[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: Troubles running Xen on Raspberry Pi 4 with 5.6.1 DomU
Hi, On 06/05/2020 14:48, Corey Minyard wrote: On Sat, May 02, 2020 at 12:46:14PM +0100, Julien Grall wrote:Hi, On 02/05/2020 03:16, Corey Minyard wrote:On Fri, May 01, 2020 at 06:06:11PM -0700, Roman Shaposhnik wrote:On Fri, May 1, 2020 at 4:42 AM Corey Minyard <minyard@xxxxxxx> wrote:On Thu, Apr 30, 2020 at 07:20:05PM -0700, Roman Shaposhnik wrote:Hi! I'm trying to run Xen on Raspberry Pi 4 with 5.6.1 stock, upstream kernel. The kernel itself works perfectly well on the board. When I try booting it as Dom0 under Xen, it goes into a stacktrace (attached).Getting Xen working on the Pi4 requires a lot of moving parts, and they all have to be right.Tell me about it! It is a pretty frustrating journey to align everything just right. On the other hand -- it seems worth to enable RPi as an ARM development platform for Xen given how ubiquitous it is. Hence me trying to combine pristine upstream kernel (5.6.1) with pristine upstream Xen to enable 100% upstream developer workflow on RPi.Looking at what nice folks over at Dornerworks have previously done to make RPi kernels boot as Dom0 I've come across these 3 patches: https://github.com/dornerworks/xen-rpi4-builder/tree/master/patches/linux The first patch seems irrelevant (unless I'm missing something really basic here).It might be irrelevant for your configuration, assuming that Xen gets the right information from EFI. I haven't tried EFI booting.I'd doing a bit of belt-and-suspenders strategy really -- I'm actually using UEFI u-boot implementation that pre-populates device trees and then I'm also forcing an extra copy of it to be load explicitly via the GRUB devicetree command (GRUB runs as a UEFI payload). I also have access to the semi-official TianoCore RPi4 port that seems to be working pretty well: https://github.com/pftf/RPi4/releases/tag/v1.5 for booting all sort of UEFI payloads on RPi4.The 2nd patch applied with no issue (but I don't think it is related) but the 3d patch failed to apply on account of 5.6.1 kernel no longer having: dev->archdata.dev_dma_ops E.g. https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/stable/linux.git/tree/arch/arm64/mm/dma-mapping.c?h=v5.6.1#n55 I've tried to emulate the effect of the patch by simply introducing a static variable that would signal that we already initialized dev->dma_ops -- but that didn't help at all. I'm CCing Jeff Kubascik to see if the original authors of that Corey Minyard to see if may be they have any suggestions on how this may be dealt with. Any advice would be greatly appreciated!What's your Pi4 config.txt file look like? The GIC is not being handled correctly, and I'm guessing that configuration is wrong. You can't use the stock config.txt file with Xen, you have to modify the configuration a bit.Understood. I'm actually using a custom one: https://github.com/lf-edge/eve/blob/master/pkg/u-boot/rpi/config.txt I could swear that I had a GIC setting in it -- but apparently no -- so I added the following at the top of what you could see at the URL above: total_mem=4096 enable_gic=1I think just adding: enable_gic=1 total_mem=1024Right -- but my board has 4G memory -- so I think what I did above should work.Nope. If you say 4096M of RAM, your issue is almost certainly DMA, but it's not (just) the Linux code. On the Raspberry Pi 4, several devices cannot DMA to above 1024M of RAM, but Xen does not handle this. The 1024M of RAM is a limitation you will have to live with until Xen has a fix.IIUC, dom0 would need to have some memory below 1GB for this to work, am I correct?FYI, this also seems to fix the issue with HDMI not working. Thank you for the testing! I will have a look how I can properly upstream this fix (I think we want to keep 4GB limit for other platforms). Cheers, -- Julien Grall
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