sachin Nikam,
	John Hubbard, Ralph Campbell, Robin Murphy, Frank Rowand,
	Marek Szyprowski, Bjorn Andersson, Mark Rutland, Arnd Bergmann,
	Ard Biesheuvel, Oscar Salvador, Wei Yang, Michal Hocko,
	Andrew Morton, Linus Torvalds, Qian Cai, LKML

On Tue, Jan 22, 2019 at 03:12:54PM +0100, Marc Gonzalez wrote:
> On 22/01/2019 15:02, Marc Gonzalez wrote:
> 
> > On 21/01/2019 18:42, Mike Rapoport wrote:
> > 
> >> If I understood correctly, the trouble comes from no-map range allocated in 
> >> early_init_dt_alloc_reserved_memory_arch().
> >>
> >> There's indeed imbalance, because memblock_alloc() does kmemleak_alloc(), but
> >> memblock_remove() does not do kmemleak_free().
> >>
> >> I think the best way is to replace __memblock_alloc_base() with
> >> memblock_find_in_range(), e.g something like:
> >>
> >>
> >> diff --git a/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c b/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
> >> index 1977ee0adcb1..6807a1cffe55 100644
> >> --- a/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
> >> +++ b/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
> >> @@ -37,21 +37,16 @@ int __init __weak early_init_dt_alloc_reserved_memory_arch(phys_addr_t size,
> >>  	 */
> >>  	end = !end ? MEMBLOCK_ALLOC_ANYWHERE : end;
> >>  	align = !align ? SMP_CACHE_BYTES : align;
> >> -	base = __memblock_alloc_base(size, align, end);
> >> +	base = memblock_find_in_range(size, align, start, end);
> >>  	if (!base)
> >>  		return -ENOMEM;
> >>  
> >> -	/*
> >> -	 * Check if the allocated region fits in to start..end window
> >> -	 */
> >> -	if (base < start) {
> >> -		memblock_free(base, size);
> >> -		return -ENOMEM;
> >> -	}
> >> -
> >>  	*res_base = base;
> >>  	if (nomap)
> >>  		return memblock_remove(base, size);
> >> +	else
> >> +		return memblock_reserve(base, size);
> >> +
> >>  	return 0;
> >>  }
> >>  
> > 
> > Your patch solves the issue. \o/

Great :)
 
> [ Add nvidia devs, but drop schowdary@nvidia.com ]
> 

Resending it as a formal patch now, I took a liberty to add your Tested-by.

From a847ca684db29a3c09e4dd2a8a008b35cf36e52f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Mike Rapoport <rppt@linux.ibm.com>
Date: Wed, 23 Jan 2019 07:38:50 +0200
Subject: [PATCH] of: fix kmemleak crash caused by imbalance in early memory
 reservation

Marc Gonzalez reported the following kmemleak crash:

Unable to handle kernel paging request at virtual address ffffffc021e00000
Mem abort info:
  ESR = 0x96000006
  Exception class = DABT (current EL), IL = 32 bits
  SET = 0, FnV = 0
  EA = 0, S1PTW = 0
Data abort info:
  ISV = 0, ISS = 0x00000006
  CM = 0, WnR = 0
swapper pgtable: 4k pages, 39-bit VAs, pgdp = (____ptrval____)
[ffffffc021e00000] pgd=000000017e3ba803, pud=000000017e3ba803,
pmd=0000000000000000
Internal error: Oops: 96000006 [#1] PREEMPT SMP
Modules linked in:
CPU: 6 PID: 523 Comm: kmemleak Tainted: G S      W         5.0.0-rc1 #13
Hardware name: Qualcomm Technologies, Inc. MSM8998 v1 MTP (DT)
pstate: 80000085 (Nzcv daIf -PAN -UAO)
pc : scan_block+0x70/0x190
lr : scan_block+0x6c/0x190
sp : ffffff8012e8bd20
x29: ffffff8012e8bd20 x28: ffffffc0fdbaf018
x27: ffffffc022000000 x26: 0000000000000080
x25: ffffff8011aadf70 x24: ffffffc0f8cc8000
x23: ffffff8010dc8000 x22: ffffff8010dc8830
x21: ffffffc021e00ff9 x20: ffffffc0f8cc8050
x19: ffffffc021e00000 x18: 0000000000002409
x17: 0000000000000200 x16: 0000000000000000
x15: ffffff8010e14dd8 x14: 0000000000002406
x13: 000000004c4dd0c6 x12: ffffffc0f77dad58
x11: 0000000000000001 x10: ffffff8010d9e688
x9 : ffffff8010d9f000 x8 : ffffff8010d9e688
x7 : 0000000000000002 x6 : 0000000000000000
x5 : ffffff8011511c20 x4 : 00000000000026d1
x3 : ffffff8010e14d88 x2 : 5b36396f4e7d4000
x1 : 0000000000208040 x0 : 0000000000000000
Process kmemleak (pid: 523, stack limit = 0x(____ptrval____))
Call trace:
 scan_block+0x70/0x190
 scan_gray_list+0x108/0x1c0
 kmemleak_scan+0x33c/0x7c0
 kmemleak_scan_thread+0x98/0xf0
 kthread+0x11c/0x120
 ret_from_fork+0x10/0x1c
Code: f9000fb4 d503201f 97ffffd2 35000580 (f9400260)
---[ end trace 176d6ed9d86a0c33 ]---
note: kmemleak[523] exited with preempt_count 2

The crash happens when a no-map area is allocated in
early_init_dt_alloc_reserved_memory_arch(). The allocated region is
registered with kmemleak, but it is then removed from memblock using
memblock_remove() that is not kmemleak-aware.

Replacing __memblock_alloc_base() with memblock_find_in_range() makes sure
that the allocated memory is not added to kmemleak and then
memblock_remove()'ing this memory is safe.

As a bonus, since memblock_find_in_range() ensures the allocation in the
specified range, the bounds check can be removed.

Signed-off-by: Mike Rapoport <rppt@linux.ibm.com>
Tested-by: Marc Gonzalez <marc.w.gonzalez@free.fr>
---
 drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c | 13 ++++---------
 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 9 deletions(-)

diff --git a/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c b/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
index 1977ee0adcb1..6807a1cffe55 100644
--- a/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
+++ b/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
@@ -37,21 +37,16 @@ int __init __weak early_init_dt_alloc_reserved_memory_arch(phys_addr_t size,
 	 */
 	end = !end ? MEMBLOCK_ALLOC_ANYWHERE : end;
 	align = !align ? SMP_CACHE_BYTES : align;
-	base = __memblock_alloc_base(size, align, end);
+	base = memblock_find_in_range(size, align, start, end);
 	if (!base)
 		return -ENOMEM;
 
-	/*
-	 * Check if the allocated region fits in to start..end window
-	 */
-	if (base < start) {
-		memblock_free(base, size);
-		return -ENOMEM;
-	}
-
 	*res_base = base;
 	if (nomap)
 		return memblock_remove(base, size);
+	else
+		return memblock_reserve(base, size);
+
 	return 0;
 }
 
-- 
2.7.4


^ permalink raw reply related	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

* Re: kmemleak panic
  2019-01-23  5:54                       ` Mike Rapoport
@ 2019-01-23  7:05                         ` Prateek Patel
  2019-01-23  7:28                         ` Marek Szyprowski
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 39+ messages in thread
From: Prateek Patel @ 2019-01-23  7:05 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Mike Rapoport, Marc Gonzalez
  Cc: Rob Herring, Catalin Marinas, Sachin Nikam, John Hubbard,
	Ralph Campbell, Robin Murphy, Frank Rowand, Marek Szyprowski,
	Bjorn Andersson, Mark Rutland, Arnd Bergmann, Ard Biesheuvel,
	Oscar Salvador, Wei Yang, Michal Hocko, Andrew Morton,
	Linus Torvalds, Qian Cai, LKML, vdumpa, praithatha


