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Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation/x86')
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diff --git a/Documentation/x86/00-INDEX b/Documentation/x86/00-INDEX new file mode 100644 index 000000000..3bb2ee3ed --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/x86/00-INDEX @@ -0,0 +1,20 @@ +00-INDEX + - this file +boot.txt + - List of boot protocol versions +earlyprintk.txt + - Using earlyprintk with a USB2 debug port key. +entry_64.txt + - Describe (some of the) kernel entry points for x86. +exception-tables.txt + - why and how Linux kernel uses exception tables on x86 +microcode.txt + - How to load microcode from an initrd-CPIO archive early to fix CPU issues. +mtrr.txt + - how to use x86 Memory Type Range Registers to increase performance +pat.txt + - Page Attribute Table intro and API +usb-legacy-support.txt + - how to fix/avoid quirks when using emulated PS/2 mouse/keyboard. +zero-page.txt + - layout of the first page of memory. diff --git a/Documentation/x86/amd-memory-encryption.txt b/Documentation/x86/amd-memory-encryption.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000..afc41f544 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/x86/amd-memory-encryption.txt @@ -0,0 +1,90 @@ +Secure Memory Encryption (SME) and Secure Encrypted Virtualization (SEV) are +features found on AMD processors. + +SME provides the ability to mark individual pages of memory as encrypted using +the standard x86 page tables. A page that is marked encrypted will be +automatically decrypted when read from DRAM and encrypted when written to +DRAM. SME can therefore be used to protect the contents of DRAM from physical +attacks on the system. + +SEV enables running encrypted virtual machines (VMs) in which the code and data +of the guest VM are secured so that a decrypted version is available only +within the VM itself. SEV guest VMs have the concept of private and shared +memory. Private memory is encrypted with the guest-specific key, while shared +memory may be encrypted with hypervisor key. When SME is enabled, the hypervisor +key is the same key which is used in SME. + +A page is encrypted when a page table entry has the encryption bit set (see +below on how to determine its position). The encryption bit can also be +specified in the cr3 register, allowing the PGD table to be encrypted. Each +successive level of page tables can also be encrypted by setting the encryption +bit in the page table entry that points to the next table. This allows the full +page table hierarchy to be encrypted. Note, this means that just because the +encryption bit is set in cr3, doesn't imply the full hierarchy is encrypted. +Each page table entry in the hierarchy needs to have the encryption bit set to +achieve that. So, theoretically, you could have the encryption bit set in cr3 +so that the PGD is encrypted, but not set the encryption bit in the PGD entry +for a PUD which results in the PUD pointed to by that entry to not be +encrypted. + +When SEV is enabled, instruction pages and guest page tables are always treated +as private. All the DMA operations inside the guest must be performed on shared +memory. Since the memory encryption bit is controlled by the guest OS when it +is operating in 64-bit or 32-bit PAE mode, in all other modes the SEV hardware +forces the memory encryption bit to 1. + +Support for SME and SEV can be determined through the CPUID instruction. The +CPUID function 0x8000001f reports information related to SME: + + 0x8000001f[eax]: + Bit[0] indicates support for SME + Bit[1] indicates support for SEV + 0x8000001f[ebx]: + Bits[5:0] pagetable bit number used to activate memory + encryption + Bits[11:6] reduction in physical address space, in bits, when + memory encryption is enabled (this only affects + system physical addresses, not guest physical + addresses) + +If support for SME is present, MSR 0xc00100010 (MSR_K8_SYSCFG) can be used to +determine if SME is enabled and/or to enable memory encryption: + + 0xc0010010: + Bit[23] 0 = memory encryption features are disabled + 1 = memory encryption features are enabled + +If SEV is supported, MSR 0xc0010131 (MSR_AMD64_SEV) can be used to determine if +SEV is active: + + 0xc0010131: + Bit[0] 0 = memory encryption is not active + 1 = memory encryption is active + +Linux relies on BIOS to set this bit if BIOS has determined that the reduction +in the physical address space as a result of enabling memory encryption (see +CPUID information above) will not conflict with the address space resource +requirements for the system. If this bit is not set upon Linux startup then +Linux itself will not set it and memory encryption will not be possible. + +The state of SME in the Linux kernel can be documented as follows: + - Supported: + The CPU supports SME (determined through CPUID instruction). + + - Enabled: + Supported and bit 23 of MSR_K8_SYSCFG is set. + + - Active: + Supported, Enabled and the Linux kernel is actively applying + the encryption bit to page table entries (the SME mask in the + kernel is non-zero). + +SME can also be enabled and activated in the BIOS. If SME is enabled and +activated in the BIOS, then all memory accesses will be encrypted and it will +not be necessary to activate the Linux memory encryption support. If the BIOS +merely enables SME (sets bit 23 of the MSR_K8_SYSCFG), then Linux can activate +memory encryption by default (CONFIG_AMD_MEM_ENCRYPT_ACTIVE_BY_DEFAULT=y) or +by supplying mem_encrypt=on on the kernel command line. However, if BIOS does +not enable SME, then Linux will not be able to activate memory encryption, even +if configured to do so by default or the mem_encrypt=on command line parameter +is specified. diff --git a/Documentation/x86/boot.txt b/Documentation/x86/boot.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000..5e9b826b5 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/x86/boot.txt @@ -0,0 +1,1130 @@ + THE LINUX/x86 BOOT PROTOCOL + --------------------------- + +On the x86 platform, the Linux kernel uses a rather complicated boot +convention. This has evolved partially due to historical aspects, as +well as the desire in the early days to have the kernel itself be a +bootable image, the complicated PC memory model and due to changed +expectations in the PC industry caused by the effective demise of +real-mode DOS as a mainstream operating system. + +Currently, the following versions of the Linux/x86 boot protocol exist. + +Old kernels: zImage/Image support only. Some very early kernels + may not even support a command line. + +Protocol 2.00: (Kernel 1.3.73) Added bzImage and initrd support, as + well as a formalized way to communicate between the + boot loader and the kernel. setup.S made relocatable, + although the traditional setup area still assumed + writable. + +Protocol 2.01: (Kernel 1.3.76) Added a heap overrun warning. + +Protocol 2.02: (Kernel 2.4.0-test3-pre3) New command line protocol. + Lower the conventional memory ceiling. No overwrite + of the traditional setup area, thus making booting + safe for systems which use the EBDA from SMM or 32-bit + BIOS entry points. zImage deprecated but still + supported. + +Protocol 2.03: (Kernel 2.4.18-pre1) Explicitly makes the highest possible + initrd address available to the bootloader. + +Protocol 2.04: (Kernel 2.6.14) Extend the syssize field to four bytes. + +Protocol 2.05: (Kernel 2.6.20) Make protected mode kernel relocatable. + Introduce relocatable_kernel and kernel_alignment fields. + +Protocol 2.06: (Kernel 2.6.22) Added a field that contains the size of + the boot command line. + +Protocol 2.07: (Kernel 2.6.24) Added paravirtualised boot protocol. + Introduced hardware_subarch and hardware_subarch_data + and KEEP_SEGMENTS flag in load_flags. + +Protocol 2.08: (Kernel 2.6.26) Added crc32 checksum and ELF format + payload. Introduced payload_offset and payload_length + fields to aid in locating the payload. + +Protocol 2.09: (Kernel 2.6.26) Added a field of 64-bit physical + pointer to single linked list of struct setup_data. + +Protocol 2.10: (Kernel 2.6.31) Added a protocol for relaxed alignment + beyond the kernel_alignment added, new init_size and + pref_address fields. Added extended boot loader IDs. + +Protocol 2.11: (Kernel 3.6) Added a field for offset of EFI handover + protocol entry point. + +Protocol 2.12: (Kernel 3.8) Added the xloadflags field and extension fields + to struct boot_params for loading bzImage and ramdisk + above 4G in 64bit. + +**** MEMORY LAYOUT + +The traditional memory map for the kernel loader, used for Image or +zImage kernels, typically looks like: + + | | +0A0000 +------------------------+ + | Reserved for BIOS | Do not use. Reserved for BIOS EBDA. +09A000 +------------------------+ + | Command line | + | Stack/heap | For use by the kernel real-mode code. +098000 +------------------------+ + | Kernel setup | The kernel real-mode code. +090200 +------------------------+ + | Kernel boot sector | The kernel legacy boot sector. +090000 +------------------------+ + | Protected-mode kernel | The bulk of the kernel image. +010000 +------------------------+ + | Boot loader | <- Boot sector entry point 0000:7C00 +001000 +------------------------+ + | Reserved for MBR/BIOS | +000800 +------------------------+ + | Typically used by MBR | +000600 +------------------------+ + | BIOS use only | +000000 +------------------------+ + + +When using bzImage, the protected-mode kernel was relocated to +0x100000 ("high memory"), and the kernel real-mode block (boot sector, +setup, and stack/heap) was made relocatable to any address between +0x10000 and end of low memory. Unfortunately, in protocols 2.00 and +2.01 the 0x90000+ memory range is still used internally by the kernel; +the 2.02 protocol resolves that problem. + +It is desirable to keep the "memory ceiling" -- the highest point in +low memory touched by the boot loader -- as low as possible, since +some newer BIOSes have begun to allocate some rather large amounts of +memory, called the Extended BIOS Data Area, near the top of low +memory. The boot loader should use the "INT 12h" BIOS call to verify +how much low memory is available. + +Unfortunately, if INT 12h reports that the amount of memory is too +low, there is usually nothing the boot loader can do but to report an +error to the user. The boot loader should therefore be designed to +take up as little space in low memory as it reasonably can. For +zImage or old bzImage kernels, which need data written into the +0x90000 segment, the boot loader should make sure not to use memory +above the 0x9A000 point; too many BIOSes will break above that point. + +For a modern bzImage kernel with boot protocol version >= 2.02, a +memory layout like the following is suggested: + + ~ ~ + | Protected-mode kernel | +100000 +------------------------+ + | I/O memory hole | +0A0000 +------------------------+ + | Reserved for BIOS | Leave as much as possible unused + ~ ~ + | Command line | (Can also be below the X+10000 mark) +X+10000 +------------------------+ + | Stack/heap | For use by the kernel real-mode code. +X+08000 +------------------------+ + | Kernel setup | The kernel real-mode code. + | Kernel boot sector | The kernel legacy boot sector. +X +------------------------+ + | Boot loader | <- Boot sector entry point 0000:7C00 +001000 +------------------------+ + | Reserved for MBR/BIOS | +000800 +------------------------+ + | Typically used by MBR | +000600 +------------------------+ + | BIOS use only | +000000 +------------------------+ + +... where the address X is as low as the design of the boot loader +permits. + + +**** THE REAL-MODE KERNEL HEADER + +In the following text, and anywhere in the kernel boot sequence, "a +sector" refers to 512 bytes. It is independent of the actual sector +size of the underlying medium. + +The first step in loading a Linux kernel should be to load the +real-mode code (boot sector and setup code) and then examine the +following header at offset 0x01f1. The real-mode code can total up to +32K, although the boot loader may choose to load only the first two +sectors (1K) and then examine the bootup sector size. + +The header looks like: + +Offset Proto Name Meaning +/Size + +01F1/1 ALL(1 setup_sects The size of the setup in sectors +01F2/2 ALL root_flags If set, the root is mounted readonly +01F4/4 2.04+(2 syssize The size of the 32-bit code in 16-byte paras +01F8/2 ALL ram_size DO NOT USE - for bootsect.S use only +01FA/2 ALL vid_mode Video mode control +01FC/2 ALL root_dev Default root device number +01FE/2 ALL boot_flag 0xAA55 magic number +0200/2 2.00+ jump Jump instruction +0202/4 2.00+ header Magic signature "HdrS" +0206/2 2.00+ version Boot protocol version supported +0208/4 2.00+ realmode_swtch Boot loader hook (see below) +020C/2 2.00+ start_sys_seg The load-low segment (0x1000) (obsolete) +020E/2 2.00+ kernel_version Pointer to kernel version string +0210/1 2.00+ type_of_loader Boot loader identifier +0211/1 2.00+ loadflags Boot protocol option flags +0212/2 2.00+ setup_move_size Move to high memory size (used with hooks) +0214/4 2.00+ code32_start Boot loader hook (see below) +0218/4 2.00+ ramdisk_image initrd load address (set by boot loader) +021C/4 2.00+ ramdisk_size initrd size (set by boot loader) +0220/4 2.00+ bootsect_kludge DO NOT USE - for bootsect.S use only +0224/2 2.01+ heap_end_ptr Free memory after setup end +0226/1 2.02+(3 ext_loader_ver Extended boot loader version +0227/1 2.02+(3 ext_loader_type Extended boot loader ID +0228/4 2.02+ cmd_line_ptr 32-bit pointer to the kernel command line +022C/4 2.03+ initrd_addr_max Highest legal initrd address +0230/4 2.05+ kernel_alignment Physical addr alignment required for kernel +0234/1 2.05+ relocatable_kernel Whether kernel is relocatable or not +0235/1 2.10+ min_alignment Minimum alignment, as a power of two +0236/2 2.12+ xloadflags Boot protocol option flags +0238/4 2.06+ cmdline_size Maximum size of the kernel command line +023C/4 2.07+ hardware_subarch Hardware subarchitecture +0240/8 2.07+ hardware_subarch_data Subarchitecture-specific data +0248/4 2.08+ payload_offset Offset of kernel payload +024C/4 2.08+ payload_length Length of kernel payload +0250/8 2.09+ setup_data 64-bit physical pointer to linked list + of struct setup_data +0258/8 2.10+ pref_address Preferred loading address +0260/4 2.10+ init_size Linear memory required during initialization +0264/4 2.11+ handover_offset Offset of handover entry point + +(1) For backwards compatibility, if the setup_sects field contains 0, the + real value is 4. + +(2) For boot protocol prior to 2.04, the upper two bytes of the syssize + field are unusable, which means the size of a bzImage kernel + cannot be determined. + +(3) Ignored, but safe to set, for boot protocols 2.02-2.09. + +If the "HdrS" (0x53726448) magic number is not found at offset 0x202, +the boot protocol version is "old". Loading an old kernel, the +following parameters should be assumed: + + Image type = zImage + initrd not supported + Real-mode kernel must be located at 0x90000. + +Otherwise, the "version" field contains the protocol version, +e.g. protocol version 2.01 will contain 0x0201 in this field. When +setting fields in the header, you must make sure only to set fields +supported by the protocol version in use. + + +**** DETAILS OF HEADER FIELDS + +For each field, some are information from the kernel to the bootloader +("read"), some are expected to be filled out by the bootloader +("write"), and some are expected to be read and modified by the +bootloader ("modify"). + +All general purpose boot loaders should write the fields marked +(obligatory). Boot loaders who want to load the kernel at a +nonstandard address should fill in the fields marked (reloc); other +boot loaders can ignore those fields. + +The byte order of all fields is littleendian (this is x86, after all.) + +Field name: setup_sects +Type: read +Offset/size: 0x1f1/1 +Protocol: ALL + + The size of the setup code in 512-byte sectors. If this field is + 0, the real value is 4. The real-mode code consists of the boot + sector (always one 512-byte sector) plus the setup code. + +Field name: root_flags +Type: modify (optional) +Offset/size: 0x1f2/2 +Protocol: ALL + + If this field is nonzero, the root defaults to readonly. The use of + this field is deprecated; use the "ro" or "rw" options on the + command line instead. + +Field name: syssize +Type: read +Offset/size: 0x1f4/4 (protocol 2.04+) 0x1f4/2 (protocol ALL) +Protocol: 2.04+ + + The size of the protected-mode code in units of 16-byte paragraphs. + For protocol versions older than 2.04 this field is only two bytes + wide, and therefore cannot be trusted for the size of a kernel if + the LOAD_HIGH flag is set. + +Field name: ram_size +Type: kernel internal +Offset/size: 0x1f8/2 +Protocol: ALL + + This field is obsolete. + +Field name: vid_mode +Type: modify (obligatory) +Offset/size: 0x1fa/2 + + Please see the section on SPECIAL COMMAND LINE OPTIONS. + +Field name: root_dev +Type: modify (optional) +Offset/size: 0x1fc/2 +Protocol: ALL + + The default root device device number. The use of this field is + deprecated, use the "root=" option on the command line instead. + +Field name: boot_flag +Type: read +Offset/size: 0x1fe/2 +Protocol: ALL + + Contains 0xAA55. This is the closest thing old Linux kernels have + to a magic number. + +Field name: jump +Type: read +Offset/size: 0x200/2 +Protocol: 2.00+ + + Contains an x86 jump instruction, 0xEB followed by a signed offset + relative to byte 0x202. This can be used to determine the size of + the header. + +Field name: header +Type: read +Offset/size: 0x202/4 +Protocol: 2.00+ + + Contains the magic number "HdrS" (0x53726448). + +Field name: version +Type: read +Offset/size: 0x206/2 +Protocol: 2.00+ + + Contains the boot protocol version, in (major << 8)+minor format, + e.g. 0x0204 for version 2.04, and 0x0a11 for a hypothetical version + 10.17. + +Field name: realmode_swtch +Type: modify (optional) +Offset/size: 0x208/4 +Protocol: 2.00+ + + Boot loader hook (see ADVANCED BOOT LOADER HOOKS below.) + +Field name: start_sys_seg +Type: read +Offset/size: 0x20c/2 +Protocol: 2.00+ + + The load low segment (0x1000). Obsolete. + +Field name: kernel_version +Type: read +Offset/size: 0x20e/2 +Protocol: 2.00+ + + If set to a nonzero value, contains a pointer to a NUL-terminated + human-readable kernel version number string, less 0x200. This can + be used to display the kernel version to the user. This value + should be less than (0x200*setup_sects). + + For example, if this value is set to 0x1c00, the kernel version + number string can be found at offset 0x1e00 in the kernel file. + This is a valid value if and only if the "setup_sects" field + contains the value 15 or higher, as: + + 0x1c00 < 15*0x200 (= 0x1e00) but + 0x1c00 >= 14*0x200 (= 0x1c00) + + 0x1c00 >> 9 = 14, so the minimum value for setup_secs is 15. + +Field name: type_of_loader +Type: write (obligatory) +Offset/size: 0x210/1 +Protocol: 2.00+ + + If your boot loader has an assigned id (see table below), enter + 0xTV here, where T is an identifier for the boot loader and V is + a version number. Otherwise, enter 0xFF here. + + For boot loader IDs above T = 0xD, write T = 0xE to this field and + write the extended ID minus 0x10 to the ext_loader_type field. + Similarly, the ext_loader_ver field can be used to provide more than + four bits for the bootloader version. + + For example, for T = 0x15, V = 0x234, write: + + type_of_loader <- 0xE4 + ext_loader_type <- 0x05 + ext_loader_ver <- 0x23 + + Assigned boot loader ids (hexadecimal): + + 0 LILO (0x00 reserved for pre-2.00 bootloader) + 1 Loadlin + 2 bootsect-loader (0x20, all other values reserved) + 3 Syslinux + 4 Etherboot/gPXE/iPXE + 5 ELILO + 7 GRUB + 8 U-Boot + 9 Xen + A Gujin + B Qemu + C Arcturus Networks uCbootloader + D kexec-tools + E Extended (see ext_loader_type) + F Special (0xFF = undefined) + 10 Reserved + 11 Minimal Linux Bootloader <http://sebastian-plotz.blogspot.de> + 12 OVMF UEFI virtualization stack + + Please contact <hpa@zytor.com> if you need a bootloader ID + value assigned. + +Field name: loadflags +Type: modify (obligatory) +Offset/size: 0x211/1 +Protocol: 2.00+ + + This field is a bitmask. + + Bit 0 (read): LOADED_HIGH + - If 0, the protected-mode code is loaded at 0x10000. + - If 1, the protected-mode code is loaded at 0x100000. + + Bit 1 (kernel internal): KASLR_FLAG + - Used internally by the compressed kernel to communicate + KASLR status to kernel proper. + If 1, KASLR enabled. + If 0, KASLR disabled. + + Bit 5 (write): QUIET_FLAG + - If 0, print early messages. + - If 1, suppress early messages. + This requests to the kernel (decompressor and early + kernel) to not write early messages that require + accessing the display hardware directly. + + Bit 6 (write): KEEP_SEGMENTS + Protocol: 2.07+ + - If 0, reload the segment registers in the 32bit entry point. + - If 1, do not reload the segment registers in the 32bit entry point. + Assume that %cs %ds %ss %es are all set to flat segments with + a base of 0 (or the equivalent for their environment). + + Bit 7 (write): CAN_USE_HEAP + Set this bit to 1 to indicate that the value entered in the + heap_end_ptr is valid. If this field is clear, some setup code + functionality will be disabled. + +Field name: setup_move_size +Type: modify (obligatory) +Offset/size: 0x212/2 +Protocol: 2.00-2.01 + + When using protocol 2.00 or 2.01, if the real mode kernel is not + loaded at 0x90000, it gets moved there later in the loading + sequence. Fill in this field if you want additional data (such as + the kernel command line) moved in addition to the real-mode kernel + itself. + + The unit is bytes starting with the beginning of the boot sector. + + This field is can be ignored when the protocol is 2.02 or higher, or + if the real-mode code is loaded at 0x90000. + +Field name: code32_start +Type: modify (optional, reloc) +Offset/size: 0x214/4 +Protocol: 2.00+ + + The address to jump to in protected mode. This defaults to the load + address of the kernel, and can be used by the boot loader to + determine the proper load address. + + This field can be modified for two purposes: + + 1. as a boot loader hook (see ADVANCED BOOT LOADER HOOKS below.) + + 2. if a bootloader which does not install a hook loads a + relocatable kernel at a nonstandard address it will have to modify + this field to point to the load address. + +Field name: ramdisk_image +Type: write (obligatory) +Offset/size: 0x218/4 +Protocol: 2.00+ + + The 32-bit linear address of the initial ramdisk or ramfs. Leave at + zero if there is no initial ramdisk/ramfs. + +Field name: ramdisk_size +Type: write (obligatory) +Offset/size: 0x21c/4 +Protocol: 2.00+ + + Size of the initial ramdisk or ramfs. Leave at zero if there is no + initial ramdisk/ramfs. + +Field name: bootsect_kludge +Type: kernel internal +Offset/size: 0x220/4 +Protocol: 2.00+ + + This field is obsolete. + +Field name: heap_end_ptr +Type: write (obligatory) +Offset/size: 0x224/2 +Protocol: 2.01+ + + Set this field to the offset (from the beginning of the real-mode + code) of the end of the setup stack/heap, minus 0x0200. + +Field name: ext_loader_ver +Type: write (optional) +Offset/size: 0x226/1 +Protocol: 2.02+ + + This field is used as an extension of the version number in the + type_of_loader field. The total version number is considered to be + (type_of_loader & 0x0f) + (ext_loader_ver << 4). + + The use of this field is boot loader specific. If not written, it + is zero. + + Kernels prior to 2.6.31 did not recognize this field, but it is safe + to write for protocol version 2.02 or higher. + +Field name: ext_loader_type +Type: write (obligatory if (type_of_loader & 0xf0) == 0xe0) +Offset/size: 0x227/1 +Protocol: 2.02+ + + This field is used as an extension of the type number in + type_of_loader field. If the type in type_of_loader is 0xE, then + the actual type is (ext_loader_type + 0x10). + + This field is ignored if the type in type_of_loader is not 0xE. + + Kernels prior to 2.6.31 did not recognize this field, but it is safe + to write for protocol version 2.02 or higher. + +Field name: cmd_line_ptr +Type: write (obligatory) +Offset/size: 0x228/4 +Protocol: 2.02+ + + Set this field to the linear address of the kernel command line. + The kernel command line can be located anywhere between the end of + the setup heap and 0xA0000; it does not have to be located in the + same 64K segment as the real-mode code itself. + + Fill in this field even if your boot loader does not support a + command line, in which case you can point this to an empty string + (or better yet, to the string "auto".) If this field is left at + zero, the kernel will assume that your boot loader does not support + the 2.02+ protocol. + +Field name: initrd_addr_max +Type: read +Offset/size: 0x22c/4 +Protocol: 2.03+ + + The maximum address that may be occupied by the initial + ramdisk/ramfs contents. For boot protocols 2.02 or earlier, this + field is not present, and the maximum address is 0x37FFFFFF. (This + address is defined as the address of the highest safe byte, so if + your ramdisk is exactly 131072 bytes long and this field is + 0x37FFFFFF, you can start your ramdisk at 0x37FE0000.) + +Field name: kernel_alignment +Type: read/modify (reloc) +Offset/size: 0x230/4 +Protocol: 2.05+ (read), 2.10+ (modify) + + Alignment unit required by the kernel (if relocatable_kernel is + true.) A relocatable kernel that is loaded at an alignment + incompatible with the value in this field will be realigned during + kernel initialization. + + Starting with protocol version 2.10, this reflects the kernel + alignment preferred for optimal performance; it is possible for the + loader to modify this field to permit a lesser alignment. See the + min_alignment and pref_address field below. + +Field name: relocatable_kernel +Type: read (reloc) +Offset/size: 0x234/1 +Protocol: 2.05+ + + If this field is nonzero, the protected-mode part of the kernel can + be loaded at any address that satisfies the kernel_alignment field. + After loading, the boot loader must set the code32_start field to + point to the loaded code, or to a boot loader hook. + +Field name: min_alignment +Type: read (reloc) +Offset/size: 0x235/1 +Protocol: 2.10+ + + This field, if nonzero, indicates as a power of two the minimum + alignment required, as opposed to preferred, by the kernel to boot. + If a boot loader makes use of this field, it should update the + kernel_alignment field with the alignment unit desired; typically: + + kernel_alignment = 1 << min_alignment + + There may be a considerable performance cost with an excessively + misaligned kernel. Therefore, a loader should typically try each + power-of-two alignment from kernel_alignment down to this alignment. + +Field name: xloadflags +Type: read +Offset/size: 0x236/2 +Protocol: 2.12+ + + This field is a bitmask. + + Bit 0 (read): XLF_KERNEL_64 + - If 1, this kernel has the legacy 64-bit entry point at 0x200. + + Bit 1 (read): XLF_CAN_BE_LOADED_ABOVE_4G + - If 1, kernel/boot_params/cmdline/ramdisk can be above 4G. + + Bit 2 (read): XLF_EFI_HANDOVER_32 + - If 1, the kernel supports the 32-bit EFI handoff entry point + given at handover_offset. + + Bit 3 (read): XLF_EFI_HANDOVER_64 + - If 1, the kernel supports the 64-bit EFI handoff entry point + given at handover_offset + 0x200. + + Bit 4 (read): XLF_EFI_KEXEC + - If 1, the kernel supports kexec EFI boot with EFI runtime support. + +Field name: cmdline_size +Type: read +Offset/size: 0x238/4 +Protocol: 2.06+ + + The maximum size of the command line without the terminating + zero. This means that the command line can contain at most + cmdline_size characters. With protocol version 2.05 and earlier, the + maximum size was 255. + +Field name: hardware_subarch +Type: write (optional, defaults to x86/PC) +Offset/size: 0x23c/4 +Protocol: 2.07+ + + In a paravirtualized environment the hardware low level architectural + pieces such as interrupt handling, page table handling, and + accessing process control registers needs to be done differently. + + This field allows the bootloader to inform the kernel we are in one + one of those environments. + + 0x00000000 The default x86/PC environment + 0x00000001 lguest + 0x00000002 Xen + 0x00000003 Moorestown MID + 0x00000004 CE4100 TV Platform + +Field name: hardware_subarch_data +Type: write (subarch-dependent) +Offset/size: 0x240/8 +Protocol: 2.07+ + + A pointer to data that is specific to hardware subarch + This field is currently unused for the default x86/PC environment, + do not modify. + +Field name: payload_offset +Type: read +Offset/size: 0x248/4 +Protocol: 2.08+ + + If non-zero then this field contains the offset from the beginning + of the protected-mode code to the payload. + + The payload may be compressed. The format of both the compressed and + uncompressed data should be determined using the standard magic + numbers. The currently supported compression formats are gzip + (magic numbers 1F 8B or 1F 9E), bzip2 (magic number 42 5A), LZMA + (magic number 5D 00), XZ (magic number FD 37), and LZ4 (magic number + 02 21). The uncompressed payload is currently always ELF (magic + number 7F 45 4C 46). + +Field name: payload_length +Type: read +Offset/size: 0x24c/4 +Protocol: 2.08+ + + The length of the payload. + +Field name: setup_data +Type: write (special) +Offset/size: 0x250/8 +Protocol: 2.09+ + + The 64-bit physical pointer to NULL terminated single linked list of + struct setup_data. This is used to define a more extensible boot + parameters passing mechanism. The definition of struct setup_data is + as follow: + + struct setup_data { + u64 next; + u32 type; + u32 len; + u8 data[0]; + }; + + Where, the next is a 64-bit physical pointer to the next node of + linked list, the next field of the last node is 0; the type is used + to identify the contents of data; the len is the length of data + field; the data holds the real payload. + + This list may be modified at a number of points during the bootup + process. Therefore, when modifying this list one should always make + sure to consider the case where the linked list already contains + entries. + +Field name: pref_address +Type: read (reloc) +Offset/size: 0x258/8 +Protocol: 2.10+ + + This field, if nonzero, represents a preferred load address for the + kernel. A relocating bootloader should attempt to load at this + address if possible. + + A non-relocatable kernel will unconditionally move itself and to run + at this address. + +Field name: init_size +Type: read +Offset/size: 0x260/4 + + This field indicates the amount of linear contiguous memory starting + at the kernel runtime start address that the kernel needs before it + is capable of examining its memory map. This is not the same thing + as the total amount of memory the kernel needs to boot, but it can + be used by a relocating boot loader to help select a safe load + address for the kernel. + + The kernel runtime start address is determined by the following algorithm: + + if (relocatable_kernel) + runtime_start = align_up(load_address, kernel_alignment) + else + runtime_start = pref_address + +Field name: handover_offset +Type: read +Offset/size: 0x264/4 + + This field is the offset from the beginning of the kernel image to + the EFI handover protocol entry point. Boot loaders using the EFI + handover protocol to boot the kernel should jump to this offset. + + See EFI HANDOVER PROTOCOL below for more details. + + +**** THE IMAGE CHECKSUM + +From boot protocol version 2.08 onwards the CRC-32 is calculated over +the entire file using the characteristic polynomial 0x04C11DB7 and an +initial remainder of 0xffffffff. The checksum is appended to the +file; therefore the CRC of the file up to the limit specified in the +syssize field of the header is always 0. + + +**** THE KERNEL COMMAND LINE + +The kernel command line has become an important way for the boot +loader to communicate with the kernel. Some of its options are also +relevant to the boot loader itself, see "special command line options" +below. + +The kernel command line is a null-terminated string. The maximum +length can be retrieved from the field cmdline_size. Before protocol +version 2.06, the maximum was 255 characters. A string that is too +long will be automatically truncated by the kernel. + +If the boot protocol version is 2.02 or later, the address of the +kernel command line is given by the header field cmd_line_ptr (see +above.) This address can be anywhere between the end of the setup +heap and 0xA0000. + +If the protocol version is *not* 2.02 or higher, the kernel +command line is entered using the following protocol: + + At offset 0x0020 (word), "cmd_line_magic", enter the magic + number 0xA33F. + + At offset 0x0022 (word), "cmd_line_offset", enter the offset + of the kernel command line (relative to the start of the + real-mode kernel). + + The kernel command line *must* be within the memory region + covered by setup_move_size, so you may need to adjust this + field. + + +**** MEMORY LAYOUT OF THE REAL-MODE CODE + +The real-mode code requires a stack/heap to be set up, as well as +memory allocated for the kernel command line. This needs to be done +in the real-mode accessible memory in bottom megabyte. + +It should be noted that modern machines often have a sizable Extended +BIOS Data Area (EBDA). As a result, it is advisable to use as little +of the low megabyte as possible. + +Unfortunately, under the following circumstances the 0x90000 memory +segment has to be used: + + - When loading a zImage kernel ((loadflags & 0x01) == 0). + - When loading a 2.01 or earlier boot protocol kernel. + + -> For the 2.00 and 2.01 boot protocols, the real-mode code + can be loaded at another address, but it is internally + relocated to 0x90000. For the "old" protocol, the + real-mode code must be loaded at 0x90000. + +When loading at 0x90000, avoid using memory above 0x9a000. + +For boot protocol 2.02 or higher, the command line does not have to be +located in the same 64K segment as the real-mode setup code; it is +thus permitted to give the stack/heap the full 64K segment and locate +the command line above it. + +The kernel command line should not be located below the real-mode +code, nor should it be located in high memory. + + +**** SAMPLE BOOT CONFIGURATION + +As a sample configuration, assume the following layout of the real +mode segment: + + When loading below 0x90000, use the entire segment: + + 0x0000-0x7fff Real mode kernel + 0x8000-0xdfff Stack and heap + 0xe000-0xffff Kernel command line + + When loading at 0x90000 OR the protocol version is 2.01 or earlier: + + 0x0000-0x7fff Real mode kernel + 0x8000-0x97ff Stack and heap + 0x9800-0x9fff Kernel command line + +Such a boot loader should enter the following fields in the header: + + unsigned long base_ptr; /* base address for real-mode segment */ + + if ( setup_sects == 0 ) { + setup_sects = 4; + } + + if ( protocol >= 0x0200 ) { + type_of_loader = <type code>; + if ( loading_initrd ) { + ramdisk_image = <initrd_address>; + ramdisk_size = <initrd_size>; + } + + if ( protocol >= 0x0202 && loadflags & 0x01 ) + heap_end = 0xe000; + else + heap_end = 0x9800; + + if ( protocol >= 0x0201 ) { + heap_end_ptr = heap_end - 0x200; + loadflags |= 0x80; /* CAN_USE_HEAP */ + } + + if ( protocol >= 0x0202 ) { + cmd_line_ptr = base_ptr + heap_end; + strcpy(cmd_line_ptr, cmdline); + } else { + cmd_line_magic = 0xA33F; + cmd_line_offset = heap_end; + setup_move_size = heap_end + strlen(cmdline)+1; + strcpy(base_ptr+cmd_line_offset, cmdline); + } + } else { + /* Very old kernel */ + + heap_end = 0x9800; + + cmd_line_magic = 0xA33F; + cmd_line_offset = heap_end; + + /* A very old kernel MUST have its real-mode code + loaded at 0x90000 */ + + if ( base_ptr != 0x90000 ) { + /* Copy the real-mode kernel */ + memcpy(0x90000, base_ptr, (setup_sects+1)*512); + base_ptr = 0x90000; /* Relocated */ + } + + strcpy(0x90000+cmd_line_offset, cmdline); + + /* It is recommended to clear memory up to the 32K mark */ + memset(0x90000 + (setup_sects+1)*512, 0, + (64-(setup_sects+1))*512); + } + + +**** LOADING THE REST OF THE KERNEL + +The 32-bit (non-real-mode) kernel starts at offset (setup_sects+1)*512 +in the kernel file (again, if setup_sects == 0 the real value is 4.) +It should be loaded at address 0x10000 for Image/zImage kernels and +0x100000 for bzImage kernels. + +The kernel is a bzImage kernel if the protocol >= 2.00 and the 0x01 +bit (LOAD_HIGH) in the loadflags field is set: + + is_bzImage = (protocol >= 0x0200) && (loadflags & 0x01); + load_address = is_bzImage ? 0x100000 : 0x10000; + +Note that Image/zImage kernels can be up to 512K in size, and thus use +the entire 0x10000-0x90000 range of memory. This means it is pretty +much a requirement for these kernels to load the real-mode part at +0x90000. bzImage kernels allow much more flexibility. + + +**** SPECIAL COMMAND LINE OPTIONS + +If the command line provided by the boot loader is entered by the +user, the user may expect the following command line options to work. +They should normally not be deleted from the kernel command line even +though not all of them are actually meaningful to the kernel. Boot +loader authors who need additional command line options for the boot +loader itself should get them registered in +Documentation/admin-guide/kernel-parameters.rst to make sure they will not +conflict with actual kernel options now or in the future. + + vga=<mode> + <mode> here is either an integer (in C notation, either + decimal, octal, or hexadecimal) or one of the strings + "normal" (meaning 0xFFFF), "ext" (meaning 0xFFFE) or "ask" + (meaning 0xFFFD). This value should be entered into the + vid_mode field, as it is used by the kernel before the command + line is parsed. + + mem=<size> + <size> is an integer in C notation optionally followed by + (case insensitive) K, M, G, T, P or E (meaning << 10, << 20, + << 30, << 40, << 50 or << 60). This specifies the end of + memory to the kernel. This affects the possible placement of + an initrd, since an initrd should be placed near end of + memory. Note that this is an option to *both* the kernel and + the bootloader! + + initrd=<file> + An initrd should be loaded. The meaning of <file> is + obviously bootloader-dependent, and some boot loaders + (e.g. LILO) do not have such a command. + +In addition, some boot loaders add the following options to the +user-specified command line: + + BOOT_IMAGE=<file> + The boot image which was loaded. Again, the meaning of <file> + is obviously bootloader-dependent. + + auto + The kernel was booted without explicit user intervention. + +If these options are added by the boot loader, it is highly +recommended that they are located *first*, before the user-specified +or configuration-specified command line. Otherwise, "init=/bin/sh" +gets confused by the "auto" option. + + +**** RUNNING THE KERNEL + +The kernel is started by jumping to the kernel entry point, which is +located at *segment* offset 0x20 from the start of the real mode +kernel. This means that if you loaded your real-mode kernel code at +0x90000, the kernel entry point is 9020:0000. + +At entry, ds = es = ss should point to the start of the real-mode +kernel code (0x9000 if the code is loaded at 0x90000), sp should be +set up properly, normally pointing to the top of the heap, and +interrupts should be disabled. Furthermore, to guard against bugs in +the kernel, it is recommended that the boot loader sets fs = gs = ds = +es = ss. + +In our example from above, we would do: + + /* Note: in the case of the "old" kernel protocol, base_ptr must + be == 0x90000 at this point; see the previous sample code */ + + seg = base_ptr >> 4; + + cli(); /* Enter with interrupts disabled! */ + + /* Set up the real-mode kernel stack */ + _SS = seg; + _SP = heap_end; + + _DS = _ES = _FS = _GS = seg; + jmp_far(seg+0x20, 0); /* Run the kernel */ + +If your boot sector accesses a floppy drive, it is recommended to +switch off the floppy motor before running the kernel, since the +kernel boot leaves interrupts off and thus the motor will not be +switched off, especially if the loaded kernel has the floppy driver as +a demand-loaded module! + + +**** ADVANCED BOOT LOADER HOOKS + +If the boot loader runs in a particularly hostile environment (such as +LOADLIN, which runs under DOS) it may be impossible to follow the +standard memory location requirements. Such a boot loader may use the +following hooks that, if set, are invoked by the kernel at the +appropriate time. The use of these hooks should probably be +considered an absolutely last resort! + +IMPORTANT: All the hooks are required to preserve %esp, %ebp, %esi and +%edi across invocation. + + realmode_swtch: + A 16-bit real mode far subroutine invoked immediately before + entering protected mode. The default routine disables NMI, so + your routine should probably do so, too. + + code32_start: + A 32-bit flat-mode routine *jumped* to immediately after the + transition to protected mode, but before the kernel is + uncompressed. No segments, except CS, are guaranteed to be + set up (current kernels do, but older ones do not); you should + set them up to BOOT_DS (0x18) yourself. + + After completing your hook, you should jump to the address + that was in this field before your boot loader overwrote it + (relocated, if appropriate.) + + +**** 32-bit BOOT PROTOCOL + +For machine with some new BIOS other than legacy BIOS, such as EFI, +LinuxBIOS, etc, and kexec, the 16-bit real mode setup code in kernel +based on legacy BIOS can not be used, so a 32-bit boot protocol needs +to be defined. + +In 32-bit boot protocol, the first step in loading a Linux kernel +should be to setup the boot parameters (struct boot_params, +traditionally known as "zero page"). The memory for struct boot_params +should be allocated and initialized to all zero. Then the setup header +from offset 0x01f1 of kernel image on should be loaded into struct +boot_params and examined. The end of setup header can be calculated as +follow: + + 0x0202 + byte value at offset 0x0201 + +In addition to read/modify/write the setup header of the struct +boot_params as that of 16-bit boot protocol, the boot loader should +also fill the additional fields of the struct boot_params as that +described in zero-page.txt. + +After setting up the struct boot_params, the boot loader can load the +32/64-bit kernel in the same way as that of 16-bit boot protocol. + +In 32-bit boot protocol, the kernel is started by jumping to the +32-bit kernel entry point, which is the start address of loaded +32/64-bit kernel. + +At entry, the CPU must be in 32-bit protected mode with paging +disabled; a GDT must be loaded with the descriptors for selectors +__BOOT_CS(0x10) and __BOOT_DS(0x18); both descriptors must be 4G flat +segment; __BOOT_CS must have execute/read permission, and __BOOT_DS +must have read/write permission; CS must be __BOOT_CS and DS, ES, SS +must be __BOOT_DS; interrupt must be disabled; %esi must hold the base +address of the struct boot_params; %ebp, %edi and %ebx must be zero. + +**** 64-bit BOOT PROTOCOL + +For machine with 64bit cpus and 64bit kernel, we could use 64bit bootloader +and we need a 64-bit boot protocol. + +In 64-bit boot protocol, the first step in loading a Linux kernel +should be to setup the boot parameters (struct boot_params, +traditionally known as "zero page"). The memory for struct boot_params +could be allocated anywhere (even above 4G) and initialized to all zero. +Then, the setup header at offset 0x01f1 of kernel image on should be +loaded into struct boot_params and examined. The end of setup header +can be calculated as follows: + + 0x0202 + byte value at offset 0x0201 + +In addition to read/modify/write the setup header of the struct +boot_params as that of 16-bit boot protocol, the boot loader should +also fill the additional fields of the struct boot_params as described +in zero-page.txt. + +After setting up the struct boot_params, the boot loader can load +64-bit kernel in the same way as that of 16-bit boot protocol, but +kernel could be loaded above 4G. + +In 64-bit boot protocol, the kernel is started by jumping to the +64-bit kernel entry point, which is the start address of loaded +64-bit kernel plus 0x200. + +At entry, the CPU must be in 64-bit mode with paging enabled. +The range with setup_header.init_size from start address of loaded +kernel and zero page and command line buffer get ident mapping; +a GDT must be loaded with the descriptors for selectors +__BOOT_CS(0x10) and __BOOT_DS(0x18); both descriptors must be 4G flat +segment; __BOOT_CS must have execute/read permission, and __BOOT_DS +must have read/write permission; CS must be __BOOT_CS and DS, ES, SS +must be __BOOT_DS; interrupt must be disabled; %rsi must hold the base +address of the struct boot_params. + +**** EFI HANDOVER PROTOCOL + +This protocol allows boot loaders to defer initialisation to the EFI +boot stub. The boot loader is required to load the kernel/initrd(s) +from the boot media and jump to the EFI handover protocol entry point +which is hdr->handover_offset bytes from the beginning of +startup_{32,64}. + +The function prototype for the handover entry point looks like this, + + efi_main(void *handle, efi_system_table_t *table, struct boot_params *bp) + +'handle' is the EFI image handle passed to the boot loader by the EFI +firmware, 'table' is the EFI system table - these are the first two +arguments of the "handoff state" as described in section 2.3 of the +UEFI specification. 'bp' is the boot loader-allocated boot params. + +The boot loader *must* fill out the following fields in bp, + + o hdr.code32_start + o hdr.cmd_line_ptr + o hdr.ramdisk_image (if applicable) + o hdr.ramdisk_size (if applicable) + +All other fields should be zero. diff --git a/Documentation/x86/conf.py b/Documentation/x86/conf.py new file mode 100644 index 000000000..33c5c3142 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/x86/conf.py @@ -0,0 +1,10 @@ +# -*- coding: utf-8; mode: python -*- + +project = "X86 architecture specific documentation" + +tags.add("subproject") + +latex_documents = [ + ('index', 'x86.tex', project, + 'The kernel development community', 'manual'), +] diff --git a/Documentation/x86/earlyprintk.txt b/Documentation/x86/earlyprintk.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000..46933e06c --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/x86/earlyprintk.txt @@ -0,0 +1,141 @@ + +Mini-HOWTO for using the earlyprintk=dbgp boot option with a +USB2 Debug port key and a debug cable, on x86 systems. + +You need two computers, the 'USB debug key' special gadget and +and two USB cables, connected like this: + + [host/target] <-------> [USB debug key] <-------> [client/console] + +1. There are a number of specific hardware requirements: + + a.) Host/target system needs to have USB debug port capability. + + You can check this capability by looking at a 'Debug port' bit in + the lspci -vvv output: + + # lspci -vvv + ... + 00:1d.7 USB Controller: Intel Corporation 82801H (ICH8 Family) USB2 EHCI Controller #1 (rev 03) (prog-if 20 [EHCI]) + Subsystem: Lenovo ThinkPad T61 + Control: I/O- Mem+ BusMaster+ SpecCycle- MemWINV- VGASnoop- ParErr- Stepping- SERR+ FastB2B- DisINTx- + Status: Cap+ 66MHz- UDF- FastB2B+ ParErr- DEVSEL=medium >TAbort- <TAbort- <MAbort- >SERR- <PERR- INTx- + Latency: 0 + Interrupt: pin D routed to IRQ 19 + Region 0: Memory at fe227000 (32-bit, non-prefetchable) [size=1K] + Capabilities: [50] Power Management version 2 + Flags: PMEClk- DSI- D1- D2- AuxCurrent=375mA PME(D0+,D1-,D2-,D3hot+,D3cold+) + Status: D0 PME-Enable- DSel=0 DScale=0 PME+ + Capabilities: [58] Debug port: BAR=1 offset=00a0 + ^^^^^^^^^^^ <==================== [ HERE ] + Kernel driver in use: ehci_hcd + Kernel modules: ehci-hcd + ... + +( If your system does not list a debug port capability then you probably + won't be able to use the USB debug key. ) + + b.) You also need a NetChip USB debug cable/key: + + http://www.plxtech.com/products/NET2000/NET20DC/default.asp + + This is a small blue plastic connector with two USB connections; + it draws power from its USB connections. + + c.) You need a second client/console system with a high speed USB 2.0 + port. + + d.) The NetChip device must be plugged directly into the physical + debug port on the "host/target" system. You cannot use a USB hub in + between the physical debug port and the "host/target" system. + + The EHCI debug controller is bound to a specific physical USB + port and the NetChip device will only work as an early printk + device in this port. The EHCI host controllers are electrically + wired such that the EHCI debug controller is hooked up to the + first physical port and there is no way to change this via software. + You can find the physical port through experimentation by trying + each physical port on the system and rebooting. Or you can try + and use lsusb or look at the kernel info messages emitted by the + usb stack when you plug a usb device into various ports on the + "host/target" system. + + Some hardware vendors do not expose the usb debug port with a + physical connector and if you find such a device send a complaint + to the hardware vendor, because there is no reason not to wire + this port into one of the physically accessible ports. + + e.) It is also important to note, that many versions of the NetChip + device require the "client/console" system to be plugged into the + right hand side of the device (with the product logo facing up and + readable left to right). The reason being is that the 5 volt + power supply is taken from only one side of the device and it + must be the side that does not get rebooted. + +2. Software requirements: + + a.) On the host/target system: + + You need to enable the following kernel config option: + + CONFIG_EARLY_PRINTK_DBGP=y + + And you need to add the boot command line: "earlyprintk=dbgp". + + (If you are using Grub, append it to the 'kernel' line in + /etc/grub.conf. If you are using Grub2 on a BIOS firmware system, + append it to the 'linux' line in /boot/grub2/grub.cfg. If you are + using Grub2 on an EFI firmware system, append it to the 'linux' + or 'linuxefi' line in /boot/grub2/grub.cfg or + /boot/efi/EFI/<distro>/grub.cfg.) + + On systems with more than one EHCI debug controller you must + specify the correct EHCI debug controller number. The ordering + comes from the PCI bus enumeration of the EHCI controllers. The + default with no number argument is "0" or the first EHCI debug + controller. To use the second EHCI debug controller, you would + use the command line: "earlyprintk=dbgp1" + + NOTE: normally earlyprintk console gets turned off once the + regular console is alive - use "earlyprintk=dbgp,keep" to keep + this channel open beyond early bootup. This can be useful for + debugging crashes under Xorg, etc. + + b.) On the client/console system: + + You should enable the following kernel config option: + + CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_DEBUG=y + + On the next bootup with the modified kernel you should + get a /dev/ttyUSBx device(s). + + Now this channel of kernel messages is ready to be used: start + your favorite terminal emulator (minicom, etc.) and set + it up to use /dev/ttyUSB0 - or use a raw 'cat /dev/ttyUSBx' to + see the raw output. + + c.) On Nvidia Southbridge based systems: the kernel will try to probe + and find out which port has a debug device connected. + +3. Testing that it works fine: + + You can test the output by using earlyprintk=dbgp,keep and provoking + kernel messages on the host/target system. You can provoke a harmless + kernel message by for example doing: + + echo h > /proc/sysrq-trigger + + On the host/target system you should see this help line in "dmesg" output: + + SysRq : HELP : loglevel(0-9) reBoot Crashdump terminate-all-tasks(E) memory-full-oom-kill(F) kill-all-tasks(I) saK show-backtrace-all-active-cpus(L) show-memory-usage(M) nice-all-RT-tasks(N) powerOff show-registers(P) show-all-timers(Q) unRaw Sync show-task-states(T) Unmount show-blocked-tasks(W) dump-ftrace-buffer(Z) + + On the client/console system do: + + cat /dev/ttyUSB0 + + And you should see the help line above displayed shortly after you've + provoked it on the host system. + +If it does not work then please ask about it on the linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org +mailing list or contact the x86 maintainers. diff --git a/Documentation/x86/entry_64.txt b/Documentation/x86/entry_64.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000..c1df8eba9 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/x86/entry_64.txt @@ -0,0 +1,104 @@ +This file documents some of the kernel entries in +arch/x86/entry/entry_64.S. A lot of this explanation is adapted from +an email from Ingo Molnar: + +http://lkml.kernel.org/r/<20110529191055.GC9835%40elte.hu> + +The x86 architecture has quite a few different ways to jump into +kernel code. Most of these entry points are registered in +arch/x86/kernel/traps.c and implemented in arch/x86/entry/entry_64.S +for 64-bit, arch/x86/entry/entry_32.S for 32-bit and finally +arch/x86/entry/entry_64_compat.S which implements the 32-bit compatibility +syscall entry points and thus provides for 32-bit processes the +ability to execute syscalls when running on 64-bit kernels. + +The IDT vector assignments are listed in arch/x86/include/asm/irq_vectors.h. + +Some of these entries are: + + - system_call: syscall instruction from 64-bit code. + + - entry_INT80_compat: int 0x80 from 32-bit or 64-bit code; compat syscall + either way. + + - entry_INT80_compat, ia32_sysenter: syscall and sysenter from 32-bit + code + + - interrupt: An array of entries. Every IDT vector that doesn't + explicitly point somewhere else gets set to the corresponding + value in interrupts. These point to a whole array of + magically-generated functions that make their way to do_IRQ with + the interrupt number as a parameter. + + - APIC interrupts: Various special-purpose interrupts for things + like TLB shootdown. + + - Architecturally-defined exceptions like divide_error. + +There are a few complexities here. The different x86-64 entries +have different calling conventions. The syscall and sysenter +instructions have their own peculiar calling conventions. Some of +the IDT entries push an error code onto the stack; others don't. +IDT entries using the IST alternative stack mechanism need their own +magic to get the stack frames right. (You can find some +documentation in the AMD APM, Volume 2, Chapter 8 and the Intel SDM, +Volume 3, Chapter 6.) + +Dealing with the swapgs instruction is especially tricky. Swapgs +toggles whether gs is the kernel gs or the user gs. The swapgs +instruction is rather fragile: it must nest perfectly and only in +single depth, it should only be used if entering from user mode to +kernel mode and then when returning to user-space, and precisely +so. If we mess that up even slightly, we crash. + +So when we have a secondary entry, already in kernel mode, we *must +not* use SWAPGS blindly - nor must we forget doing a SWAPGS when it's +not switched/swapped yet. + +Now, there's a secondary complication: there's a cheap way to test +which mode the CPU is in and an expensive way. + +The cheap way is to pick this info off the entry frame on the kernel +stack, from the CS of the ptregs area of the kernel stack: + + xorl %ebx,%ebx + testl $3,CS+8(%rsp) + je error_kernelspace + SWAPGS + +The expensive (paranoid) way is to read back the MSR_GS_BASE value +(which is what SWAPGS modifies): + + movl $1,%ebx + movl $MSR_GS_BASE,%ecx + rdmsr + testl %edx,%edx + js 1f /* negative -> in kernel */ + SWAPGS + xorl %ebx,%ebx +1: ret + +If we are at an interrupt or user-trap/gate-alike boundary then we can +use the faster check: the stack will be a reliable indicator of +whether SWAPGS was already done: if we see that we are a secondary +entry interrupting kernel mode execution, then we know that the GS +base has already been switched. If it says that we interrupted +user-space execution then we must do the SWAPGS. + +But if we are in an NMI/MCE/DEBUG/whatever super-atomic entry context, +which might have triggered right after a normal entry wrote CS to the +stack but before we executed SWAPGS, then the only safe way to check +for GS is the slower method: the RDMSR. + +Therefore, super-atomic entries (except NMI, which is handled separately) +must use idtentry with paranoid=1 to handle gsbase correctly. This +triggers three main behavior changes: + + - Interrupt entry will use the slower gsbase check. + - Interrupt entry from user mode will switch off the IST stack. + - Interrupt exit to kernel mode will not attempt to reschedule. + +We try to only use IST entries and the paranoid entry code for vectors +that absolutely need the more expensive check for the GS base - and we +generate all 'normal' entry points with the regular (faster) paranoid=0 +variant. diff --git a/Documentation/x86/exception-tables.txt b/Documentation/x86/exception-tables.