On 12/22/2014 09:00 PM, Andi Kleen wrote:
On Mon, Dec 22, 2014 at 10:49:40AM -0800, Andi Kleen wrote:Hi Andi,
On Mon, Dec 22, 2014 at 11:58:43AM -0500, Alex Deucher wrote:
On Mon, Dec 22, 2014 at 6:11 AM, Oded Gabbay <oded.gabbay@xxxxxxx> wrote:Sorry but the patch is just bogus. X-bit only code is usually
amdkfd driver can be compiled only in 64-bit kernel. Therefore, there is noReviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@xxxxxxx>
point in trying to initialize amdkfd in 32-bit kernel.
In addition, in case of specific configuration of 32-bit kernel, no modules and
random kernel base, the symbol_request function doesn't work as expected - It
doesn't return NULL if the symbol doesn't exists. That makes the kernel panic.
Therefore, the as amdkfd doesn't compile in 32-bit kernel, the best way is just
to return false immediately.
Signed-off-by: Oded Gabbay <oded.gabbay@xxxxxxx>
a very bad sign for the code. This is not windows programing after all.
Strange, I have never programmed for Windows in my life (except maybe in a
few courses during my degree) :)
So amdkfd actually *only* supports 64bit user processes, because AMD's HSAEven if you wanted to do a 64bit only driver -- which
you probably don't -- the standard way would be to exclude
it in Kconfig.
stack on Linux supports *only* 64bit user processes. So, yes, I definitely
want to do a 64bit only driver.
If you look at kfd_open(), it fails the open of /dev/kfd if the process is
32bit.
In addition, in Kconfig of amdkfd, it is written:
"depends on DRM_RADEON && AMD_IOMMU_V2 && X86_64"
The problem here is that there is code in radeon, which is a driver that can
compile in 32bit, which tries to load amdkfd. I didn't see a point in trying
to load a driver which can't be compiled in 32bit.
I didn't say it doesn't always work.Please root-cause why symbol_request doesn't work on 32bit
and fix it properly.
The actual thing that doesn't work is the define symbol_get and only in a
specific case of 32bit kernel AND CONFIG_MODULES is unset AND
CONFIG_RANDOMIZE_BASE is set.
The define in that case is:
#define symbol_get(x) ({ extern typeof(x) x __attribute__((weak)); &(x); })
Why it doesn't work (doesn't return NULL when symbol doesn't exists) ?
I don't know, probably because of some elf/makefile/c language magic. I'm
not that big of an expert on those issues, and I wanted to provide a fix for
this problem during the -rc stages. If someone can help me solving the root
cause, I would be more than happy.
Oded
_______________________________________________+rusty.And also with correct email.
-Andi
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