On 1/23/2019 11:24 AM, Mike Rapoport wrote:
> On Tue, Jan 22, 2019 at 03:12:54PM +0100, Marc Gonzalez wrote:
>> On 22/01/2019 15:02, Marc Gonzalez wrote:
>>
>>> On 21/01/2019 18:42, Mike Rapoport wrote:
>>>
>>>> If I understood correctly, the trouble comes from no-map range allocated in
>>>> early_init_dt_alloc_reserved_memory_arch().
>>>>
>>>> There's indeed imbalance, because memblock_alloc() does kmemleak_alloc(), but
>>>> memblock_remove() does not do kmemleak_free().
>>>>
>>>> I think the best way is to replace __memblock_alloc_base() with
>>>> memblock_find_in_range(), e.g something like:
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> diff --git a/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c b/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
>>>> index 1977ee0adcb1..6807a1cffe55 100644
>>>> --- a/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
>>>> +++ b/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
>>>> @@ -37,21 +37,16 @@ int __init __weak early_init_dt_alloc_reserved_memory_arch(phys_addr_t size,
>>>>   	 */
>>>>   	end = !end ? MEMBLOCK_ALLOC_ANYWHERE : end;
>>>>   	align = !align ? SMP_CACHE_BYTES : align;
>>>> -	base = __memblock_alloc_base(size, align, end);
>>>> +	base = memblock_find_in_range(size, align, start, end);
>>>>   	if (!base)
>>>>   		return -ENOMEM;
>>>>   
>>>> -	/*
>>>> -	 * Check if the allocated region fits in to start..end window
>>>> -	 */
>>>> -	if (base < start) {
>>>> -		memblock_free(base, size);
>>>> -		return -ENOMEM;
>>>> -	}
>>>> -
>>>>   	*res_base = base;
>>>>   	if (nomap)
>>>>   		return memblock_remove(base, size);
>>>> +	else
>>>> +		return memblock_reserve(base, size);
>>>> +
>>>>   	return 0;
>>>>   }
>>>>   
>>> Your patch solves the issue. \o/
> Great :)
>   
>> [ Add nvidia devs, but drop schowdary@nvidia.com ]
>>
> Resending it as a formal patch now, I took a liberty to add your Tested-by.
>
>  From a847ca684db29a3c09e4dd2a8a008b35cf36e52f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
> From: Mike Rapoport <rppt@linux.ibm.com>
> Date: Wed, 23 Jan 2019 07:38:50 +0200
> Subject: [PATCH] of: fix kmemleak crash caused by imbalance in early memory
>   reservation
>
> Marc Gonzalez reported the following kmemleak crash:
>
> Unable to handle kernel paging request at virtual address ffffffc021e00000
> Mem abort info:
>    ESR = 0x96000006
>    Exception class = DABT (current EL), IL = 32 bits
>    SET = 0, FnV = 0
>    EA = 0, S1PTW = 0
> Data abort info:
>    ISV = 0, ISS = 0x00000006
>    CM = 0, WnR = 0
> swapper pgtable: 4k pages, 39-bit VAs, pgdp = (____ptrval____)
> [ffffffc021e00000] pgd=000000017e3ba803, pud=000000017e3ba803,
> pmd=0000000000000000
> Internal error: Oops: 96000006 [#1] PREEMPT SMP
> Modules linked in:
> CPU: 6 PID: 523 Comm: kmemleak Tainted: G S      W         5.0.0-rc1 #13
> Hardware name: Qualcomm Technologies, Inc. MSM8998 v1 MTP (DT)
> pstate: 80000085 (Nzcv daIf -PAN -UAO)
> pc : scan_block+0x70/0x190
> lr : scan_block+0x6c/0x190
> sp : ffffff8012e8bd20
> x29: ffffff8012e8bd20 x28: ffffffc0fdbaf018
> x27: ffffffc022000000 x26: 0000000000000080
> x25: ffffff8011aadf70 x24: ffffffc0f8cc8000
> x23: ffffff8010dc8000 x22: ffffff8010dc8830
> x21: ffffffc021e00ff9 x20: ffffffc0f8cc8050
> x19: ffffffc021e00000 x18: 0000000000002409
> x17: 0000000000000200 x16: 0000000000000000
> x15: ffffff8010e14dd8 x14: 0000000000002406
> x13: 000000004c4dd0c6 x12: ffffffc0f77dad58
> x11: 0000000000000001 x10: ffffff8010d9e688
> x9 : ffffff8010d9f000 x8 : ffffff8010d9e688
> x7 : 0000000000000002 x6 : 0000000000000000
> x5 : ffffff8011511c20 x4 : 00000000000026d1
> x3 : ffffff8010e14d88 x2 : 5b36396f4e7d4000
> x1 : 0000000000208040 x0 : 0000000000000000
> Process kmemleak (pid: 523, stack limit = 0x(____ptrval____))
> Call trace:
>   scan_block+0x70/0x190
>   scan_gray_list+0x108/0x1c0
>   kmemleak_scan+0x33c/0x7c0
>   kmemleak_scan_thread+0x98/0xf0
>   kthread+0x11c/0x120
>   ret_from_fork+0x10/0x1c
> Code: f9000fb4 d503201f 97ffffd2 35000580 (f9400260)
> ---[ end trace 176d6ed9d86a0c33 ]---
> note: kmemleak[523] exited with preempt_count 2
>
> The crash happens when a no-map area is allocated in
> early_init_dt_alloc_reserved_memory_arch(). The allocated region is
> registered with kmemleak, but it is then removed from memblock using
> memblock_remove() that is not kmemleak-aware.
>
> Replacing __memblock_alloc_base() with memblock_find_in_range() makes sure
> that the allocated memory is not added to kmemleak and then
> memblock_remove()'ing this memory is safe.
>
> As a bonus, since memblock_find_in_range() ensures the allocation in the
> specified range, the bounds check can be removed.
>
> Signed-off-by: Mike Rapoport <rppt@linux.ibm.com>
> Tested-by: Marc Gonzalez <marc.w.gonzalez@free.fr>
> ---
>   drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c | 13 ++++---------
>   1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 9 deletions(-)
>
> diff --git a/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c b/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
> index 1977ee0adcb1..6807a1cffe55 100644
> --- a/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
> +++ b/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
> @@ -37,21 +37,16 @@ int __init __weak early_init_dt_alloc_reserved_memory_arch(phys_addr_t size,
>   	 */
>   	end = !end ? MEMBLOCK_ALLOC_ANYWHERE : end;
>   	align = !align ? SMP_CACHE_BYTES : align;
> -	base = __memblock_alloc_base(size, align, end);
> +	base = memblock_find_in_range(size, align, start, end);
>   	if (!base)
>   		return -ENOMEM;
>   
> -	/*
> -	 * Check if the allocated region fits in to start..end window
> -	 */
> -	if (base < start) {
> -		memblock_free(base, size);
> -		return -ENOMEM;
> -	}
> -
>   	*res_base = base;
>   	if (nomap)
>   		return memblock_remove(base, size);
> +	else
> +		return memblock_reserve(base, size);
> +
>   	return 0;
>   }
>   

Thanks Mike for the patch. With this, skipping kmemleak scan: 
https://patchwork.ozlabs.org/patch/995367/ is not required.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

* Re: kmemleak panic
  2019-01-23  5:54                       ` Mike Rapoport
  2019-01-23  7:05                         ` Prateek Patel
@ 2019-01-23  7:28                         ` Marek Szyprowski
  2019-01-23 12:31                           ` [PATCH v2] of: fix kmemleak crash (was: Re: kmemleak panic) Mike Rapoport
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 39+ messages in thread
From: Marek Szyprowski @ 2019-01-23  7:28 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Mike Rapoport, Marc Gonzalez
  Cc: Rob Herring, Catalin Marinas, Prateek Patel, Sachin Nikam,
	John Hubbard, Ralph Campbell, Robin Murphy, Frank Rowand,
	Bjorn Andersson, Mark Rutland, Arnd Bergmann, Ard Biesheuvel,
	Oscar Salvador, Wei Yang, Michal Hocko, Andrew Morton,
	Linus Torvalds, Qian Cai, LKML

Hi Mike,

On 2019-01-23 06:54, Mike Rapoport wrote:

...
> Resending it as a formal patch now, I took a liberty to add your Tested-by.
>
> >From a847ca684db29a3c09e4dd2a8a008b35cf36e52f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
> From: Mike Rapoport <rppt@linux.ibm.com>
> Date: Wed, 23 Jan 2019 07:38:50 +0200
> Subject: [PATCH] of: fix kmemleak crash caused by imbalance in early memory
>  reservation
>
> Marc Gonzalez reported the following kmemleak crash:
>
> Unable to handle kernel paging request at virtual address ffffffc021e00000
> Mem abort info:
>   ESR = 0x96000006
>   Exception class = DABT (current EL), IL = 32 bits
>   SET = 0, FnV = 0
>   EA = 0, S1PTW = 0
> Data abort info:
>   ISV = 0, ISS = 0x00000006
>   CM = 0, WnR = 0
> swapper pgtable: 4k pages, 39-bit VAs, pgdp = (____ptrval____)
> [ffffffc021e00000] pgd=000000017e3ba803, pud=000000017e3ba803,
> pmd=0000000000000000
> Internal error: Oops: 96000006 [#1] PREEMPT SMP
> Modules linked in:
> CPU: 6 PID: 523 Comm: kmemleak Tainted: G S      W         5.0.0-rc1 #13
> Hardware name: Qualcomm Technologies, Inc. MSM8998 v1 MTP (DT)
> pstate: 80000085 (Nzcv daIf -PAN -UAO)
> pc : scan_block+0x70/0x190
> lr : scan_block+0x6c/0x190
> sp : ffffff8012e8bd20
> x29: ffffff8012e8bd20 x28: ffffffc0fdbaf018
> x27: ffffffc022000000 x26: 0000000000000080
> x25: ffffff8011aadf70 x24: ffffffc0f8cc8000
> x23: ffffff8010dc8000 x22: ffffff8010dc8830
> x21: ffffffc021e00ff9 x20: ffffffc0f8cc8050
> x19: ffffffc021e00000 x18: 0000000000002409
> x17: 0000000000000200 x16: 0000000000000000
> x15: ffffff8010e14dd8 x14: 0000000000002406
> x13: 000000004c4dd0c6 x12: ffffffc0f77dad58
> x11: 0000000000000001 x10: ffffff8010d9e688
> x9 : ffffff8010d9f000 x8 : ffffff8010d9e688
> x7 : 0000000000000002 x6 : 0000000000000000
> x5 : ffffff8011511c20 x4 : 00000000000026d1
> x3 : ffffff8010e14d88 x2 : 5b36396f4e7d4000
> x1 : 0000000000208040 x0 : 0000000000000000
> Process kmemleak (pid: 523, stack limit = 0x(____ptrval____))
> Call trace:
>  scan_block+0x70/0x190
>  scan_gray_list+0x108/0x1c0
>  kmemleak_scan+0x33c/0x7c0
>  kmemleak_scan_thread+0x98/0xf0
>  kthread+0x11c/0x120
>  ret_from_fork+0x10/0x1c
> Code: f9000fb4 d503201f 97ffffd2 35000580 (f9400260)
> ---[ end trace 176d6ed9d86a0c33 ]---
> note: kmemleak[523] exited with preempt_count 2
>
> The crash happens when a no-map area is allocated in
> early_init_dt_alloc_reserved_memory_arch(). The allocated region is
> registered with kmemleak, but it is then removed from memblock using
> memblock_remove() that is not kmemleak-aware.
>
> Replacing __memblock_alloc_base() with memblock_find_in_range() makes sure
> that the allocated memory is not added to kmemleak and then
> memblock_remove()'ing this memory is safe.
>
> As a bonus, since memblock_find_in_range() ensures the allocation in the
> specified range, the bounds check can be removed.
>
> Signed-off-by: Mike Rapoport <rppt@linux.ibm.com>
> Tested-by: Marc Gonzalez <marc.w.gonzalez@free.fr>

With the minor fix mentioned below, you can add my:

Acked-by: Marek Szyprowski <m.szyprowski@samsung.com>

> ---
>  drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c | 13 ++++---------
>  1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 9 deletions(-)
>
> diff --git a/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c b/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
> index 1977ee0adcb1..6807a1cffe55 100644
> --- a/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
> +++ b/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
> @@ -37,21 +37,16 @@ int __init __weak early_init_dt_alloc_reserved_memory_arch(phys_addr_t size,
>  	 */
>  	end = !end ? MEMBLOCK_ALLOC_ANYWHERE : end;
>  	align = !align ? SMP_CACHE_BYTES : align;
> -	base = __memblock_alloc_base(size, align, end);
> +	base = memblock_find_in_range(size, align, start, end);

Please remove a comment about __memblock_alloc_base() above that block
of code. It is no longer needed after this change.

