@@ -425,8 +425,7 @@ static void ghes_handle_memory_failure(struct acpi_hest_generic_data *gdata, int
* GHES_SEV_RECOVERABLE -> AER_NONFATAL
* GHES_SEV_RECOVERABLE && CPER_SEC_RESET -> AER_FATAL
* These both need to be reported and recovered from by the AER driver.
- * GHES_SEV_PANIC does not make it to this handling since the kernel must
- * panic.
+ * GHES_SEV_PANIC -> AER_FATAL
*/
static void ghes_handle_aer(struct acpi_hest_generic_data *gdata)
{
@@ -459,6 +458,49 @@ static void ghes_handle_aer(struct acpi_hest_generic_data *gdata)
#endif
}
+/* PCIe errors should not cause a panic. */
+static int ghes_sec_pcie_severity(struct acpi_hest_generic_data *gdata)
+{
+ struct cper_sec_pcie *pcie_err = acpi_hest_get_payload(gdata);
+
+ if (pcie_err->validation_bits & CPER_PCIE_VALID_DEVICE_ID &&
+ pcie_err->validation_bits & CPER_PCIE_VALID_AER_INFO &&
+ IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_ACPI_APEI_PCIEAER))
+ return GHES_SEV_RECOVERABLE;
+
+ return ghes_cper_severity(gdata->error_severity);
+}
+
+/*
+ * The severity field in the status block is an unreliable metric for the
+ * severity. A more reliable way is to look at each subsection and see how safe
+ * it is to call the approproate error handler.
+ * We're not conerned with handling the error. We're concerned with being able
+ * to notify an error handler by crossing the NMI/IRQ boundary, being able to
+ * schedule_work, and so forth.
+ * - SEC_PCIE: All PCIe errors can be handled by AER.
+ */
+static int ghes_severity(struct ghes *ghes)
+{
+ int worst_sev, sec_sev;
+ struct acpi_hest_generic_data *gdata;
+ const guid_t *section_type;
+ const struct acpi_hest_generic_status *estatus = ghes->estatus;
+
+ worst_sev = GHES_SEV_NO;
+ apei_estatus_for_each_section(estatus, gdata) {
+ section_type = (guid_t *)gdata->section_type;
+ sec_sev = ghes_cper_severity(gdata->error_severity);
+
+ if (guid_equal(section_type, &CPER_SEC_PCIE))
+ sec_sev = ghes_sec_pcie_severity(gdata);
+
+ worst_sev = max(worst_sev, sec_sev);
+ }
+
+ return worst_sev;
+}
+
static void ghes_do_proc(struct ghes *ghes,
const struct acpi_hest_generic_status *estatus)
{
@@ -944,7 +986,7 @@ static int ghes_notify_nmi(unsigned int cmd, struct pt_regs *regs)
ret = NMI_HANDLED;
}
- sev = ghes_cper_severity(ghes->estatus->error_severity);
+ sev = ghes_severity(ghes);
if (sev >= GHES_SEV_PANIC) {
oops_begin();
ghes_print_queued_estatus();
The policy was to panic() when GHES said that an error is "Fatal". This logic is wrong for several reasons, as it doesn't take into account what caused the error. PCIe fatal errors indicate that the link to a device is either unstable or unusable. They don't indicate that the machine is on fire, and they are not severe enough that we need to panic(). Instead of relying on crackmonkey firmware, evaluate the error severity based on what caused the error (GHES subsections). Signed-off-by: Alexandru Gagniuc <mr.nuke.me@gmail.com> --- drivers/acpi/apei/ghes.c | 48 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++--- 1 file changed, 45 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)