On Wednesday, July 27, 2016 05:17:38 PM Josh Poimboeuf wrote: > On Thu, Jul 28, 2016 at 12:12:15AM +0200, Rafael J. Wysocki wrote: > > On Wednesday, July 27, 2016 12:59:18 PM Josh Poimboeuf wrote: > > > Hm... I have a theory, but I'm not sure about it. I noticed that > > > x86_acpi_enter_sleep_state(), > > > > I think you mean x86_acpi_suspend_lowlevel(). > > Oops! > > > > which is involved in suspend, overwrites > > > several global variables (e.g, initial_code) which are used by the CPU > > > boot code in head_64.S. But surprisingly, it doesn't restore those > > > variables to their original values after it resumes. > > > > Is the head_64.S code also used to bring up offline CPUs? > > Yes.
OK So it is really interesting why and how that stuff works for everybody. Basically, CPU online should fail after a suspend-resume cycle, but it doesn't most of the time AFAICS. > > If not, then this is not the problem, because hibernation doesn't use it > > for the boot CPU anyway. > > > > > So if a suspend and resume were done before the hibernate, those > > > variables would presumably have suspend-centric values, and the first > > > time a CPU is brought up during the hibernation restore operation, it > > > would jump to wakeup_long64() (the suspend resume function) instead of > > > start_secondary (which is the normal CPU boot function). > > > > > > So, if true, that would explain why my patch triggers a bug: > > > wakeup_long64() always[*] jumps to .Lresume_point, which my patch > > > affected. Because of the FRAME_END, it would pop an extra value off the > > > stack. So when restore_processor_state() returns, it would return to > > > whatever random address is on the stack after the real RIP. Which is > > > consistent with the oops from the bug. It had a bad instruction > > > pointer, which looked like a stack address. > > > > OK, so why doesn't it break resume from suspend to RAM? > > Because for suspend to RAM, it enters suspend through > do_suspend_lowlevel(), which has the FRAME_BEGIN which corresponds to > .Lresume_point's FRAME_END. > > > wakeup_long64 is invoked by the CPU startup code then and doesn't the > > FRAME_END affect that too? > > Yes, I would imagine that any CPU startup operation (after > suspend/resume to RAM) would be affected. That would mean that your patch is needed anyway, wouldn't it? Thanks, Rafael