>  	if (!base)
>  		return -ENOMEM;
>  
> -	/*
> -	 * Check if the allocated region fits in to start..end window
> -	 */
> -	if (base < start) {
> -		memblock_free(base, size);
> -		return -ENOMEM;
> -	}
> -
>  	*res_base = base;
>  	if (nomap)
>  		return memblock_remove(base, size);
> +	else
> +		return memblock_reserve(base, size);
> +
>  	return 0;
>  }
>  

Best regards
-- 
Marek Szyprowski, PhD
Samsung R&D Institute Poland


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v2] of: fix kmemleak crash (was: Re: kmemleak panic)
  2019-01-23  7:28                         ` Marek Szyprowski
@ 2019-01-23 12:31                           ` Mike Rapoport
  2019-02-01 16:23                             ` [PATCH v2] of: fix kmemleak crash Marc Gonzalez
  2019-02-04 14:37                             ` [RESEND PATCH v2] of: fix kmemleak crash caused by imbalance in early memory reservation Marc Gonzalez
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 39+ messages in thread
From: Mike Rapoport @ 2019-01-23 12:31 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Marek Szyprowski
  Cc: Marc Gonzalez, Rob Herring, Catalin Marinas, Prateek Patel,
	Sachin Nikam, John Hubbard, Ralph Campbell, Robin Murphy,
	Frank Rowand, Bjorn Andersson, Mark Rutland, Arnd Bergmann,
	Ard Biesheuvel, Oscar Salvador, Wei Yang, Michal Hocko,
	Andrew Morton, Linus Torvalds, Qian Cai, LKML

On Wed, Jan 23, 2019 at 08:28:03AM +0100, Marek Szyprowski wrote:
> Hi Mike,
> 
> On 2019-01-23 06:54, Mike Rapoport wrote:
> 
> > @@ -37,21 +37,16 @@ int __init __weak early_init_dt_alloc_reserved_memory_arch(phys_addr_t size,
> >  	 */
> >  	end = !end ? MEMBLOCK_ALLOC_ANYWHERE : end;
> >  	align = !align ? SMP_CACHE_BYTES : align;
> > -	base = __memblock_alloc_base(size, align, end);
> > +	base = memblock_find_in_range(size, align, start, end);
> 
> Please remove a comment about __memblock_alloc_base() above that block
> of code. It is no longer needed after this change.

Huh, missed that, thanks!
Fixed now.

From 2f340afcc8cc81f1829a19f9c595a9995656e547 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Mike Rapoport <rppt@linux.ibm.com>
Date: Wed, 23 Jan 2019 07:38:50 +0200
Subject: [PATCH v2] of: fix kmemleak crash caused by imbalance in early memory
 reservation

Marc Gonzalez reported the following kmemleak crash:

Unable to handle kernel paging request at virtual address ffffffc021e00000
Mem abort info:
  ESR = 0x96000006
  Exception class = DABT (current EL), IL = 32 bits
  SET = 0, FnV = 0
  EA = 0, S1PTW = 0
Data abort info:
  ISV = 0, ISS = 0x00000006
  CM = 0, WnR = 0
swapper pgtable: 4k pages, 39-bit VAs, pgdp = (____ptrval____)
[ffffffc021e00000] pgd=000000017e3ba803, pud=000000017e3ba803,
pmd=0000000000000000
Internal error: Oops: 96000006 [#1] PREEMPT SMP
Modules linked in:
CPU: 6 PID: 523 Comm: kmemleak Tainted: G S      W         5.0.0-rc1 #13
Hardware name: Qualcomm Technologies, Inc. MSM8998 v1 MTP (DT)
pstate: 80000085 (Nzcv daIf -PAN -UAO)
pc : scan_block+0x70/0x190
lr : scan_block+0x6c/0x190
sp : ffffff8012e8bd20
x29: ffffff8012e8bd20 x28: ffffffc0fdbaf018
x27: ffffffc022000000 x26: 0000000000000080
x25: ffffff8011aadf70 x24: ffffffc0f8cc8000
x23: ffffff8010dc8000 x22: ffffff8010dc8830
x21: ffffffc021e00ff9 x20: ffffffc0f8cc8050
x19: ffffffc021e00000 x18: 0000000000002409
x17: 0000000000000200 x16: 0000000000000000
x15: ffffff8010e14dd8 x14: 0000000000002406
x13: 000000004c4dd0c6 x12: ffffffc0f77dad58
x11: 0000000000000001 x10: ffffff8010d9e688
x9 : ffffff8010d9f000 x8 : ffffff8010d9e688
x7 : 0000000000000002 x6 : 0000000000000000
x5 : ffffff8011511c20 x4 : 00000000000026d1
x3 : ffffff8010e14d88 x2 : 5b36396f4e7d4000
x1 : 0000000000208040 x0 : 0000000000000000
Process kmemleak (pid: 523, stack limit = 0x(____ptrval____))
Call trace:
 scan_block+0x70/0x190
 scan_gray_list+0x108/0x1c0
 kmemleak_scan+0x33c/0x7c0
 kmemleak_scan_thread+0x98/0xf0
 kthread+0x11c/0x120
 ret_from_fork+0x10/0x1c
Code: f9000fb4 d503201f 97ffffd2 35000580 (f9400260)
---[ end trace 176d6ed9d86a0c33 ]---
note: kmemleak[523] exited with preempt_count 2

The crash happens when a no-map area is allocated in
early_init_dt_alloc_reserved_memory_arch(). The allocated region is
registered with kmemleak, but it is then removed from memblock using
memblock_remove() that is not kmemleak-aware.

Replacing __memblock_alloc_base() with memblock_find_in_range() makes sure
that the allocated memory is not added to kmemleak and then
memblock_remove()'ing this memory is safe.

As a bonus, since memblock_find_in_range() ensures the allocation in the
specified range, the bounds check can be removed.

Signed-off-by: Mike Rapoport <rppt@linux.ibm.com>
Tested-by: Marc Gonzalez <marc.w.gonzalez@free.fr>
Acked-by: Marek Szyprowski <m.szyprowski@samsung.com>
---
 drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c | 18 +++++-------------
 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 13 deletions(-)

diff --git a/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c b/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
index 1977ee0adcb1..2ae81604ffef 100644
--- a/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
+++ b/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
@@ -31,27 +31,19 @@ int __init __weak early_init_dt_alloc_reserved_memory_arch(phys_addr_t size,
 	phys_addr_t *res_base)
 {
 	phys_addr_t base;
-	/*
-	 * We use __memblock_alloc_base() because memblock_alloc_base()
-	 * panic()s on allocation failure.
-	 */
+
 	end = !end ? MEMBLOCK_ALLOC_ANYWHERE : end;
 	align = !align ? SMP_CACHE_BYTES : align;
-	base = __memblock_alloc_base(size, align, end);
+	base = memblock_find_in_range(size, align, start, end);
 	if (!base)
 		return -ENOMEM;
 
-	/*
-	 * Check if the allocated region fits in to start..end window
-	 */
-	if (base < start) {
-		memblock_free(base, size);
-		return -ENOMEM;
-	}
-
 	*res_base = base;
 	if (nomap)
 		return memblock_remove(base, size);
+	else
+		return memblock_reserve(base, size);
+
 	return 0;
 }
 
-- 
2.7.4

 


^ permalink raw reply related	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

* Re: [PATCH v2] of: fix kmemleak crash
  2019-01-23 12:31                           ` [PATCH v2] of: fix kmemleak crash (was: Re: kmemleak panic) Mike Rapoport
@ 2019-02-01 16:23                             ` Marc Gonzalez
  2019-02-04 10:10                               ` Marc Gonzalez
  2019-02-04 14:37                             ` [RESEND PATCH v2] of: fix kmemleak crash caused by imbalance in early memory reservation Marc Gonzalez
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 39+ messages in thread
From: Marc Gonzalez @ 2019-02-01 16:23 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Mike Rapoport, Marek Szyprowski
  Cc: Rob Herring, Catalin Marinas, Prateek Patel, Sachin Nikam,
	John Hubbard, Ralph Campbell, Robin Murphy, Frank Rowand,
	Bjorn Andersson, Mark Rutland, Arnd Bergmann, Ard Biesheuvel,
	Oscar Salvador, Wei Yang, Michal Hocko, Andrew Morton,
	Linus Torvalds, Qian Cai, LKML

On 23/01/2019 13:31, Mike Rapoport wrote:

> Signed-off-by: Mike Rapoport <rppt@linux.ibm.com>
> Tested-by: Marc Gonzalez <marc.w.gonzalez@free.fr>
> Acked-by: Marek Szyprowski <m.szyprowski@samsung.com>
> ---
>  drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c | 18 +++++-------------
>  1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 13 deletions(-)

Thanks for the patch, Mike.

