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@@ -27,23 +27,43 @@
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#include <asm/cpufeature.h>
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/*
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- * The e820 table is the array that gets modified e.g. with command line parameters
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- * and that is also registered with modifications in the kernel resource tree
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- * with the iomem_resource as parent.
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+ * The firmware and bootloader passes us an E820 table that is the primary
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+ * physical memory layout description available about x86 systems.
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*
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- * The e820_table_saved is directly saved after the BIOS-provided memory map is
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- * copied. It doesn't get modified afterwards. It's registered for the
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- * /sys/firmware/memmap interface.
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+ * The kernel takes the e820 memory layout and optionally modifies it with
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+ * quirks and other tweaks, and feeds that into the generic Linux memory
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+ * allocation code routines via a platform independent interface (memblock, etc.).
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*
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- * That memory map is not modified and is used as base for kexec. The kexec'd
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- * kernel should get the same memory map as the firmware provides. Then the
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- * user can e.g. boot the original kernel with mem=1G while still booting the
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- * next kernel with full memory.
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+ * We organize the E820 table into two main data structures:
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+ *
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+ * - 'e820_table_firmware': the original firmware version passed to us by the
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+ * bootloader - not modified by the kernel. We use this to:
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+ *
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+ * - inform the user about the firmware's notion of memory layout
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+ * via /sys/firmware/memmap
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+ *
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+ * - the hibernation code uses it to generate a kernel-independent MD5
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+ * fingerprint of the physical memory layout of a system.
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+ *
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+ * - kexec, which is a bootloader in disguise, uses the original e820
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+ * layout to pass to the kexec-ed kernel. This way the original kernel
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+ * can have a restricted e820 map while the kexec()-ed kexec-kernel
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+ * can have access to full memory - etc.
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+ *
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+ * - 'e820_table': this is the main e820 table that is massaged by the
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+ * low level x86 platform code, or modified by boot parameters, before
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+ * passed on to higher level MM layers.
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+ *
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+ * Once the e820 map has been converted to the standard Linux memory layout
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+ * information its role stops - modifying it has no effect and does not get
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+ * re-propagated. So itsmain role is a temporary bootstrap storage of firmware
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+ * specific memory layout data during early bootup.
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*/
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-static struct e820_table e820_table_init __initdata;
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-static struct e820_table initial_e820_table_saved __initdata;
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-struct e820_table *e820_table __refdata = &e820_table_init;
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-struct e820_table *e820_table_saved __refdata = &initial_e820_table_saved;
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+static struct e820_table e820_table_init __initdata;
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+static struct e820_table e820_table_firmware_init __initdata;
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+
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+struct e820_table *e820_table __refdata = &e820_table_init;
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+struct e820_table *e820_table_firmware __refdata = &e820_table_firmware_init;
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/* For PCI or other memory-mapped resources */
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unsigned long pci_mem_start = 0xaeedbabe;
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@@ -497,10 +517,10 @@ u64 __init e820_update_range(u64 start, u64 size, unsigned old_type,
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return __e820_update_range(e820_table, start, size, old_type, new_type);
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}
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-static u64 __init e820_update_range_saved(u64 start, u64 size,
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+static u64 __init e820_update_range_firmware(u64 start, u64 size,
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unsigned old_type, unsigned new_type)
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{
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- return __e820_update_range(e820_table_saved, start, size, old_type,
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+ return __e820_update_range(e820_table_firmware, start, size, old_type,
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new_type);
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}
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@@ -572,9 +592,9 @@ void __init update_e820(void)
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printk(KERN_INFO "e820: modified physical RAM map:\n");
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e820_print_map("modified");
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}
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-static void __init update_e820_table_saved(void)
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+static void __init update_e820_table_firmware(void)
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{
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- sanitize_e820_table(e820_table_saved->entries, ARRAY_SIZE(e820_table_saved->entries), &e820_table_saved->nr_entries);
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+ sanitize_e820_table(e820_table_firmware->entries, ARRAY_SIZE(e820_table_firmware->entries), &e820_table_firmware->nr_entries);
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}
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#define MAX_GAP_END 0x100000000ull
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/*
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@@ -648,7 +668,7 @@ __init void e820_setup_gap(void)
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/*
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* Called late during init, in free_initmem().
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*
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- * Initial e820 and e820_table_saved are largish __initdata arrays.
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+ * Initial e820 and e820_table_firmware are largish __initdata arrays.
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* Copy them to (usually much smaller) dynamically allocated area.
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* This is done after all tweaks we ever do to them:
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* all functions which modify them are __init functions,
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@@ -665,11 +685,11 @@ __init void e820_reallocate_tables(void)
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memcpy(n, e820_table, size);
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e820_table = n;
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- size = offsetof(struct e820_table, entries) + sizeof(struct e820_entry) * e820_table_saved->nr_entries;
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+ size = offsetof(struct e820_table, entries) + sizeof(struct e820_entry) * e820_table_firmware->nr_entries;
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n = kmalloc(size, GFP_KERNEL);
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BUG_ON(!n);
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- memcpy(n, e820_table_saved, size);
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- e820_table_saved = n;
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+ memcpy(n, e820_table_firmware, size);
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+ e820_table_firmware = n;
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}
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/**
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@@ -745,7 +765,7 @@ core_initcall(e820_mark_nvs_memory);
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#endif
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/*
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- * pre allocated 4k and reserved it in memblock and e820_table_saved
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+ * pre allocated 4k and reserved it in memblock and e820_table_firmware
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*/
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u64 __init early_reserve_e820(u64 size, u64 align)
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{
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@@ -753,9 +773,9 @@ u64 __init early_reserve_e820(u64 size, u64 align)
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addr = __memblock_alloc_base(size, align, MEMBLOCK_ALLOC_ACCESSIBLE);
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if (addr) {
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- e820_update_range_saved(addr, size, E820_RAM, E820_RESERVED);
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- printk(KERN_INFO "e820: update e820_table_saved for early_reserve_e820\n");
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- update_e820_table_saved();
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+ e820_update_range_firmware(addr, size, E820_RAM, E820_RESERVED);
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+ printk(KERN_INFO "e820: update e820_table_firmware for early_reserve_e820\n");
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+ update_e820_table_firmware();
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}
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return addr;
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@@ -1034,8 +1054,8 @@ void __init e820_reserve_resources(void)
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res++;
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}
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- for (i = 0; i < e820_table_saved->nr_entries; i++) {
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- struct e820_entry *entry = &e820_table_saved->entries[i];
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+ for (i = 0; i < e820_table_firmware->nr_entries; i++) {
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+ struct e820_entry *entry = &e820_table_firmware->entries[i];
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firmware_map_add_early(entry->addr,
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entry->addr + entry->size,
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e820_type_to_string(entry->type));
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@@ -1145,7 +1165,7 @@ void __init e820__memory_setup(void)
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char *who;
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who = x86_init.resources.memory_setup();
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- memcpy(e820_table_saved, e820_table, sizeof(struct e820_table));
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+ memcpy(e820_table_firmware, e820_table, sizeof(struct e820_table));
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printk(KERN_INFO "e820: BIOS-provided physical RAM map:\n");
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e820_print_map(who);
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}
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