Zoltan Boszormenyi reported this regression:
"There's a Realtek RTL8111/8168/8411 (PCI ID 10ec:8168, Subsystem ID
1565:230e) network chip on the mainboard. After the r8169 driver loaded
the IRQs in the machine went berserk. Keyboard keypressed arrived with
considerable latency and duplicated, so no real work was possible.
The machine responded to the power button but didn't actually power
down. It just stuck at the powering down message. I had to press the
power button for 4 seconds to power it down.
The computer is a POS machine with a big battery inside. Because of this,
either ACPI or the Realtek chip kept the bad state and after rebooting,
the network chip didn't even show up in lspci. Not even the PXE ROM
announced itself during boot. I had to disconnect the battery to beat
some sense back to the computer.
The regression happens with 4.0.5, 4.1.0-rc8 and 4.1.0-final. 3.18.16 was
good."
The regression is caused by commit
593669c2ac0f (x86/PCI/ACPI: Use common
ACPI resource interfaces to simplify implementation). Since commit
593669c2ac0f, x86 PCI ACPI host bridge driver validates ACPI resources by
first converting an ACPI resource to a 'struct resource' structure and
then applying checks against the converted resource structure. The 'start'
and 'end' fields in 'struct resource' are defined to be type of
resource_size_t, which may be 32 bits or 64 bits depending on
CONFIG_PHYS_ADDR_T_64BIT.
This may cause incorrect resource validation results with 32-bit kernels
because 64-bit ACPI resource descriptors may get truncated when converting
to 32-bit 'start' and 'end' fields in 'struct resource'. It eventually
affects PCI resource allocation subsystem and makes some PCI devices and
the system behave abnormally due to incorrect resource assignment.
So enhance the ACPI resource parsing interfaces to ignore ACPI resource
descriptors with address/offset above 4G when running in 32-bit mode.
With the fix applied, the behavior of the machine was restored to how
3.18.16 worked, i.e. the memory range that is over 4GB is ignored again,
and lspci -vvxxx shows that everything is at the same memory window as
they were with 3.18.16.
Reported-and-tested-by: Boszormenyi Zoltan <zboszor@pr.hu>
Fixes:
593669c2ac0f (x86/PCI/ACPI: Use common ACPI resource interfaces to simplify implementation)
Signed-off-by: Jiang Liu <jiang.liu@linux.intel.com>
Cc: 4.0+ <stable@vger.kernel.org> # 4.0+
Signed-off-by: Rafael J. Wysocki <rafael.j.wysocki@intel.com>
u8 iodec = attr->granularity == 0xfff ? ACPI_DECODE_10 : ACPI_DECODE_16;
bool wp = addr->info.mem.write_protect;
u64 len = attr->address_length;
+ u64 start, end, offset = 0;
struct resource *res = &win->res;
/*
pr_debug("ACPI: Invalid address space min_addr_fix %d, max_addr_fix %d, len %llx\n",
addr->min_address_fixed, addr->max_address_fixed, len);
- res->start = attr->minimum;
- res->end = attr->maximum;
-
/*
* For bridges that translate addresses across the bridge,
* translation_offset is the offset that must be added to the
* primary side. Non-bridge devices must list 0 for all Address
* Translation offset bits.
*/
- if (addr->producer_consumer == ACPI_PRODUCER) {
- res->start += attr->translation_offset;
- res->end += attr->translation_offset;
- } else if (attr->translation_offset) {
+ if (addr->producer_consumer == ACPI_PRODUCER)
+ offset = attr->translation_offset;
+ else if (attr->translation_offset)
pr_debug("ACPI: translation_offset(%lld) is invalid for non-bridge device.\n",
attr->translation_offset);
+ start = attr->minimum + offset;
+ end = attr->maximum + offset;
+
+ win->offset = offset;
+ res->start = start;
+ res->end = end;
+ if (sizeof(resource_size_t) < sizeof(u64) &&
+ (offset != win->offset || start != res->start || end != res->end)) {
+ pr_warn("acpi resource window ([%#llx-%#llx] ignored, not CPU addressable)\n",
+ attr->minimum, attr->maximum);
+ return false;
}
switch (addr->resource_type) {
return false;
}
- win->offset = attr->translation_offset;
-
if (addr->producer_consumer == ACPI_PRODUCER)
res->flags |= IORESOURCE_WINDOW;