Whose tree should this patch go through?

Regards.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

* Re: [PATCH v2] of: fix kmemleak crash
  2019-02-01 16:23                             ` [PATCH v2] of: fix kmemleak crash Marc Gonzalez
@ 2019-02-04 10:10                               ` Marc Gonzalez
  2019-02-04 15:25                                 ` Greg Kroah-Hartman
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 39+ messages in thread
From: Marc Gonzalez @ 2019-02-04 10:10 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Mike Rapoport, Marek Szyprowski, Rob Herring, Frank Rowand,
	Greg Kroah-Hartman
  Cc: Catalin Marinas, Prateek Patel, Robin Murphy, Bjorn Andersson,
	Mark Rutland, Arnd Bergmann, Ard Biesheuvel, Oscar Salvador,
	Wei Yang, Michal Hocko, Andrew Morton, Linus Torvalds, Qian Cai,
	LKML, stable

+ GKH

On 01/02/2019 17:23, Marc Gonzalez wrote:

> On 23/01/2019 13:31, Mike Rapoport wrote:
> 
>> Signed-off-by: Mike Rapoport <rppt@linux.ibm.com>
>> Tested-by: Marc Gonzalez <marc.w.gonzalez@free.fr>
>> Acked-by: Marek Szyprowski <m.szyprowski@samsung.com>
>> ---
>>  drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c | 18 +++++-------------
>>  1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 13 deletions(-)
> 
> Thanks for the patch, Mike.
> 
> Whose tree should this patch go through?

By the way, I think we can add

Acked-by: Prateek Patel <prpatel@nvidia.com>
Fixes: 3f0c820664483 ("drivers: of: add initialization code for dynamic reserved memory")
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org # 3.15+

Regards.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

* [RESEND PATCH v2] of: fix kmemleak crash caused by imbalance in early memory reservation
  2019-01-23 12:31                           ` [PATCH v2] of: fix kmemleak crash (was: Re: kmemleak panic) Mike Rapoport
  2019-02-01 16:23                             ` [PATCH v2] of: fix kmemleak crash Marc Gonzalez
@ 2019-02-04 14:37                             ` Marc Gonzalez
  2019-02-11 16:47                               ` Marc Gonzalez
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 39+ messages in thread
From: Marc Gonzalez @ 2019-02-04 14:37 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Rob Herring, Frank Rowand
  Cc: Mike Rapoport, Marek Szyprowski, Catalin Marinas, Prateek Patel,
	DT, LKML, stable

From: Mike Rapoport <rppt@linux.ibm.com>

Marc Gonzalez reported the following kmemleak crash:

Unable to handle kernel paging request at virtual address ffffffc021e00000
Mem abort info:
  ESR = 0x96000006
  Exception class = DABT (current EL), IL = 32 bits
  SET = 0, FnV = 0
  EA = 0, S1PTW = 0
Data abort info:
  ISV = 0, ISS = 0x00000006
  CM = 0, WnR = 0
swapper pgtable: 4k pages, 39-bit VAs, pgdp = (____ptrval____)
[ffffffc021e00000] pgd=000000017e3ba803, pud=000000017e3ba803,
pmd=0000000000000000
Internal error: Oops: 96000006 [#1] PREEMPT SMP
Modules linked in:
CPU: 6 PID: 523 Comm: kmemleak Tainted: G S      W         5.0.0-rc1 #13
Hardware name: Qualcomm Technologies, Inc. MSM8998 v1 MTP (DT)
pstate: 80000085 (Nzcv daIf -PAN -UAO)
pc : scan_block+0x70/0x190
lr : scan_block+0x6c/0x190
sp : ffffff8012e8bd20
x29: ffffff8012e8bd20 x28: ffffffc0fdbaf018
x27: ffffffc022000000 x26: 0000000000000080
x25: ffffff8011aadf70 x24: ffffffc0f8cc8000
x23: ffffff8010dc8000 x22: ffffff8010dc8830
x21: ffffffc021e00ff9 x20: ffffffc0f8cc8050
x19: ffffffc021e00000 x18: 0000000000002409
x17: 0000000000000200 x16: 0000000000000000
x15: ffffff8010e14dd8 x14: 0000000000002406
x13: 000000004c4dd0c6 x12: ffffffc0f77dad58
x11: 0000000000000001 x10: ffffff8010d9e688
x9 : ffffff8010d9f000 x8 : ffffff8010d9e688
x7 : 0000000000000002 x6 : 0000000000000000
x5 : ffffff8011511c20 x4 : 00000000000026d1
x3 : ffffff8010e14d88 x2 : 5b36396f4e7d4000
x1 : 0000000000208040 x0 : 0000000000000000
Process kmemleak (pid: 523, stack limit = 0x(____ptrval____))
Call trace:
 scan_block+0x70/0x190
 scan_gray_list+0x108/0x1c0
 kmemleak_scan+0x33c/0x7c0
 kmemleak_scan_thread+0x98/0xf0
 kthread+0x11c/0x120
 ret_from_fork+0x10/0x1c
Code: f9000fb4 d503201f 97ffffd2 35000580 (f9400260)
---[ end trace 176d6ed9d86a0c33 ]---
note: kmemleak[523] exited with preempt_count 2

The crash happens when a no-map area is allocated in
early_init_dt_alloc_reserved_memory_arch(). The allocated region is
registered with kmemleak, but it is then removed from memblock using
memblock_remove() that is not kmemleak-aware.

Replacing __memblock_alloc_base() with memblock_find_in_range() makes sure
that the allocated memory is not added to kmemleak and then
memblock_remove()'ing this memory is safe.

As a bonus, since memblock_find_in_range() ensures the allocation in the
specified range, the bounds check can be removed.

Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org # 3.15+
Fixes: 3f0c820664483 ("drivers: of: add initialization code for dynamic reserved memory")
Acked-by: Marek Szyprowski <m.szyprowski@samsung.com>
Acked-by: Prateek Patel <prpatel@nvidia.com>
Tested-by: Marc Gonzalez <marc.w.gonzalez@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Mike Rapoport <rppt@linux.ibm.com>
---
Resend with DT CCed to reach robh's patch queue
I added CC: stable, Fixes, and Prateek's ack
Trim recipients list to minimize inconvenience
---
 drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c | 18 +++++-------------
 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 13 deletions(-)

diff --git a/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c b/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
index 1977ee0adcb1..2ae81604ffef 100644
--- a/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
+++ b/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
@@ -31,27 +31,19 @@ int __init __weak early_init_dt_alloc_reserved_memory_arch(phys_addr_t size,
 	phys_addr_t *res_base)
 {
 	phys_addr_t base;
-	/*
-	 * We use __memblock_alloc_base() because memblock_alloc_base()
-	 * panic()s on allocation failure.
-	 */
+
 	end = !end ? MEMBLOCK_ALLOC_ANYWHERE : end;
 	align = !align ? SMP_CACHE_BYTES : align;
-	base = __memblock_alloc_base(size, align, end);
+	base = memblock_find_in_range(size, align, start, end);
 	if (!base)
 		return -ENOMEM;
 
-	/*
-	 * Check if the allocated region fits in to start..end window
-	 */
-	if (base < start) {
-		memblock_free(base, size);
-		return -ENOMEM;
-	}
-
 	*res_base = base;
 	if (nomap)
 		return memblock_remove(base, size);
+	else
+		return memblock_reserve(base, size);
+
 	return 0;
 }
 
-- 
2.7.4

^ permalink raw reply related	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

* Re: [PATCH v2] of: fix kmemleak crash
  2019-02-04 10:10                               ` Marc Gonzalez
@ 2019-02-04 15:25                                 ` Greg Kroah-Hartman
  2019-02-04 16:41                                   ` Rob Herring
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 39+ messages in thread
From: Greg Kroah-Hartman @ 2019-02-04 15:25 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Marc Gonzalez
  Cc: Mike Rapoport, Marek Szyprowski, Rob Herring, Frank Rowand,
	Catalin Marinas, Prateek Patel, Robin Murphy, Bjorn Andersson,
	Mark Rutland, Arnd Bergmann, Ard Biesheuvel, Oscar Salvador,
	Wei Yang, Michal Hocko, Andrew Morton, Linus Torvalds, Qian Cai,
	LKML, stable

On Mon, Feb 04, 2019 at 11:10:39AM +0100, Marc Gonzalez wrote:
> + GKH
> 
> On 01/02/2019 17:23, Marc Gonzalez wrote:
> 
> > On 23/01/2019 13:31, Mike Rapoport wrote:
> > 
> >> Signed-off-by: Mike Rapoport <rppt@linux.ibm.com>
> >> Tested-by: Marc Gonzalez <marc.w.gonzalez@free.fr>
> >> Acked-by: Marek Szyprowski <m.szyprowski@samsung.com>
> >> ---
> >>  drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c | 18 +++++-------------
> >>  1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 13 deletions(-)
> > 
> > Thanks for the patch, Mike.
> > 
> > Whose tree should this patch go through?
> 
> By the way, I think we can add
> 
> Acked-by: Prateek Patel <prpatel@nvidia.com>
> Fixes: 3f0c820664483 ("drivers: of: add initialization code for dynamic reserved memory")
> Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org # 3.15+

What am I supposed to do with this?