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000..e396bcd8d --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/x86/exception-tables.txt @@ -0,0 +1,327 @@ + Kernel level exception handling in Linux + Commentary by Joerg Pommnitz <joerg@raleigh.ibm.com> + +When a process runs in kernel mode, it often has to access user +mode memory whose address has been passed by an untrusted program. +To protect itself the kernel has to verify this address. + +In older versions of Linux this was done with the +int verify_area(int type, const void * addr, unsigned long size) +function (which has since been replaced by access_ok()). + +This function verified that the memory area starting at address +'addr' and of size 'size' was accessible for the operation specified +in type (read or write). To do this, verify_read had to look up the +virtual memory area (vma) that contained the address addr. In the +normal case (correctly working program), this test was successful. +It only failed for a few buggy programs. In some kernel profiling +tests, this normally unneeded verification used up a considerable +amount of time. + +To overcome this situation, Linus decided to let the virtual memory +hardware present in every Linux-capable CPU handle this test. + +How does this work? + +Whenever the kernel tries to access an address that is currently not +accessible, the CPU generates a page fault exception and calls the +page fault handler + +void do_page_fault(struct pt_regs *regs, unsigned long error_code) + +in arch/x86/mm/fault.c. The parameters on the stack are set up by +the low level assembly glue in arch/x86/kernel/entry_32.S. The parameter +regs is a pointer to the saved registers on the stack, error_code +contains a reason code for the exception. + +do_page_fault first obtains the unaccessible address from the CPU +control register CR2. If the address is within the virtual address +space of the process, the fault probably occurred, because the page +was not swapped in, write protected or something similar. However, +we are interested in the other case: the address is not valid, there +is no vma that contains this address. In this case, the kernel jumps +to the bad_area label. + +There it uses the address of the instruction that caused the exception +(i.e. regs->eip) to find an address where the execution can continue +(fixup). If this search is successful, the fault handler modifies the +return address (again regs->eip) and returns. The execution will +continue at the address in fixup. + +Where does fixup point to? + +Since we jump to the contents of fixup, fixup obviously points +to executable code. This code is hidden inside the user access macros. +I have picked the get_user macro defined in arch/x86/include/asm/uaccess.h +as an example. The definition is somewhat hard to follow, so let's peek at +the code generated by the preprocessor and the compiler. I selected +the get_user call in drivers/char/sysrq.c for a detailed examination. + +The original code in sysrq.c line 587: + get_user(c, buf); + +The preprocessor output (edited to become somewhat readable): + +( + { + long __gu_err = - 14 , __gu_val = 0; + const __typeof__(*( ( buf ) )) *__gu_addr = ((buf)); + if (((((0 + current_set[0])->tss.segment) == 0x18 ) || + (((sizeof(*(buf))) <= 0xC0000000UL) && + ((unsigned long)(__gu_addr ) <= 0xC0000000UL - (sizeof(*(buf))))))) + do { + __gu_err = 0; + switch ((sizeof(*(buf)))) { + case 1: + __asm__ __volatile__( + "1: mov" "b" " %2,%" "b" "1\n" + "2:\n" + ".section .fixup,\"ax\"\n" + "3: movl %3,%0\n" + " xor" "b" " %" "b" "1,%" "b" "1\n" + " jmp 2b\n" + ".section __ex_table,\"a\"\n" + " .align 4\n" + " .long 1b,3b\n" + ".text" : "=r"(__gu_err), "=q" (__gu_val): "m"((*(struct __large_struct *) + ( __gu_addr )) ), "i"(- 14 ), "0"( __gu_err )) ; + break; + case 2: + __asm__ __volatile__( + "1: mov" "w" " %2,%" "w" "1\n" + "2:\n" + ".section .fixup,\"ax\"\n" + "3: movl %3,%0\n" + " xor" "w" " %" "w" "1,%" "w" "1\n" + " jmp 2b\n" + ".section __ex_table,\"a\"\n" + " .align 4\n" + " .long 1b,3b\n" + ".text" : "=r"(__gu_err), "=r" (__gu_val) : "m"((*(struct __large_struct *) + ( __gu_addr )) ), "i"(- 14 ), "0"( __gu_err )); + break; + case 4: + __asm__ __volatile__( + "1: mov" "l" " %2,%" "" "1\n" + "2:\n" + ".section .fixup,\"ax\"\n" + "3: movl %3,%0\n" + " xor" "l" " %" "" "1,%" "" "1\n" + " jmp 2b\n" + ".section __ex_table,\"a\"\n" + " .align 4\n" " .long 1b,3b\n" + ".text" : "=r"(__gu_err), "=r" (__gu_val) : "m"((*(struct __large_struct *) + ( __gu_addr )) ), "i"(- 14 ), "0"(__gu_err)); + break; + default: + (__gu_val) = __get_user_bad(); + } + } while (0) ; + ((c)) = (__typeof__(*((buf))))__gu_val; + __gu_err; + } +); + +WOW! Black GCC/assembly magic. This is impossible to follow, so let's +see what code gcc generates: + + > xorl %edx,%edx + > movl current_set,%eax + > cmpl $24,788(%eax) + > je .L1424 + > cmpl $-1073741825,64(%esp) + > ja .L1423 + > .L1424: + > movl %edx,%eax + > movl 64(%esp),%ebx + > #APP + > 1: movb (%ebx),%dl /* this is the actual user access */ + > 2: + > .section .fixup,"ax" + > 3: movl $-14,%eax + > xorb %dl,%dl + > jmp 2b + > .section __ex_table,"a" + > .align 4 + > .long 1b,3b + > .text + > #NO_APP + > .L1423: + > movzbl %dl,%esi + +The optimizer does a good job and gives us something we can actually +understand. Can we? The actual user access is quite obvious. Thanks +to the unified address space we can just access the address in user +memory. But what does the .section stuff do????? + +To understand this we have to look at the final kernel: + + > objdump --section-headers vmlinux + > + > vmlinux: file format elf32-i386 + > + > Sections: + > Idx Name Size VMA LMA File off Algn + > 0 .text 00098f40 c0100000 c0100000 00001000 2**4 + > CONTENTS, ALLOC, LOAD, READONLY, CODE + > 1 .fixup 000016bc c0198f40 c0198f40 00099f40 2**0 + > CONTENTS, ALLOC, LOAD, READONLY, CODE + > 2 .rodata 0000f127 c019a5fc c019a5fc 0009b5fc 2**2 + > CONTENTS, ALLOC, LOAD, READONLY, DATA + > 3 __ex_table 000015c0 c01a9724 c01a9724 000aa724 2**2 + > CONTENTS, ALLOC, LOAD, READONLY, DATA + > 4 .data 0000ea58 c01abcf0 c01abcf0 000abcf0 2**4 + > CONTENTS, ALLOC, LOAD, DATA + > 5 .bss 00018e21 c01ba748 c01ba748 000ba748 2**2 + > ALLOC + > 6 .comment 00000ec4 00000000 00000000 000ba748 2**0 + > CONTENTS, READONLY + > 7 .note 00001068 00000ec4 00000ec4 000bb60c 2**0 + > CONTENTS, READONLY + +There are obviously 2 non standard ELF sections in the generated object +file. But first we want to find out what happened to our code in the +final kernel executable: + + > objdump --disassemble --section=.text vmlinux + > + > c017e785 <do_con_write+c1> xorl %edx,%edx + > c017e787 <do_con_write+c3> movl 0xc01c7bec,%eax + > c017e78c <do_con_write+c8> cmpl $0x18,0x314(%eax) + > c017e793 <do_con_write+cf> je c017e79f <do_con_write+db> + > c017e795 <do_con_write+d1> cmpl $0xbfffffff,0x40(%esp,1) + > c017e79d <do_con_write+d9> ja c017e7a7 <do_con_write+e3> + > c017e79f <do_con_write+db> movl %edx,%eax + > c017e7a1 <do_con_write+dd> movl 0x40(%esp,1),%ebx + > c017e7a5 <do_con_write+e1> movb (%ebx),%dl + > c017e7a7 <do_con_write+e3> movzbl %dl,%esi + +The whole user memory access is reduced to 10 x86 machine instructions. +The instructions bracketed in the .section directives are no longer +in the normal execution path. They are located in a different section +of the executable file: + + > objdump --disassemble --section=.fixup vmlinux + > + > c0199ff5 <.fixup+10b5> movl $0xfffffff2,%eax + > c0199ffa <.fixup+10ba> xorb %dl,%dl + > c0199ffc <.fixup+10bc> jmp c017e7a7 <do_con_write+e3> + +And finally: + > objdump --full-contents --section=__ex_table vmlinux + > + > c01aa7c4 93c017c0 e09f19c0 97c017c0 99c017c0 ................ + > c01aa7d4 f6c217c0 e99f19c0 a5e717c0 f59f19c0 ................ + > c01aa7e4 080a18c0 01a019c0 0a0a18c0 04a019c0 ................ + +or in human readable byte order: + + > c01aa7c4 c017c093 c0199fe0 c017c097 c017c099 ................ + > c01aa7d4 c017c2f6 c0199fe9 c017e7a5 c0199ff5 ................ + ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + this is the interesting part! + > c01aa7e4 c0180a08 c019a001 c0180a0a c019a004 ................ + +What happened? The assembly directives + +.section .fixup,"ax" +.section __ex_table,"a" + +told the assembler to move the following code to the specified +sections in the ELF object file. So the instructions +3: movl $-14,%eax + xorb %dl,%dl + jmp 2b +ended up in the .fixup section of the object file and the addresses + .long 1b,3b +ended up in the __ex_table section of the object file. 1b and 3b +are local labels. The local label 1b (1b stands for next label 1 +backward) is the address of the instruction that might fault, i.e. +in our case the address of the label 1 is c017e7a5: +the original assembly code: > 1: movb (%ebx),%dl +and linked in vmlinux : > c017e7a5 <do_con_write+e1> movb (%ebx),%dl + +The local label 3 (backwards again) is the address of the code to handle +the fault, in our case the actual value is c0199ff5: +the original assembly code: > 3: movl $-14,%eax +and linked in vmlinux : > c0199ff5 <.fixup+10b5> movl $0xfffffff2,%eax + +The assembly code + > .section __ex_table,"a" + > .align 4 + > .long 1b,3b + +becomes the value pair + > c01aa7d4 c017c2f6 c0199fe9 c017e7a5 c0199ff5 ................ + ^this is ^this is + 1b 3b +c017e7a5,c0199ff5 in the exception table of the kernel. + +So, what actually happens if a fault from kernel mode with no suitable +vma occurs? + +1.) access to invalid address: + > c017e7a5 <do_con_write+e1> movb (%ebx),%dl +2.) MMU generates exception +3.) CPU calls do_page_fault +4.) do page fault calls search_exception_table (regs->eip == c017e7a5); +5.) search_exception_table looks up the address c017e7a5 in the + exception table (i.e. the contents of the ELF section __ex_table) + and returns the address of the associated fault handle code c0199ff5. +6.) do_page_fault modifies its own return address to point to the fault + handle code and returns. +7.) execution continues in the fault handling code. +8.) 8a) EAX becomes -EFAULT (== -14) + 8b) DL becomes zero (the value we "read" from user space) + 8c) execution continues at local label 2 (address of the + instruction immediately after the faulting user access). + +The steps 8a to 8c in a certain way emulate the faulting instruction. + +That's it, mostly. If you look at our example, you might ask why +we set EAX to -EFAULT in the exception handler code. Well, the +get_user macro actually returns a value: 0, if the user access was +successful, -EFAULT on failure. Our original code did not test this +return value, however the inline assembly code in get_user tries to +return -EFAULT. GCC selected EAX to return this value. + +NOTE: +Due to the way that the exception table is built and needs to be ordered, +only use exceptions for code in the .text section. Any other section +will cause the exception table to not be sorted correctly, and the +exceptions will fail. + +Things changed when 64-bit support was added to x86 Linux. Rather than +double the size of the exception table by expanding the two entries +from 32-bits to 64 bits, a clever trick was used to store addresses +as relative offsets from the table itself. The assembly code changed +from: + .long 1b,3b +to: + .long (from) - . + .long (to) - . + +and the C-code that uses these values converts back to absolute addresses +like this: + + ex_insn_addr(const struct exception_table_entry *x) + { + return (unsigned long)&x->insn + x->insn; + } + +In v4.6 the exception table entry was expanded with a new field "handler". +This is also 32-bits wide and contains a third relative function +pointer which points to one of: + +1) int ex_handler_default(const struct exception_table_entry *fixup) + This is legacy case that just jumps to the fixup code +2) int ex_handler_fault(const struct exception_table_entry *fixup) + This case provides the fault number of the trap that occurred at + entry->insn. It is used to distinguish page faults from machine + check. +3) int ex_handler_ext(const struct exception_table_entry *fixup) + This case is used for uaccess_err ... we need to set a flag + in the task structure. Before the handler functions existed this + case was handled by adding a large offset to the fixup to tag + it as special. +More functions can easily be added. diff --git a/Documentation/x86/i386/IO-APIC.txt b/Documentation/x86/i386/IO-APIC.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000..15f5baf7e --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/x86/i386/IO-APIC.txt @@ -0,0 +1,119 @@ +Most (all) Intel-MP compliant SMP boards have the so-called 'IO-APIC', +which is an enhanced interrupt controller. It enables us to route +hardware interrupts to multiple CPUs, or to CPU groups. Without an +IO-APIC, interrupts from hardware will be delivered only to the +CPU which boots the operating system (usually CPU#0). + +Linux supports all variants of compliant SMP boards, including ones with +multiple IO-APICs. Multiple IO-APICs are used in high-end servers to +distribute IRQ load further. + +There are (a few) known breakages in certain older boards, such bugs are +usually worked around by the kernel. If your MP-compliant SMP board does +not boot Linux, then consult the linux-smp mailing list archives first. + +If your box boots fine with enabled IO-APIC IRQs, then your +/proc/interrupts will look like this one: + + ----------------------------> + hell:~> cat /proc/interrupts + CPU0 + 0: 1360293 IO-APIC-edge timer + 1: 4 IO-APIC-edge keyboard + 2: 0 XT-PIC cascade + 13: 1 XT-PIC fpu + 14: 1448 IO-APIC-edge ide0 + 16: 28232 IO-APIC-level Intel EtherExpress Pro 10/100 Ethernet + 17: 51304 IO-APIC-level eth0 + NMI: 0 + ERR: 0 + hell:~> + <---------------------------- + +Some interrupts are still listed as 'XT PIC', but this is not a problem; +none of those IRQ sources is performance-critical. + + +In the unlikely case that your board does not create a working mp-table, +you can use the pirq= boot parameter to 'hand-construct' IRQ entries. This +is non-trivial though and cannot be automated. One sample /etc/lilo.conf +entry: + + append="pirq=15,11,10" + +The actual numbers depend on your system, on your PCI cards and on their +PCI slot position. Usually PCI slots are 'daisy chained' before they are +connected to the PCI chipset IRQ routing facility (the incoming PIRQ1-4 +lines): + + ,-. ,-. ,-. ,-. ,-. + PIRQ4 ----| |-. ,-| |-. ,-| |-. ,-| |--------| | + |S| \ / |S| \ / |S| \ / |S| |S| + PIRQ3 ----|l|-. `/---|l|-. `/---|l|-. `/---|l|--------|l| + |o| \/ |o| \/ |o| \/ |o| |o| + PIRQ2 ----|t|-./`----|t|-./`----|t|-./`----|t|--------|t| + |1| /\ |2| /\ |3| /\ |4| |5| + PIRQ1 ----| |- `----| |- `----| |- `----| |--------| | + `-' `-' `-' `-' `-' + +Every PCI card emits a PCI IRQ, which can be INTA, INTB, INTC or INTD: + + ,-. + INTD--| | + |S| + INTC--|l| + |o| + INTB--|t| + |x| + INTA--| | + `-' + +These INTA-D PCI IRQs are always 'local to the card', their real meaning +depends on which slot they are in. If you look at the daisy chaining diagram, +a card in slot4, issuing INTA IRQ, it will end up as a signal on PIRQ4 of +the PCI chipset. Most cards issue INTA, this creates optimal distribution +between the PIRQ lines. (distributing IRQ sources properly is not a +necessity, PCI IRQs can be shared at will, but it's a good for performance +to have non shared interrupts). Slot5 should be used for videocards, they +do not use interrupts normally, thus they are not daisy chained either. + +so if you have your SCSI card (IRQ11) in Slot1, Tulip card (IRQ9) in +Slot2, then you'll have to specify this pirq= line: + + append="pirq=11,9" + +the following script tries to figure out such a default pirq= line from +your PCI configuration: + + echo -n pirq=; echo `scanpci | grep T_L | cut -c56-` | sed 's/ /,/g' + +note that this script won't work if you have skipped a few slots or if your +board does not do default daisy-chaining. (or the IO-APIC has the PIRQ pins +connected in some strange way). E.g. if in the above case you have your SCSI +card (IRQ11) in Slot3, and have Slot1 empty: + + append="pirq=0,9,11" + +[value '0' is a generic 'placeholder', reserved for empty (or non-IRQ emitting) +slots.] + +Generally, it's always possible to find out the correct pirq= settings, just +permute all IRQ numbers properly ... it will take some time though. An +'incorrect' pirq line will cause the booting process to hang, or a device +won't function properly (e.g. if it's inserted as a module). + +If you have 2 PCI buses, then you can use up to 8 pirq values, although such +boards tend to have a good configuration. + +Be prepared that it might happen that you need some strange pirq line: + + append="pirq=0,0,0,0,0,0,9,11" + +Use smart trial-and-error techniques to find out the correct pirq line ... + +Good luck and mail to linux-smp@vger.kernel.org or +linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org if you have any problems that are not covered +by this document. + +-- mingo + diff --git a/Documentation/x86/index.rst b/Documentation/x86/index.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000..0780d55c5 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/x86/index.rst @@ -0,0 +1,9 @@ +========================== +x86 architecture specifics +========================== + +.. toctree:: + :maxdepth: 1 + + mds + tsx_async_abort diff --git a/Documentation/x86/intel_mpx.txt b/Documentation/x86/intel_mpx.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000..85d0549ad --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/x86/intel_mpx.txt @@ -0,0 +1,244 @@ +1. Intel(R) MPX Overview +======================== + +Intel(R) Memory Protection Extensions (Intel(R) MPX) is a new capability +introduced into Intel Architecture. Intel MPX provides hardware features +that can be used in conjunction with compiler changes to check memory +references, for those references whose compile-time normal intentions are +usurped at runtime due to buffer overflow or underflow. + +You can tell if your CPU supports MPX by looking in /proc/cpuinfo: + + cat /proc/cpuinfo | grep ' mpx ' + +For more information, please refer to Intel(R) Architecture Instruction +Set Extensions Programming Reference, Chapter 9: Intel(R) Memory Protection +Extensions. + +Note: As of December 2014, no hardware with MPX is available but it is +possible to use SDE (Intel(R) Software Development Emulator) instead, which +can be downloaded from +http://software.intel.com/en-us/articles/intel-software-development-emulator + + +2. How to get the advantage of MPX +================================== + +For MPX to work, changes are required in the kernel, binutils and compiler. +No source changes are required for applications, just a recompile. + +There are a lot of moving parts of this to all work right. The following +is how we expect the compiler, application and kernel to work together. + +1) Application developer compiles with -fmpx. The compiler will add the + instrumentation as well as some setup code called early after the app + starts. New instruction prefixes are noops for old CPUs. +2) That setup code allocates (virtual) space for the "bounds directory", + points the "bndcfgu" register to the directory (must also set the valid + bit) and notifies the kernel (via the new prctl(PR_MPX_ENABLE_MANAGEMENT)) + that the app will be using MPX. The app must be careful not to access + the bounds tables between the time when it populates "bndcfgu" and + when it calls the prctl(). This might be hard to guarantee if the app + is compiled with MPX. You can add "__attribute__((bnd_legacy))" to + the function to disable MPX instrumentation to help guarantee this. + Also be careful not to call out to any other code which might be + MPX-instrumented. +3) The kernel detects that the CPU has MPX, allows the new prctl() to + succeed, and notes the location of the bounds directory. Userspace is + expected to keep the bounds directory at that location. We note it + instead of reading it each time because the 'xsave' operation needed + to access the bounds directory register is an expensive operation. +4) If the application needs to spill bounds out of the 4 registers, it + issues a bndstx instruction. Since the bounds directory is empty at + this point, a bounds fault (#BR) is raised, the kernel allocates a + bounds table (in the user address space) and makes the relevant entry + in the bounds directory point to the new table. +5) If the application violates the bounds specified in the bounds registers, + a separate kind of #BR is raised which will deliver a signal with + information about the violation in the 'struct siginfo'. +6) Whenever memory is freed, we know that it can no longer contain valid + pointers, and we attempt to free the associated space in the bounds + tables. If an entire table becomes unused, we will attempt to free + the table and remove the entry in the directory. + +To summarize, there are essentially three things interacting here: + +GCC with -fmpx: + * enables annotation of code with MPX instructions and prefixes + * inserts code early in the application to call in to the "gcc runtime" +GCC MPX Runtime: + * Checks for hardware MPX support in cpuid leaf + * allocates virtual space for the bounds directory (malloc() essentially) + * points the hardware BNDCFGU register at the directory + * calls a new prctl(PR_MPX_ENABLE_MANAGEMENT) to notify the kernel to + start managing the bounds directories +Kernel MPX Code: + * Checks for hardware MPX support in cpuid leaf + * Handles #BR exceptions and sends SIGSEGV to the app when it violates + bounds, like during a buffer overflow. + * When bounds are spilled in to an unallocated bounds table, the kernel + notices in the #BR exception, allocates the virtual space, then + updates the bounds directory to point to the new table. It keeps + special track of the memory with a VM_MPX flag. + * Frees unused bounds tables at the time that the memory they described + is unmapped. + + +3. How does MPX kernel code work +================================ + +Handling #BR faults caused by MPX +--------------------------------- + +When MPX is enabled, there are 2 new situations that can generate +#BR faults. + * new bounds tables (BT) need to be allocated to save bounds. + * bounds violation caused by MPX instructions. + +We hook #BR handler to handle these two new situations. + +On-demand kernel allocation of bounds tables +-------------------------------------------- + +MPX only has 4 hardware registers for storing bounds information. If +MPX-enabled code needs more than these 4 registers, it needs to spill +them somewhere. It has two special instructions for this which allow +the bounds to be moved between the bounds registers and some new "bounds +tables". + +#BR exceptions are a new class of exceptions just for MPX. They are +similar conceptually to a page fault and will be raised by the MPX +hardware during both bounds violations or when the tables are not +present. The kernel handles those #BR exceptions for not-present tables +by carving the space out of the normal processes address space and then +pointing the bounds-directory over to it. + +The tables need to be accessed and controlled by userspace because +the instructions for moving bounds in and out of them are extremely +frequent. They potentially happen every time a register points to +memory. Any direct kernel involvement (like a syscall) to access the +tables would obviously destroy performance. + +Why not do this in userspace? MPX does not strictly require anything in +the kernel. It can theoretically be done completely from userspace. Here +are a few ways this could be done. We don't think any of them are practical +in the real-world, but here they are. + +Q: Can virtual space simply be reserved for the bounds tables so that we + never have to allocate them? +A: MPX-enabled application will possibly create a lot of bounds tables in + process address space to save bounds information. These tables can take + up huge swaths of memory (as much as 80% of the memory on the system) + even if we clean them up aggressively. In the worst-case scenario, the + tables can be 4x the size of the data structure being tracked. IOW, a + 1-page structure can require 4 bounds-table pages. An X-GB virtual + area needs 4*X GB of virtual space, plus 2GB for the bounds directory. + If we were to preallocate them for the 128TB of user virtual address + space, we would need to reserve 512TB+2GB, which is larger than the + entire virtual address space today. This means they can not be reserved + ahead of time. Also, a single process's pre-populated bounds directory + consumes 2GB of virtual *AND* physical memory. IOW, it's completely + infeasible to prepopulate bounds directories. + +Q: Can we preallocate bounds table space at the same time memory is + allocated which might contain pointers that might eventually need + bounds tables? +A: This would work if we could hook the site of each and every memory + allocation syscall. This can be done for small, constrained applications. + But, it isn't practical at a larger scale since a given app has no + way of controlling how all the parts of the app might allocate memory + (think libraries). The kernel is really the only place to intercept + these calls. + +Q: Could a bounds fault be handed to userspace and the tables allocated + there in a signal handler instead of in the kernel? +A: mmap() is not on the list of safe async handler functions and even + if mmap() would work it still requires locking or nasty tricks to + keep track of the allocation state there. + +Having ruled out all of the userspace-only approaches for managing +bounds tables that we could think of, we create them on demand in +the kernel. + +Decoding MPX instructions +------------------------- + +If a #BR is generated due to a bounds violation caused by MPX. +We need to decode MPX instructions to get violation address and +set this address into extended struct siginfo. + +The _sigfault field of struct siginfo is extended as follow: + +87 /* SIGILL, SIGFPE, SIGSEGV, SIGBUS */ +88 struct { +89 void __user *_addr; /* faulting insn/memory ref. */ +90 #ifdef __ARCH_SI_TRAPNO +91 int _trapno; /* TRAP # which caused the signal */ +92 #endif +93 short _addr_lsb; /* LSB of the reported address */ +94 struct { +95 void __user *_lower; +96 void __user *_upper; +97 } _addr_bnd; +98 } _sigfault; + +The '_addr' field refers to violation address, and new '_addr_and' +field refers to the upper/lower bounds when a #BR is caused. + +Glibc will be also updated to support this new siginfo. So user +can get violation address and bounds when bounds violations occur. + +Cleanup unused bounds tables +---------------------------- + +When a BNDSTX instruction attempts to save bounds to a bounds directory +entry marked as invalid, a #BR is generated. This is an indication that +no bounds table exists for this entry. In this case the fault handler +will allocate a new bounds table on demand. + +Since the kernel allocated those tables on-demand without userspace +knowledge, it is also responsible for freeing them when the associated +mappings go away. + +Here, the solution for this issue is to hook do_munmap() to check +whether one process is MPX enabled. If yes, those bounds tables covered +in the virtual address region which is being unmapped will be freed also. + +Adding new prctl commands +------------------------- + +Two new prctl commands are added to enable and disable MPX bounds tables +management in kernel. + +155 #define PR_MPX_ENABLE_MANAGEMENT 43 +156 #define PR_MPX_DISABLE_MANAGEMENT 44 + +Runtime library in userspace is responsible for allocation of bounds +directory. So kernel have to use XSAVE instruction to get the base +of bounds directory from BNDCFG register. + +But XSAVE is expected to be very expensive. In order to do performance +optimization, we have to get the base of bounds directory and save it +into struct mm_struct to be used in future during PR_MPX_ENABLE_MANAGEMENT +command execution. + + +4. Special rules +================ + +1) If userspace is requesting help from the kernel to do the management +of bounds tables, it may not create or modify entries in the bounds directory. + +Certainly users can allocate bounds tables and forcibly point the bounds +directory at them through XSAVE instruction, and then set valid bit +of bounds entry to have this entry valid. But, the kernel will decline +to assist in managing these tables. + +2) Userspace may not take multiple bounds directory entries and point +them at the same bounds table. + +This is allowed architecturally. See more information "Intel(R) Architecture +Instruction Set Extensions Programming Reference" (9.3.4). + +However, if users did this, the kernel might be fooled in to unmapping an +in-use bounds table since it does not recognize sharing. diff --git a/Documentation/x86/intel_rdt_ui.txt b/Documentation/x86/intel_rdt_ui.