From patchwork Wed Jan 17 14:46:47 2024 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8" MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-Patchwork-Submitter: Alexander Graf X-Patchwork-Id: 13521837 Return-Path: X-Spam-Checker-Version: SpamAssassin 3.4.0 (2014-02-07) on aws-us-west-2-korg-lkml-1.web.codeaurora.org Received: from bombadil.infradead.org (bombadil.infradead.org [198.137.202.133]) (using TLSv1.2 with cipher ECDHE-RSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384 (256/256 bits)) (No client certificate requested) by smtp.lore.kernel.org (Postfix) with ESMTPS id 090FFC47DA2 for ; Wed, 17 Jan 2024 14:48:10 +0000 (UTC) DKIM-Signature: v=1; a=rsa-sha256; q=dns/txt; c=relaxed/relaxed; d=lists.infradead.org; s=bombadil.20210309; h=Sender: Content-Transfer-Encoding:Content-Type:List-Subscribe:List-Help:List-Post: List-Archive:List-Unsubscribe:List-Id:MIME-Version:Message-ID:Date:Subject:CC :To:From:Reply-To:Content-ID:Content-Description:Resent-Date:Resent-From: Resent-Sender:Resent-To:Resent-Cc:Resent-Message-ID:In-Reply-To:References: List-Owner; bh=abz9RdW6w6uP1wyzEECI3P2y85uRnm75fxKD6BIZhRY=; b=TP28QJp2AWE9c3 TR1kBBkodf9i7b6H28uKFZ7fOozE0pgyGiPhtjM0Hp3ORYYXo6rJMQpcpxEZ7FIvJ1kurR5jCQ5Yp nnezbDOUnfbswKP9vwgvn1VnhYkafZC2VnGdukAgj+z6hygzXqX5bAHAsczsbiovQT6vAgcr0nZlm 2kkNHRTb2s5LS7VuNe+rz1DoHuAx3oQVC7st286GiUFN42UA0l3eInD/NBfvD9db2gFeDllrUhTmW NqG4ivELqy0E9WdeHVkH1OVE13eUXpd1kwFBFyQpUaFm7EZfQUyKMEIx1kpCwaUBo9iXXpNA4rhM/ Vsb3aN8dfMt+YHUoZelw==; Received: from localhost ([::1] helo=bombadil.infradead.org) by bombadil.infradead.org with esmtp (Exim 4.96 #2 (Red Hat Linux)) id 1rQ7CU-00HHDT-0H; Wed, 17 Jan 2024 14:47:30 +0000 Received: from smtp-fw-9102.amazon.com ([207.171.184.29]) by bombadil.infradead.org with esmtps (Exim 4.96 #2 (Red Hat Linux)) id 1rQ7CO-00HHAY-1F; Wed, 17 Jan 2024 14:47:27 +0000 DKIM-Signature: v=1; a=rsa-sha256; c=relaxed/relaxed; d=amazon.com; i=@amazon.com; q=dns/txt; s=amazon201209; t=1705502844; x=1737038844; h=from:to:cc:subject:date:message-id:mime-version: content-transfer-encoding; bh=KI36AyxTHNxAyrC2/E2CPscnAMWQcpsDDCviRMf/ptM=; b=fqP3qkDOLeN/N8iYL9N9MVT1YqE9UI4v0jXiH9BWZXgoLcu/yuaAfIa0 a4fP6wE1rTml7SQURfR45kg3eS3tKI011uliqt2KkBWlZXNoc715ASSBW N9moufP6jx3qL6iCrBJnoCCiErWefEPUcy1Tlveni6B1fgHYmdbt0OOO2 8=; X-IronPort-AV: E=Sophos;i="6.05,200,1701129600"; d="scan'208";a="390420952" Received: from pdx4-co-svc-p1-lb2-vlan3.amazon.com (HELO email-inbound-relay-pdx-2c-m6i4x-dc7c3f8b.us-west-2.amazon.com) ([10.25.36.214]) by smtp-border-fw-9102.sea19.amazon.com with ESMTP/TLS/ECDHE-RSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384; 17 Jan 2024 14:47:13 +0000 Received: from smtpout.prod.us-west-2.prod.farcaster.email.amazon.dev (pdx2-ws-svc-p26-lb5-vlan2.pdx.amazon.com [10.39.38.66]) by email-inbound-relay-pdx-2c-m6i4x-dc7c3f8b.us-west-2.amazon.com (Postfix) with ESMTPS id 305C8A096F; Wed, 17 Jan 2024 14:47:11 +0000 (UTC) Received: from EX19MTAUWA001.ant.amazon.com [10.0.21.151:35085] by smtpin.naws.us-west-2.prod.farcaster.email.amazon.dev [10.0.23.111:2525] with esmtp (Farcaster) id 8f49e889-7c05-4767-8fa7-e8d859bd377f; Wed, 17 Jan 2024 14:47:10 +0000 (UTC) X-Farcaster-Flow-ID: 8f49e889-7c05-4767-8fa7-e8d859bd377f Received: from EX19D020UWC004.ant.amazon.com (10.13.138.149) by EX19MTAUWA001.ant.amazon.com (10.250.64.204) with Microsoft SMTP Server (version=TLS1_2, cipher=TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_AES_256_GCM_SHA384) id 15.2.1118.40; Wed, 17 Jan 2024 14:47:10 +0000 Received: from dev-dsk-graf-1a-5ce218e4.eu-west-1.amazon.com (10.253.83.51) by EX19D020UWC004.ant.amazon.com (10.13.138.149) with Microsoft SMTP Server (version=TLS1_2, cipher=TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_AES_256_GCM_SHA384) id 15.2.1118.40; Wed, 17 Jan 2024 14:47:06 +0000 From: Alexander Graf To: CC: , , , , , , , Eric Biederman , "H . Peter Anvin" , Andy Lutomirski , Peter Zijlstra , Steven Rostedt , Andrew Morton , Mark Rutland , "Tom Lendacky" , Ashish Kalra , James Gowans , Stanislav Kinsburskii , , , , Anthony Yznaga , Usama Arif , David Woodhouse , Benjamin Herrenschmidt , Rob Herring , Krzysztof Kozlowski Subject: [PATCH v3 00/17] kexec: Allow preservation of ftrace buffers Date: Wed, 17 Jan 2024 14:46:47 +0000 Message-ID: <20240117144704.602-1-graf@amazon.com> X-Mailer: git-send-email 2.40.1 MIME-Version: 1.0 X-Originating-IP: [10.253.83.51] X-ClientProxiedBy: EX19D046UWA001.ant.amazon.com (10.13.139.112) To EX19D020UWC004.ant.amazon.com (10.13.138.149) X-CRM114-Version: 20100106-BlameMichelson ( TRE 0.8.0 (BSD) ) MR-646709E3 X-CRM114-CacheID: sfid-20240117_064724_464851_FD139AC6 X-CRM114-Status: GOOD ( 33.94 ) X-BeenThere: linux-arm-kernel@lists.infradead.org X-Mailman-Version: 2.1.34 Precedence: list List-Id: List-Unsubscribe: , List-Archive: List-Post: List-Help: List-Subscribe: , Sender: "linux-arm-kernel" Errors-To: linux-arm-kernel-bounces+linux-arm-kernel=archiver.kernel.org@lists.infradead.org Kexec today considers itself purely a boot loader: When we enter the new kernel, any state the previous kernel left behind is irrelevant and the new kernel reinitializes the system. However, there are use cases where this mode of operation is not what we actually want. In virtualization hosts for example, we want to use kexec to update the host kernel while virtual machine memory stays untouched. When we add device assignment to the mix, we also need to ensure that IOMMU and VFIO states are untouched. If we add PCIe peer to peer DMA, we need to do the same for the PCI subsystem. If we want to kexec while an SEV-SNP enabled virtual machine is running, we need to preserve the VM context pages and physical memory. See James' and my Linux Plumbers Conference 2023 presentation for details: https://lpc.events/event/17/contributions/1485/ To start us on the journey to support all the use cases above, this patch implements basic infrastructure to allow hand over of kernel state across kexec (Kexec HandOver, aka KHO). As example target, we use ftrace: With this patch set applied, you can read ftrace records from the pre-kexec environment in your post-kexec one. This creates a very powerful debugging and performance analysis tool for kexec. It's also slightly easier to reason about than full blown VFIO state preservation. == Alternatives == There are alternative approaches to (parts of) the problems above: * Memory Pools [1] - preallocated persistent memory region + allocator * PRMEM [2] - resizable persistent memory regions with fixed metadata pointer on the kernel command line + allocator * Pkernfs [3] - preallocated file system for in-kernel data with fixed address location on the kernel command line * PKRAM [4] - handover of user space pages using a fixed metadata page specified via command line All of the approaches above fundamentally have the same problem: They require the administrator to explicitly carve out a physical memory location because they have no mechanism outside of the kernel command line to pass data (including memory reservations) between kexec'ing kernels. KHO provides that base foundation. We