confused,

greg k-h

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

* Re: [PATCH v2] of: fix kmemleak crash
  2019-02-04 15:25                                 ` Greg Kroah-Hartman
@ 2019-02-04 16:41                                   ` Rob Herring
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 39+ messages in thread
From: Rob Herring @ 2019-02-04 16:41 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Greg Kroah-Hartman
  Cc: Marc Gonzalez, Mike Rapoport, Marek Szyprowski, Frank Rowand,
	Catalin Marinas, Prateek Patel, Robin Murphy, Bjorn Andersson,
	Mark Rutland, Arnd Bergmann, Ard Biesheuvel, Oscar Salvador,
	Wei Yang, Michal Hocko, Andrew Morton, Linus Torvalds, Qian Cai,
	LKML, stable

On Mon, Feb 4, 2019 at 9:25 AM Greg Kroah-Hartman
<gregkh@linuxfoundation.org> wrote:
>
> On Mon, Feb 04, 2019 at 11:10:39AM +0100, Marc Gonzalez wrote:
> > + GKH
> >
> > On 01/02/2019 17:23, Marc Gonzalez wrote:
> >
> > > On 23/01/2019 13:31, Mike Rapoport wrote:
> > >
> > >> Signed-off-by: Mike Rapoport <rppt@linux.ibm.com>
> > >> Tested-by: Marc Gonzalez <marc.w.gonzalez@free.fr>
> > >> Acked-by: Marek Szyprowski <m.szyprowski@samsung.com>
> > >> ---
> > >>  drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c | 18 +++++-------------
> > >>  1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 13 deletions(-)
> > >
> > > Thanks for the patch, Mike.
> > >
> > > Whose tree should this patch go through?
> >
> > By the way, I think we can add
> >
> > Acked-by: Prateek Patel <prpatel@nvidia.com>
> > Fixes: 3f0c820664483 ("drivers: of: add initialization code for dynamic reserved memory")
> > Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org # 3.15+
>
> What am I supposed to do with this?

Nothing til I apply it.

Rob

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

* Re: [RESEND PATCH v2] of: fix kmemleak crash caused by imbalance in early memory reservation
  2019-02-04 14:37                             ` [RESEND PATCH v2] of: fix kmemleak crash caused by imbalance in early memory reservation Marc Gonzalez
@ 2019-02-11 16:47                               ` Marc Gonzalez
  2019-02-12 16:03                                 ` Rob Herring
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 39+ messages in thread
From: Marc Gonzalez @ 2019-02-11 16:47 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Rob Herring, Frank Rowand, Mike Rapoport, Stephen Rothwell
  Cc: Marek Szyprowski, Catalin Marinas, Prateek Patel, DT, LKML, stable

On 04/02/2019 15:37, Marc Gonzalez wrote:

> Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org # 3.15+
> Fixes: 3f0c820664483 ("drivers: of: add initialization code for dynamic reserved memory")
> Acked-by: Marek Szyprowski <m.szyprowski@samsung.com>
> Acked-by: Prateek Patel <prpatel@nvidia.com>
> Tested-by: Marc Gonzalez <marc.w.gonzalez@free.fr>
> Signed-off-by: Mike Rapoport <rppt@linux.ibm.com>
> ---
> Resend with DT CCed to reach robh's patch queue
> I added CC: stable, Fixes, and Prateek's ack
> Trim recipients list to minimize inconvenience

Mike, Stephen,

I'm confused over commit 3532b3b554a216f30edb841d29eef48521bdc592 in linux-next
"memblock: drop __memblock_alloc_base()"

It's definitely going to conflict with the proposed patch
over drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c

Rob, what's the next step then?

Regards.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

* Re: [RESEND PATCH v2] of: fix kmemleak crash caused by imbalance in early memory reservation
  2019-02-11 16:47                               ` Marc Gonzalez
@ 2019-02-12 16:03                                 ` Rob Herring
  2019-02-12 21:50                                   ` Stephen Rothwell
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 39+ messages in thread
From: Rob Herring @ 2019-02-12 16:03 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Marc Gonzalez
  Cc: Frank Rowand, Mike Rapoport, Stephen Rothwell, Marek Szyprowski,
	Catalin Marinas, Prateek Patel, DT, LKML, stable

On Mon, Feb 11, 2019 at 10:47 AM Marc Gonzalez <marc.w.gonzalez@free.fr> wrote:
>
> On 04/02/2019 15:37, Marc Gonzalez wrote:
>
> > Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org # 3.15+
> > Fixes: 3f0c820664483 ("drivers: of: add initialization code for dynamic reserved memory")
> > Acked-by: Marek Szyprowski <m.szyprowski@samsung.com>
> > Acked-by: Prateek Patel <prpatel@nvidia.com>
> > Tested-by: Marc Gonzalez <marc.w.gonzalez@free.fr>
> > Signed-off-by: Mike Rapoport <rppt@linux.ibm.com>
> > ---
> > Resend with DT CCed to reach robh's patch queue
> > I added CC: stable, Fixes, and Prateek's ack
> > Trim recipients list to minimize inconvenience
>
> Mike, Stephen,
>
> I'm confused over commit 3532b3b554a216f30edb841d29eef48521bdc592 in linux-next
> "memblock: drop __memblock_alloc_base()"
>
> It's definitely going to conflict with the proposed patch
> over drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
>
> Rob, what's the next step then?

Rebase it on top of what's in linux-next and apply it to the tree
which has the above dependency. I'm guessing that is Andrew Morton's
tree.

Rob

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

* Re: [RESEND PATCH v2] of: fix kmemleak crash caused by imbalance in early memory reservation
  2019-02-12 16:03                                 ` Rob Herring
@ 2019-02-12 21:50                                   ` Stephen Rothwell
  2019-02-12 21:52                                     ` Andrew Morton
  2019-02-12 22:12                                     ` Rob Herring
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 39+ messages in thread
From: Stephen Rothwell @ 2019-02-12 21:50 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Rob Herring
  Cc: Marc Gonzalez, Frank Rowand, Mike Rapoport, Marek Szyprowski,
	Catalin Marinas, Prateek Patel, DT, LKML, stable, Andrew Morton

[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1680 bytes --]

Hi all,

On Tue, 12 Feb 2019 10:03:09 -0600 Rob Herring <robh+dt@kernel.org> wrote:
>
> On Mon, Feb 11, 2019 at 10:47 AM Marc Gonzalez <marc.w.gonzalez@free.fr> wrote:
> >
> > On 04/02/2019 15:37, Marc Gonzalez wrote:
> >  
> > > Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org # 3.15+
> > > Fixes: 3f0c820664483 ("drivers: of: add initialization code for dynamic reserved memory")
> > > Acked-by: Marek Szyprowski <m.szyprowski@samsung.com>
> > > Acked-by: Prateek Patel <prpatel@nvidia.com>
> > > Tested-by: Marc Gonzalez <marc.w.gonzalez@free.fr>
> > > Signed-off-by: Mike Rapoport <rppt@linux.ibm.com>
> > > ---
> > > Resend with DT CCed to reach robh's patch queue
> > > I added CC: stable, Fixes, and Prateek's ack
> > > Trim recipients list to minimize inconvenience  
> >
> > I'm confused over commit 3532b3b554a216f30edb841d29eef48521bdc592 in linux-next
> > "memblock: drop __memblock_alloc_base()"
> >
> > It's definitely going to conflict with the proposed patch
> > over drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
> >
> > Rob, what's the next step then?  
> 
> Rebase it on top of what's in linux-next and apply it to the tree
> which has the above dependency. I'm guessing that is Andrew Morton's
> tree.

Yeah, that is in Andrew's "post linux-next" patch series, so if you
rebase it on top of linux-next and then send it to Andrew with some
explanation.

...

Actually, if it is intended for the stable trees, then presumably it is
intended to go to Linus for the current release?  In which case, the
patch in Andrew's tree will have to be changed to cope after your patch
appears in Linus' tree (and therefore, linux-next).

-- 
Cheers,
Stephen Rothwell

[-- Attachment #2: OpenPGP digital signature --]
[-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 488 bytes --]

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

* Re: [RESEND PATCH v2] of: fix kmemleak crash caused by imbalance in early memory reservation
  2019-02-12 21:50                                   ` Stephen Rothwell
@ 2019-02-12 21:52                                     ` Andrew Morton
  2019-02-12 22:12                                     ` Rob Herring
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 39+ messages in thread
From: Andrew Morton @ 2019-02-12 21:52 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Stephen Rothwell
  Cc: Rob Herring, Marc Gonzalez, Frank Rowand, Mike Rapoport,
	Marek Szyprowski, Catalin Marinas, Prateek Patel, DT, LKML,
	stable

On Wed, 13 Feb 2019 08:50:28 +1100 Stephen Rothwell <sfr@canb.auug.org.au> wrote:

> > > It's definitely going to conflict with the proposed patch
> > > over drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
> > >
> > > Rob, what's the next step then?  
> > 
> > Rebase it on top of what's in linux-next and apply it to the tree
> > which has the above dependency. I'm guessing that is Andrew Morton's
> > tree.
> 
> Yeah, that is in Andrew's "post linux-next" patch series, so if you
> rebase it on top of linux-next and then send it to Andrew with some
> explanation.
> 
> ...
> 
> Actually, if it is intended for the stable trees, then presumably it is
> intended to go to Linus for the current release?  In which case, the
> patch in Andrew's tree will have to be changed to cope after your patch
> appears in Linus' tree (and therefore, linux-next).