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000..f662d3c53 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/x86/intel_rdt_ui.txt @@ -0,0 +1,1112 @@ +User Interface for Resource Allocation in Intel Resource Director Technology + +Copyright (C) 2016 Intel Corporation + +Fenghua Yu <fenghua.yu@intel.com> +Tony Luck <tony.luck@intel.com> +Vikas Shivappa <vikas.shivappa@intel.com> + +This feature is enabled by the CONFIG_INTEL_RDT Kconfig and the +X86 /proc/cpuinfo flag bits: +RDT (Resource Director Technology) Allocation - "rdt_a" +CAT (Cache Allocation Technology) - "cat_l3", "cat_l2" +CDP (Code and Data Prioritization ) - "cdp_l3", "cdp_l2" +CQM (Cache QoS Monitoring) - "cqm_llc", "cqm_occup_llc" +MBM (Memory Bandwidth Monitoring) - "cqm_mbm_total", "cqm_mbm_local" +MBA (Memory Bandwidth Allocation) - "mba" + +To use the feature mount the file system: + + # mount -t resctrl resctrl [-o cdp[,cdpl2][,mba_MBps]] /sys/fs/resctrl + +mount options are: + +"cdp": Enable code/data prioritization in L3 cache allocations. +"cdpl2": Enable code/data prioritization in L2 cache allocations. +"mba_MBps": Enable the MBA Software Controller(mba_sc) to specify MBA + bandwidth in MBps + +L2 and L3 CDP are controlled seperately. + +RDT features are orthogonal. A particular system may support only +monitoring, only control, or both monitoring and control. Cache +pseudo-locking is a unique way of using cache control to "pin" or +"lock" data in the cache. Details can be found in +"Cache Pseudo-Locking". + + +The mount succeeds if either of allocation or monitoring is present, but +only those files and directories supported by the system will be created. +For more details on the behavior of the interface during monitoring +and allocation, see the "Resource alloc and monitor groups" section. + +Info directory +-------------- + +The 'info' directory contains information about the enabled +resources. Each resource has its own subdirectory. The subdirectory +names reflect the resource names. + +Each subdirectory contains the following files with respect to +allocation: + +Cache resource(L3/L2) subdirectory contains the following files +related to allocation: + +"num_closids": The number of CLOSIDs which are valid for this + resource. The kernel uses the smallest number of + CLOSIDs of all enabled resources as limit. + +"cbm_mask": The bitmask which is valid for this resource. + This mask is equivalent to 100%. + +"min_cbm_bits": The minimum number of consecutive bits which + must be set when writing a mask. + +"shareable_bits": Bitmask of shareable resource with other executing + entities (e.g. I/O). User can use this when + setting up exclusive cache partitions. Note that + some platforms support devices that have their + own settings for cache use which can over-ride + these bits. +"bit_usage": Annotated capacity bitmasks showing how all + instances of the resource are used. The legend is: + "0" - Corresponding region is unused. When the system's + resources have been allocated and a "0" is found + in "bit_usage" it is a sign that resources are + wasted. + "H" - Corresponding region is used by hardware only + but available for software use. If a resource + has bits set in "shareable_bits" but not all + of these bits appear in the resource groups' + schematas then the bits appearing in + "shareable_bits" but no resource group will + be marked as "H". + "X" - Corresponding region is available for sharing and + used by hardware and software. These are the + bits that appear in "shareable_bits" as + well as a resource group's allocation. + "S" - Corresponding region is used by software + and available for sharing. + "E" - Corresponding region is used exclusively by + one resource group. No sharing allowed. + "P" - Corresponding region is pseudo-locked. No + sharing allowed. + +Memory bandwitdh(MB) subdirectory contains the following files +with respect to allocation: + +"min_bandwidth": The minimum memory bandwidth percentage which + user can request. + +"bandwidth_gran": The granularity in which the memory bandwidth + percentage is allocated. The allocated + b/w percentage is rounded off to the next + control step available on the hardware. The + available bandwidth control steps are: + min_bandwidth + N * bandwidth_gran. + +"delay_linear": Indicates if the delay scale is linear or + non-linear. This field is purely informational + only. + +If RDT monitoring is available there will be an "L3_MON" directory +with the following files: + +"num_rmids": The number of RMIDs available. This is the + upper bound for how many "CTRL_MON" + "MON" + groups can be created. + +"mon_features": Lists the monitoring events if + monitoring is enabled for the resource. + +"max_threshold_occupancy": + Read/write file provides the largest value (in + bytes) at which a previously used LLC_occupancy + counter can be considered for re-use. + +Finally, in the top level of the "info" directory there is a file +named "last_cmd_status". This is reset with every "command" issued +via the file system (making new directories or writing to any of the +control files). If the command was successful, it will read as "ok". +If the command failed, it will provide more information that can be +conveyed in the error returns from file operations. E.g. + + # echo L3:0=f7 > schemata + bash: echo: write error: Invalid argument + # cat info/last_cmd_status + mask f7 has non-consecutive 1-bits + +Resource alloc and monitor groups +--------------------------------- + +Resource groups are represented as directories in the resctrl file +system. The default group is the root directory which, immediately +after mounting, owns all the tasks and cpus in the system and can make +full use of all resources. + +On a system with RDT control features additional directories can be +created in the root directory that specify different amounts of each +resource (see "schemata" below). The root and these additional top level +directories are referred to as "CTRL_MON" groups below. + +On a system with RDT monitoring the root directory and other top level +directories contain a directory named "mon_groups" in which additional +directories can be created to monitor subsets of tasks in the CTRL_MON +group that is their ancestor. These are called "MON" groups in the rest +of this document. + +Removing a directory will move all tasks and cpus owned by the group it +represents to the parent. Removing one of the created CTRL_MON groups +will automatically remove all MON groups below it. + +All groups contain the following files: + +"tasks": + Reading this file shows the list of all tasks that belong to + this group. Writing a task id to the file will add a task to the + group. If the group is a CTRL_MON group the task is removed from + whichever previous CTRL_MON group owned the task and also from + any MON group that owned the task. If the group is a MON group, + then the task must already belong to the CTRL_MON parent of this + group. The task is removed from any previous MON group. + + +"cpus": + Reading this file shows a bitmask of the logical CPUs owned by + this group. Writing a mask to this file will add and remove + CPUs to/from this group. As with the tasks file a hierarchy is + maintained where MON groups may only include CPUs owned by the + parent CTRL_MON group. + When the resouce group is in pseudo-locked mode this file will + only be readable, reflecting the CPUs associated with the + pseudo-locked region. + + +"cpus_list": + Just like "cpus", only using ranges of CPUs instead of bitmasks. + + +When control is enabled all CTRL_MON groups will also contain: + +"schemata": + A list of all the resources available to this group. + Each resource has its own line and format - see below for details. + +"size": + Mirrors the display of the "schemata" file to display the size in + bytes of each allocation instead of the bits representing the + allocation. + +"mode": + The "mode" of the resource group dictates the sharing of its + allocations. A "shareable" resource group allows sharing of its + allocations while an "exclusive" resource group does not. A + cache pseudo-locked region is created by first writing + "pseudo-locksetup" to the "mode" file before writing the cache + pseudo-locked region's schemata to the resource group's "schemata" + file. On successful pseudo-locked region creation the mode will + automatically change to "pseudo-locked". + +When monitoring is enabled all MON groups will also contain: + +"mon_data": + This contains a set of files organized by L3 domain and by + RDT event. E.g. on a system with two L3 domains there will + be subdirectories "mon_L3_00" and "mon_L3_01". Each of these + directories have one file per event (e.g. "llc_occupancy", + "mbm_total_bytes", and "mbm_local_bytes"). In a MON group these + files provide a read out of the current value of the event for + all tasks in the group. In CTRL_MON groups these files provide + the sum for all tasks in the CTRL_MON group and all tasks in + MON groups. Please see example section for more details on usage. + +Resource allocation rules +------------------------- +When a task is running the following rules define which resources are +available to it: + +1) If the task is a member of a non-default group, then the schemata + for that group is used. + +2) Else if the task belongs to the default group, but is running on a + CPU that is assigned to some specific group, then the schemata for the + CPU's group is used. + +3) Otherwise the schemata for the default group is used. + +Resource monitoring rules +------------------------- +1) If a task is a member of a MON group, or non-default CTRL_MON group + then RDT events for the task will be reported in that group. + +2) If a task is a member of the default CTRL_MON group, but is running + on a CPU that is assigned to some specific group, then the RDT events + for the task will be reported in that group. + +3) Otherwise RDT events for the task will be reported in the root level + "mon_data" group. + + +Notes on cache occupancy monitoring and control +----------------------------------------------- +When moving a task from one group to another you should remember that +this only affects *new* cache allocations by the task. E.g. you may have +a task in a monitor group showing 3 MB of cache occupancy. If you move +to a new group and immediately check the occupancy of the old and new +groups you will likely see that the old group is still showing 3 MB and +the new group zero. When the task accesses locations still in cache from +before the move, the h/w does not update any counters. On a busy system +you will likely see the occupancy in the old group go down as cache lines +are evicted and re-used while the occupancy in the new group rises as +the task accesses memory and loads into the cache are counted based on +membership in the new group. + +The same applies to cache allocation control. Moving a task to a group +with a smaller cache partition will not evict any cache lines. The +process may continue to use them from the old partition. + +Hardware uses CLOSid(Class of service ID) and an RMID(Resource monitoring ID) +to identify a control group and a monitoring group respectively. Each of +the resource groups are mapped to these IDs based on the kind of group. The +number of CLOSid and RMID are limited by the hardware and hence the creation of +a "CTRL_MON" directory may fail if we run out of either CLOSID or RMID +and creation of "MON" group may fail if we run out of RMIDs. + +max_threshold_occupancy - generic concepts +------------------------------------------ + +Note that an RMID once freed may not be immediately available for use as +the RMID is still tagged the cache lines of the previous user of RMID. +Hence such RMIDs are placed on limbo list and checked back if the cache +occupancy has gone down. If there is a time when system has a lot of +limbo RMIDs but which are not ready to be used, user may see an -EBUSY +during mkdir. + +max_threshold_occupancy is a user configurable value to determine the +occupancy at which an RMID can be freed. + +Schemata files - general concepts +--------------------------------- +Each line in the file describes one resource. The line starts with +the name of the resource, followed by specific values to be applied +in each of the instances of that resource on the system. + +Cache IDs +--------- +On current generation systems there is one L3 cache per socket and L2 +caches are generally just shared by the hyperthreads on a core, but this +isn't an architectural requirement. We could have multiple separate L3 +caches on a socket, multiple cores could share an L2 cache. So instead +of using "socket" or "core" to define the set of logical cpus sharing +a resource we use a "Cache ID". At a given cache level this will be a +unique number across the whole system (but it isn't guaranteed to be a +contiguous sequence, there may be gaps). To find the ID for each logical +CPU look in /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu*/cache/index*/id + +Cache Bit Masks (CBM) +--------------------- +For cache resources we describe the portion of the cache that is available +for allocation using a bitmask. The maximum value of the mask is defined +by each cpu model (and may be different for different cache levels). It +is found using CPUID, but is also provided in the "info" directory of +the resctrl file system in "info/{resource}/cbm_mask". X86 hardware +requires that these masks have all the '1' bits in a contiguous block. So +0x3, 0x6 and 0xC are legal 4-bit masks with two bits set, but 0x5, 0x9 +and 0xA are not. On a system with a 20-bit mask each bit represents 5% +of the capacity of the cache. You could partition the cache into four +equal parts with masks: 0x1f, 0x3e0, 0x7c00, 0xf8000. + +Memory bandwidth Allocation and monitoring +------------------------------------------ + +For Memory bandwidth resource, by default the user controls the resource +by indicating the percentage of total memory bandwidth. + +The minimum bandwidth percentage value for each cpu model is predefined +and can be looked up through "info/MB/min_bandwidth". The bandwidth +granularity that is allocated is also dependent on the cpu model and can +be looked up at "info/MB/bandwidth_gran". The available bandwidth +control steps are: min_bw + N * bw_gran. Intermediate values are rounded +to the next control step available on the hardware. + +The bandwidth throttling is a core specific mechanism on some of Intel +SKUs. Using a high bandwidth and a low bandwidth setting on two threads +sharing a core will result in both threads being throttled to use the +low bandwidth. The fact that Memory bandwidth allocation(MBA) is a core +specific mechanism where as memory bandwidth monitoring(MBM) is done at +the package level may lead to confusion when users try to apply control +via the MBA and then monitor the bandwidth to see if the controls are +effective. Below are such scenarios: + +1. User may *not* see increase in actual bandwidth when percentage + values are increased: + +This can occur when aggregate L2 external bandwidth is more than L3 +external bandwidth. Consider an SKL SKU with 24 cores on a package and +where L2 external is 10GBps (hence aggregate L2 external bandwidth is +240GBps) and L3 external bandwidth is 100GBps. Now a workload with '20 +threads, having 50% bandwidth, each consuming 5GBps' consumes the max L3 +bandwidth of 100GBps although the percentage value specified is only 50% +<< 100%. Hence increasing the bandwidth percentage will not yeild any +more bandwidth. This is because although the L2 external bandwidth still +has capacity, the L3 external bandwidth is fully used. Also note that +this would be dependent on number of cores the benchmark is run on. + +2. Same bandwidth percentage may mean different actual bandwidth + depending on # of threads: + +For the same SKU in #1, a 'single thread, with 10% bandwidth' and '4 +thread, with 10% bandwidth' can consume upto 10GBps and 40GBps although +they have same percentage bandwidth of 10%. This is simply because as +threads start using more cores in an rdtgroup, the actual bandwidth may +increase or vary although user specified bandwidth percentage is same. + +In order to mitigate this and make the interface more user friendly, +resctrl added support for specifying the bandwidth in MBps as well. The +kernel underneath would use a software feedback mechanism or a "Software +Controller(mba_sc)" which reads the actual bandwidth using MBM counters +and adjust the memowy bandwidth percentages to ensure + + "actual bandwidth < user specified bandwidth". + +By default, the schemata would take the bandwidth percentage values +where as user can switch to the "MBA software controller" mode using +a mount option 'mba_MBps'. The schemata format is specified in the below +sections. + +L3 schemata file details (code and data prioritization disabled) +---------------------------------------------------------------- +With CDP disabled the L3 schemata format is: + + L3:<cache_id0>=<cbm>;<cache_id1>=<cbm>;... + +L3 schemata file details (CDP enabled via mount option to resctrl) +------------------------------------------------------------------ +When CDP is enabled L3 control is split into two separate resources +so you can specify independent masks for code and data like this: + + L3data:<cache_id0>=<cbm>;<cache_id1>=<cbm>;... + L3code:<cache_id0>=<cbm>;<cache_id1>=<cbm>;... + +L2 schemata file details +------------------------ +L2 cache does not support code and data prioritization, so the +schemata format is always: + + L2:<cache_id0>=<cbm>;<cache_id1>=<cbm>;... + +Memory bandwidth Allocation (default mode) +------------------------------------------ + +Memory b/w domain is L3 cache. + + MB:<cache_id0>=bandwidth0;<cache_id1>=bandwidth1;... + +Memory bandwidth Allocation specified in MBps +--------------------------------------------- + +Memory bandwidth domain is L3 cache. + + MB:<cache_id0>=bw_MBps0;<cache_id1>=bw_MBps1;... + +Reading/writing the schemata file +--------------------------------- +Reading the schemata file will show the state of all resources +on all domains. When writing you only need to specify those values +which you wish to change. E.g. + +# cat schemata +L3DATA:0=fffff;1=fffff;2=fffff;3=fffff +L3CODE:0=fffff;1=fffff;2=fffff;3=fffff +# echo "L3DATA:2=3c0;" > schemata +# cat schemata +L3DATA:0=fffff;1=fffff;2=3c0;3=fffff +L3CODE:0=fffff;1=fffff;2=fffff;3=fffff + +Cache Pseudo-Locking +-------------------- +CAT enables a user to specify the amount of cache space that an +application can fill. Cache pseudo-locking builds on the fact that a +CPU can still read and write data pre-allocated outside its current +allocated area on a cache hit. With cache pseudo-locking, data can be +preloaded into a reserved portion of cache that no application can +fill, and from that point on will only serve cache hits. The cache +pseudo-locked memory is made accessible to user space where an +application can map it into its virtual address space and thus have +a region of memory with reduced average read latency. + +The creation of a cache pseudo-locked region is triggered by a request +from the user to do so that is accompanied by a schemata of the region +to be pseudo-locked. The cache pseudo-locked region is created as follows: +- Create a CAT allocation CLOSNEW with a CBM matching the schemata + from the user of the cache region that will contain the pseudo-locked + memory. This region must not overlap with any current CAT allocation/CLOS + on the system and no future overlap with this cache region is allowed + while the pseudo-locked region exists. +- Create a contiguous region of memory of the same size as the cache + region. +- Flush the cache, disable hardware prefetchers, disable preemption. +- Make CLOSNEW the active CLOS and touch the allocated memory to load + it into the cache. +- Set the previous CLOS as active. +- At this point the closid CLOSNEW can be released - the cache + pseudo-locked region is protected as long as its CBM does not appear in + any CAT allocation. Even though the cache pseudo-locked region will from + this point on not appear in any CBM of any CLOS an application running with + any CLOS will be able to access the memory in the pseudo-locked region since + the region continues to serve cache hits. +- The contiguous region of memory loaded into the cache is exposed to + user-space as a character device. + +Cache pseudo-locking increases the probability that data will remain +in the cache via carefully configuring the CAT feature and controlling +application behavior. There is no guarantee that data is placed in +cache. Instructions like INVD, WBINVD, CLFLUSH, etc. can still evict +“locked” data from cache. Power management C-states may shrink or +power off cache. Deeper C-states will automatically be restricted on +pseudo-locked region creation. + +It is required that an application using a pseudo-locked region runs +with affinity to the cores (or a subset of the cores) associated +with the cache on which the pseudo-locked region resides. A sanity check +within the code will not allow an application to map pseudo-locked memory +unless it runs with affinity to cores associated with the cache on which the +pseudo-locked region resides. The sanity check is only done during the +initial mmap() handling, there is no enforcement afterwards and the +application self needs to ensure it remains affine to the correct cores. + +Pseudo-locking is accomplished in two stages: +1) During the first stage the system administrator allocates a portion + of cache that should be dedicated to pseudo-locking. At this time an + equivalent portion of memory is allocated, loaded into allocated + cache portion, and exposed as a character device. +2) During the second stage a user-space application maps (mmap()) the + pseudo-locked memory into its address space. + +Cache Pseudo-Locking Interface +------------------------------ +A pseudo-locked region is created using the resctrl interface as follows: + +1) Create a new resource group by creating a new directory in /sys/fs/resctrl. +2) Change the new resource group's mode to "pseudo-locksetup" by writing + "pseudo-locksetup" to the "mode" file. +3) Write the schemata of the pseudo-locked region to the "schemata" file. All + bits within the schemata should be "unused" according to the "bit_usage" + file. + +On successful pseudo-locked region creation the "mode" file will contain +"pseudo-locked" and a new character device with the same name as the resource +group will exist in /dev/pseudo_lock. This character device can be mmap()'ed +by user space in order to obtain access to the pseudo-locked memory region. + +An example of cache pseudo-locked region creation and usage can be found below. + +Cache Pseudo-Locking Debugging Interface +--------------------------------------- +The pseudo-locking debugging interface is enabled by default (if +CONFIG_DEBUG_FS is enabled) and can be found in /sys/kernel/debug/resctrl. + +There is no explicit way for the kernel to test if a provided memory +location is present in the cache. The pseudo-locking debugging interface uses +the tracing infrastructure to provide two ways to measure cache residency of +the pseudo-locked region: +1) Memory access latency using the pseudo_lock_mem_latency tracepoint. Data + from these measurements are best visualized using a hist trigger (see + example below). In this test the pseudo-locked region is traversed at + a stride of 32 bytes while hardware prefetchers and preemption + are disabled. This also provides a substitute visualization of cache + hits and misses. +2) Cache hit and miss measurements using model specific precision counters if + available. Depending on the levels of cache on the system the pseudo_lock_l2 + and pseudo_lock_l3 tracepoints are available. + WARNING: triggering this measurement uses from two (for just L2 + measurements) to four (for L2 and L3 measurements) precision counters on + the system, if any other measurements are in progress the counters and + their corresponding event registers will be clobbered. + +When a pseudo-locked region is created a new debugfs directory is created for +it in debugfs as /sys/kernel/debug/resctrl/<newdir>. A single +write-only file, pseudo_lock_measure, is present in this directory. The +measurement on the pseudo-locked region depends on the number, 1 or 2, +written to this debugfs file. Since the measurements are recorded with the +tracing infrastructure the relevant tracepoints need to be enabled before the +measurement is triggered. + +Example of latency debugging interface: +In this example a pseudo-locked region named "newlock" was created. Here is +how we can measure the latency in cycles of reading from this region and +visualize this data with a histogram that is available if CONFIG_HIST_TRIGGERS +is set: +# :> /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/trace +# echo 'hist:keys=latency' > /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/resctrl/pseudo_lock_mem_latency/trigger +# echo 1 > /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/resctrl/pseudo_lock_mem_latency/enable +# echo 1 > /sys/kernel/debug/resctrl/newlock/pseudo_lock_measure +# echo 0 > /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/resctrl/pseudo_lock_mem_latency/enable +# cat /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/resctrl/pseudo_lock_mem_latency/hist + +# event histogram +# +# trigger info: hist:keys=latency:vals=hitcount:sort=hitcount:size=2048 [active] +# + +{ latency: 456 } hitcount: 1 +{ latency: 50 } hitcount: 83 +{ latency: 36 } hitcount: 96 +{ latency: 44 } hitcount: 174 +{ latency: 48 } hitcount: 195 +{ latency: 46 } hitcount: 262 +{ latency: 42 } hitcount: 693 +{ latency: 40 } hitcount: 3204 +{ latency: 38 } hitcount: 3484 + +Totals: + Hits: 8192 + Entries: 9 + Dropped: 0 + +Example of cache hits/misses debugging: +In this example a pseudo-locked region named "newlock" was created on the L2 +cache of a platform. Here is how we can obtain details of the cache hits +and misses using the platform's precision counters. + +# :> /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/trace +# echo 1 > /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/resctrl/pseudo_lock_l2/enable +# echo 2 > /sys/kernel/debug/resctrl/newlock/pseudo_lock_measure +# echo 0 > /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/resctrl/pseudo_lock_l2/enable +# cat /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/trace + +# tracer: nop +# +# _-----=> irqs-off +# / _----=> need-resched +# | / _---=> hardirq/softirq +# || / _--=> preempt-depth +# ||| / delay +# TASK-PID CPU# |||| TIMESTAMP FUNCTION +# | | | |||| | | + pseudo_lock_mea-1672 [002] .... 3132.860500: pseudo_lock_l2: hits=4097 miss=0 + + +Examples for RDT allocation usage: + +Example 1 +--------- +On a two socket machine (one L3 cache per socket) with just four bits +for cache bit masks, minimum b/w of 10% with a memory bandwidth +granularity of 10% + +# mount -t resctrl resctrl /sys/fs/resctrl +# cd /sys/fs/resctrl +# mkdir p0 p1 +# echo "L3:0=3;1=c\nMB:0=50;1=50" > /sys/fs/resctrl/p0/schemata +# echo "L3:0=3;1=3\nMB:0=50;1=50" > /sys/fs/resctrl/p1/schemata + +The default resource group is unmodified, so we have access to all parts +of all caches (its schemata file reads "L3:0=f;1=f"). + +Tasks that are under the control of group "p0" may only allocate from the +"lower" 50% on cache ID 0, and the "upper" 50% of cache ID 1. +Tasks in group "p1" use the "lower" 50% of cache on both sockets. + +Similarly, tasks that are under the control of group "p0" may use a +maximum memory b/w of 50% on socket0 and 50% on socket 1. +Tasks in group "p1" may also use 50% memory b/w on both sockets. +Note that unlike cache masks, memory b/w cannot specify whether these +allocations can overlap or not. The allocations specifies the maximum +b/w that the group may be able to use and the system admin can configure +the b/w accordingly. + +If the MBA is specified in MB(megabytes) then user can enter the max b/w in MB +rather than the percentage values. + +# echo "L3:0=3;1=c\nMB:0=1024;1=500" > /sys/fs/resctrl/p0/schemata +# echo "L3:0=3;1=3\nMB:0=1024;1=500" > /sys/fs/resctrl/p1/schemata + +In the above example the tasks in "p1" and "p0" on socket 0 would use a max b/w +of 1024MB where as on socket 1 they would use 500MB. + +Example 2 +--------- +Again two sockets, but this time with a more realistic 20-bit mask. + +Two real time tasks pid=1234 running on processor 0 and pid=5678 running on +processor 1 on socket 0 on a 2-socket and dual core machine. To avoid noisy +neighbors, each of the two real-time tasks exclusively occupies one quarter +of L3 cache on socket 0. + +# mount -t resctrl resctrl /sys/fs/resctrl +# cd /sys/fs/resctrl + +First we reset the schemata for the default group so that the "upper" +50% of the L3 cache on socket 0 and 50% of memory b/w cannot be used by +ordinary tasks: + +# echo "L3:0=3ff;1=fffff\nMB:0=50;1=100" > schemata + +Next we make a resource group for our first real time task and give +it access to the "top" 25% of the cache on socket 0. + +# mkdir p0 +# echo "L3:0=f8000;1=fffff" > p0/schemata + +Finally we move our first real time task into this resource group. We +also use taskset(1) to ensure the task always runs on a dedicated CPU +on socket 0. Most uses of resource groups will also constrain which +processors tasks run on. + +# echo 1234 > p0/tasks +# taskset -cp 1 1234 + +Ditto for the second real time task (with the remaining 25% of cache): + +# mkdir p1 +# echo "L3:0=7c00;1=fffff" > p1/schemata +# echo 5678 > p1/tasks +# taskset -cp 2 5678 + +For the same 2 socket system with memory b/w resource and CAT L3 the +schemata would look like(Assume min_bandwidth 10 and bandwidth_gran is +10): + +For our first real time task this would request 20% memory b/w on socket +0. + +# echo -e "L3:0=f8000;1=fffff\nMB:0=20;1=100" > p0/schemata + +For our second real time task this would request an other 20% memory b/w +on socket 0. + +# echo -e "L3:0=f8000;1=fffff\nMB:0=20;1=100" > p0/schemata + +Example 3 +--------- + +A single socket system which has real-time tasks running on core 4-7 and +non real-time workload assigned to core 0-3. The real-time tasks share text +and data, so a per task association is not required and due to interaction +with the kernel it's desired that the kernel on these cores shares L3 with +the tasks. + +# mount -t resctrl resctrl /sys/fs/resctrl +# cd /sys/fs/resctrl + +First we reset the schemata for the default group so that the "upper" +50% of the L3 cache on socket 0, and 50% of memory bandwidth on socket 0 +cannot be used by ordinary tasks: + +# echo "L3:0=3ff\nMB:0=50" > schemata + +Next we make a resource group for our real time cores and give it access +to the "top" 50% of the cache on socket 0 and 50% of memory bandwidth on +socket 0. + +# mkdir p0 +# echo "L3:0=ffc00\nMB:0=50" > p0/schemata + +Finally we move core 4-7 over to the new group and make sure that the +kernel and the tasks running there get 50% of the cache. They should +also get 50% of memory bandwidth assuming that the cores 4-7 are SMT +siblings and only the real time threads are scheduled on the cores 4-7. + +# echo F0 > p0/cpus + +Example 4 +--------- + +The resource groups in previous examples were all in the default "shareable" +mode allowing sharing of their cache allocations. If one resource group +configures a cache allocation then nothing prevents another resource group +to overlap with that allocation. + +In this example a new exclusive resource group will be created on a L2 CAT +system with two L2 cache instances that can be configured with an 8-bit +capacity bitmask. The new exclusive resource group will be configured to use +25% of each cache instance. + +# mount -t resctrl resctrl /sys/fs/resctrl/ +# cd /sys/fs/resctrl + +First, we observe that the default group is configured to allocate to all L2 +cache: + +# cat schemata +L2:0=ff;1=ff + +We could attempt to create the new resource group at this point, but it will +fail because of the overlap with the schemata of the default group: +# mkdir p0 +# echo 'L2:0=0x3;1=0x3' > p0/schemata +# cat p0/mode +shareable +# echo exclusive > p0/mode +-sh: echo: write error: Invalid argument +# cat info/last_cmd_status +schemata overlaps + +To ensure that there is no overlap with another resource group the default +resource group's schemata has to change, making it possible for the new +resource group to become exclusive. +# echo 'L2:0=0xfc;1=0xfc' > schemata +# echo exclusive > p0/mode +# grep . p0/* +p0/cpus:0 +p0/mode:exclusive +p0/schemata:L2:0=03;1=03 +p0/size:L2:0=262144;1=262144 + +A new resource group will on creation not overlap with an exclusive resource +group: +# mkdir p1 +# grep . p1/* +p1/cpus:0 +p1/mode:shareable +p1/schemata:L2:0=fc;1=fc +p1/size:L2:0=786432;1=786432 + +The bit_usage will reflect how the cache is used: +# cat info/L2/bit_usage +0=SSSSSSEE;1=SSSSSSEE + +A resource group cannot be forced to overlap with an exclusive resource group: +# echo 'L2:0=0x1;1=0x1' > p1/schemata +-sh: echo: write error: Invalid argument +# cat info/last_cmd_status +overlaps with exclusive group + +Example of Cache Pseudo-Locking +------------------------------- +Lock portion of L2 cache from cache id 1 using CBM 0x3. Pseudo-locked +region is exposed at /dev/pseudo_lock/newlock that can be provided to +application for argument to mmap(). + +# mount -t resctrl resctrl /sys/fs/resctrl/ +# cd /sys/fs/resctrl + +Ensure that there are bits available that can be pseudo-locked, since only +unused bits can be pseudo-locked the bits to be pseudo-locked needs to be +removed from the default resource group's schemata: +# cat info/L2/bit_usage +0=SSSSSSSS;1=SSSSSSSS +# echo 'L2:1=0xfc' > schemata +# cat