Re: Recent commits reject RPi4B booting: pcib0 vs. pcib1 "rman_manage_region: <pcib1 memory window> request" leads to panic
- Reply: Mark Millard : "Re: Recent commits reject RPi4B booting: pcib0 vs. pcib1 "rman_manage_region: <pcib1 memory window> request" leads to panic"
- In reply to: Mark Millard : "Re: Recent commits reject RPi4B booting: pcib0 vs. pcib1 "rman_manage_region: <pcib1 memory window> request" leads to panic"
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Date: Mon, 12 Feb 2024 20:00:16 UTC
[Gack: I was looking at the wrong vintage of source code, predating
your changes: wrong system used.]
On Feb 12, 2024, at 10:41, Mark Millard <marklmi@yahoo.com> wrote:
> On Feb 12, 2024, at 09:32, John Baldwin <jhb@freebsd.org> wrote:
>
>> On 2/9/24 8:13 PM, Mark Millard wrote:
>>> Summary:
>>> pcib0: <BCM2838-compatible PCI-express controller> mem 0x7d500000-0x7d50930f irq 80,81 on simplebus2
>>> pcib0: parsing FDT for ECAM0:
>>> pcib0: PCI addr: 0xc0000000, CPU addr: 0x600000000, Size: 0x40000000
>>> . . .
>>> rman_manage_region: <pcib1 memory window> request: start 0x600000000, end 0x6000fffff
>>> panic: Failed to add resource to rman
>>
>> Hmmm, I suspect this is due to the way that bus_translate_resource works which is
>> fundamentally broken. It rewrites the start address of a resource in-situ instead
>> of keeping downstream resources separate from the upstream resources. For example,
>> I don't see how you could ever release a resource in this design without completely
>> screwing up your rman. That is, I expect trying to detach a PCI device behind a
>> translating bridge that uses the current approach should corrupt the allocated
>> resource ranges in an rman long before my changes.
>>
>> That said, that doesn't really explain the panic. Hmm, the panic might be because
>> for PCI bridge windows the driver now passes RF_ACTIVE and the bus_translate_resource
>> hack only kicks in the activate_resource method of pci_host_generic.c.
>>
>>> Detail:
>>> . . .
>>> pcib0: <BCM2838-compatible PCI-express controller> mem 0x7d500000-0x7d50930f irq 80,81 on simplebus2
>>> pcib0: parsing FDT for ECAM0:
>>> pcib0: PCI addr: 0xc0000000, CPU addr: 0x600000000, Size: 0x40000000
>>
>> This indicates this is a translating bus.
>>
>>> pcib1: <PCI-PCI bridge> irq 91 at device 0.0 on pci0
>>> rman_manage_region: <pcib1 bus numbers> request: start 0x1, end 0x1
>>> pcib0: rman_reserve_resource: start=0xc0000000, end=0xc00fffff, count=0x100000
>>> rman_reserve_resource_bound: <PCIe Memory> request: [0xc0000000, 0xc00fffff], length 0x100000, flags 102, device pcib1
>>> rman_reserve_resource_bound: trying 0xffffffff <0xc0000000,0xfffff>
>>> considering [0xc0000000, 0xffffffff]
>>> truncated region: [0xc0000000, 0xc00fffff]; size 0x100000 (requested 0x100000)
>>> candidate region: [0xc0000000, 0xc00fffff], size 0x100000
>>> allocating from the beginning
>>> rman_manage_region: <pcib1 memory window> request: start 0x600000000, end 0x6000fffff
>>
>> The fact that we are trying to reserve the CPU addresses in the rman is because
>> bus_translate_resource rewrote the start address in the resource after it was allocated.
>>
>> That said, I can't see why rman_manage_region would actually fail. At this point the
>> rman is empty (this is the first call to rman_manage_region for "pcib1 memory window"),
>> so only the check that should be failing are the checks against rm_start and
>> rm_end. For the memory window, rm_start is always 0, and rm_end is always
>> 0xffffffff, so both the old (0xc00000000 - 0xc00fffff) and new (0x60000000 - 0x600fffffff)
>> ranges are within those bounds. I would instead expect to see some other issue later
>> on where we fail to allocate a resource for a child BAR, but I wouldn't expect
>> rman_manage_region to fail.
>>
>> Logging the return value from rman_manage_region would be the first step I think
>> to see which error value it is returning.
>
> Looking at the code in sys/kern/subr_rman.c for rman_manage_region I see
> the (mostly) return rv related logic only has ENONMEM (explicit return) and
> EBUSY as non-0 possibilities (no other returns).
The modern code also has EINVAL via an explicit return.
> All the rv references and
> all the returns are shown below:
>
> int rv = 0;
> . . .
The modern code also has here:
DPRINTF(("rman_manage_region: <%s> request: start %#jx, end %#jx\n",
rm->rm_descr, start, end));
if (start < rm->rm_start || end > rm->rm_end)
return EINVAL;
Adding rm->rm_start and rm->rm_end to the message might be
appropriate --and would also be enough additional information
to know if EINVAL would be returned.
> r = int_alloc_resource(M_NOWAIT);
> if (r == NULL)
> return ENOMEM;
> . . .
> /* Check for any overlap with the current region. */
> if (r->r_start <= s->r_end && r->r_end >= s->r_start) {
> rv = EBUSY;
> goto out;
> }
>
> /* Check for any overlap with the next region. */
> t = TAILQ_NEXT(s, r_link);
> if (t && r->r_start <= t->r_end && r->r_end >= t->r_start) {
> rv = EBUSY;
> goto out;
> }
> . . .
> out:
> mtx_unlock(rm->rm_mtx);
> return rv;
>
> int_alloc_resource failure would be failure (NULL) from the:
>
> struct resource_i *r;
>
> r = malloc(sizeof *r, M_RMAN, malloc_flag | M_ZERO);
>
> (associated with the M_NOWAIT argument).
>
> The malloc failure would likely go in a very different direction.
>
>
>
> Side note: looks like the EBUSY cases leak what r references.
Still true in the newer code.
>> Probably I should fix pci_host_generic.c to handle translation properly however.
>> I can work on a patch for that.
>
===
Mark Millard
marklmi at yahoo.com