Yup, just do whatever needs to be done and I'll figure it out ;)

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

* Re: [RESEND PATCH v2] of: fix kmemleak crash caused by imbalance in early memory reservation
  2019-02-12 21:50                                   ` Stephen Rothwell
  2019-02-12 21:52                                     ` Andrew Morton
@ 2019-02-12 22:12                                     ` Rob Herring
  2019-02-13  6:57                                       ` Mike Rapoport
  2019-03-06  2:12                                       ` Guenter Roeck
  1 sibling, 2 replies; 39+ messages in thread
From: Rob Herring @ 2019-02-12 22:12 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Stephen Rothwell
  Cc: Marc Gonzalez, Frank Rowand, Mike Rapoport, Marek Szyprowski,
	Catalin Marinas, Prateek Patel, DT, LKML, stable, Andrew Morton

On Tue, Feb 12, 2019 at 3:50 PM Stephen Rothwell <sfr@canb.auug.org.au> wrote:
>
> Hi all,
>
> On Tue, 12 Feb 2019 10:03:09 -0600 Rob Herring <robh+dt@kernel.org> wrote:
> >
> > On Mon, Feb 11, 2019 at 10:47 AM Marc Gonzalez <marc.w.gonzalez@free.fr> wrote:
> > >
> > > On 04/02/2019 15:37, Marc Gonzalez wrote:
> > >
> > > > Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org # 3.15+
> > > > Fixes: 3f0c820664483 ("drivers: of: add initialization code for dynamic reserved memory")
> > > > Acked-by: Marek Szyprowski <m.szyprowski@samsung.com>
> > > > Acked-by: Prateek Patel <prpatel@nvidia.com>
> > > > Tested-by: Marc Gonzalez <marc.w.gonzalez@free.fr>
> > > > Signed-off-by: Mike Rapoport <rppt@linux.ibm.com>
> > > > ---
> > > > Resend with DT CCed to reach robh's patch queue
> > > > I added CC: stable, Fixes, and Prateek's ack
> > > > Trim recipients list to minimize inconvenience
> > >
> > > I'm confused over commit 3532b3b554a216f30edb841d29eef48521bdc592 in linux-next
> > > "memblock: drop __memblock_alloc_base()"
> > >
> > > It's definitely going to conflict with the proposed patch
> > > over drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
> > >
> > > Rob, what's the next step then?
> >
> > Rebase it on top of what's in linux-next and apply it to the tree
> > which has the above dependency. I'm guessing that is Andrew Morton's
> > tree.
>
> Yeah, that is in Andrew's "post linux-next" patch series, so if you
> rebase it on top of linux-next and then send it to Andrew with some
> explanation.
>
> ...
>
> Actually, if it is intended for the stable trees, then presumably it is
> intended to go to Linus for the current release?  In which case, the
> patch in Andrew's tree will have to be changed to cope after your patch
> appears in Linus' tree (and therefore, linux-next).

At this point in the cycle, I wasn't planning to send this for 5.0.
It's not fixing something introduced in 5.0 and it is a debug feature.

Rob

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

* Re: [RESEND PATCH v2] of: fix kmemleak crash caused by imbalance in early memory reservation
  2019-02-12 22:12                                     ` Rob Herring
@ 2019-02-13  6:57                                       ` Mike Rapoport
  2019-02-13  9:27                                         ` Marc Gonzalez
  2019-03-06  2:12                                       ` Guenter Roeck
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 39+ messages in thread
From: Mike Rapoport @ 2019-02-13  6:57 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Rob Herring, Andrew Morton
  Cc: Stephen Rothwell, Marc Gonzalez, Frank Rowand, Marek Szyprowski,
	Catalin Marinas, Prateek Patel, DT, LKML, stable

On Tue, Feb 12, 2019 at 04:12:24PM -0600, Rob Herring wrote:
> On Tue, Feb 12, 2019 at 3:50 PM Stephen Rothwell <sfr@canb.auug.org.au> wrote:
> >
> > Hi all,
> >
> > On Tue, 12 Feb 2019 10:03:09 -0600 Rob Herring <robh+dt@kernel.org> wrote:
> > >
> > > On Mon, Feb 11, 2019 at 10:47 AM Marc Gonzalez <marc.w.gonzalez@free.fr> wrote:
> > > >
> > > > On 04/02/2019 15:37, Marc Gonzalez wrote:
> > > >
> > > > > Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org # 3.15+
> > > > > Fixes: 3f0c820664483 ("drivers: of: add initialization code for dynamic reserved memory")
> > > > > Acked-by: Marek Szyprowski <m.szyprowski@samsung.com>
> > > > > Acked-by: Prateek Patel <prpatel@nvidia.com>
> > > > > Tested-by: Marc Gonzalez <marc.w.gonzalez@free.fr>
> > > > > Signed-off-by: Mike Rapoport <rppt@linux.ibm.com>
> > > > > ---
> > > > > Resend with DT CCed to reach robh's patch queue
> > > > > I added CC: stable, Fixes, and Prateek's ack
> > > > > Trim recipients list to minimize inconvenience
> > > >
> > > > I'm confused over commit 3532b3b554a216f30edb841d29eef48521bdc592 in linux-next
> > > > "memblock: drop __memblock_alloc_base()"
> > > >
> > > > It's definitely going to conflict with the proposed patch
> > > > over drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
> > > >
> > > > Rob, what's the next step then?
> > >
> > > Rebase it on top of what's in linux-next and apply it to the tree
> > > which has the above dependency. I'm guessing that is Andrew Morton's
> > > tree.
> >
> > Yeah, that is in Andrew's "post linux-next" patch series, so if you
> > rebase it on top of linux-next and then send it to Andrew with some
> > explanation.
> >
> > ...
> >
> > Actually, if it is intended for the stable trees, then presumably it is
> > intended to go to Linus for the current release?  In which case, the
> > patch in Andrew's tree will have to be changed to cope after your patch
> > appears in Linus' tree (and therefore, linux-next).
> 
> At this point in the cycle, I wasn't planning to send this for 5.0.
> It's not fixing something introduced in 5.0 and it is a debug feature.
 
Below is the version vs. current mmotm.

From 9ea6dceb46067d4f1cbbdbec1189c8496aa0a4bc Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Mike Rapoport <rppt@linux.ibm.com>
Date: Mon, 4 Feb 2019 15:37:21 +0100
Subject: [PATCH] of: fix kmemleak crash caused by imbalance in early memory
 reservation

Marc Gonzalez reported the following kmemleak crash:

Unable to handle kernel paging request at virtual address ffffffc021e00000
Mem abort info:
  ESR = 0x96000006
  Exception class = DABT (current EL), IL = 32 bits
  SET = 0, FnV = 0
  EA = 0, S1PTW = 0
Data abort info:
  ISV = 0, ISS = 0x00000006
  CM = 0, WnR = 0
swapper pgtable: 4k pages, 39-bit VAs, pgdp = (____ptrval____)
[ffffffc021e00000] pgd=000000017e3ba803, pud=000000017e3ba803,
pmd=0000000000000000
Internal error: Oops: 96000006 [#1] PREEMPT SMP
Modules linked in:
CPU: 6 PID: 523 Comm: kmemleak Tainted: G S      W         5.0.0-rc1 #13
Hardware name: Qualcomm Technologies, Inc. MSM8998 v1 MTP (DT)
pstate: 80000085 (Nzcv daIf -PAN -UAO)
pc : scan_block+0x70/0x190
lr : scan_block+0x6c/0x190
sp : ffffff8012e8bd20
x29: ffffff8012e8bd20 x28: ffffffc0fdbaf018
x27: ffffffc022000000 x26: 0000000000000080
x25: ffffff8011aadf70 x24: ffffffc0f8cc8000
x23: ffffff8010dc8000 x22: ffffff8010dc8830
x21: ffffffc021e00ff9 x20: ffffffc0f8cc8050
x19: ffffffc021e00000 x18: 0000000000002409
x17: 0000000000000200 x16: 0000000000000000
x15: ffffff8010e14dd8 x14: 0000000000002406
x13: 000000004c4dd0c6 x12: ffffffc0f77dad58
x11: 0000000000000001 x10: ffffff8010d9e688
x9 : ffffff8010d9f000 x8 : ffffff8010d9e688
x7 : 0000000000000002 x6 : 0000000000000000
x5 : ffffff8011511c20 x4 : 00000000000026d1
x3 : ffffff8010e14d88 x2 : 5b36396f4e7d4000
x1 : 0000000000208040 x0 : 0000000000000000
Process kmemleak (pid: 523, stack limit = 0x(____ptrval____))
Call trace:
 scan_block+0x70/0x190
 scan_gray_list+0x108/0x1c0
 kmemleak_scan+0x33c/0x7c0
 kmemleak_scan_thread+0x98/0xf0
 kthread+0x11c/0x120
 ret_from_fork+0x10/0x1c
Code: f9000fb4 d503201f 97ffffd2 35000580 (f9400260)
---[ end trace 176d6ed9d86a0c33 ]---
note: kmemleak[523] exited with preempt_count 2

The crash happens when a no-map area is allocated in
early_init_dt_alloc_reserved_memory_arch(). The allocated region is
registered with kmemleak, but it is then removed from memblock using
memblock_remove() that is not kmemleak-aware.

Replacing __memblock_alloc_base() with memblock_find_in_range() makes sure
that the allocated memory is not added to kmemleak and then
memblock_remove()'ing this memory is safe.

As a bonus, since memblock_find_in_range() ensures the allocation in the
specified range, the bounds check can be removed.

Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org # 3.15+
Fixes: 3f0c820664483 ("drivers: of: add initialization code for dynamic reserved memory")
Acked-by: Marek Szyprowski <m.szyprowski@samsung.com>
Acked-by: Prateek Patel <prpatel@nvidia.com>
Tested-by: Marc Gonzalez <marc.w.gonzalez@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Mike Rapoport <rppt@linux.ibm.com>
---
 drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c | 13 ++++---------
 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 9 deletions(-)

diff --git a/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c b/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
index 78aa9eb..47971ab 100644
--- a/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
+++ b/drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
@@ -34,21 +34,16 @@ int __init __weak early_init_dt_alloc_reserved_memory_arch(phys_addr_t size,
 
 	end = !end ? MEMBLOCK_ALLOC_ANYWHERE : end;
 	align = !align ? SMP_CACHE_BYTES : align;
-	base = memblock_phys_alloc_range(size, align, 0, end);
+	base = memblock_find_in_range(size, align, start, end);
 	if (!base)
 		return -ENOMEM;
 
-	/*
-	 * Check if the allocated region fits in to start..end window
-	 */
-	if (base < start) {
-		memblock_free(base, size);
-		return -ENOMEM;
-	}
-
 	*res_base = base;
 	if (nomap)
 		return memblock_remove(base, size);
+	else
+		return memblock_reserve(base, size);
+
 	return 0;
 }
 
-- 
2.7.4


^ permalink raw reply related	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

* Re: [RESEND PATCH v2] of: fix kmemleak crash caused by imbalance in early memory reservation
  2019-02-13  6:57                                       ` Mike Rapoport
@ 2019-02-13  9:27                                         ` Marc Gonzalez
  2019-02-13 16:30                                           ` Mike Rapoport
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 39+ messages in thread
From: Marc Gonzalez @ 2019-02-13  9:27 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Mike Rapoport
  Cc: Rob Herring, Andrew Morton, Stephen Rothwell, Frank Rowand,
	Marek Szyprowski, Catalin Marinas, Prateek Patel, DT, LKML,
	stable

On 13/02/2019 07:57, Mike Rapoport wrote:

> Below is the version vs. current mmotm.
> 
> From 9ea6dceb46067d4f1cbbdbec1189c8496aa0a4bc Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
> From: Mike Rapoport <rppt@linux.ibm.com>
> Date: Mon, 4 Feb 2019 15:37:21 +0100
> Subject: [PATCH] of: fix kmemleak crash caused by imbalance in early memory reservation

Out of curiosity, why don't you send as a proper v3?

> Marc Gonzalez reported the following kmemleak crash:
> 
> [...]
> 
> The crash happens when a no-map area is allocated in
> early_init_dt_alloc_reserved_memory_arch(). The allocated region is
> registered with kmemleak, but it is then removed from memblock using
> memblock_remove() that is not kmemleak-aware.
> 
> Replacing __memblock_alloc_base() with memblock_find_in_range()

Nit: in this new version, you're replacing memblock_phys_alloc_range()
with memblock_find_in_range() so I don't know if the comment still
applies.

> makes sure that the allocated memory is not added to kmemleak and then
> memblock_remove()'ing this memory is safe.
> 
> As a bonus, since memblock_find_in_range() ensures the allocation in the
> specified range, the bounds check can be removed.
> 
> Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org # 3.15+
> Fixes: 3f0c820664483 ("drivers: of: add initialization code for dynamic reserved memory")
> Acked-by: Marek Szyprowski <m.szyprowski@samsung.com>
> Acked-by: Prateek Patel <prpatel@nvidia.com>
> Tested-by: Marc Gonzalez <marc.w.gonzalez@free.fr>
> Signed-off-by: Mike Rapoport <rppt@linux.ibm.com>

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

* Re: [RESEND PATCH v2] of: fix kmemleak crash caused by imbalance in early memory reservation
  2019-02-13  9:27                                         ` Marc Gonzalez
@ 2019-02-13 16:30                                           ` Mike Rapoport
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 39+ messages in thread
From: Mike Rapoport @ 2019-02-13 16:30 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Marc Gonzalez
  Cc: Rob Herring, Andrew Morton, Stephen Rothwell, Frank Rowand,
	Marek Szyprowski, Catalin Marinas, Prateek Patel, DT, LKML,
	stable

On Wed, Feb 13, 2019 at 10:27:48AM +0100, Marc Gonzalez wrote:
> On 13/02/2019 07:57, Mike Rapoport wrote:
> 
> > Below is the version vs. current mmotm.
> > 
> > From 9ea6dceb46067d4f1cbbdbec1189c8496aa0a4bc Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
> > From: Mike Rapoport <rppt@linux.ibm.com>
> > Date: Mon, 4 Feb 2019 15:37:21 +0100
> > Subject: [PATCH] of: fix kmemleak crash caused by imbalance in early memory reservation
> 
> Out of curiosity, why don't you send as a proper v3?
 
Was too much in a hurry

> > Marc Gonzalez reported the following kmemleak crash:
> > 
> > [...]
> > 
> > The crash happens when a no-map area is allocated in
> > early_init_dt_alloc_reserved_memory_arch(). The allocated region is
> > registered with kmemleak, but it is then removed from memblock using
> > memblock_remove() that is not kmemleak-aware.
> > 
> > Replacing __memblock_alloc_base() with memblock_find_in_range()
> 
> Nit: in this new version, you're replacing memblock_phys_alloc_range()
> with memblock_find_in_range() so I don't know if the comment still
> applies.

and didn't check the outcome of blindly applying the patch :(

I'll send a proper v3 soon. Sorry for the noise.
 
> > makes sure that the allocated memory is not added to kmemleak and then
> > memblock_remove()'ing this memory is safe.
> > 
> > As a bonus, since memblock_find_in_range() ensures the allocation in the
> > specified range, the bounds check can be removed.
> > 
> > Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org # 3.15+
> > Fixes: 3f0c820664483 ("drivers: of: add initialization code for dynamic reserved memory")
> > Acked-by: Marek Szyprowski <m.szyprowski@samsung.com>
> > Acked-by: Prateek Patel <prpatel@nvidia.com>
> > Tested-by: Marc Gonzalez <marc.w.gonzalez@free.fr>
> > Signed-off-by: Mike Rapoport <rppt@linux.ibm.com>
> 

-- 
Sincerely yours,
Mike.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

* Re: [RESEND PATCH v2] of: fix kmemleak crash caused by imbalance in early memory reservation
  2019-02-12 22:12                                     ` Rob Herring
  2019-02-13  6:57                                       ` Mike Rapoport
@ 2019-03-06  2:12                                       ` Guenter Roeck
  2019-03-06 13:39                                         ` Rob Herring
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 39+ messages in thread
From: Guenter Roeck @ 2019-03-06  2:12 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Rob Herring
  Cc: Stephen Rothwell, Marc Gonzalez, Frank Rowand, Mike Rapoport,
	Marek Szyprowski, Catalin Marinas, Prateek Patel, DT, LKML,
	stable, Andrew Morton

On Tue, Feb 12, 2019 at 04:12:24PM -0600, Rob Herring wrote:
> On Tue, Feb 12, 2019 at 3:50 PM Stephen Rothwell <sfr@canb.auug.org.au> wrote:
> >
> > Hi all,
> >
> > On Tue, 12 Feb 2019 10:03:09 -0600 Rob Herring <robh+dt@kernel.org> wrote:
> > >
> > > On Mon, Feb 11, 2019 at 10:47 AM Marc Gonzalez <marc.w.gonzalez@free.fr> wrote:
> > > >
> > > > On 04/02/2019 15:37, Marc Gonzalez wrote:
> > > >
> > > > > Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org # 3.15+
> > > > > Fixes: 3f0c820664483 ("drivers: of: add initialization code for dynamic reserved memory")
> > > > > Acked-by: Marek Szyprowski <m.szyprowski@samsung.com>
> > > > > Acked-by: Prateek Patel <prpatel@nvidia.com>
> > > > > Tested-by: Marc Gonzalez <marc.w.gonzalez@free.fr>
> > > > > Signed-off-by: Mike Rapoport <rppt@linux.ibm.com>
> > > > > ---
> > > > > Resend with DT CCed to reach robh's patch queue
> > > > > I added CC: stable, Fixes, and Prateek's ack
> > > > > Trim recipients list to minimize inconvenience
> > > >
> > > > I'm confused over commit 3532b3b554a216f30edb841d29eef48521bdc592 in linux-next
> > > > "memblock: drop __memblock_alloc_base()"
> > > >
> > > > It's definitely going to conflict with the proposed patch
> > > > over drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
> > > >
> > > > Rob, what's the next step then?
> > >
> > > Rebase it on top of what's in linux-next and apply it to the tree
> > > which has the above dependency. I'm guessing that is Andrew Morton's
> > > tree.
> >
> > Yeah, that is in Andrew's "post linux-next" patch series, so if you
> > rebase it on top of linux-next and then send it to Andrew with some
> > explanation.
> >
> > ...
> >
> > Actually, if it is intended for the stable trees, then presumably it is
> > intended to go to Linus for the current release?  In which case, the
> > patch in Andrew's tree will have to be changed to cope after your patch
> > appears in Linus' tree (and therefore, linux-next).
> 
> At this point in the cycle, I wasn't planning to send this for 5.0.
> It's not fixing something introduced in 5.0 and it is a debug feature.
> 
Hi Rob,

this may be a debug feature, but we do test our kernels with it enabled,
and the problem does affect our 4.19 branch (chromeos-4.19). Are you
suggesting that we should backport the fix into our branch and not send
the backport to -stable ?

No problem, just trying to avoid wasting our time.