will determine later whether we still need any of the approaches above for fast bulk memory handover of for example IOMMU page tables. But IMHO they would all be users of KHO, with KHO providing the foundational primitive to pass metadata and bulk memory reservations as well as provide easy versioning for data. == Overview == We introduce a metadata file that the kernels pass between each other. How they pass it is architecture specific. The file's format is a Flattened Device Tree (fdt) which has a generator and parser already included in Linux. When the root user enables KHO through /sys/kernel/kho/active, the kernel invokes callbacks to every driver that supports KHO to serialize its state. When the actual kexec happens, the fdt is part of the image set that we boot into. In addition, we keep a "scratch region" available for kexec: A physically contiguous memory region that is guaranteed to not have any memory that KHO would preserve. The new kernel bootstraps itself using the scratch region and sets all handed over memory as in use. When drivers initialize that support KHO, they introspect the fdt and recover their state from it. This includes memory reservations, where the driver can either discard or claim reservations. == Limitations == I currently only implemented file based kexec. The kernel interfaces in the patch set are already in place to support user space kexec as well, but I have not implemented it yet inside kexec tools. == How to Use == To use the code, please boot the kernel with the "kho_scratch=" command line parameter set: "kho_scratch=512M". KHO requires a scratch region. Make sure to fill ftrace with contents that you want to observe after kexec. Then, before you invoke file based "kexec -l", activate KHO: # echo 1 > /sys/kernel/kho/active # kexec -l Image --initrd=initrd -s # kexec -e The new kernel will boot up and contain the previous kernel's trace buffers in /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/trace. == Changelog == v1 -> v2: - Removed: tracing: Introduce names for ring buffers - Removed: tracing: Introduce names for events - New: kexec: Add config option for KHO - New: kexec: Add documentation for KHO - New: tracing: Initialize fields before registering - New: devicetree: Add bindings for ftrace KHO - test bot warning fixes - Change kconfig option to ARCH_SUPPORTS_KEXEC_KHO - s/kho_reserve_mem/kho_reserve_previous_mem/g - s/kho_reserve/kho_reserve_scratch/g - Remove / reduce ifdefs - Select crc32 - Leave anything that requires a name in trace.c to keep buffers unnamed entities - Put events as array into a property, use fingerprint instead of names to identify them - Reduce footprint without CONFIG_FTRACE_KHO - s/kho_reserve_mem/kho_reserve_previous_mem/g - make kho_get_fdt() const - Add stubs for return_mem and claim_mem - make kho_get_fdt() const - Get events as array from a property, use fingerprint instead of names to identify events - Change kconfig option to ARCH_SUPPORTS_KEXEC_KHO - s/kho_reserve_mem/kho_reserve_previous_mem/g - s/kho_reserve/kho_reserve_scratch/g - Leave the node generation code that needs to know the name in trace.c so that ring buffers can stay anonymous - s/kho_reserve/kho_reserve_scratch/g - Move kho enums out of ifdef - Move from names to fdt offsets. That way, trace.c can find the trace array offset and then the ring buffer code only needs to read out its per-CPU data. That way it can stay oblivient to its name. - Make kho_get_fdt() const v2 -> v3: - Fix make dt_binding_check - Add descriptions for each object - s/trace_flags/trace-flags/ - s/global_trace/global-trace/ - Make all additionalProperties false - Change subject to reflect subsysten (dt-bindings) - Fix indentation - Remove superfluous examples - Convert to 64bit syntax - Move to kho directory - s/"global_trace"/"global-trace"/ - s/"global_trace"/"global-trace"/ - s/"trace_flags"/"trace-flags"/ - Fix wording - Add Documentation to MAINTAINERS file - Remove kho reference on read error - Move handover_dt unmap up - s/reserve_scratch_mem/mark_phys_as_cma/ - Remove ifdeffery - Remove superfluous comment Alexander Graf (17): mm,memblock: Add support for scratch memory memblock: Declare scratch memory as CMA kexec: Add Kexec HandOver (KHO) generation helpers kexec: Add KHO parsing support kexec: Add KHO support to kexec file loads kexec: Add config option for KHO kexec: Add documentation for KHO arm64: Add KHO support x86: Add KHO support tracing: Initialize fields before registering tracing: Introduce kho serialization tracing: Add kho serialization of trace buffers tracing: Recover trace buffers from kexec handover tracing: Add kho serialization of trace events tracing: Recover trace events from kexec handover tracing: Add config option for kexec handover Documentation: KHO: Add ftrace bindings Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-firmware-kho | 9 + Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-kernel-kho | 53 ++ .../admin-guide/kernel-parameters.txt | 10 + .../kho/bindings/ftrace/ftrace-array.yaml | 38 ++ .../kho/bindings/ftrace/ftrace-cpu.yaml | 43 ++ Documentation/kho/bindings/ftrace/ftrace.yaml | 62 +++ Documentation/kho/concepts.rst | 88 +++ Documentation/kho/index.rst | 19 + Documentation/kho/usage.rst | 57 ++ Documentation/subsystem-apis.rst | 1 + MAINTAINERS | 3 + arch/arm64/Kconfig | 3 + arch/arm64/kernel/setup.c | 2 + arch/arm64/mm/init.c | 8 + arch/x86/Kconfig | 3 + arch/x86/boot/compressed/kaslr.c | 55 ++ arch/x86/include/uapi/asm/bootparam.h | 15 +- arch/x86/kernel/e820.c | 9 + arch/x86/kernel/kexec-bzimage64.c | 39 ++ arch/x86/kernel/setup.c | 46 ++ arch/x86/mm/init_32.c | 7 + arch/x86/mm/init_64.c | 7 + drivers/of/fdt.c | 39 ++ drivers/of/kexec.c | 54 ++ include/linux/kexec.h | 58 ++ include/linux/memblock.h | 19 + include/linux/ring_buffer.h | 17 +- include/linux/trace_events.h | 1 + include/uapi/linux/kexec.h | 6 + kernel/Kconfig.kexec | 13 + kernel/Makefile | 2 + kernel/kexec_file.c | 41 ++ kernel/kexec_kho_in.c | 298 ++++++++++ kernel/kexec_kho_out.c | 526 ++++++++++++++++++ kernel/trace/Kconfig | 14 + kernel/trace/ring_buffer.c | 243 +++++++- kernel/trace/trace.c | 96 +++- kernel/trace/trace_events.c | 14 +- kernel/trace/trace_events_synth.c | 14 +- kernel/trace/trace_events_user.c | 4 + kernel/trace/trace_output.c | 247 +++++++- kernel/trace/trace_output.h | 5 + kernel/trace/trace_probe.c | 4 + mm/Kconfig | 4 + mm/memblock.c | 79 ++- 45 files changed, 2351 insertions(+), 24 deletions(-) create mode 100644 Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-firmware-kho create mode 100644 Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-kernel-kho create mode 100644 Documentation/kho/bindings/ftrace/ftrace-array.yaml create mode 100644 Documentation/kho/bindings/ftrace/ftrace-cpu.yaml create mode 100644 Documentation/kho/bindings/ftrace/ftrace.yaml create mode 100644 Documentation/kho/concepts.rst create mode 100644 Documentation/kho/index.rst create mode 100644 Documentation/kho/usage.rst create mode 100644 kernel/kexec_kho_in.c create mode 100644 kernel/kexec_kho_out.c Tested-by: Pratyush Yadav