info/L2/bit_usage +0=SSSSSSSS;1=SSSSSS00 + +Create a new resource group that will be associated with the pseudo-locked +region, indicate that it will be used for a pseudo-locked region, and +configure the requested pseudo-locked region capacity bitmask: + +# mkdir newlock +# echo pseudo-locksetup > newlock/mode +# echo 'L2:1=0x3' > newlock/schemata + +On success the resource group's mode will change to pseudo-locked, the +bit_usage will reflect the pseudo-locked region, and the character device +exposing the pseudo-locked region will exist: + +# cat newlock/mode +pseudo-locked +# cat info/L2/bit_usage +0=SSSSSSSS;1=SSSSSSPP +# ls -l /dev/pseudo_lock/newlock +crw------- 1 root root 243, 0 Apr 3 05:01 /dev/pseudo_lock/newlock + +/* + * Example code to access one page of pseudo-locked cache region + * from user space. + */ +#define _GNU_SOURCE +#include <fcntl.h> +#include <sched.h> +#include <stdio.h> +#include <stdlib.h> +#include <unistd.h> +#include <sys/mman.h> + +/* + * It is required that the application runs with affinity to only + * cores associated with the pseudo-locked region. Here the cpu + * is hardcoded for convenience of example. + */ +static int cpuid = 2; + +int main(int argc, char *argv[]) +{ + cpu_set_t cpuset; + long page_size; + void *mapping; + int dev_fd; + int ret; + + page_size = sysconf(_SC_PAGESIZE); + + CPU_ZERO(&cpuset); + CPU_SET(cpuid, &cpuset); + ret = sched_setaffinity(0, sizeof(cpuset), &cpuset); + if (ret < 0) { + perror("sched_setaffinity"); + exit(EXIT_FAILURE); + } + + dev_fd = open("/dev/pseudo_lock/newlock", O_RDWR); + if (dev_fd < 0) { + perror("open"); + exit(EXIT_FAILURE); + } + + mapping = mmap(0, page_size, PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE, MAP_SHARED, + dev_fd, 0); + if (mapping == MAP_FAILED) { + perror("mmap"); + close(dev_fd); + exit(EXIT_FAILURE); + } + + /* Application interacts with pseudo-locked memory @mapping */ + + ret = munmap(mapping, page_size); + if (ret < 0) { + perror("munmap"); + close(dev_fd); + exit(EXIT_FAILURE); + } + + close(dev_fd); + exit(EXIT_SUCCESS); +} + +Locking between applications +---------------------------- + +Certain operations on the resctrl filesystem, composed of read/writes +to/from multiple files, must be atomic. + +As an example, the allocation of an exclusive reservation of L3 cache +involves: + + 1. Read the cbmmasks from each directory or the per-resource "bit_usage" + 2. Find a contiguous set of bits in the global CBM bitmask that is clear + in any of the directory cbmmasks + 3. Create a new directory + 4. Set the bits found in step 2 to the new directory "schemata" file + +If two applications attempt to allocate space concurrently then they can +end up allocating the same bits so the reservations are shared instead of +exclusive. + +To coordinate atomic operations on the resctrlfs and to avoid the problem +above, the following locking procedure is recommended: + +Locking is based on flock, which is available in libc and also as a shell +script command + +Write lock: + + A) Take flock(LOCK_EX) on /sys/fs/resctrl + B) Read/write the directory structure. + C) funlock + +Read lock: + + A) Take flock(LOCK_SH) on /sys/fs/resctrl + B) If success read the directory structure. + C) funlock + +Example with bash: + +# Atomically read directory structure +$ flock -s /sys/fs/resctrl/ find /sys/fs/resctrl + +# Read directory contents and create new subdirectory + +$ cat create-dir.sh +find /sys/fs/resctrl/ > output.txt +mask = function-of(output.txt) +mkdir /sys/fs/resctrl/newres/ +echo mask > /sys/fs/resctrl/newres/schemata + +$ flock /sys/fs/resctrl/ ./create-dir.sh + +Example with C: + +/* + * Example code do take advisory locks + * before accessing resctrl filesystem + */ +#include <sys/file.h> +#include <stdlib.h> + +void resctrl_take_shared_lock(int fd) +{ + int ret; + + /* take shared lock on resctrl filesystem */ + ret = flock(fd, LOCK_SH); + if (ret) { + perror("flock"); + exit(-1); + } +} + +void resctrl_take_exclusive_lock(int fd) +{ + int ret; + + /* release lock on resctrl filesystem */ + ret = flock(fd, LOCK_EX); + if (ret) { + perror("flock"); + exit(-1); + } +} + +void resctrl_release_lock(int fd) +{ + int ret; + + /* take shared lock on resctrl filesystem */ + ret = flock(fd, LOCK_UN); + if (ret) { + perror("flock"); + exit(-1); + } +} + +void main(void) +{ + int fd, ret; + + fd = open("/sys/fs/resctrl", O_DIRECTORY); + if (fd == -1) { + perror("open"); + exit(-1); + } + resctrl_take_shared_lock(fd); + /* code to read directory contents */ + resctrl_release_lock(fd); + + resctrl_take_exclusive_lock(fd); + /* code to read and write directory contents */ + resctrl_release_lock(fd); +} + +Examples for RDT Monitoring along with allocation usage: + +Reading monitored data +---------------------- +Reading an event file (for ex: mon_data/mon_L3_00/llc_occupancy) would +show the current snapshot of LLC occupancy of the corresponding MON +group or CTRL_MON group. + + +Example 1 (Monitor CTRL_MON group and subset of tasks in CTRL_MON group) +--------- +On a two socket machine (one L3 cache per socket) with just four bits +for cache bit masks + +# mount -t resctrl resctrl /sys/fs/resctrl +# cd /sys/fs/resctrl +# mkdir p0 p1 +# echo "L3:0=3;1=c" > /sys/fs/resctrl/p0/schemata +# echo "L3:0=3;1=3" > /sys/fs/resctrl/p1/schemata +# echo 5678 > p1/tasks +# echo 5679 > p1/tasks + +The default resource group is unmodified, so we have access to all parts +of all caches (its schemata file reads "L3:0=f;1=f"). + +Tasks that are under the control of group "p0" may only allocate from the +"lower" 50% on cache ID 0, and the "upper" 50% of cache ID 1. +Tasks in group "p1" use the "lower" 50% of cache on both sockets. + +Create monitor groups and assign a subset of tasks to each monitor group. + +# cd /sys/fs/resctrl/p1/mon_groups +# mkdir m11 m12 +# echo 5678 > m11/tasks +# echo 5679 > m12/tasks + +fetch data (data shown in bytes) + +# cat m11/mon_data/mon_L3_00/llc_occupancy +16234000 +# cat m11/mon_data/mon_L3_01/llc_occupancy +14789000 +# cat m12/mon_data/mon_L3_00/llc_occupancy +16789000 + +The parent ctrl_mon group shows the aggregated data. + +# cat /sys/fs/resctrl/p1/mon_data/mon_l3_00/llc_occupancy +31234000 + +Example 2 (Monitor a task from its creation) +--------- +On a two socket machine (one L3 cache per socket) + +# mount -t resctrl resctrl /sys/fs/resctrl +# cd /sys/fs/resctrl +# mkdir p0 p1 + +An RMID is allocated to the group once its created and hence the <cmd> +below is monitored from its creation. + +# echo $$ > /sys/fs/resctrl/p1/tasks +# <cmd> + +Fetch the data + +# cat /sys/fs/resctrl/p1/mon_data/mon_l3_00/llc_occupancy +31789000 + +Example 3 (Monitor without CAT support or before creating CAT groups) +--------- + +Assume a system like HSW has only CQM and no CAT support. In this case +the resctrl will still mount but cannot create CTRL_MON directories. +But user can create different MON groups within the root group thereby +able to monitor all tasks including kernel threads. + +This can also be used to profile jobs cache size footprint before being +able to allocate them to different allocation groups. + +# mount -t resctrl resctrl /sys/fs/resctrl +# cd /sys/fs/resctrl +# mkdir mon_groups/m01 +# mkdir mon_groups/m02 + +# echo 3478 > /sys/fs/resctrl/mon_groups/m01/tasks +# echo 2467 > /sys/fs/resctrl/mon_groups/m02/tasks + +Monitor the groups separately and also get per domain data. From the +below its apparent that the tasks are mostly doing work on +domain(socket) 0. + +# cat /sys/fs/resctrl/mon_groups/m01/mon_L3_00/llc_occupancy +31234000 +# cat /sys/fs/resctrl/mon_groups/m01/mon_L3_01/llc_occupancy +34555 +# cat /sys/fs/resctrl/mon_groups/m02/mon_L3_00/llc_occupancy +31234000 +# cat /sys/fs/resctrl/mon_groups/m02/mon_L3_01/llc_occupancy +32789 + + +Example 4 (Monitor real time tasks) +----------------------------------- + +A single socket system which has real time tasks running on cores 4-7 +and non real time tasks on other cpus. We want to monitor the cache +occupancy of the real time threads on these cores. + +# mount -t resctrl resctrl /sys/fs/resctrl +# cd /sys/fs/resctrl +# mkdir p1 + +Move the cpus 4-7 over to p1 +# echo f0 > p1/cpus + +View the llc occupancy snapshot + +# cat /sys/fs/resctrl/p1/mon_data/mon_L3_00/llc_occupancy +11234000 diff --git a/Documentation/x86/kernel-stacks b/Documentation/x86/kernel-stacks new file mode 100644 index 000000000..9a0aa4d3a --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/x86/kernel-stacks @@ -0,0 +1,141 @@ +Kernel stacks on x86-64 bit +--------------------------- + +Most of the text from Keith Owens, hacked by AK + +x86_64 page size (PAGE_SIZE) is 4K. + +Like all other architectures, x86_64 has a kernel stack for every +active thread. These thread stacks are THREAD_SIZE (2*PAGE_SIZE) big. +These stacks contain useful data as long as a thread is alive or a +zombie. While the thread is in user space the kernel stack is empty +except for the thread_info structure at the bottom. + +In addition to the per thread stacks, there are specialized stacks +associated with each CPU. These stacks are only used while the kernel +is in control on that CPU; when a CPU returns to user space the +specialized stacks contain no useful data. The main CPU stacks are: + +* Interrupt stack. IRQ_STACK_SIZE + + Used for external hardware interrupts. If this is the first external + hardware interrupt (i.e. not a nested hardware interrupt) then the + kernel switches from the current task to the interrupt stack. Like + the split thread and interrupt stacks on i386, this gives more room + for kernel interrupt processing without having to increase the size + of every per thread stack. + + The interrupt stack is also used when processing a softirq. + +Switching to the kernel interrupt stack is done by software based on a +per CPU interrupt nest counter. This is needed because x86-64 "IST" +hardware stacks cannot nest without races. + +x86_64 also has a feature which is not available on i386, the ability +to automatically switch to a new stack for designated events such as +double fault or NMI, which makes it easier to handle these unusual +events on x86_64. This feature is called the Interrupt Stack Table +(IST). There can be up to 7 IST entries per CPU. The IST code is an +index into the Task State Segment (TSS). The IST entries in the TSS +point to dedicated stacks; each stack can be a different size. + +An IST is selected by a non-zero value in the IST field of an +interrupt-gate descriptor. When an interrupt occurs and the hardware +loads such a descriptor, the hardware automatically sets the new stack +pointer based on the IST value, then invokes the interrupt handler. If +the interrupt came from user mode, then the interrupt handler prologue +will switch back to the per-thread stack. If software wants to allow +nested IST interrupts then the handler must adjust the IST values on +entry to and exit from the interrupt handler. (This is occasionally +done, e.g. for debug exceptions.) + +Events with different IST codes (i.e. with different stacks) can be +nested. For example, a debug interrupt can safely be interrupted by an +NMI. arch/x86_64/kernel/entry.S::paranoidentry adjusts the stack +pointers on entry to and exit from all IST events, in theory allowing +IST events with the same code to be nested. However in most cases, the +stack size allocated to an IST assumes no nesting for the same code. +If that assumption is ever broken then the stacks will become corrupt. + +The currently assigned IST stacks are :- + +* DOUBLEFAULT_STACK. EXCEPTION_STKSZ (PAGE_SIZE). + + Used for interrupt 8 - Double Fault Exception (#DF). + + Invoked when handling one exception causes another exception. Happens + when the kernel is very confused (e.g. kernel stack pointer corrupt). + Using a separate stack allows the kernel to recover from it well enough + in many cases to still output an oops. + +* NMI_STACK. EXCEPTION_STKSZ (PAGE_SIZE). + + Used for non-maskable interrupts (NMI). + + NMI can be delivered at any time, including when the kernel is in the + middle of switching stacks. Using IST for NMI events avoids making + assumptions about the previous state of the kernel stack. + +* DEBUG_STACK. DEBUG_STKSZ + + Used for hardware debug interrupts (interrupt 1) and for software + debug interrupts (INT3). + + When debugging a kernel, debug interrupts (both hardware and + software) can occur at any time. Using IST for these interrupts + avoids making assumptions about the previous state of the kernel + stack. + +* MCE_STACK. EXCEPTION_STKSZ (PAGE_SIZE). + + Used for interrupt 18 - Machine Check Exception (#MC). + + MCE can be delivered at any time, including when the kernel is in the + middle of switching stacks. Using IST for MCE events avoids making + assumptions about the previous state of the kernel stack. + +For more details see the Intel IA32 or AMD AMD64 architecture manuals. + + +Printing backtraces on x86 +-------------------------- + +The question about the '?' preceding function names in an x86 stacktrace +keeps popping up, here's an indepth explanation. It helps if the reader +stares at print_context_stack() and the whole machinery in and around +arch/x86/kernel/dumpstack.c. + +Adapted from Ingo's mail, Message-ID: <20150521101614.GA10889@gmail.com>: + +We always scan the full kernel stack for return addresses stored on +the kernel stack(s) [*], from stack top to stack bottom, and print out +anything that 'looks like' a kernel text address. + +If it fits into the frame pointer chain, we print it without a question +mark, knowing that it's part of the real backtrace. + +If the address does not fit into our expected frame pointer chain we +still print it, but we print a '?'. It can mean two things: + + - either the address is not part of the call chain: it's just stale + values on the kernel stack, from earlier function calls. This is + the common case. + + - or it is part of the call chain, but the frame pointer was not set + up properly within the function, so we don't recognize it. + +This way we will always print out the real call chain (plus a few more +entries), regardless of whether the frame pointer was set up correctly +or not - but in most cases we'll get the call chain right as well. The +entries printed are strictly in stack order, so you can deduce more +information from that as well. + +The most important property of this method is that we _never_ lose +information: we always strive to print _all_ addresses on the stack(s) +that look like kernel text addresses, so if debug information is wrong, +we still print out the real call chain as well - just with more question +marks than ideal. + +[*] For things like IRQ and IST stacks, we also scan those stacks, in + the right order, and try to cross from one stack into another + reconstructing the call chain. This works most of the time. diff --git a/Documentation/x86/mds.rst b/Documentation/x86/mds.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000..5d4330be2 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/x86/mds.rst @@ -0,0 +1,193 @@ +Microarchitectural Data Sampling (MDS) mitigation +================================================= + +.. _mds: + +Overview +-------- + +Microarchitectural Data Sampling (MDS) is a family of side channel attacks +on internal buffers in Intel CPUs. The variants are: + + - Microarchitectural Store Buffer Data Sampling (MSBDS) (CVE-2018-12126) + - Microarchitectural Fill Buffer Data Sampling (MFBDS) (CVE-2018-12130) + - Microarchitectural Load Port Data Sampling (MLPDS) (CVE-2018-12127) + - Microarchitectural Data Sampling Uncacheable Memory (MDSUM) (CVE-2019-11091) + +MSBDS leaks Store Buffer Entries which can be speculatively forwarded to a +dependent load (store-to-load forwarding) as an optimization. The forward +can also happen to a faulting or assisting load operation for a different +memory address, which can be exploited under certain conditions. Store +buffers are partitioned between Hyper-Threads so cross thread forwarding is +not possible. But if a thread enters or exits a sleep state the store +buffer is repartitioned which can expose data from one thread to the other. + +MFBDS leaks Fill Buffer Entries. Fill buffers are used internally to manage +L1 miss situations and to hold data which is returned or sent in response +to a memory or I/O operation. Fill buffers can forward data to a load +operation and also write data to the cache. When the fill buffer is +deallocated it can retain the stale data of the preceding operations which +can then be forwarded to a faulting or assisting load operation, which can +be exploited under certain conditions. Fill buffers are shared between +Hyper-Threads so cross thread leakage is possible. + +MLPDS leaks Load Port Data. Load ports are used to perform load operations +from memory or I/O. The received data is then forwarded to the register +file or a subsequent operation. In some implementations the Load Port can +contain stale data from a previous operation which can be forwarded to +faulting or assisting loads under certain conditions, which again can be +exploited eventually. Load ports are shared between Hyper-Threads so cross +thread leakage is possible. + +MDSUM is a special case of MSBDS, MFBDS and MLPDS. An uncacheable load from +memory that takes a fault or assist can leave data in a microarchitectural +structure that may later be observed using one of the same methods used by +MSBDS, MFBDS or MLPDS. + +Exposure assumptions +-------------------- + +It is assumed that attack code resides in user space or in a guest with one +exception. The rationale behind this assumption is that the code construct +needed for exploiting MDS requires: + + - to control the load to trigger a fault or assist + + - to have a disclosure gadget which exposes the speculatively accessed + data for consumption through a side channel. + + - to control the pointer through which the disclosure gadget exposes the + data + +The existence of such a construct in the kernel cannot be excluded with +100% certainty, but the complexity involved makes it extremly unlikely. + +There is one exception, which is untrusted BPF. The functionality of +untrusted BPF is limited, but it needs to be thoroughly investigated +whether it can be used to create such a construct. + + +Mitigation strategy +------------------- + +All variants have the same mitigation strategy at least for the single CPU +thread case (SMT off): Force the CPU to clear the affected buffers. + +This is achieved by using the otherwise unused and obsolete VERW +instruction in combination with a microcode update. The microcode clears +the affected CPU buffers when the VERW instruction is executed. + +For virtualization there are two ways to achieve CPU buffer +clearing. Either the modified VERW instruction or via the L1D Flush +command. The latter is issued when L1TF mitigation is enabled so the extra +VERW can be avoided. If the CPU is not affected by L1TF then VERW needs to +be issued. + +If the VERW instruction with the supplied segment selector argument is +executed on a CPU without the microcode update there is no side effect +other than a small number of pointlessly wasted CPU cycles. + +This does not protect against cross Hyper-Thread attacks except for MSBDS +which is only exploitable cross Hyper-thread when one of the Hyper-Threads +enters a C-state. + +The kernel provides a function to invoke the buffer clearing: + + mds_clear_cpu_buffers() + +The mitigation is invoked on kernel/userspace, hypervisor/guest and C-state +(idle) transitions. + +As a special quirk to address virtualization scenarios where the host has +the microcode updated, but the hypervisor does not (yet) expose the +MD_CLEAR CPUID bit to guests, the kernel issues the VERW instruction in the +hope that it might actually clear the buffers. The state is reflected +accordingly. + +According to current knowledge additional mitigations inside the kernel +itself are not required because the necessary gadgets to expose the leaked +data cannot be controlled in a way which allows exploitation from malicious +user space or VM guests. + +Kernel internal mitigation modes +-------------------------------- + + ======= ============================================================ + off Mitigation is disabled. Either the CPU is not affected or + mds=off is supplied on the kernel command line + + full Mitigation is enabled. CPU is affected and MD_CLEAR is + advertised in CPUID. + + vmwerv Mitigation is enabled. CPU is affected and MD_CLEAR is not + advertised in CPUID. That is mainly for virtualization + scenarios where the host has the updated microcode but the + hypervisor does not expose MD_CLEAR in CPUID. It's a best + effort approach without guarantee. + ======= ============================================================ + +If the CPU is affected and mds=off is not supplied on the kernel command +line then the kernel selects the appropriate mitigation mode depending on +the availability of the MD_CLEAR CPUID bit. + +Mitigation points +----------------- + +1. Return to user space +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + + When transitioning from kernel to user space the CPU buffers are flushed + on affected CPUs when the mitigation is not disabled on the kernel + command line. The migitation is enabled through the static key + mds_user_clear. + + The mitigation is invoked in prepare_exit_to_usermode() which covers + all but one of the kernel to user space transitions. The exception + is when we return from a Non Maskable Interrupt (NMI), which is + handled directly in do_nmi(). + + (The reason that NMI is special is that prepare_exit_to_usermode() can + enable IRQs. In NMI context, NMIs are blocked, and we don't want to + enable IRQs with NMIs blocked.) + + +2. C-State transition +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + + When a CPU goes idle and enters a C-State the CPU buffers need to be + cleared on affected CPUs when SMT is active. This addresses the + repartitioning of the store buffer when one of the Hyper-Threads enters + a C-State. + + When SMT is inactive, i.e. either the CPU does not support it or all + sibling threads are offline CPU buffer clearing is not required. + + The idle clearing is enabled on CPUs which are only affected by MSBDS + and not by any other MDS variant. The other MDS variants cannot be + protected against cross Hyper-Thread attacks because the Fill Buffer and + the Load Ports are shared. So on CPUs affected by other variants, the + idle clearing would be a window dressing exercise and is therefore not + activated. + + The invocation is controlled by the static key mds_idle_clear which is + switched depending on the chosen mitigation mode and the SMT state of + the system. + + The buffer clear is only invoked before entering the C-State to prevent + that stale data from the idling CPU from spilling to the Hyper-Thread + sibling after the store buffer got repartitioned and all entries are + available to the non idle sibling. + + When coming out of idle the store buffer is partitioned again so each + sibling has half of it available. The back from idle CPU could be then + speculatively exposed to contents of the sibling. The buffers are + flushed either on exit to user space or on VMENTER so malicious code + in user space or the guest cannot speculatively access them. + + The mitigation is hooked into all variants of halt()/mwait(), but does + not cover the legacy ACPI IO-Port mechanism because the ACPI idle driver + has been superseded by the intel_idle driver around 2010 and is + preferred on all affected CPUs which are expected to gain the MD_CLEAR + functionality in microcode. Aside of that the IO-Port mechanism is a + legacy interface which is only used on older systems which are either + not affected or do not receive microcode updates anymore. diff --git a/Documentation/x86/microcode.txt b/Documentation/x86/microcode.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000..79fdb4a81 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/x86/microcode.txt @@ -0,0 +1,136 @@ + The Linux Microcode Loader + +Authors: Fenghua Yu <fenghua.yu@intel.com> + Borislav Petkov <bp@suse.de> + +The kernel has a x86 microcode loading facility which is supposed to +provide microcode loading methods in the OS. Potential use cases are +updating the microcode on platforms beyond the OEM End-Of-Life support, +and updating the microcode on long-running systems without rebooting. + +The loader supports three loading methods: + +1. Early load microcode +======================= + +The kernel can update microcode very early during boot. Loading +microcode early can fix CPU issues before they are observed during +kernel boot time. + +The microcode is stored in an initrd file. During boot, it is read from +it and loaded into the CPU cores. + +The format of the combined initrd image is microcode in (uncompressed) +cpio format followed by the (possibly compressed) initrd image. The +loader parses the combined initrd image during boot. + +The microcode files in cpio name space are: + +on Intel: kernel/x86/microcode/GenuineIntel.bin +on AMD : kernel/x86/microcode/AuthenticAMD.bin + +During BSP (BootStrapping Processor) boot (pre-SMP), the kernel +scans the microcode file in the initrd. If microcode matching the +CPU is found, it will be applied in the BSP and later on in all APs +(Application Processors). + +The loader also saves the matching microcode for the CPU in memory. +Thus, the cached microcode patch is applied when CPUs resume from a +sleep state. + +Here's a crude example how to prepare an initrd with microcode (this is +normally done automatically by the distribution, when recreating the +initrd, so you don't really have to do it yourself. It is documented +here for future reference only). + +--- + #!/bin/bash + + if [ -z "$1" ]; then + echo "You need to supply an initrd file" + exit 1 + fi + + INITRD="$1" + + DSTDIR=kernel/x86/microcode + TMPDIR=/tmp/initrd + + rm -rf $TMPDIR + + mkdir $TMPDIR + cd $TMPDIR + mkdir -p $DSTDIR + + if [ -d /lib/firmware/amd-ucode ]; then + cat /lib/firmware/amd-ucode/microcode_amd*.bin > $DSTDIR/AuthenticAMD.bin + fi + + if [ -d /lib/firmware/intel-ucode ]; then + cat /lib/firmware/intel-ucode/* > $DSTDIR/GenuineIntel.bin + fi + + find . | cpio -o -H newc >../ucode.cpio + cd .. + mv $INITRD $INITRD.orig + cat ucode.cpio $INITRD.orig > $INITRD + + rm -rf $TMPDIR +--- + +The system needs to have the microcode packages installed into +/lib/firmware or you need to fixup the paths above if yours are +somewhere else and/or you've downloaded them directly from the processor +vendor's site. + +2. Late loading +=============== + +There are two legacy user space interfaces to load microcode, either through +/dev/cpu/microcode or through /sys/devices/system/cpu/microcode/reload file +in sysfs. + +The /dev/cpu/microcode method is deprecated because it needs a special +userspace tool for that. + +The easier method is simply installing the microcode packages your distro +supplies and running: + +# echo 1 > /sys/devices/system/cpu/microcode/reload + +as root. + +The loading mechanism looks for microcode blobs in +/lib/firmware/{intel-ucode,amd-ucode}. The default distro installation +packages already put them there. + +3. Builtin microcode +==================== + +The loader supports also loading of a builtin microcode supplied through +the regular builtin firmware method CONFIG_EXTRA_FIRMWARE. Only 64-bit is +currently supported. + +Here's an example: + +CONFIG_EXTRA_FIRMWARE="intel-ucode/06-3a-09 amd-ucode/microcode_amd_fam15h.bin" +CONFIG_EXTRA_FIRMWARE_DIR="/lib/firmware" + +This basically means, you have the following tree structure locally: + +/lib/firmware/ +|-- amd-ucode +... +| |-- microcode_amd_fam15h.bin +... +|-- intel-ucode +... +| |-- 06-3a-09 +... + +so that the build system can find those files and integrate them into +the final kernel image. The early loader finds them and applies them. + +Needless to say, this method is not the most flexible one because it +requires rebuilding the kernel each time updated microcode from the CPU +vendor is available. diff --git a/Documentation/x86/mtrr.txt b/Documentation/x86/mtrr.