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authorVasant Hegde <hegdevasant@linux.vnet.ibm.com>2017-06-09 22:49:05 +0530
committerStewart Smith <stewart@linux.vnet.ibm.com>2017-06-14 14:30:31 +1000
commitc8a7535f3539c79955645e6b3714b367a994b1e9 (patch)
tree6961a22c171aee0cb9326a5ab3f6d5691035f752 /hw
parent4cef4d8d6000936b1a4e1065bf69ee2edd3fcc1f (diff)
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FSP/CONSOLE: Workaround for unresponsive ipmi daemon
We use TCE mapped area to write data to console. Console header (fsp_serbuf_hdr) is modified by both FSP and OPAL (OPAL updates next_in pointer in fsp_serbuf_hdr and FSP updates next_out pointer). Kernel makes opal_console_write() OPAL call to write data to console. OPAL write data to TCE mapped area and sends MBOX command to FSP. If our console becomes full and we have data to write to console, we keep on waiting until FSP reads data. In some corner cases, where FSP is active but not responding to console MBOX message (due to buggy IPMI) and we have heavy console write happening from kernel, then eventually our console buffer becomes full. At this point OPAL starts sending OPAL_BUSY_EVENT to kernel. Kernel will keep on retrying. This is creating kernel soft lockups. In some extreme case when every CPU is trying to write to console, user will not be able to ssh and thinks system is hang. If we reset FSP or restart IPMI daemon on FSP, system recovers and everything becomes normal. This patch adds workaround to above issue by returning OPAL_HARDWARE when cosole is full. Side effect of this patch is, we may endup dropping latest console data. But better to drop console data than system hang. Alternative approach is to drop old data from console buffer, make space for new data. But in normal condition only FSP can update 'next_out' pointer and if we touch that pointer, it may introduce some other race conditions. Hence we decided to just new console write request. Signed-off-by: Vasant Hegde <hegdevasant@linux.vnet.ibm.com> Acked-by: Vaidyanathan Srinivasan <svaidy@linux.vnet.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Stewart Smith <stewart@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'hw')
-rw-r--r--hw/fsp/fsp-console.c18
1 files changed, 17 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/hw/fsp/fsp-console.c b/hw/fsp/fsp-console.c
index 8eaf7b8..ae71761 100644
--- a/hw/fsp/fsp-console.c
+++ b/hw/fsp/fsp-console.c
@@ -26,6 +26,11 @@
#include <timebase.h>
#include <device.h>
#include <fsp-sysparam.h>
+#include <errorlog.h>
+
+DEFINE_LOG_ENTRY(OPAL_RC_CONSOLE_HANG, OPAL_PLATFORM_ERR_EVT, OPAL_CONSOLE,
+ OPAL_PLATFORM_FIRMWARE,
+ OPAL_PREDICTIVE_ERR_GENERAL, OPAL_NA);
struct fsp_serbuf_hdr {
u16 partition_id;
@@ -611,7 +616,18 @@ static int64_t fsp_console_write(int64_t term_number, int64_t *length,
*length = written;
unlock(&fsp_con_lock);
- return written ? OPAL_SUCCESS : OPAL_BUSY_EVENT;
+ if (written)
+ return OPAL_SUCCESS;
+
+ /*
+ * FSP is still active but not reading console data. Hence
+ * our console buffer became full. Most likely IPMI daemon
+ * on FSP is buggy. Lets log error and return OPAL_HARDWARE
+ * to payload (Linux).
+ */
+ log_simple_error(&e_info(OPAL_RC_CONSOLE_HANG), "FSPCON: Console "
+ "buffer is full, dropping console data\n");
+ return OPAL_HARDWARE;
}
static int64_t fsp_console_write_buffer_space(int64_t term_number,