Thanks,
Guenter

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

* Re: [RESEND PATCH v2] of: fix kmemleak crash caused by imbalance in early memory reservation
  2019-03-06  2:12                                       ` Guenter Roeck
@ 2019-03-06 13:39                                         ` Rob Herring
  2019-03-06 16:18                                           ` Guenter Roeck
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 39+ messages in thread
From: Rob Herring @ 2019-03-06 13:39 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Guenter Roeck
  Cc: Stephen Rothwell, Marc Gonzalez, Frank Rowand, Mike Rapoport,
	Marek Szyprowski, Catalin Marinas, Prateek Patel, DT, LKML,
	stable, Andrew Morton

On Tue, Mar 5, 2019 at 8:12 PM Guenter Roeck <linux@roeck-us.net> wrote:
>
> On Tue, Feb 12, 2019 at 04:12:24PM -0600, Rob Herring wrote:
> > On Tue, Feb 12, 2019 at 3:50 PM Stephen Rothwell <sfr@canb.auug.org.au> wrote:
> > >
> > > Hi all,
> > >
> > > On Tue, 12 Feb 2019 10:03:09 -0600 Rob Herring <robh+dt@kernel.org> wrote:
> > > >
> > > > On Mon, Feb 11, 2019 at 10:47 AM Marc Gonzalez <marc.w.gonzalez@free.fr> wrote:
> > > > >
> > > > > On 04/02/2019 15:37, Marc Gonzalez wrote:
> > > > >
> > > > > > Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org # 3.15+
> > > > > > Fixes: 3f0c820664483 ("drivers: of: add initialization code for dynamic reserved memory")
> > > > > > Acked-by: Marek Szyprowski <m.szyprowski@samsung.com>
> > > > > > Acked-by: Prateek Patel <prpatel@nvidia.com>
> > > > > > Tested-by: Marc Gonzalez <marc.w.gonzalez@free.fr>
> > > > > > Signed-off-by: Mike Rapoport <rppt@linux.ibm.com>
> > > > > > ---
> > > > > > Resend with DT CCed to reach robh's patch queue
> > > > > > I added CC: stable, Fixes, and Prateek's ack
> > > > > > Trim recipients list to minimize inconvenience
> > > > >
> > > > > I'm confused over commit 3532b3b554a216f30edb841d29eef48521bdc592 in linux-next
> > > > > "memblock: drop __memblock_alloc_base()"
> > > > >
> > > > > It's definitely going to conflict with the proposed patch
> > > > > over drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
> > > > >
> > > > > Rob, what's the next step then?
> > > >
> > > > Rebase it on top of what's in linux-next and apply it to the tree
> > > > which has the above dependency. I'm guessing that is Andrew Morton's
> > > > tree.
> > >
> > > Yeah, that is in Andrew's "post linux-next" patch series, so if you
> > > rebase it on top of linux-next and then send it to Andrew with some
> > > explanation.
> > >
> > > ...
> > >
> > > Actually, if it is intended for the stable trees, then presumably it is
> > > intended to go to Linus for the current release?  In which case, the
> > > patch in Andrew's tree will have to be changed to cope after your patch
> > > appears in Linus' tree (and therefore, linux-next).
> >
> > At this point in the cycle, I wasn't planning to send this for 5.0.
> > It's not fixing something introduced in 5.0 and it is a debug feature.
> >
> Hi Rob,
>
> this may be a debug feature, but we do test our kernels with it enabled,
> and the problem does affect our 4.19 branch (chromeos-4.19). Are you
> suggesting that we should backport the fix into our branch and not send
> the backport to -stable ?

No, not at all. Just that I wasn't going to add it to the probable
last 5.0-rc and would wait.

However, it's complicated by other memblock changes in 5.1 and not a
trivial backport. One of the versions on the list should be easier to
backport than what's in mainline (or going to be).

Rob

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

* Re: [RESEND PATCH v2] of: fix kmemleak crash caused by imbalance in early memory reservation
  2019-03-06 13:39                                         ` Rob Herring
@ 2019-03-06 16:18                                           ` Guenter Roeck
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 39+ messages in thread
From: Guenter Roeck @ 2019-03-06 16:18 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Rob Herring
  Cc: Stephen Rothwell, Marc Gonzalez, Frank Rowand, Mike Rapoport,
	Marek Szyprowski, Catalin Marinas, Prateek Patel, DT, LKML,
	stable, Andrew Morton

On 3/6/19 5:39 AM, Rob Herring wrote:
> On Tue, Mar 5, 2019 at 8:12 PM Guenter Roeck <linux@roeck-us.net> wrote:
>>
>> On Tue, Feb 12, 2019 at 04:12:24PM -0600, Rob Herring wrote:
>>> On Tue, Feb 12, 2019 at 3:50 PM Stephen Rothwell <sfr@canb.auug.org.au> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Hi all,
>>>>
>>>> On Tue, 12 Feb 2019 10:03:09 -0600 Rob Herring <robh+dt@kernel.org> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> On Mon, Feb 11, 2019 at 10:47 AM Marc Gonzalez <marc.w.gonzalez@free.fr> wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> On 04/02/2019 15:37, Marc Gonzalez wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org # 3.15+
>>>>>>> Fixes: 3f0c820664483 ("drivers: of: add initialization code for dynamic reserved memory")
>>>>>>> Acked-by: Marek Szyprowski <m.szyprowski@samsung.com>
>>>>>>> Acked-by: Prateek Patel <prpatel@nvidia.com>
>>>>>>> Tested-by: Marc Gonzalez <marc.w.gonzalez@free.fr>
>>>>>>> Signed-off-by: Mike Rapoport <rppt@linux.ibm.com>
>>>>>>> ---
>>>>>>> Resend with DT CCed to reach robh's patch queue
>>>>>>> I added CC: stable, Fixes, and Prateek's ack
>>>>>>> Trim recipients list to minimize inconvenience
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I'm confused over commit 3532b3b554a216f30edb841d29eef48521bdc592 in linux-next
>>>>>> "memblock: drop __memblock_alloc_base()"
>>>>>>
>>>>>> It's definitely going to conflict with the proposed patch
>>>>>> over drivers/of/of_reserved_mem.c
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Rob, what's the next step then?
>>>>>
>>>>> Rebase it on top of what's in linux-next and apply it to the tree
>>>>> which has the above dependency. I'm guessing that is Andrew Morton's
>>>>> tree.
>>>>
>>>> Yeah, that is in Andrew's "post linux-next" patch series, so if you
>>>> rebase it on top of linux-next and then send it to Andrew with some
>>>> explanation.
>>>>
>>>> ...
>>>>
>>>> Actually, if it is intended for the stable trees, then presumably it is
>>>> intended to go to Linus for the current release?  In which case, the
>>>> patch in Andrew's tree will have to be changed to cope after your patch
>>>> appears in Linus' tree (and therefore, linux-next).
>>>
>>> At this point in the cycle, I wasn't planning to send this for 5.0.
>>> It's not fixing something introduced in 5.0 and it is a debug feature.
>>>
>> Hi Rob,
>>
>> this may be a debug feature, but we do test our kernels with it enabled,
>> and the problem does affect our 4.19 branch (chromeos-4.19). Are you
>> suggesting that we should backport the fix into our branch and not send
>> the backport to -stable ?
> 
> No, not at all. Just that I wasn't going to add it to the probable
> last 5.0-rc and would wait.
> 
> However, it's complicated by other memblock changes in 5.1 and not a
> trivial backport. One of the versions on the list should be easier to
> backport than what's in mainline (or going to be).
> 

We went ahead and applied a backport of an older version of the patch series
to chromeos-4.19. We'll see how well that works, but so far it looks like
it fixes our problem.

Guenter

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 39+ messages in thread

end of thread, other threads:[~2019-03-06 16:18 UTC | newest]

Thread overview: 39+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed)
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
     [not found] <f6fbf528-8213-e3b8-6990-9fcf9dec04d6@free.fr>
     [not found] ` <20190118143434.GE118707@arrakis.emea.arm.com>
2019-01-18 15:36   ` kmemleak panic Marc Gonzalez
2019-01-18 16:14     ` Qian Cai
2019-01-18 17:05       ` Marc Gonzalez
2019-01-18 17:38         ` Qian Cai
2019-01-19 10:21           ` Marc Gonzalez
2019-01-18 19:12     ` Robin Murphy
2019-01-19 13:28     ` Catalin Marinas
2019-01-21 11:57       ` Marc Gonzalez
2019-01-21 12:19         ` Robin Murphy
2019-01-21 13:35           ` Rob Herring
2019-01-21 13:54             ` Marc Gonzalez
2019-01-22  8:20               ` Prateek Patel
2019-01-21 14:37             ` Catalin Marinas
2019-01-21 15:42               ` Rob Herring
2019-01-21 15:53                 ` Robin Murphy
2019-01-21 17:42                 ` Mike Rapoport
2019-01-22 14:02                   ` Marc Gonzalez
2019-01-22 14:12                     ` Marc Gonzalez
2019-01-23  5:54                       ` Mike Rapoport
2019-01-23  7:05                         ` Prateek Patel
2019-01-23  7:28                         ` Marek Szyprowski
2019-01-23 12:31                           ` [PATCH v2] of: fix kmemleak crash (was: Re: kmemleak panic) Mike Rapoport
2019-02-01 16:23                             ` [PATCH v2] of: fix kmemleak crash Marc Gonzalez
2019-02-04 10:10                               ` Marc Gonzalez
2019-02-04 15:25                                 ` Greg Kroah-Hartman
2019-02-04 16:41                                   ` Rob Herring
2019-02-04 14:37                             ` [RESEND PATCH v2] of: fix kmemleak crash caused by imbalance in early memory reservation Marc Gonzalez
2019-02-11 16:47                               ` Marc Gonzalez
2019-02-12 16:03                                 ` Rob Herring
2019-02-12 21:50                                   ` Stephen Rothwell
2019-02-12 21:52                                     ` Andrew Morton
2019-02-12 22:12                                     ` Rob Herring
2019-02-13  6:57                                       ` Mike Rapoport
2019-02-13  9:27                                         ` Marc Gonzalez
2019-02-13 16:30                                           ` Mike Rapoport
2019-03-06  2:12                                       ` Guenter Roeck
2019-03-06 13:39                                         ` Rob Herring
2019-03-06 16:18                                           ` Guenter Roeck
2019-01-21 12:22         ` kmemleak panic Marc Gonzalez

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