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000..dc3e70391 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/x86/mtrr.txt @@ -0,0 +1,329 @@ +MTRR (Memory Type Range Register) control + +Richard Gooch <rgooch@atnf.csiro.au> - 3 Jun 1999 +Luis R. Rodriguez <mcgrof@do-not-panic.com> - April 9, 2015 + +=============================================================================== +Phasing out MTRR use + +MTRR use is replaced on modern x86 hardware with PAT. Direct MTRR use by +drivers on Linux is now completely phased out, device drivers should use +arch_phys_wc_add() in combination with ioremap_wc() to make MTRR effective on +non-PAT systems while a no-op but equally effective on PAT enabled systems. + +Even if Linux does not use MTRRs directly, some x86 platform firmware may still +set up MTRRs early before booting the OS. They do this as some platform +firmware may still have implemented access to MTRRs which would be controlled +and handled by the platform firmware directly. An example of platform use of +MTRRs is through the use of SMI handlers, one case could be for fan control, +the platform code would need uncachable access to some of its fan control +registers. Such platform access does not need any Operating System MTRR code in +place other than mtrr_type_lookup() to ensure any OS specific mapping requests +are aligned with platform MTRR setup. If MTRRs are only set up by the platform +firmware code though and the OS does not make any specific MTRR mapping +requests mtrr_type_lookup() should always return MTRR_TYPE_INVALID. + +For details refer to Documentation/x86/pat.txt. + +=============================================================================== + + On Intel P6 family processors (Pentium Pro, Pentium II and later) + the Memory Type Range Registers (MTRRs) may be used to control + processor access to memory ranges. This is most useful when you have + a video (VGA) card on a PCI or AGP bus. Enabling write-combining + allows bus write transfers to be combined into a larger transfer + before bursting over the PCI/AGP bus. This can increase performance + of image write operations 2.5 times or more. + + The Cyrix 6x86, 6x86MX and M II processors have Address Range + Registers (ARRs) which provide a similar functionality to MTRRs. For + these, the ARRs are used to emulate the MTRRs. + + The AMD K6-2 (stepping 8 and above) and K6-3 processors have two + MTRRs. These are supported. The AMD Athlon family provide 8 Intel + style MTRRs. + + The Centaur C6 (WinChip) has 8 MCRs, allowing write-combining. These + are supported. + + The VIA Cyrix III and VIA C3 CPUs offer 8 Intel style MTRRs. + + The CONFIG_MTRR option creates a /proc/mtrr file which may be used + to manipulate your MTRRs. Typically the X server should use + this. This should have a reasonably generic interface so that + similar control registers on other processors can be easily + supported. + + +There are two interfaces to /proc/mtrr: one is an ASCII interface +which allows you to read and write. The other is an ioctl() +interface. The ASCII interface is meant for administration. The +ioctl() interface is meant for C programs (i.e. the X server). The +interfaces are described below, with sample commands and C code. + +=============================================================================== +Reading MTRRs from the shell: + +% cat /proc/mtrr +reg00: base=0x00000000 ( 0MB), size= 128MB: write-back, count=1 +reg01: base=0x08000000 ( 128MB), size= 64MB: write-back, count=1 +=============================================================================== +Creating MTRRs from the C-shell: +# echo "base=0xf8000000 size=0x400000 type=write-combining" >! /proc/mtrr +or if you use bash: +# echo "base=0xf8000000 size=0x400000 type=write-combining" >| /proc/mtrr + +And the result thereof: +% cat /proc/mtrr +reg00: base=0x00000000 ( 0MB), size= 128MB: write-back, count=1 +reg01: base=0x08000000 ( 128MB), size= 64MB: write-back, count=1 +reg02: base=0xf8000000 (3968MB), size= 4MB: write-combining, count=1 + +This is for video RAM at base address 0xf8000000 and size 4 megabytes. To +find out your base address, you need to look at the output of your X +server, which tells you where the linear framebuffer address is. A +typical line that you may get is: + +(--) S3: PCI: 968 rev 0, Linear FB @ 0xf8000000 + +Note that you should only use the value from the X server, as it may +move the framebuffer base address, so the only value you can trust is +that reported by the X server. + +To find out the size of your framebuffer (what, you don't actually +know?), the following line will tell you: + +(--) S3: videoram: 4096k + +That's 4 megabytes, which is 0x400000 bytes (in hexadecimal). +A patch is being written for XFree86 which will make this automatic: +in other words the X server will manipulate /proc/mtrr using the +ioctl() interface, so users won't have to do anything. If you use a +commercial X server, lobby your vendor to add support for MTRRs. +=============================================================================== +Creating overlapping MTRRs: + +%echo "base=0xfb000000 size=0x1000000 type=write-combining" >/proc/mtrr +%echo "base=0xfb000000 size=0x1000 type=uncachable" >/proc/mtrr + +And the results: cat /proc/mtrr +reg00: base=0x00000000 ( 0MB), size= 64MB: write-back, count=1 +reg01: base=0xfb000000 (4016MB), size= 16MB: write-combining, count=1 +reg02: base=0xfb000000 (4016MB), size= 4kB: uncachable, count=1 + +Some cards (especially Voodoo Graphics boards) need this 4 kB area +excluded from the beginning of the region because it is used for +registers. + +NOTE: You can only create type=uncachable region, if the first +region that you created is type=write-combining. +=============================================================================== +Removing MTRRs from the C-shell: +% echo "disable=2" >! /proc/mtrr +or using bash: +% echo "disable=2" >| /proc/mtrr +=============================================================================== +Reading MTRRs from a C program using ioctl()'s: + +/* mtrr-show.c + + Source file for mtrr-show (example program to show MTRRs using ioctl()'s) + + Copyright (C) 1997-1998 Richard Gooch + + This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify + it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by + the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or + (at your option) any later version. + + This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, + but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of + MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the + GNU General Public License for more details. + + You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License + along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software + Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. + + Richard Gooch may be reached by email at rgooch@atnf.csiro.au + The postal address is: + Richard Gooch, c/o ATNF, P. O. Box 76, Epping, N.S.W., 2121, Australia. +*/ + +/* + This program will use an ioctl() on /proc/mtrr to show the current MTRR + settings. This is an alternative to reading /proc/mtrr. + + + Written by Richard Gooch 17-DEC-1997 + + Last updated by Richard Gooch 2-MAY-1998 + + +*/ +#include <stdio.h> +#include <stdlib.h> +#include <string.h> +#include <sys/types.h> +#include <sys/stat.h> +#include <fcntl.h> +#include <sys/ioctl.h> +#include <errno.h> +#include <asm/mtrr.h> + +#define TRUE 1 +#define FALSE 0 +#define ERRSTRING strerror (errno) + +static char *mtrr_strings[MTRR_NUM_TYPES] = +{ + "uncachable", /* 0 */ + "write-combining", /* 1 */ + "?", /* 2 */ + "?", /* 3 */ + "write-through", /* 4 */ + "write-protect", /* 5 */ + "write-back", /* 6 */ +}; + +int main () +{ + int fd; + struct mtrr_gentry gentry; + + if ( ( fd = open ("/proc/mtrr", O_RDONLY, 0) ) == -1 ) + { + if (errno == ENOENT) + { + fputs ("/proc/mtrr not found: not supported or you don't have a PPro?\n", + stderr); + exit (1); + } + fprintf (stderr, "Error opening /proc/mtrr\t%s\n", ERRSTRING); + exit (2); + } + for (gentry.regnum = 0; ioctl (fd, MTRRIOC_GET_ENTRY, &gentry) == 0; + ++gentry.regnum) + { + if (gentry.size < 1) + { + fprintf (stderr, "Register: %u disabled\n", gentry.regnum); + continue; + } + fprintf (stderr, "Register: %u base: 0x%lx size: 0x%lx type: %s\n", + gentry.regnum, gentry.base, gentry.size, + mtrr_strings[gentry.type]); + } + if (errno == EINVAL) exit (0); + fprintf (stderr, "Error doing ioctl(2) on /dev/mtrr\t%s\n", ERRSTRING); + exit (3); +} /* End Function main */ +=============================================================================== +Creating MTRRs from a C programme using ioctl()'s: + +/* mtrr-add.c + + Source file for mtrr-add (example programme to add an MTRRs using ioctl()) + + Copyright (C) 1997-1998 Richard Gooch + + This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify + it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by + the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or + (at your option) any later version. + + This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, + but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of + MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the + GNU General Public License for more details. + + You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License + along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software + Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. + + Richard Gooch may be reached by email at rgooch@atnf.csiro.au + The postal address is: + Richard Gooch, c/o ATNF, P. O. Box 76, Epping, N.S.W., 2121, Australia. +*/ + +/* + This programme will use an ioctl() on /proc/mtrr to add an entry. The first + available mtrr is used. This is an alternative to writing /proc/mtrr. + + + Written by Richard Gooch 17-DEC-1997 + + Last updated by Richard Gooch 2-MAY-1998 + + +*/ +#include <stdio.h> +#include <string.h> +#include <stdlib.h> +#include <unistd.h> +#include <sys/types.h> +#include <sys/stat.h> +#include <fcntl.h> +#include <sys/ioctl.h> +#include <errno.h> +#include <asm/mtrr.h> + +#define TRUE 1 +#define FALSE 0 +#define ERRSTRING strerror (errno) + +static char *mtrr_strings[MTRR_NUM_TYPES] = +{ + "uncachable", /* 0 */ + "write-combining", /* 1 */ + "?", /* 2 */ + "?", /* 3 */ + "write-through", /* 4 */ + "write-protect", /* 5 */ + "write-back", /* 6 */ +}; + +int main (int argc, char **argv) +{ + int fd; + struct mtrr_sentry sentry; + + if (argc != 4) + { + fprintf (stderr, "Usage:\tmtrr-add base size type\n"); + exit (1); + } + sentry.base = strtoul (argv[1], NULL, 0); + sentry.size = strtoul (argv[2], NULL, 0); + for (sentry.type = 0; sentry.type < MTRR_NUM_TYPES; ++sentry.type) + { + if (strcmp (argv[3], mtrr_strings[sentry.type]) == 0) break; + } + if (sentry.type >= MTRR_NUM_TYPES) + { + fprintf (stderr, "Illegal type: \"%s\"\n", argv[3]); + exit (2); + } + if ( ( fd = open ("/proc/mtrr", O_WRONLY, 0) ) == -1 ) + { + if (errno == ENOENT) + { + fputs ("/proc/mtrr not found: not supported or you don't have a PPro?\n", + stderr); + exit (3); + } + fprintf (stderr, "Error opening /proc/mtrr\t%s\n", ERRSTRING); + exit (4); + } + if (ioctl (fd, MTRRIOC_ADD_ENTRY, &sentry) == -1) + { + fprintf (stderr, "Error doing ioctl(2) on /dev/mtrr\t%s\n", ERRSTRING); + exit (5); + } + fprintf (stderr, "Sleeping for 5 seconds so you can see the new entry\n"); + sleep (5); + close (fd); + fputs ("I've just closed /proc/mtrr so now the new entry should be gone\n", + stderr); +} /* End Function main */ +=============================================================================== diff --git a/Documentation/x86/orc-unwinder.txt b/Documentation/x86/orc-unwinder.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000..cd4b29be2 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/x86/orc-unwinder.txt @@ -0,0 +1,179 @@ +ORC unwinder +============ + +Overview +-------- + +The kernel CONFIG_UNWINDER_ORC option enables the ORC unwinder, which is +similar in concept to a DWARF unwinder. The difference is that the +format of the ORC data is much simpler than DWARF, which in turn allows +the ORC unwinder to be much simpler and faster. + +The ORC data consists of unwind tables which are generated by objtool. +They contain out-of-band data which is used by the in-kernel ORC +unwinder. Objtool generates the ORC data by first doing compile-time +stack metadata validation (CONFIG_STACK_VALIDATION). After analyzing +all the code paths of a .o file, it determines information about the +stack state at each instruction address in the file and outputs that +information to the .orc_unwind and .orc_unwind_ip sections. + +The per-object ORC sections are combined at link time and are sorted and +post-processed at boot time. The unwinder uses the resulting data to +correlate instruction addresses with their stack states at run time. + + +ORC vs frame pointers +--------------------- + +With frame pointers enabled, GCC adds instrumentation code to every +function in the kernel. The kernel's .text size increases by about +3.2%, resulting in a broad kernel-wide slowdown. Measurements by Mel +Gorman [1] have shown a slowdown of 5-10% for some workloads. + +In contrast, the ORC unwinder has no effect on text size or runtime +performance, because the debuginfo is out of band. So if you disable +frame pointers and enable the ORC unwinder, you get a nice performance +improvement across the board, and still have reliable stack traces. + +Ingo Molnar says: + + "Note that it's not just a performance improvement, but also an + instruction cache locality improvement: 3.2% .text savings almost + directly transform into a similarly sized reduction in cache + footprint. That can transform to even higher speedups for workloads + whose cache locality is borderline." + +Another benefit of ORC compared to frame pointers is that it can +reliably unwind across interrupts and exceptions. Frame pointer based +unwinds can sometimes skip the caller of the interrupted function, if it +was a leaf function or if the interrupt hit before the frame pointer was +saved. + +The main disadvantage of the ORC unwinder compared to frame pointers is +that it needs more memory to store the ORC unwind tables: roughly 2-4MB +depending on the kernel config. + + +ORC vs DWARF +------------ + +ORC debuginfo's advantage over DWARF itself is that it's much simpler. +It gets rid of the complex DWARF CFI state machine and also gets rid of +the tracking of unnecessary registers. This allows the unwinder to be +much simpler, meaning fewer bugs, which is especially important for +mission critical oops code. + +The simpler debuginfo format also enables the unwinder to be much faster +than DWARF, which is important for perf and lockdep. In a basic +performance test by Jiri Slaby [2], the ORC unwinder was about 20x +faster than an out-of-tree DWARF unwinder. (Note: That measurement was +taken before some performance tweaks were added, which doubled +performance, so the speedup over DWARF may be closer to 40x.) + +The ORC data format does have a few downsides compared to DWARF. ORC +unwind tables take up ~50% more RAM (+1.3MB on an x86 defconfig kernel) +than DWARF-based eh_frame tables. + +Another potential downside is that, as GCC evolves, it's conceivable +that the ORC data may end up being *too* simple to describe the state of +the stack for certain optimizations. But IMO this is unlikely because +GCC saves the frame pointer for any unusual stack adjustments it does, +so I suspect we'll really only ever need to keep track of the stack +pointer and the frame pointer between call frames. But even if we do +end up having to track all the registers DWARF tracks, at least we will +still be able to control the format, e.g. no complex state machines. + + +ORC unwind table generation +--------------------------- + +The ORC data is generated by objtool. With the existing compile-time +stack metadata validation feature, objtool already follows all code +paths, and so it already has all the information it needs to be able to +generate ORC data from scratch. So it's an easy step to go from stack +validation to ORC data generation. + +It should be possible to instead generate the ORC data with a simple +tool which converts DWARF to ORC data. However, such a solution would +be incomplete due to the kernel's extensive use of asm, inline asm, and +special sections like exception tables. + +That could be rectified by manually annotating those special code paths +using GNU assembler .cfi annotations in .S files, and homegrown +annotations for inline asm in .c files. But asm annotations were tried +in the past and were found to be unmaintainable. They were often +incorrect/incomplete and made the code harder to read and keep updated. +And based on looking at glibc code, annotating inline asm in .c files +might be even worse. + +Objtool still needs a few annotations, but only in code which does +unusual things to the stack like entry code. And even then, far fewer +annotations are needed than what DWARF would need, so they're much more +maintainable than DWARF CFI annotations. + +So the advantages of using objtool to generate ORC data are that it +gives more accurate debuginfo, with very few annotations. It also +insulates the kernel from toolchain bugs which can be very painful to +deal with in the kernel since we often have to workaround issues in +older versions of the toolchain for years. + +The downside is that the unwinder now becomes dependent on objtool's +ability to reverse engineer GCC code flow. If GCC optimizations become +too complicated for objtool to follow, the ORC data generation might +stop working or become incomplete. (It's worth noting that livepatch +already has such a dependency on objtool's ability to follow GCC code +flow.) + +If newer versions of GCC come up with some optimizations which break +objtool, we may need to revisit the current implementation. Some +possible solutions would be asking GCC to make the optimizations more +palatable, or having objtool use DWARF as an additional input, or +creating a GCC plugin to assist objtool with its analysis. But for now, +objtool follows GCC code quite well. + + +Unwinder implementation details +------------------------------- + +Objtool generates the ORC data by integrating with the compile-time +stack metadata validation feature, which is described in detail in +tools/objtool/Documentation/stack-validation.txt. After analyzing all +the code paths of a .o file, it creates an array of orc_entry structs, +and a parallel array of instruction addresses associated with those +structs, and writes them to the .orc_unwind and .orc_unwind_ip sections +respectively. + +The ORC data is split into the two arrays for performance reasons, to +make the searchable part of the data (.orc_unwind_ip) more compact. The +arrays are sorted in parallel at boot time. + +Performance is further improved by the use of a fast lookup table which +is created at runtime. The fast lookup table associates a given address +with a range of indices for the .orc_unwind table, so that only a small +subset of the table needs to be searched. + + +Etymology +--------- + +Orcs, fearsome creatures of medieval folklore, are the Dwarves' natural +enemies. Similarly, the ORC unwinder was created in opposition to the +complexity and slowness of DWARF. + +"Although Orcs rarely consider multiple solutions to a problem, they do +excel at getting things done because they are creatures of action, not +thought." [3] Similarly, unlike the esoteric DWARF unwinder, the +veracious ORC unwinder wastes no time or siloconic effort decoding +variable-length zero-extended unsigned-integer byte-coded +state-machine-based debug information entries. + +Similar to how Orcs frequently unravel the well-intentioned plans of +their adversaries, the ORC unwinder frequently unravels stacks with +brutal, unyielding efficiency. + +ORC stands for Oops Rewind Capability. + + +[1] https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20170602104048.jkkzssljsompjdwy@suse.de +[2] https://lkml.kernel.org/r/d2ca5435-6386-29b8-db87-7f227c2b713a@suse.cz +[3] http://dustin.wikidot.com/half-orcs-and-orcs diff --git a/Documentation/x86/pat.txt b/Documentation/x86/pat.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000..2a4ee6302 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/x86/pat.txt @@ -0,0 +1,230 @@ + +PAT (Page Attribute Table) + +x86 Page Attribute Table (PAT) allows for setting the memory attribute at the +page level granularity. PAT is complementary to the MTRR settings which allows +for setting of memory types over physical address ranges. However, PAT is +more flexible than MTRR due to its capability to set attributes at page level +and also due to the fact that there are no hardware limitations on number of +such attribute settings allowed. Added flexibility comes with guidelines for +not having memory type aliasing for the same physical memory with multiple +virtual addresses. + +PAT allows for different types of memory attributes. The most commonly used +ones that will be supported at this time are Write-back, Uncached, +Write-combined, Write-through and Uncached Minus. + + +PAT APIs +-------- + +There are many different APIs in the kernel that allows setting of memory +attributes at the page level. In order to avoid aliasing, these interfaces +should be used thoughtfully. Below is a table of interfaces available, +their intended usage and their memory attribute relationships. Internally, +these APIs use a reserve_memtype()/free_memtype() interface on the physical +address range to avoid any aliasing. + + +------------------------------------------------------------------- +API | RAM | ACPI,... | Reserved/Holes | +-----------------------|----------|------------|------------------| + | | | | +ioremap | -- | UC- | UC- | + | | | | +ioremap_cache | -- | WB | WB | + | | | | +ioremap_uc | -- | UC | UC | + | | | | +ioremap_nocache | -- | UC- | UC- | + | | | | +ioremap_wc | -- | -- | WC | + | | | | +ioremap_wt | -- | -- | WT | + | | | | +set_memory_uc | UC- | -- | -- | + set_memory_wb | | | | + | | | | +set_memory_wc | WC | -- | -- | + set_memory_wb | | | | + | | | | +set_memory_wt | WT | -- | -- | + set_memory_wb | | | | + | | | | +pci sysfs resource | -- | -- | UC- | + | | | | +pci sysfs resource_wc | -- | -- | WC | + is IORESOURCE_PREFETCH| | | | + | | | | +pci proc | -- | -- | UC- | + !PCIIOC_WRITE_COMBINE | | | | + | | | | +pci proc | -- | -- | WC | + PCIIOC_WRITE_COMBINE | | | | + | | | | +/dev/mem | -- | WB/WC/UC- | WB/WC/UC- | + read-write | | | | + | | | | +/dev/mem | -- | UC- | UC- | + mmap SYNC flag | | | | + | | | | +/dev/mem | -- | WB/WC/UC- | WB/WC/UC- | + mmap !SYNC flag | |(from exist-| (from exist- | + and | | ing alias)| ing alias) | + any alias to this area| | | | + | | | | +/dev/mem | -- | WB | WB | + mmap !SYNC flag | | | | + no alias to this area | | | | + and | | | | + MTRR says WB | | | | + | | | | +/dev/mem | -- | -- | UC- | + mmap !SYNC flag | | | | + no alias to this area | | | | + and | | | | + MTRR says !WB | | | | + | | | | +------------------------------------------------------------------- + +Advanced APIs for drivers +------------------------- +A. Exporting pages to users with remap_pfn_range, io_remap_pfn_range, +vm_insert_pfn + +Drivers wanting to export some pages to userspace do it by using mmap +interface and a combination of +1) pgprot_noncached() +2) io_remap_pfn_range() or remap_pfn_range() or vm_insert_pfn() + +With PAT support, a new API pgprot_writecombine is being added. So, drivers can +continue to use the above sequence, with either pgprot_noncached() or +pgprot_writecombine() in step 1, followed by step 2. + +In addition, step 2 internally tracks the region as UC or WC in memtype +list in order to ensure no conflicting mapping. + +Note that this set of APIs only works with IO (non RAM) regions. If driver +wants to export a RAM region, it has to do set_memory_uc() or set_memory_wc() +as step 0 above and also track the usage of those pages and use set_memory_wb() +before the page is freed to free pool. + +MTRR effects on PAT / non-PAT systems +------------------------------------- + +The following table provides the effects of using write-combining MTRRs when +using ioremap*() calls on x86 for both non-PAT and PAT systems. Ideally +mtrr_add() usage will be phased out in favor of arch_phys_wc_add() which will +be a no-op on PAT enabled systems. The region over which a arch_phys_wc_add() +is made, should already have been ioremapped with WC attributes or PAT entries, +this can be done by using ioremap_wc() / set_memory_wc(). Devices which +combine areas of IO memory desired to remain uncacheable with areas where +write-combining is desirable should consider use of ioremap_uc() followed by +set_memory_wc() to white-list effective write-combined areas. Such use is +nevertheless discouraged as the effective memory type is considered +implementation defined, yet this strategy can be used as last resort on devices +with size-constrained regions where otherwise MTRR write-combining would +otherwise not be effective. + +---------------------------------------------------------------------- +MTRR Non-PAT PAT Linux ioremap value Effective memory type +---------------------------------------------------------------------- + Non-PAT | PAT + PAT + |PCD + ||PWT + ||| +WC 000 WB _PAGE_CACHE_MODE_WB WC | WC +WC 001 WC _PAGE_CACHE_MODE_WC WC* | WC +WC 010 UC- _PAGE_CACHE_MODE_UC_MINUS WC* | UC +WC 011 UC _PAGE_CACHE_MODE_UC UC | UC +---------------------------------------------------------------------- + +(*) denotes implementation defined and is discouraged + +Notes: + +-- in the above table mean "Not suggested usage for the API". Some of the --'s +are strictly enforced by the kernel. Some others are not really enforced +today, but may be enforced in future. + +For ioremap and pci access through /sys or /proc - The actual type returned +can be more restrictive, in case of any existing aliasing for that address. +For example: If there is an existing uncached mapping, a new ioremap_wc can +return uncached mapping in place of write-combine requested. + +set_memory_[uc|wc|wt] and set_memory_wb should be used in pairs, where driver +will first make a region uc, wc or wt and switch it back to wb after use. + +Over time writes to /proc/mtrr will be deprecated in favor of using PAT based +interfaces. Users writing to /proc/mtrr are suggested to use above interfaces. + +Drivers should use ioremap_[uc|wc] to access PCI BARs with [uc|wc] access +types. + +Drivers should use set_memory_[uc|wc|wt] to set access type for RAM ranges. + + +PAT debugging +------------- + +With CONFIG_DEBUG_FS enabled, PAT memtype list can be examined by + +# mount -t debugfs debugfs /sys/kernel/debug +# cat /sys/kernel/debug/x86/pat_memtype_list +PAT memtype list: +uncached-minus @ 0x7fadf000-0x7fae0000 +uncached-minus @ 0x7fb19000-0x7fb1a000 +uncached-minus @ 0x7fb1a000-0x7fb1b000 +uncached-minus @ 0x7fb1b000-0x7fb1c000 +uncached-minus @ 0x7fb1c000-0x7fb1d000 +uncached-minus @ 0x7fb1d000-0x7fb1e000 +uncached-minus @ 0x7fb1e000-0x7fb25000 +uncached-minus @ 0x7fb25000-0x7fb26000 +uncached-minus @ 0x7fb26000-0x7fb27000 +uncached-minus @ 0x7fb27000-0x7fb28000 +uncached-minus @ 0x7fb28000-0x7fb2e000 +uncached-minus @ 0x7fb2e000-0x7fb2f000 +uncached-minus @ 0x7fb2f000-0x7fb30000 +uncached-minus @ 0x7fb31000-0x7fb32000 +uncached-minus @ 0x80000000-0x90000000 + +This list shows physical address ranges and various PAT settings used to +access those physical address ranges. + +Another, more verbose way of getting PAT related debug messages is with +"debugpat" boot parameter. With this parameter, various debug messages are +printed to dmesg log. + +PAT Initialization +------------------ + +The following table describes how PAT is initialized under various +configurations. The PAT MSR must be updated by Linux in order to support WC +and WT attributes. Otherwise, the PAT MSR has the value programmed in it +by the firmware. Note, Xen enables WC attribute in the PAT MSR for guests. + + MTRR PAT Call Sequence PAT State PAT MSR + ========================================================= + E E MTRR -> PAT init Enabled OS + E D MTRR -> PAT init Disabled - + D E MTRR -> PAT disable Disabled BIOS + D D MTRR -> PAT disable Disabled - + - np/E PAT -> PAT disable Disabled BIOS + - np/D PAT -> PAT disable Disabled - + E !P/E MTRR -> PAT init Disabled BIOS + D !P/E MTRR -> PAT disable Disabled BIOS + !M !P/E MTRR stub -> PAT disable Disabled BIOS + + Legend + ------------------------------------------------ + E Feature enabled in CPU + D Feature disabled/unsupported in CPU + np "nopat" boot option specified + !P CONFIG_X86_PAT option unset + !M CONFIG_MTRR option unset + Enabled PAT state set to enabled + Disabled PAT state set to disabled + OS PAT initializes PAT MSR with OS setting + BIOS PAT keeps PAT MSR with BIOS setting + diff --git a/Documentation/x86/protection-keys.txt b/Documentation/x86/protection-keys.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000..ecb0d2dad --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/x86/protection-keys.txt @@ -0,0 +1,90 @@ +Memory Protection Keys for Userspace (PKU aka PKEYs) is a feature +which is found on Intel's Skylake "Scalable Processor" Server CPUs. +It will be avalable in future non-server parts. + +For anyone wishing to test or use this feature, it is available in +Amazon's EC2 C5 instances and is known to work there using an Ubuntu +17.04 image. + +Memory Protection Keys provides a mechanism for enforcing page-based +protections, but without requiring modification of the page tables +when an application changes protection domains. It works by +dedicating 4 previously ignored bits in each page table entry to a +"protection key", giving 16 possible keys. + +There is also a new user-accessible register (PKRU) with two separate +bits (Access Disable and Write Disable) for each key. Being a CPU +register, PKRU is inherently thread-local, potentially giving each +thread a different set of protections from every other thread. + +There are two new instructions (RDPKRU/WRPKRU) for reading and writing +to the new register. The feature is only available in 64-bit mode, +even though there is theoretically space in the PAE PTEs. These +permissions are enforced on data access only and have no effect on +instruction fetches. + +=========================== Syscalls =========================== + +There are 3 system calls which directly interact with pkeys: + + int pkey_alloc(unsigned long flags, unsigned long init_access_rights) + int pkey_free(int pkey); + int pkey_mprotect(unsigned long start, size_t len, + unsigned long prot, int pkey); + +Before a pkey can be used, it must first be allocated with +pkey_alloc(). An application calls the WRPKRU instruction +directly in order to change access permissions to memory covered +with a key. In this example WRPKRU is wrapped by a C function +called pkey_set(). + + int real_prot = PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE; + pkey = pkey_alloc(0, PKEY_DISABLE_WRITE); + ptr = mmap(NULL, PAGE_SIZE, PROT_NONE, MAP_ANONYMOUS|MAP_PRIVATE, -1, 0); + ret = pkey_mprotect(ptr, PAGE_SIZE, real_prot, pkey); + ... application runs here + +Now, if the application needs to update the data at 'ptr', it can +gain access, do the update, then remove its write access: + + pkey_set(pkey, 0); // clear PKEY_DISABLE_WRITE + *ptr = foo; // assign something + pkey_set(pkey, PKEY_DISABLE_WRITE); // set PKEY_DISABLE_WRITE again + +Now when it frees the memory, it will also free the pkey since it +is no longer in use: + + munmap(ptr, PAGE_SIZE); + pkey_free(pkey); + +(Note: pkey_set() is a wrapper for the RDPKRU and WRPKRU instructions. + An example implementation can be found in + tools/testing/selftests/x86/protection_keys.c) + +=========================== Behavior =========================== + +The kernel attempts to make protection keys consistent with the +behavior of a plain mprotect(). For instance if you do this: + + mprotect(ptr, size, PROT_NONE); + something(ptr); + +you can expect the same effects with protection keys when doing this: + + pkey = pkey_alloc(0, PKEY_DISABLE_WRITE | PKEY_DISABLE_READ); + pkey_mprotect(ptr, size, PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE, pkey); + something(ptr); + +That should be true whether something() is a direct access to 'ptr' +like: + + *ptr = foo; + +or when the kernel does the access on the application's behalf like +with a read(): + + read(fd, ptr, 1); + +The kernel will send a SIGSEGV in both cases, but si_code will be set +to SEGV_PKERR when violating protection keys versus SEGV_ACCERR when +the plain mprotect() permissions are violated. diff --git a/Documentation/x86/pti.txt b/Documentation/x86/pti.