On Wed, 2 Feb 2022 at 13:41, Krzysztof Adamski
<krzysztof.adamski@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Dnia Tue, Feb 01, 2022 at 01:58:29PM +0000, Mark Rutland napisał(a):
>> If we use the restart handlers only to reset the system, this is indeed
>> true. But technically, restart handlers support the scenario where the
>> handler does some action that does not do reset of the whole system and
>> passes the control further down the chain, eventually reaching a handler
>> that will reset the whole system.
>> This can be done on non-uefi systems without problems but it doesn't
>> work on UEFI bases arm64 systems and this is a problem for us.
>>
>> In other words, I would like to be able to run a restart handler on EFI
>> based ARM64 systems, just like I can on other systems, just for its
>> "side effects", not to do the actual reboot. Current code disables this
>> possibility on an ARM64 EFI system.
>
>It sounds like two things are being conflated here:
>
>1) A *notification* that a restart will subsequently occur.
>2) A *request* to initiate a restart.
>
>IIUC (1) is supposed to be handled by the existing reboot notifier mechanism
>(see the reboot_notifier_list) which *is* invoked prior to the EFI reboot
>today.
>
>IMO, using restart handlers as notifiers is an abuse of the interface, and
>that's the fundamental problem.
>
>What am I missing?
You are completly right. It is possible that I would like to be able to
*abuse* the restart handlers as notifier. You are right that we have a
reboot_notifier but it is not good enough for my usecase - it is only
called, well, on reboot. It is not called in case of emergency_restart()
so in case of a panic, this won't happen. It also is called much earlier
than restart handlers which also makes a difference in some cases. So I
see no other choice than to abuse the restart_handler mechanism for that.
Why would such a platform implement ResetSystem() in the first place
if it cannot be used?
So the right solution here is for the firmware to publish a
EFI_RT_PROPERTIES_TABLE that describes ResetSystem() as unsupported,
and Linux will happily disregard it and try something else.
Btw please cc linux-efi@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx and myself on future EFI
issues. I found this thread by accident.