From 61603016e2122bf95328321b2f1a64277202b6e3 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Russell King Date: Mon, 14 Mar 2016 19:34:37 +0000 Subject: ARM: kexec: fix crashkernel= handling When the kernel crashkernel parameter is specified with just a size, we are supposed to allocate a region from RAM to store the crashkernel. However, ARM merely reserves physical address zero with no checking that there is even RAM there. Fix this by lifting similar code from x86, importing it to ARM with the ARM specific parameters added. In the absence of any platform specific information, we allocate the crashkernel region from the first 512MB of physical memory. Update the kdump documentation to reflect this change. Signed-off-by: Russell King Reviewed-by: Pratyush Anand --- Documentation/kdump/kdump.txt | 13 +++---------- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-) (limited to 'Documentation') diff --git a/Documentation/kdump/kdump.txt b/Documentation/kdump/kdump.txt index bc4bd5a44b88..88ff63d5fde3 100644 --- a/Documentation/kdump/kdump.txt +++ b/Documentation/kdump/kdump.txt @@ -263,12 +263,6 @@ The syntax is: crashkernel=:[,:,...][@offset] range=start-[end] -Please note, on arm, the offset is required. - crashkernel=:[,:,...]@offset - range=start-[end] - - 'start' is inclusive and 'end' is exclusive. - For example: crashkernel=512M-2G:64M,2G-:128M @@ -307,10 +301,9 @@ Boot into System Kernel on the memory consumption of the kdump system. In general this is not dependent on the memory size of the production system. - On arm, use "crashkernel=Y@X". Note that the start address of the kernel - will be aligned to 128MiB (0x08000000), so if the start address is not then - any space below the alignment point may be overwritten by the dump-capture kernel, - which means it is possible that the vmcore is not that precise as expected. + On arm, the use of "crashkernel=Y@X" is no longer necessary; the + kernel will automatically locate the crash kernel image within the + first 512MB of RAM if X is not given. Load the Dump-capture Kernel -- cgit