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Re: [PATCH 18/18] x86: add multiboot2 protocol support for EFI platforms
From: |
Andrei Borzenkov |
Subject: |
Re: [PATCH 18/18] x86: add multiboot2 protocol support for EFI platforms |
Date: |
Sat, 14 Feb 2015 20:23:45 +0300 |
В Wed, 11 Feb 2015 08:20:04 +0000
"Jan Beulich" <address@hidden> пишет:
> >>> On 10.02.15 at 22:27, <address@hidden> wrote:
> > After some testing we have found at least one machine on which this thing
> > does not work. It is Dell PowerEdge R820 with latest firmware. Machine
> > crashes/stops because early 32-bit code is not relocatable and must live
> > under 0x100000 address. (side note: I am surprised how it worked without
> > any issue until now; Multiboot protocol, any version, does not guarantee
> > that OS image will be loaded at specified/requested address;
>
> How does it not? It's an ELF binary without relocations that's being
> loaded - I can't see how such could be validly loaded anywhere but
> at the virtual address(es) its program header states (and I don't
> know whether grub [1 or 2] would correctly process relocations if
> there were any, but I doubt it).
>
grub2 relocates own modules when loading them. It does not do
relocation when loading Xen binary, but it does not sound impossible.
> > Now I see two solutions for these issues:
> >
> > 1) We can make early 32-bit code relocatable. We may use something similar
> > to xen/arch/x86/boot/trampoline.S:bootsym_rel(). Additionally, I think
> > that early code should not blindly map first 16 MiB of memory. It should
> > map first 1 MiB of memory and then 16 MiB of memory starting from
> > xen_phys_start. This way we also fix long standing bug in early code
> > which I described earlier.
> >
> > 2) We can jump from EFI x86-64 mode directly into "Xen x86-64 mode" like
> > it is done in case of EFI loader. However, then we must duplicate
> > multiboot2
> > protocol implementation in x86-64 mode (if we wish that multiboot2
> > protocol
> > can be used on legacy BIOS and EFI platforms; I think that we should
> > support
> > this protocol on both for users convenience). Additionally, we must use
> > a workaround to relocate trampoline if boot services uses memory below 1
> > MiB
> > (please check commit c1f2dfe8f6a559bc28935f24e31bb33d17d9713d, x86/EFI:
> > make
> > trampoline allocation more flexible, for more details).
> >
> > I prefer #1 because this way we do not duplicate multiboot2 protocol
> > implementation
> > (one for legacy BIOS and EFI) and we avoid issues with trampoline
> > relocation
> > when
> > low memory is occupied by boot services and/or 1:1 EFI page tables.
>
> Between the two, 1 is certainly the preferable option.
>
> > PS I have just realized that commit c1f2dfe8f6a559bc28935f24e31bb33d17d9713d
> > will not work if trampoline code will overwrite some of EFI 1:1 page
> > tables.
> > Dell PowerEdge R820 store part of 1:1 page tables below 1 MiB. Xen loaded
> > by native EFI loader boots but it is only lucky coincidence that it does
> > not overwrite used entries. So, I tend to go and choose #1 even more.
>
> How awful a firmware implementation! On PC-like systems, _nothing_
> that _absolutely_ has to be below 1Mb should be placed there.
>
> Jan
>
>
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