Re: AMD-IOMMU and problem with __init(data)?
From: Alexander Holler
Date: Tue Sep 29 2015 - 13:18:01 EST
Am 29.09.2015 um 17:06 schrieb Joerg Roedel:
As expected it is no bug in the AMD IOMMU driver, but in your code.
On Wed, Sep 23, 2015 at 09:04:31PM +0200, Alexander Holler wrote:
struct _annotated_initcall {
initcall_t initcall;
unsigned driver_id;
unsigned *dependencies;
struct device_driver *driver;
};
This struct gets aligned on a 32 bytes boundary.
+#define ANNOTATED_INITCALLS \
+ VMLINUX_SYMBOL(__annotated_initcall_start) = .; \
+ *(.annotated_initcall.init) \
+ VMLINUX_SYMBOL(__annotated_initcall_end) = .;
But this section does not.
+ ac = __annotated_initcall_start;
+ pr_info("ac %p ID %u\n", ac, ac->driver_id);
+ BUG_ON(ac->driver_id != 23);
So when you access __annotated_initcall_start here, you don't access the
first element of your array, but actually the zero padding before your
struct.
On my system the section was aligned on an 8 bytes boundary, which means
there were 24 bytes of padding before the symbol you try to access.
Hmm. Thanks a lot. Also I've checked the alignment (at least twice) and
remember it was 32bit. But maybe I've checked something different or
looked at some file for ARM or x86(_32) or was confused or similar. But
now, when I look at ARM the initcall section seems to be aligned to 8
too. So I wonder why the stuff works on ARM (v5 and v7) and on an Intel
Atom (32bit). I think at least the armv5 box should have trapped (fatal)
too, but maybe that changed.
Sorry for not having looked at the alignment at least once more.
Alignment bugs are always hard to see and I've already assumed such,
especially because any other kernel seems to work, but I was obviously
unable to see it.
Again, thanks a lot.
Regards,
Alexander Holler
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