Re: [PATCH v3] Drivers: hv: vmbus: Improve the logic of reserving fb_mmio on Gen2 VMs
From: Wei Liu
Date: Wed May 27 2026 - 18:29:11 EST
On Thu, May 07, 2026 at 02:28:38PM -0700, Dexuan Cui wrote:
> If vmbus_reserve_fb() in the kdump/kexec kernel fails to properly reserve
> the framebuffer MMIO range (which is below 4GB) due to a Gen2 VM's
> screen.lfb_base being zero [1], there is an MMIO conflict between the
> drivers hyperv-drm and pci-hyperv: when the driver pci-hyperv's
> hv_allocate_config_window() calls vmbus_allocate_mmio() to get an
> MMIO range, typically it gets a 32-bit MMIO range that overlaps with the
> framebuffer MMIO range, and later hv_pci_enter_d0() fails with an
> error message "PCI Pass-through VSP failed D0 Entry with status" since
> the host thinks that PCI devices must not use MMIO space that the
> host has assigned to the framebuffer.
>
> This is especially an issue if pci-hyperv is built-in and hyperv-drm is
> built as a module. Consequently, the kdump/kexec kernel fails to detect
> PCI devices via pci-hyperv, and may fail to mount the root file system,
> which may reside in a NVMe disk. The issue described here has existed
> for SR-IOV VF NICs since day one of the pci-hyperv driver, and has been
> worked around on x64 when possible. With the recent introduction of
> ARM64 VMs that boot from NVMe, there is no workaround, so we need a
> formal fix.
>
> On Gen2 VMs, if the screen.lfb_base is 0 in the kdump/kexec kernel [1],
> fall back to the low MMIO base, which should be equal to the framebuffer
> MMIO base [2] (the statement is true according to my testing on x64
> Windows Server 2016, and on x64 and ARM64 Windows Server 2025 and on
> Azure. I checked with the Hyper-V team and they said the statement should
> continue to be true for Gen2 VMs). In the first kernel, screen.lfb_base
> is not 0; if the user specifies a very high resolution, it's not enough
> to only reserve 8MB: let's always reserve half of the space below 4GB,
> but cap the reservation to 128MB, which is the required framebuffer size
> of the highest resolution 7680*4320 supported by Hyper-V.
>
> While at it, fix the comparison "end > VTPM_BASE_ADDRESS" by changing
> the > to >=. Here the 'end' is an inclusive end (typically, it's
> 0xFFFF_FFFF for the low MMIO range).
>
> Note: vmbus_reserve_fb() now also reserves an MMIO range at the beginning
> of the low MMIO range on CVMs, which have no framebuffers (the
> 'screen.lfb_base' in vmbus_reserve_fb() is 0 for CVMs), just in case the
> host might treat the beginning of the low MMIO range specially [3]. BTW,
> the OpenHCL kernel is not affected by the change, because that kernel
> boots with DeviceTree rather than ACPI (so vmbus_reserve_fb() won't run
> there), and there is no framebuffer device for that kernel.
>
> Note: normally Gen1 VMs don't have the MMIO conflict issue because the
> framebuffer MMIO range (which is hardcoded to base=4GB-128MB and
> size=64MB for Gen1 VMs by the host) is always reported via the legacy PCI
> graphics device's BAR, so the kdump/kexec kernel can reserve the 64MB
> MMIO range; however, if the VM is configured to use a very high resolution
> and the required framebuffer size exceeds 64MB (AFAIK, in practice, this
> isn't a typical configuration by users), the hyperv-drm driver may need to
> allocate an MMIO range above 4GB and change the framebuffer MMIO location
> to the allocated MMIO range -- in this case, there can still be issues [4]
> which can't be easily fixed: any possible affected Gen1 users would have
> to use a resolution whose framebuffer size is <= 64MB, or switch to Gen2
> VMs.
>
> [1] https://lore.kernel.org/all/SA1PR21MB692176C1BC53BFC9EAE5CF8EBF51A@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx/
> [2] https://lore.kernel.org/all/SA1PR21MB69218F955B62DFF62E3E88D2BF222@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx/
> [3] https://lore.kernel.org/all/SN6PR02MB415726B17D5A6027CD1717E8D4342@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx/
> [4] https://lore.kernel.org/all/SA1PR21MB69213486F821CA5A2C793C81BF342@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx/
>
> Fixes: 4daace0d8ce8 ("PCI: hv: Add paravirtual PCI front-end for Microsoft Hyper-V VMs")
> CC: stable@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Reviewed-by: Michael Kelley <mhklinux@xxxxxxxxxxx>
> Tested-by: Krister Johansen <kjlx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> Tested-by: Matthew Ruffell <matthew.ruffell@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> Signed-off-by: Dexuan Cui <decui@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Applied. Thanks.