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000..5cd58439a --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/x86/pti.txt @@ -0,0 +1,186 @@ +Overview +======== + +Page Table Isolation (pti, previously known as KAISER[1]) is a +countermeasure against attacks on the shared user/kernel address +space such as the "Meltdown" approach[2]. + +To mitigate this class of attacks, we create an independent set of +page tables for use only when running userspace applications. When +the kernel is entered via syscalls, interrupts or exceptions, the +page tables are switched to the full "kernel" copy. When the system +switches back to user mode, the user copy is used again. + +The userspace page tables contain only a minimal amount of kernel +data: only what is needed to enter/exit the kernel such as the +entry/exit functions themselves and the interrupt descriptor table +(IDT). There are a few strictly unnecessary things that get mapped +such as the first C function when entering an interrupt (see +comments in pti.c). + +This approach helps to ensure that side-channel attacks leveraging +the paging structures do not function when PTI is enabled. It can be +enabled by setting CONFIG_PAGE_TABLE_ISOLATION=y at compile time. +Once enabled at compile-time, it can be disabled at boot with the +'nopti' or 'pti=' kernel parameters (see kernel-parameters.txt). + +Page Table Management +===================== + +When PTI is enabled, the kernel manages two sets of page tables. +The first set is very similar to the single set which is present in +kernels without PTI. This includes a complete mapping of userspace +that the kernel can use for things like copy_to_user(). + +Although _complete_, the user portion of the kernel page tables is +crippled by setting the NX bit in the top level. This ensures +that any missed kernel->user CR3 switch will immediately crash +userspace upon executing its first instruction. + +The userspace page tables map only the kernel data needed to enter +and exit the kernel. This data is entirely contained in the 'struct +cpu_entry_area' structure which is placed in the fixmap which gives +each CPU's copy of the area a compile-time-fixed virtual address. + +For new userspace mappings, the kernel makes the entries in its +page tables like normal. The only difference is when the kernel +makes entries in the top (PGD) level. In addition to setting the +entry in the main kernel PGD, a copy of the entry is made in the +userspace page tables' PGD. + +This sharing at the PGD level also inherently shares all the lower +layers of the page tables. This leaves a single, shared set of +userspace page tables to manage. One PTE to lock, one set of +accessed bits, dirty bits, etc... + +Overhead +======== + +Protection against side-channel attacks is important. But, +this protection comes at a cost: + +1. Increased Memory Use + a. Each process now needs an order-1 PGD instead of order-0. + (Consumes an additional 4k per process). + b. The 'cpu_entry_area' structure must be 2MB in size and 2MB + aligned so that it can be mapped by setting a single PMD + entry. This consumes nearly 2MB of RAM once the kernel + is decompressed, but no space in the kernel image itself. + +2. Runtime Cost + a. CR3 manipulation to switch between the page table copies + must be done at interrupt, syscall, and exception entry + and exit (it can be skipped when the kernel is interrupted, + though.) Moves to CR3 are on the order of a hundred + cycles, and are required at every entry and exit. + b. A "trampoline" must be used for SYSCALL entry. This + trampoline depends on a smaller set of resources than the + non-PTI SYSCALL entry code, so requires mapping fewer + things into the userspace page tables. The downside is + that stacks must be switched at entry time. + c. Global pages are disabled for all kernel structures not + mapped into both kernel and userspace page tables. This + feature of the MMU allows different processes to share TLB + entries mapping the kernel. Losing the feature means more + TLB misses after a context switch. The actual loss of + performance is very small, however, never exceeding 1%. + d. Process Context IDentifiers (PCID) is a CPU feature that + allows us to skip flushing the entire TLB when switching page + tables by setting a special bit in CR3 when the page tables + are changed. This makes switching the page tables (at context + switch, or kernel entry/exit) cheaper. But, on systems with + PCID support, the context switch code must flush both the user + and kernel entries out of the TLB. The user PCID TLB flush is + deferred until the exit to userspace, minimizing the cost. + See intel.com/sdm for the gory PCID/INVPCID details. + e. The userspace page tables must be populated for each new + process. Even without PTI, the shared kernel mappings + are created by copying top-level (PGD) entries into each + new process. But, with PTI, there are now *two* kernel + mappings: one in the kernel page tables that maps everything + and one for the entry/exit structures. At fork(), we need to + copy both. + f. In addition to the fork()-time copying, there must also + be an update to the userspace PGD any time a set_pgd() is done + on a PGD used to map userspace. This ensures that the kernel + and userspace copies always map the same userspace + memory. + g. On systems without PCID support, each CR3 write flushes + the entire TLB. That means that each syscall, interrupt + or exception flushes the TLB. + h. INVPCID is a TLB-flushing instruction which allows flushing + of TLB entries for non-current PCIDs. Some systems support + PCIDs, but do not support INVPCID. On these systems, addresses + can only be flushed from the TLB for the current PCID. When + flushing a kernel address, we need to flush all PCIDs, so a + single kernel address flush will require a TLB-flushing CR3 + write upon the next use of every PCID. + +Possible Future Work +==================== +1. We can be more careful about not actually writing to CR3 + unless its value is actually changed. +2. Allow PTI to be enabled/disabled at runtime in addition to the + boot-time switching. + +Testing +======== + +To test stability of PTI, the following test procedure is recommended, +ideally doing all of these in parallel: + +1. Set CONFIG_DEBUG_ENTRY=y +2. Run several copies of all of the tools/testing/selftests/x86/ tests + (excluding MPX and protection_keys) in a loop on multiple CPUs for + several minutes. These tests frequently uncover corner cases in the + kernel entry code. In general, old kernels might cause these tests + themselves to crash, but they should never crash the kernel. +3. Run the 'perf' tool in a mode (top or record) that generates many + frequent performance monitoring non-maskable interrupts (see "NMI" + in /proc/interrupts). This exercises the NMI entry/exit code which + is known to trigger bugs in code paths that did not expect to be + interrupted, including nested NMIs. Using "-c" boosts the rate of + NMIs, and using two -c with separate counters encourages nested NMIs + and less deterministic behavior. + + while true; do perf record -c 10000 -e instructions,cycles -a sleep 10; done + +4. Launch a KVM virtual machine. +5. Run 32-bit binaries on systems supporting the SYSCALL instruction. + This has been a lightly-tested code path and needs extra scrutiny. + +Debugging +========= + +Bugs in PTI cause a few different signatures of crashes +that are worth noting here. + + * Failures of the selftests/x86 code. Usually a bug in one of the + more obscure corners of entry_64.S + * Crashes in early boot, especially around CPU bringup. Bugs + in the trampoline code or mappings cause these. + * Crashes at the first interrupt. Caused by bugs in entry_64.S, + like screwing up a page table switch. Also caused by + incorrectly mapping the IRQ handler entry code. + * Crashes at the first NMI. The NMI code is separate from main + interrupt handlers and can have bugs that do not affect + normal interrupts. Also caused by incorrectly mapping NMI + code. NMIs that interrupt the entry code must be very + careful and can be the cause of crashes that show up when + running perf. + * Kernel crashes at the first exit to userspace. entry_64.S + bugs, or failing to map some of the exit code. + * Crashes at first interrupt that interrupts userspace. The paths + in entry_64.S that return to userspace are sometimes separate + from the ones that return to the kernel. + * Double faults: overflowing the kernel stack because of page + faults upon page faults. Caused by touching non-pti-mapped + data in the entry code, or forgetting to switch to kernel + CR3 before calling into C functions which are not pti-mapped. + * Userspace segfaults early in boot, sometimes manifesting + as mount(8) failing to mount the rootfs. These have + tended to be TLB invalidation issues. Usually invalidating + the wrong PCID, or otherwise missing an invalidation. + +1. https://gruss.cc/files/kaiser.pdf +2. https://meltdownattack.com/meltdown.pdf diff --git a/Documentation/x86/tlb.txt b/Documentation/x86/tlb.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000..6a0607b99 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/x86/tlb.txt @@ -0,0 +1,75 @@ +When the kernel unmaps or modified the attributes of a range of +memory, it has two choices: + 1. Flush the entire TLB with a two-instruction sequence. This is + a quick operation, but it causes collateral damage: TLB entries + from areas other than the one we are trying to flush will be + destroyed and must be refilled later, at some cost. + 2. Use the invlpg instruction to invalidate a single page at a + time. This could potentially cost many more instructions, but + it is a much more precise operation, causing no collateral + damage to other TLB entries. + +Which method to do depends on a few things: + 1. The size of the flush being performed. A flush of the entire + address space is obviously better performed by flushing the + entire TLB than doing 2^48/PAGE_SIZE individual flushes. + 2. The contents of the TLB. If the TLB is empty, then there will + be no collateral damage caused by doing the global flush, and + all of the individual flush will have ended up being wasted + work. + 3. The size of the TLB. The larger the TLB, the more collateral + damage we do with a full flush. So, the larger the TLB, the + more attractive an individual flush looks. Data and + instructions have separate TLBs, as do different page sizes. + 4. The microarchitecture. The TLB has become a multi-level + cache on modern CPUs, and the global flushes have become more + expensive relative to single-page flushes. + +There is obviously no way the kernel can know all these things, +especially the contents of the TLB during a given flush. The +sizes of the flush will vary greatly depending on the workload as +well. There is essentially no "right" point to choose. + +You may be doing too many individual invalidations if you see the +invlpg instruction (or instructions _near_ it) show up high in +profiles. If you believe that individual invalidations being +called too often, you can lower the tunable: + + /sys/kernel/debug/x86/tlb_single_page_flush_ceiling + +This will cause us to do the global flush for more cases. +Lowering it to 0 will disable the use of the individual flushes. +Setting it to 1 is a very conservative setting and it should +never need to be 0 under normal circumstances. + +Despite the fact that a single individual flush on x86 is +guaranteed to flush a full 2MB [1], hugetlbfs always uses the full +flushes. THP is treated exactly the same as normal memory. + +You might see invlpg inside of flush_tlb_mm_range() show up in +profiles, or you can use the trace_tlb_flush() tracepoints. to +determine how long the flush operations are taking. + +Essentially, you are balancing the cycles you spend doing invlpg +with the cycles that you spend refilling the TLB later. + +You can measure how expensive TLB refills are by using +performance counters and 'perf stat', like this: + +perf stat -e + cpu/event=0x8,umask=0x84,name=dtlb_load_misses_walk_duration/, + cpu/event=0x8,umask=0x82,name=dtlb_load_misses_walk_completed/, + cpu/event=0x49,umask=0x4,name=dtlb_store_misses_walk_duration/, + cpu/event=0x49,umask=0x2,name=dtlb_store_misses_walk_completed/, + cpu/event=0x85,umask=0x4,name=itlb_misses_walk_duration/, + cpu/event=0x85,umask=0x2,name=itlb_misses_walk_completed/ + +That works on an IvyBridge-era CPU (i5-3320M). Different CPUs +may have differently-named counters, but they should at least +be there in some form. You can use pmu-tools 'ocperf list' +(https://github.com/andikleen/pmu-tools) to find the right +counters for a given CPU. + +1. A footnote in Intel's SDM "4.10.4.2 Recommended Invalidation" + says: "One execution of INVLPG is sufficient even for a page + with size greater than 4 KBytes." diff --git a/Documentation/x86/topology.txt b/Documentation/x86/topology.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000..2953e3ec9 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/x86/topology.txt @@ -0,0 +1,217 @@ +x86 Topology +============ + +This documents and clarifies the main aspects of x86 topology modelling and +representation in the kernel. Update/change when doing changes to the +respective code. + +The architecture-agnostic topology definitions are in +Documentation/cputopology.txt. This file holds x86-specific +differences/specialities which must not necessarily apply to the generic +definitions. Thus, the way to read up on Linux topology on x86 is to start +with the generic one and look at this one in parallel for the x86 specifics. + +Needless to say, code should use the generic functions - this file is *only* +here to *document* the inner workings of x86 topology. + +Started by Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de> and Borislav Petkov <bp@alien8.de>. + +The main aim of the topology facilities is to present adequate interfaces to +code which needs to know/query/use the structure of the running system wrt +threads, cores, packages, etc. + +The kernel does not care about the concept of physical sockets because a +socket has no relevance to software. It's an electromechanical component. In +the past a socket always contained a single package (see below), but with the +advent of Multi Chip Modules (MCM) a socket can hold more than one package. So +there might be still references to sockets in the code, but they are of +historical nature and should be cleaned up. + +The topology of a system is described in the units of: + + - packages + - cores + - threads + +* Package: + + Packages contain a number of cores plus shared resources, e.g. DRAM + controller, shared caches etc. + + AMD nomenclature for package is 'Node'. + + Package-related topology information in the kernel: + + - cpuinfo_x86.x86_max_cores: + + The number of cores in a package. This information is retrieved via CPUID. + + - cpuinfo_x86.phys_proc_id: + + The physical ID of the package. This information is retrieved via CPUID + and deduced from the APIC IDs of the cores in the package. + + - cpuinfo_x86.logical_id: + + The logical ID of the package. As we do not trust BIOSes to enumerate the + packages in a consistent way, we introduced the concept of logical package + ID so we can sanely calculate the number of maximum possible packages in + the system and have the packages enumerated linearly. + + - topology_max_packages(): + + The maximum possible number of packages in the system. Helpful for per + package facilities to preallocate per package information. + + - cpu_llc_id: + + A per-CPU variable containing: + - On Intel, the first APIC ID of the list of CPUs sharing the Last Level + Cache + + - On AMD, the Node ID or Core Complex ID containing the Last Level + Cache. In general, it is a number identifying an LLC uniquely on the + system. + +* Cores: + + A core consists of 1 or more threads. It does not matter whether the threads + are SMT- or CMT-type threads. + + AMDs nomenclature for a CMT core is "Compute Unit". The kernel always uses + "core". + + Core-related topology information in the kernel: + + - smp_num_siblings: + + The number of threads in a core. The number of threads in a package can be + calculated by: + + threads_per_package = cpuinfo_x86.x86_max_cores * smp_num_siblings + + +* Threads: + + A thread is a single scheduling unit. It's the equivalent to a logical Linux + CPU. + + AMDs nomenclature for CMT threads is "Compute Unit Core". The kernel always + uses "thread". + + Thread-related topology information in the kernel: + + - topology_core_cpumask(): + + The cpumask contains all online threads in the package to which a thread + belongs. + + The number of online threads is also printed in /proc/cpuinfo "siblings." + + - topology_sibling_cpumask(): + + The cpumask contains all online threads in the core to which a thread + belongs. + + - topology_logical_package_id(): + + The logical package ID to which a thread belongs. + + - topology_physical_package_id(): + + The physical package ID to which a thread belongs. + + - topology_core_id(); + + The ID of the core to which a thread belongs. It is also printed in /proc/cpuinfo + "core_id." + + + +System topology examples + +Note: + +The alternative Linux CPU enumeration depends on how the BIOS enumerates the +threads. Many BIOSes enumerate all threads 0 first and then all threads 1. +That has the "advantage" that the logical Linux CPU numbers of threads 0 stay +the same whether threads are enabled or not. That's merely an implementation +detail and has no practical impact. + +1) Single Package, Single Core + + [package 0] -> [core 0] -> [thread 0] -> Linux CPU 0 + +2) Single Package, Dual Core + + a) One thread per core + + [package 0] -> [core 0] -> [thread 0] -> Linux CPU 0 + -> [core 1] -> [thread 0] -> Linux CPU 1 + + b) Two threads per core + + [package 0] -> [core 0] -> [thread 0] -> Linux CPU 0 + -> [thread 1] -> Linux CPU 1 + -> [core 1] -> [thread 0] -> Linux CPU 2 + -> [thread 1] -> Linux CPU 3 + + Alternative enumeration: + + [package 0] -> [core 0] -> [thread 0] -> Linux CPU 0 + -> [thread 1] -> Linux CPU 2 + -> [core 1] -> [thread 0] -> Linux CPU 1 + -> [thread 1] -> Linux CPU 3 + + AMD nomenclature for CMT systems: + + [node 0] -> [Compute Unit 0] -> [Compute Unit Core 0] -> Linux CPU 0 + -> [Compute Unit Core 1] -> Linux CPU 1 + -> [Compute Unit 1] -> [Compute Unit Core 0] -> Linux CPU 2 + -> [Compute Unit Core 1] -> Linux CPU 3 + +4) Dual Package, Dual Core + + a) One thread per core + + [package 0] -> [core 0] -> [thread 0] -> Linux CPU 0 + -> [core 1] -> [thread 0] -> Linux CPU 1 + + [package 1] -> [core 0] -> [thread 0] -> Linux CPU 2 + -> [core 1] -> [thread 0] -> Linux CPU 3 + + b) Two threads per core + + [package 0] -> [core 0] -> [thread 0] -> Linux CPU 0 + -> [thread 1] -> Linux CPU 1 + -> [core 1] -> [thread 0] -> Linux CPU 2 + -> [thread 1] -> Linux CPU 3 + + [package 1] -> [core 0] -> [thread 0] -> Linux CPU 4 + -> [thread 1] -> Linux CPU 5 + -> [core 1] -> [thread 0] -> Linux CPU 6 + -> [thread 1] -> Linux CPU 7 + + Alternative enumeration: + + [package 0] -> [core 0] -> [thread 0] -> Linux CPU 0 + -> [thread 1] -> Linux CPU 4 + -> [core 1] -> [thread 0] -> Linux CPU 1 + -> [thread 1] -> Linux CPU 5 + + [package 1] -> [core 0] -> [thread 0] -> Linux CPU 2 + -> [thread 1] -> Linux CPU 6 + -> [core 1] -> [thread 0] -> Linux CPU 3 + -> [thread 1] -> Linux CPU 7 + + AMD nomenclature for CMT systems: + + [node 0] -> [Compute Unit 0] -> [Compute Unit Core 0] -> Linux CPU 0 + -> [Compute Unit Core 1] -> Linux CPU 1 + -> [Compute Unit 1] -> [Compute Unit Core 0] -> Linux CPU 2 + -> [Compute Unit Core 1] -> Linux CPU 3 + + [node 1] -> [Compute Unit 0] -> [Compute Unit Core 0] -> Linux CPU 4 + -> [Compute Unit Core 1] -> Linux CPU 5 + -> [Compute Unit 1] -> [Compute Unit Core 0] -> Linux CPU 6 + -> [Compute Unit Core 1] -> Linux CPU 7 diff --git a/Documentation/x86/tsx_async_abort.rst b/Documentation/x86/tsx_async_abort.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000..583ddc185 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/x86/tsx_async_abort.rst @@ -0,0 +1,117 @@ +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 + +TSX Async Abort (TAA) mitigation +================================ + +.. _tsx_async_abort: + +Overview +-------- + +TSX Async Abort (TAA) is a side channel attack on internal buffers in some +Intel processors similar to Microachitectural Data Sampling (MDS). In this +case certain loads may speculatively pass invalid data to dependent operations +when an asynchronous abort condition is pending in a Transactional +Synchronization Extensions (TSX) transaction. This includes loads with no +fault or assist condition. Such loads may speculatively expose stale data from +the same uarch data structures as in MDS, with same scope of exposure i.e. +same-thread and cross-thread. This issue affects all current processors that +support TSX. + +Mitigation strategy +------------------- + +a) TSX disable - one of the mitigations is to disable TSX. A new MSR +IA32_TSX_CTRL will be available in future and current processors after +microcode update which can be used to disable TSX. In addition, it +controls the enumeration of the TSX feature bits (RTM and HLE) in CPUID. + +b) Clear CPU buffers - similar to MDS, clearing the CPU buffers mitigates this +vulnerability. More details on this approach can be found in +:ref:`Documentation/admin-guide/hw-vuln/mds.rst <mds>`. + +Kernel internal mitigation modes +-------------------------------- + + ============= ============================================================ + off Mitigation is disabled. Either the CPU is not affected or + tsx_async_abort=off is supplied on the kernel command line. + + tsx disabled Mitigation is enabled. TSX feature is disabled by default at + bootup on processors that support TSX control. + + verw Mitigation is enabled. CPU is affected and MD_CLEAR is + advertised in CPUID. + + ucode needed Mitigation is enabled. CPU is affected and MD_CLEAR is not + advertised in CPUID. That is mainly for virtualization + scenarios where the host has the updated microcode but the + hypervisor does not expose MD_CLEAR in CPUID. It's a best + effort approach without guarantee. + ============= ============================================================ + +If the CPU is affected and the "tsx_async_abort" kernel command line parameter is +not provided then the kernel selects an appropriate mitigation depending on the +status of RTM and MD_CLEAR CPUID bits. + +Below tables indicate the impact of tsx=on|off|auto cmdline options on state of +TAA mitigation, VERW behavior and TSX feature for various combinations of +MSR_IA32_ARCH_CAPABILITIES bits. + +1. "tsx=off" + +========= ========= ============ ============ ============== =================== ====================== +MSR_IA32_ARCH_CAPABILITIES bits Result with cmdline tsx=off +---------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------------------------------- +TAA_NO MDS_NO TSX_CTRL_MSR TSX state VERW can clear TAA mitigation TAA mitigation + after bootup CPU buffers tsx_async_abort=off tsx_async_abort=full +========= ========= ============ ============ ============== =================== ====================== + 0 0 0 HW default Yes Same as MDS Same as MDS + 0 0 1 Invalid case Invalid case Invalid case Invalid case + 0 1 0 HW default No Need ucode update Need ucode update + 0 1 1 Disabled Yes TSX disabled TSX disabled + 1 X 1 Disabled X None needed None needed +========= ========= ============ ============ ============== =================== ====================== + +2. "tsx=on" + +========= ========= ============ ============ ============== =================== ====================== +MSR_IA32_ARCH_CAPABILITIES bits Result with cmdline tsx=on +---------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------------------------------- +TAA_NO MDS_NO TSX_CTRL_MSR TSX state VERW can clear TAA mitigation TAA mitigation + after bootup CPU buffers tsx_async_abort=off tsx_async_abort=full +========= ========= ============ ============ ============== =================== ====================== + 0 0 0 HW default Yes Same as MDS Same as MDS + 0 0 1 Invalid case Invalid case Invalid case Invalid case + 0 1 0 HW default No Need ucode update Need ucode update + 0 1 1 Enabled Yes None Same as MDS + 1 X 1 Enabled X None needed None needed +========= ========= ============ ============ ============== =================== ====================== + +3. "tsx=auto" + +========= ========= ============ ============ ============== =================== ====================== +MSR_IA32_ARCH_CAPABILITIES bits Result with cmdline tsx=auto +---------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------------------------------- +TAA_NO MDS_NO TSX_CTRL_MSR TSX state VERW can clear TAA mitigation TAA mitigation + after bootup CPU buffers tsx_async_abort=off tsx_async_abort=full +========= ========= ============ ============ ============== =================== ====================== + 0 0 0 HW default Yes Same as MDS Same as MDS + 0 0 1 Invalid case Invalid case Invalid case Invalid case + 0 1 0 HW default No Need ucode update Need ucode update + 0 1 1 Disabled Yes TSX disabled TSX disabled + 1 X 1 Enabled X None needed None needed +========= ========= ============ ============ ============== =================== ====================== + +In the tables, TSX_CTRL_MSR is a new bit in MSR_IA32_ARCH_CAPABILITIES that +indicates whether MSR_IA32_TSX_CTRL is supported. + +There are two control bits in IA32_TSX_CTRL MSR: + + Bit 0: When set it disables the Restricted Transactional Memory (RTM) + sub-feature of TSX (will force all transactions to abort on the + XBEGIN instruction). + + Bit 1: When set it disables the enumeration of the RTM and HLE feature + (i.e. it will make CPUID(EAX=7).EBX{bit4} and + CPUID(EAX=7).EBX{bit11} read as 0). diff --git a/Documentation/x86/usb-legacy-support.txt b/Documentation/x86/usb-legacy-support.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000..1894cdfc6 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/x86/usb-legacy-support.txt @@ -0,0 +1,44 @@ +USB Legacy support +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Vojtech Pavlik <vojtech@suse.cz>, January 2004 + + +Also known as "USB Keyboard" or "USB Mouse support" in the BIOS Setup is a +feature that allows one to use the USB mouse and keyboard as if they were +their classic PS/2 counterparts. This means one can use an USB keyboard to +type in LILO for example. + +It has several drawbacks, though: + +1) On some machines, the emulated PS/2 mouse takes over even when no USB + mouse is present and a real PS/2 mouse is present. In that case the extra + features (wheel, extra buttons, touchpad mode) of the real PS/2 mouse may + not be available. + +2) If CONFIG_HIGHMEM64G is enabled, the PS/2 mouse emulation can cause + system crashes, because the SMM BIOS is not expecting to be in PAE mode. + The Intel E7505 is a typical machine where this happens. + +3) If AMD64 64-bit mode is enabled, again system crashes often happen, + because the SMM BIOS isn't expecting the CPU to be in 64-bit mode. The + BIOS manufacturers only test with Windows, and Windows doesn't do 64-bit + yet. + +Solutions: + +Problem 1) can be solved by loading the USB drivers prior to loading the +PS/2 mouse driver. Since the PS/2 mouse driver is in 2.6 compiled into +the kernel unconditionally, this means the USB drivers need to be +compiled-in, too. + +Problem 2) can currently only be solved by either disabling HIGHMEM64G +in the kernel config or USB Legacy support in the BIOS. A BIOS update +could help, but so far no such update exists. + +Problem 3) is usually fixed by a BIOS update. Check the board +manufacturers web site. If an update is not available, disable USB +Legacy support in the BIOS. If this alone doesn't help, try also adding +idle=poll on the kernel command line. The BIOS may be entering the SMM +on the HLT instruction as well. + diff --git a/Documentation/x86/x86_64/00-INDEX b/Documentation/x86/x86_64/00-INDEX new file mode 100644 index 000000000..92fc20ab5 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/x86/x86_64/00-INDEX @@ -0,0 +1,16 @@ +00-INDEX + - This file +boot-options.txt + - AMD64-specific boot options. +cpu-hotplug-spec + - Firmware support for CPU hotplug under Linux/x86-64 +fake-numa-for-cpusets + - Using numa=fake and CPUSets for Resource Management +kernel-stacks + - Context-specific per-processor interrupt stacks. +machinecheck + - Configurable sysfs parameters for the x86-64 machine check code. +mm.txt + - Memory layout of x86-64 (4 level page tables, 46 bits physical). +uefi.txt + - Booting Linux via Unified Extensible Firmware Interface. diff --git a/Documentation/x86/x86_64/5level-paging.txt b/Documentation/x86/x86_64/5level-paging.