Reverting seems like the right approach at the moment. My apologies
for the breakage so late the in the cycle.
Post-revert, there remains a bug here wherein you can make the system
OOPS if you mmap memory above the 48 bit bus width. Linus/Ingo, is
there something in particular that you'd like to see before pulling in
a check on the bus width (or some other fix)? Based on Linus'
comment, the bus width check smells like something that should cook
for a while before pulling into mainline.
On Thu, Oct 26, 2017 at 1:29 PM, Linus Torvalds
<[email protected]> wrote:
> On Thu, Oct 26, 2017 at 9:02 PM, Ingo Molnar <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> Well, 'mem=2048M' shouldn't really limit device memory, it's supposed to limit
>> (trim) 'RAM' and not much else.
>
> Agreed. You should very much be able to map in IO memory or whatever
> above the 2G address even if the high_memory itself might be limited
> to 2GB.
>
> So I think that commit ce56a86e2ade ("x86/mm: Limit mmap() of /dev/mem
> to valid physical addresses") is wrong, in that "high_memory" is very
> much the wrong thing to test.
>
> The memory mapping limit might validly be something like
>
> 1ull << boot_cpu_data.x86_phys_bits
>
> or similar, but for now I suspect that the right thing to do is to
> revert. I'm not convinced that our "x86_phys_bits" value is guaranteed
> to be always right, since I think we mainlyjust use it for showing
> things, rather than have lots of code that depends on it.
>
> Ingo?
>
> Linus
From 1582349782608274533@xxx Thu Oct 26 19:32:27 +0000 2017
X-GM-THRID: 1582105239086831553
X-Gmail-Labels: Inbox,Category Forums