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000..2432a5ef8 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/x86/x86_64/5level-paging.txt @@ -0,0 +1,61 @@ +== Overview == + +Original x86-64 was limited by 4-level paing to 256 TiB of virtual address +space and 64 TiB of physical address space. We are already bumping into +this limit: some vendors offers servers with 64 TiB of memory today. + +To overcome the limitation upcoming hardware will introduce support for +5-level paging. It is a straight-forward extension of the current page +table structure adding one more layer of translation. + +It bumps the limits to 128 PiB of virtual address space and 4 PiB of +physical address space. This "ought to be enough for anybody" ©. + +QEMU 2.9 and later support 5-level paging. + +Virtual memory layout for 5-level paging is described in +Documentation/x86/x86_64/mm.txt + +== Enabling 5-level paging == + +CONFIG_X86_5LEVEL=y enables the feature. + +Kernel with CONFIG_X86_5LEVEL=y still able to boot on 4-level hardware. +In this case additional page table level -- p4d -- will be folded at +runtime. + +== User-space and large virtual address space == + +On x86, 5-level paging enables 56-bit userspace virtual address space. +Not all user space is ready to handle wide addresses. It's known that +at least some JIT compilers use higher bits in pointers to encode their +information. It collides with valid pointers with 5-level paging and +leads to crashes. + +To mitigate this, we are not going to allocate virtual address space +above 47-bit by default. + +But userspace can ask for allocation from full address space by +specifying hint address (with or without MAP_FIXED) above 47-bits. + +If hint address set above 47-bit, but MAP_FIXED is not specified, we try +to look for unmapped area by specified address. If it's already +occupied, we look for unmapped area in *full* address space, rather than +from 47-bit window. + +A high hint address would only affect the allocation in question, but not +any future mmap()s. + +Specifying high hint address on older kernel or on machine without 5-level +paging support is safe. The hint will be ignored and kernel will fall back +to allocation from 47-bit address space. + +This approach helps to easily make application's memory allocator aware +about large address space without manually tracking allocated virtual +address space. + +One important case we need to handle here is interaction with MPX. +MPX (without MAWA extension) cannot handle addresses above 47-bit, so we +need to make sure that MPX cannot be enabled we already have VMA above +the boundary and forbid creating such VMAs once MPX is enabled. + diff --git a/Documentation/x86/x86_64/boot-options.txt b/Documentation/x86/x86_64/boot-options.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000..ad6d2a80c --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/x86/x86_64/boot-options.txt @@ -0,0 +1,281 @@ +AMD64 specific boot options + +There are many others (usually documented in driver documentation), but +only the AMD64 specific ones are listed here. + +Machine check + + Please see Documentation/x86/x86_64/machinecheck for sysfs runtime tunables. + + mce=off + Disable machine check + mce=no_cmci + Disable CMCI(Corrected Machine Check Interrupt) that + Intel processor supports. Usually this disablement is + not recommended, but it might be handy if your hardware + is misbehaving. + Note that you'll get more problems without CMCI than with + due to the shared banks, i.e. you might get duplicated + error logs. + mce=dont_log_ce + Don't make logs for corrected errors. All events reported + as corrected are silently cleared by OS. + This option will be useful if you have no interest in any + of corrected errors. + mce=ignore_ce + Disable features for corrected errors, e.g. polling timer + and CMCI. All events reported as corrected are not cleared + by OS and remained in its error banks. + Usually this disablement is not recommended, however if + there is an agent checking/clearing corrected errors + (e.g. BIOS or hardware monitoring applications), conflicting + with OS's error handling, and you cannot deactivate the agent, + then this option will be a help. + mce=no_lmce + Do not opt-in to Local MCE delivery. Use legacy method + to broadcast MCEs. + mce=bootlog + Enable logging of machine checks left over from booting. + Disabled by default on AMD Fam10h and older because some BIOS + leave bogus ones. + If your BIOS doesn't do that it's a good idea to enable though + to make sure you log even machine check events that result + in a reboot. On Intel systems it is enabled by default. + mce=nobootlog + Disable boot machine check logging. + mce=tolerancelevel[,monarchtimeout] (number,number) + tolerance levels: + 0: always panic on uncorrected errors, log corrected errors + 1: panic or SIGBUS on uncorrected errors, log corrected errors + 2: SIGBUS or log uncorrected errors, log corrected errors + 3: never panic or SIGBUS, log all errors (for testing only) + Default is 1 + Can be also set using sysfs which is preferable. + monarchtimeout: + Sets the time in us to wait for other CPUs on machine checks. 0 + to disable. + mce=bios_cmci_threshold + Don't overwrite the bios-set CMCI threshold. This boot option + prevents Linux from overwriting the CMCI threshold set by the + bios. Without this option, Linux always sets the CMCI + threshold to 1. Enabling this may make memory predictive failure + analysis less effective if the bios sets thresholds for memory + errors since we will not see details for all errors. + mce=recovery + Force-enable recoverable machine check code paths + + nomce (for compatibility with i386): same as mce=off + + Everything else is in sysfs now. + +APICs + + apic Use IO-APIC. Default + + noapic Don't use the IO-APIC. + + disableapic Don't use the local APIC + + nolapic Don't use the local APIC (alias for i386 compatibility) + + pirq=... See Documentation/x86/i386/IO-APIC.txt + + noapictimer Don't set up the APIC timer + + no_timer_check Don't check the IO-APIC timer. This can work around + problems with incorrect timer initialization on some boards. + apicpmtimer + Do APIC timer calibration using the pmtimer. Implies + apicmaintimer. Useful when your PIT timer is totally + broken. + +Timing + + notsc + Deprecated, use tsc=unstable instead. + + nohpet + Don't use the HPET timer. + +Idle loop + + idle=poll + Don't do power saving in the idle loop using HLT, but poll for rescheduling + event. This will make the CPUs eat a lot more power, but may be useful + to get slightly better performance in multiprocessor benchmarks. It also + makes some profiling using performance counters more accurate. + Please note that on systems with MONITOR/MWAIT support (like Intel EM64T + CPUs) this option has no performance advantage over the normal idle loop. + It may also interact badly with hyperthreading. + +Rebooting + + reboot=b[ios] | t[riple] | k[bd] | a[cpi] | e[fi] [, [w]arm | [c]old] + bios Use the CPU reboot vector for warm reset + warm Don't set the cold reboot flag + cold Set the cold reboot flag + triple Force a triple fault (init) + kbd Use the keyboard controller. cold reset (default) + acpi Use the ACPI RESET_REG in the FADT. If ACPI is not configured or the + ACPI reset does not work, the reboot path attempts the reset using + the keyboard controller. + efi Use efi reset_system runtime service. If EFI is not configured or the + EFI reset does not work, the reboot path attempts the reset using + the keyboard controller. + + Using warm reset will be much faster especially on big memory + systems because the BIOS will not go through the memory check. + Disadvantage is that not all hardware will be completely reinitialized + on reboot so there may be boot problems on some systems. + + reboot=force + + Don't stop other CPUs on reboot. This can make reboot more reliable + in some cases. + +Non Executable Mappings + + noexec=on|off + + on Enable(default) + off Disable + +NUMA + + numa=off Only set up a single NUMA node spanning all memory. + + numa=noacpi Don't parse the SRAT table for NUMA setup + + numa=fake=<size>[MG] + If given as a memory unit, fills all system RAM with nodes of + size interleaved over physical nodes. + + numa=fake=<N> + If given as an integer, fills all system RAM with N fake nodes + interleaved over physical nodes. + + numa=fake=<N>U + If given as an integer followed by 'U', it will divide each + physical node into N emulated nodes. + +ACPI + + acpi=off Don't enable ACPI + acpi=ht Use ACPI boot table parsing, but don't enable ACPI + interpreter + acpi=force Force ACPI on (currently not needed) + + acpi=strict Disable out of spec ACPI workarounds. + + acpi_sci={edge,level,high,low} Set up ACPI SCI interrupt. + + acpi=noirq Don't route interrupts + + acpi=nocmcff Disable firmware first mode for corrected errors. This + disables parsing the HEST CMC error source to check if + firmware has set the FF flag. This may result in + duplicate corrected error reports. + +PCI + + pci=off Don't use PCI + pci=conf1 Use conf1 access. + pci=conf2 Use conf2 access. + pci=rom Assign ROMs. + pci=assign-busses Assign busses + pci=irqmask=MASK Set PCI interrupt mask to MASK + pci=lastbus=NUMBER Scan up to NUMBER busses, no matter what the mptable says. + pci=noacpi Don't use ACPI to set up PCI interrupt routing. + +IOMMU (input/output memory management unit) + + Multiple x86-64 PCI-DMA mapping implementations exist, for example: + + 1. <lib/dma-direct.c>: use no hardware/software IOMMU at all + (e.g. because you have < 3 GB memory). + Kernel boot message: "PCI-DMA: Disabling IOMMU" + + 2. <arch/x86/kernel/amd_gart_64.c>: AMD GART based hardware IOMMU. + Kernel boot message: "PCI-DMA: using GART IOMMU" + + 3. <arch/x86_64/kernel/pci-swiotlb.c> : Software IOMMU implementation. Used + e.g. if there is no hardware IOMMU in the system and it is need because + you have >3GB memory or told the kernel to us it (iommu=soft)) + Kernel boot message: "PCI-DMA: Using software bounce buffering + for IO (SWIOTLB)" + + 4. <arch/x86_64/pci-calgary.c> : IBM Calgary hardware IOMMU. Used in IBM + pSeries and xSeries servers. This hardware IOMMU supports DMA address + mapping with memory protection, etc. + Kernel boot message: "PCI-DMA: Using Calgary IOMMU" + + iommu=[<size>][,noagp][,off][,force][,noforce][,leak[=<nr_of_leak_pages>] + [,memaper[=<order>]][,merge][,fullflush][,nomerge] + [,noaperture][,calgary] + + General iommu options: + off Don't initialize and use any kind of IOMMU. + noforce Don't force hardware IOMMU usage when it is not needed. + (default). + force Force the use of the hardware IOMMU even when it is + not actually needed (e.g. because < 3 GB memory). + soft Use software bounce buffering (SWIOTLB) (default for + Intel machines). This can be used to prevent the usage + of an available hardware IOMMU. + + iommu options only relevant to the AMD GART hardware IOMMU: + <size> Set the size of the remapping area in bytes. + allowed Overwrite iommu off workarounds for specific chipsets. + fullflush Flush IOMMU on each allocation (default). + nofullflush Don't use IOMMU fullflush. + leak Turn on simple iommu leak tracing (only when + CONFIG_IOMMU_LEAK is on). Default number of leak pages + is 20. + memaper[=<order>] Allocate an own aperture over RAM with size 32MB<<order. + (default: order=1, i.e. 64MB) + merge Do scatter-gather (SG) merging. Implies "force" + (experimental). + nomerge Don't do scatter-gather (SG) merging. + noaperture Ask the IOMMU not to touch the aperture for AGP. + noagp Don't initialize the AGP driver and use full aperture. + panic Always panic when IOMMU overflows. + calgary Use the Calgary IOMMU if it is available + + iommu options only relevant to the software bounce buffering (SWIOTLB) IOMMU + implementation: + swiotlb=<pages>[,force] + <pages> Prereserve that many 128K pages for the software IO + bounce buffering. + force Force all IO through the software TLB. + + Settings for the IBM Calgary hardware IOMMU currently found in IBM + pSeries and xSeries machines: + + calgary=[64k,128k,256k,512k,1M,2M,4M,8M] + calgary=[translate_empty_slots] + calgary=[disable=<PCI bus number>] + panic Always panic when IOMMU overflows + + 64k,...,8M - Set the size of each PCI slot's translation table + when using the Calgary IOMMU. This is the size of the translation + table itself in main memory. The smallest table, 64k, covers an IO + space of 32MB; the largest, 8MB table, can cover an IO space of + 4GB. Normally the kernel will make the right choice by itself. + + translate_empty_slots - Enable translation even on slots that have + no devices attached to them, in case a device will be hotplugged + in the future. + + disable=<PCI bus number> - Disable translation on a given PHB. For + example, the built-in graphics adapter resides on the first bridge + (PCI bus number 0); if translation (isolation) is enabled on this + bridge, X servers that access the hardware directly from user + space might stop working. Use this option if you have devices that + are accessed from userspace directly on some PCI host bridge. + +Miscellaneous + + nogbpages + Do not use GB pages for kernel direct mappings. + gbpages + Use GB pages for kernel direct mappings. diff --git a/Documentation/x86/x86_64/cpu-hotplug-spec b/Documentation/x86/x86_64/cpu-hotplug-spec new file mode 100644 index 000000000..3c23e0587 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/x86/x86_64/cpu-hotplug-spec @@ -0,0 +1,21 @@ +Firmware support for CPU hotplug under Linux/x86-64 +--------------------------------------------------- + +Linux/x86-64 supports CPU hotplug now. For various reasons Linux wants to +know in advance of boot time the maximum number of CPUs that could be plugged +into the system. ACPI 3.0 currently has no official way to supply +this information from the firmware to the operating system. + +In ACPI each CPU needs an LAPIC object in the MADT table (5.2.11.5 in the +ACPI 3.0 specification). ACPI already has the concept of disabled LAPIC +objects by setting the Enabled bit in the LAPIC object to zero. + +For CPU hotplug Linux/x86-64 expects now that any possible future hotpluggable +CPU is already available in the MADT. If the CPU is not available yet +it should have its LAPIC Enabled bit set to 0. Linux will use the number +of disabled LAPICs to compute the maximum number of future CPUs. + +In the worst case the user can overwrite this choice using a command line +option (additional_cpus=...), but it is recommended to supply the correct +number (or a reasonable approximation of it, with erring towards more not less) +in the MADT to avoid manual configuration. diff --git a/Documentation/x86/x86_64/fake-numa-for-cpusets b/Documentation/x86/x86_64/fake-numa-for-cpusets new file mode 100644 index 000000000..4b09f1883 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/x86/x86_64/fake-numa-for-cpusets @@ -0,0 +1,67 @@ +Using numa=fake and CPUSets for Resource Management +Written by David Rientjes <rientjes@cs.washington.edu> + +This document describes how the numa=fake x86_64 command-line option can be used +in conjunction with cpusets for coarse memory management. Using this feature, +you can create fake NUMA nodes that represent contiguous chunks of memory and +assign them to cpusets and their attached tasks. This is a way of limiting the +amount of system memory that are available to a certain class of tasks. + +For more information on the features of cpusets, see +Documentation/cgroup-v1/cpusets.txt. +There are a number of different configurations you can use for your needs. For +more information on the numa=fake command line option and its various ways of +configuring fake nodes, see Documentation/x86/x86_64/boot-options.txt. + +For the purposes of this introduction, we'll assume a very primitive NUMA +emulation setup of "numa=fake=4*512,". This will split our system memory into +four equal chunks of 512M each that we can now use to assign to cpusets. As +you become more familiar with using this combination for resource control, +you'll determine a better setup to minimize the number of nodes you have to deal +with. + +A machine may be split as follows with "numa=fake=4*512," as reported by dmesg: + + Faking node 0 at 0000000000000000-0000000020000000 (512MB) + Faking node 1 at 0000000020000000-0000000040000000 (512MB) + Faking node 2 at 0000000040000000-0000000060000000 (512MB) + Faking node 3 at 0000000060000000-0000000080000000 (512MB) + ... + On node 0 totalpages: 130975 + On node 1 totalpages: 131072 + On node 2 totalpages: 131072 + On node 3 totalpages: 131072 + +Now following the instructions for mounting the cpusets filesystem from +Documentation/cgroup-v1/cpusets.txt, you can assign fake nodes (i.e. contiguous memory +address spaces) to individual cpusets: + + [root@xroads /]# mkdir exampleset + [root@xroads /]# mount -t cpuset none exampleset + [root@xroads /]# mkdir exampleset/ddset + [root@xroads /]# cd exampleset/ddset + [root@xroads /exampleset/ddset]# echo 0-1 > cpus + [root@xroads /exampleset/ddset]# echo 0-1 > mems + +Now this cpuset, 'ddset', will only allowed access to fake nodes 0 and 1 for +memory allocations (1G). + +You can now assign tasks to these cpusets to limit the memory resources +available to them according to the fake nodes assigned as mems: + + [root@xroads /exampleset/ddset]# echo $$ > tasks + [root@xroads /exampleset/ddset]# dd if=/dev/zero of=tmp bs=1024 count=1G + [1] 13425 + +Notice the difference between the system memory usage as reported by +/proc/meminfo between the restricted cpuset case above and the unrestricted +case (i.e. running the same 'dd' command without assigning it to a fake NUMA +cpuset): + Unrestricted Restricted + MemTotal: 3091900 kB 3091900 kB + MemFree: 42113 kB 1513236 kB + +This allows for coarse memory management for the tasks you assign to particular +cpusets. Since cpusets can form a hierarchy, you can create some pretty +interesting combinations of use-cases for various classes of tasks for your +memory management needs. diff --git a/Documentation/x86/x86_64/machinecheck b/Documentation/x86/x86_64/machinecheck new file mode 100644 index 000000000..d0648a74f --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/x86/x86_64/machinecheck @@ -0,0 +1,83 @@ + +Configurable sysfs parameters for the x86-64 machine check code. + +Machine checks report internal hardware error conditions detected +by the CPU. Uncorrected errors typically cause a machine check +(often with panic), corrected ones cause a machine check log entry. + +Machine checks are organized in banks (normally associated with +a hardware subsystem) and subevents in a bank. The exact meaning +of the banks and subevent is CPU specific. + +mcelog knows how to decode them. + +When you see the "Machine check errors logged" message in the system +log then mcelog should run to collect and decode machine check entries +from /dev/mcelog. Normally mcelog should be run regularly from a cronjob. + +Each CPU has a directory in /sys/devices/system/machinecheck/machinecheckN +(N = CPU number) + +The directory contains some configurable entries: + +Entries: + +bankNctl +(N bank number) + 64bit Hex bitmask enabling/disabling specific subevents for bank N + When a bit in the bitmask is zero then the respective + subevent will not be reported. + By default all events are enabled. + Note that BIOS maintain another mask to disable specific events + per bank. This is not visible here + +The following entries appear for each CPU, but they are truly shared +between all CPUs. + +check_interval + How often to poll for corrected machine check errors, in seconds + (Note output is hexadecimal). Default 5 minutes. When the poller + finds MCEs it triggers an exponential speedup (poll more often) on + the polling interval. When the poller stops finding MCEs, it + triggers an exponential backoff (poll less often) on the polling + interval. The check_interval variable is both the initial and + maximum polling interval. 0 means no polling for corrected machine + check errors (but some corrected errors might be still reported + in other ways) + +tolerant + Tolerance level. When a machine check exception occurs for a non + corrected machine check the kernel can take different actions. + Since machine check exceptions can happen any time it is sometimes + risky for the kernel to kill a process because it defies + normal kernel locking rules. The tolerance level configures + how hard the kernel tries to recover even at some risk of + deadlock. Higher tolerant values trade potentially better uptime + with the risk of a crash or even corruption (for tolerant >= 3). + + 0: always panic on uncorrected errors, log corrected errors + 1: panic or SIGBUS on uncorrected errors, log corrected errors + 2: SIGBUS or log uncorrected errors, log corrected errors + 3: never panic or SIGBUS, log all errors (for testing only) + + Default: 1 + + Note this only makes a difference if the CPU allows recovery + from a machine check exception. Current x86 CPUs generally do not. + +trigger + Program to run when a machine check event is detected. + This is an alternative to running mcelog regularly from cron + and allows to detect events faster. +monarch_timeout + How long to wait for the other CPUs to machine check too on a + exception. 0 to disable waiting for other CPUs. + Unit: us + +TBD document entries for AMD threshold interrupt configuration + +For more details about the x86 machine check architecture +see the Intel and AMD architecture manuals from their developer websites. + +For more details about the architecture see +see http://one.firstfloor.org/~andi/mce.pdf diff --git a/Documentation/x86/x86_64/mm.txt b/Documentation/x86/x86_64/mm.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000..05ef53d83 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/x86/x86_64/mm.txt @@ -0,0 +1,81 @@ + +Virtual memory map with 4 level page tables: + +0000000000000000 - 00007fffffffffff (=47 bits) user space, different per mm +hole caused by [47:63] sign extension +ffff800000000000 - ffff87ffffffffff (=43 bits) guard hole, reserved for hypervisor +ffff880000000000 - ffff887fffffffff (=39 bits) LDT remap for PTI +ffff888000000000 - ffffc87fffffffff (=64 TB) direct mapping of all phys. memory +ffffc88000000000 - ffffc8ffffffffff (=39 bits) hole +ffffc90000000000 - ffffe8ffffffffff (=45 bits) vmalloc/ioremap space +ffffe90000000000 - ffffe9ffffffffff (=40 bits) hole +ffffea0000000000 - ffffeaffffffffff (=40 bits) virtual memory map (1TB) +... unused hole ... +ffffec0000000000 - fffffbffffffffff (=44 bits) kasan shadow memory (16TB) +... unused hole ... + vaddr_end for KASLR +fffffe0000000000 - fffffe7fffffffff (=39 bits) cpu_entry_area mapping +fffffe8000000000 - fffffeffffffffff (=39 bits) LDT remap for PTI +ffffff0000000000 - ffffff7fffffffff (=39 bits) %esp fixup stacks +... unused hole ... +ffffffef00000000 - fffffffeffffffff (=64 GB) EFI region mapping space +... unused hole ... +ffffffff80000000 - ffffffff9fffffff (=512 MB) kernel text mapping, from phys 0 +ffffffffa0000000 - fffffffffeffffff (1520 MB) module mapping space +[fixmap start] - ffffffffff5fffff kernel-internal fixmap range +ffffffffff600000 - ffffffffff600fff (=4 kB) legacy vsyscall ABI +ffffffffffe00000 - ffffffffffffffff (=2 MB) unused hole + +Virtual memory map with 5 level page tables: + +0000000000000000 - 00ffffffffffffff (=56 bits) user space, different per mm +hole caused by [56:63] sign extension +ff00000000000000 - ff0fffffffffffff (=52 bits) guard hole, reserved for hypervisor +ff10000000000000 - ff10ffffffffffff (=48 bits) LDT remap for PTI +ff11000000000000 - ff90ffffffffffff (=55 bits) direct mapping of all phys. memory +ff91000000000000 - ff9fffffffffffff (=3840 TB) hole +ffa0000000000000 - ffd1ffffffffffff (=54 bits) vmalloc/ioremap space (12800 TB) +ffd2000000000000 - ffd3ffffffffffff (=49 bits) hole +ffd4000000000000 - ffd5ffffffffffff (=49 bits) virtual memory map (512TB) +... unused hole ... +ffdf000000000000 - fffffc0000000000 (=53 bits) kasan shadow memory (8PB) +... unused hole ... + vaddr_end for KASLR +fffffe0000000000 - fffffe7fffffffff (=39 bits) cpu_entry_area mapping +... unused hole ... +ffffff0000000000 - ffffff7fffffffff (=39 bits) %esp fixup stacks +... unused hole ... +ffffffef00000000 - fffffffeffffffff (=64 GB) EFI region mapping space +... unused hole ... +ffffffff80000000 - ffffffff9fffffff (=512 MB) kernel text mapping, from phys 0 +ffffffffa0000000 - fffffffffeffffff (1520 MB) module mapping space +[fixmap start] - ffffffffff5fffff kernel-internal fixmap range +ffffffffff600000 - ffffffffff600fff (=4 kB) legacy vsyscall ABI +ffffffffffe00000 - ffffffffffffffff (=2 MB) unused hole + +Architecture defines a 64-bit virtual address. Implementations can support +less. Currently supported are 48- and 57-bit virtual addresses. Bits 63 +through to the most-significant implemented bit are sign extended. +This causes hole between user space and kernel addresses if you interpret them +as unsigned. + +The direct mapping covers all memory in the system up to the highest +memory address (this means in some cases it can also include PCI memory +holes). + +vmalloc space is lazily synchronized into the different PML4/PML5 pages of +the processes using the page fault handler, with init_top_pgt as +reference. + +We map EFI runtime services in the 'efi_pgd' PGD in a 64Gb large virtual +memory window (this size is arbitrary, it can be raised later if needed). +The mappings are not part of any other kernel PGD and are only available +during EFI runtime calls. + +Note that if CONFIG_RANDOMIZE_MEMORY is enabled, the direct mapping of all +physical memory, vmalloc/ioremap space and virtual memory map are randomized. +Their order is preserved but their base will be offset early at boot time. + +Be very careful vs. KASLR when changing anything here. The KASLR address +range must not overlap with anything except the KASAN shadow area, which is +correct as KASAN disables KASLR. diff --git a/Documentation/x86/x86_64/uefi.txt b/Documentation/x86/x86_64/uefi.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000..a5e2b4fdb --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/x86/x86_64/uefi.txt @@ -0,0 +1,42 @@ +General note on [U]EFI x86_64 support +------------------------------------- + +The nomenclature EFI and UEFI are used interchangeably in this document. + +Although the tools below are _not_ needed for building the kernel, +the needed bootloader support and associated tools for x86_64 platforms +with EFI firmware and specifications are listed below. + +1. UEFI specification: http://www.uefi.org + +2. Booting Linux kernel on UEFI x86_64 platform requires bootloader + support. Elilo with x86_64 support can be used. + +3. x86_64 platform with EFI/UEFI firmware. + +Mechanics: +--------- +- Build the kernel with the following configuration. + CONFIG_FB_EFI=y + CONFIG_FRAMEBUFFER_CONSOLE=y + If EFI runtime services are expected, the following configuration should + be selected. + CONFIG_EFI=y + CONFIG_EFI_VARS=y or m # optional +- Create a VFAT partition on the disk +- Copy the following to the VFAT partition: + elilo bootloader with x86_64 support, elilo configuration file, + kernel image built in first step and corresponding + initrd. Instructions on building elilo and its dependencies + can be found in the elilo sourceforge project. +- Boot to EFI shell and invoke elilo choosing the kernel image built + in first step. +- If some or all EFI runtime services don't work, you can try following + kernel command line parameters to turn off some or all EFI runtime + services. + noefi turn off all EFI runtime services + reboot_type=k turn off EFI reboot runtime service +- If the EFI memory map has additional entries not in the E820 map, + you can include those entries in the kernels memory map of available + physical RAM by using the following kernel command line parameter. + add_efi_memmap include EFI memory map of available physical RAM diff --git a/Documentation/x86/zero-page.txt b/Documentation/x86/zero-page.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000..97b7adbce --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/x86/zero-page.txt @@ -0,0 +1,40 @@ +The additional fields in struct boot_params as a part of 32-bit boot +protocol of kernel. These should be filled by bootloader or 16-bit +real-mode setup code of the kernel. References/settings to it mainly +are in: + + arch/x86/include/uapi/asm/bootparam.h + + +Offset Proto Name Meaning +/Size + +000/040 ALL screen_info Text mode or frame buffer information + (struct screen_info) +040/014 ALL apm_bios_info APM BIOS information (struct apm_bios_info) +058/008 ALL tboot_addr Physical address of tboot shared page +060/010 ALL ist_info Intel SpeedStep (IST) BIOS support information + (struct ist_info) +080/010 ALL hd0_info hd0 disk parameter, OBSOLETE!! +090/010 ALL hd1_info hd1 disk parameter, OBSOLETE!! +0A0/010 ALL sys_desc_table System description table (struct sys_desc_table), + OBSOLETE!! +0B0/010 ALL olpc_ofw_header OLPC's OpenFirmware CIF and friends +0C0/004 ALL ext_ramdisk_image ramdisk_image high 32bits +0C4/004 ALL ext_ramdisk_size ramdisk_size high 32bits +0C8/004 ALL ext_cmd_line_ptr cmd_line_ptr high 32bits +140/080 ALL edid_info Video mode setup (struct edid_info) +1C0/020 ALL efi_info EFI 32 information (struct efi_info) +1E0/004 ALL alk_mem_k Alternative mem check, in KB +1E4/004 ALL scratch Scratch field for the kernel setup code +1E8/001 ALL e820_entries Number of entries in e820_table (below) +1E9/001 ALL eddbuf_entries Number of entries in eddbuf (below) +1EA/001 ALL edd_mbr_sig_buf_entries Number of entries in edd_mbr_sig_buffer + (below) +1EB/001 ALL kbd_status Numlock is enabled +1EC/001 ALL secure_boot Secure boot is enabled in the firmware +1EF/001 ALL sentinel Used to detect broken bootloaders +290/040 ALL edd_mbr_sig_buffer EDD MBR signatures +2D0/A00 ALL e820_table E820 memory map table + (array of struct e820_entry) +D00/1EC ALL eddbuf EDD data (array of struct edd_info) |