}
/*
+ * Load our new page tables. A strict BBM approach requires that we ensure that
+ * TLBs are free of any entries that may overlap with the global mappings we are
+ * about to install.
+ *
+ * For a real hibernate/resume/kexec cycle TTBR0 currently points to a zero
+ * page, but TLBs may contain stale ASID-tagged entries (e.g. for EFI runtime
+ * services), while for a userspace-driven test_resume cycle it points to
+ * userspace page tables (and we must point it at a zero page ourselves).
+ *
+ * We change T0SZ as part of installing the idmap. This is undone by
+ * cpu_uninstall_idmap() in __cpu_suspend_exit().
+ */
+static inline void cpu_install_ttbr0(phys_addr_t ttbr0, unsigned long t0sz)
+{
+ cpu_set_reserved_ttbr0();
+ local_flush_tlb_all();
+ __cpu_set_tcr_t0sz(t0sz);
+
+ /* avoid cpu_switch_mm() and its SW-PAN and CNP interactions */
+ write_sysreg(ttbr0, ttbr0_el1);
+ isb();
+}
+
+/*
* Atomically replaces the active TTBR1_EL1 PGD with a new VA-compatible PGD,
* avoiding the possibility of conflicting TLB entries being allocated.
*/
if (rc)
return rc;
- /*
- * Load our new page tables. A strict BBM approach requires that we
- * ensure that TLBs are free of any entries that may overlap with the
- * global mappings we are about to install.
- *
- * For a real hibernate/resume cycle TTBR0 currently points to a zero
- * page, but TLBs may contain stale ASID-tagged entries (e.g. for EFI
- * runtime services), while for a userspace-driven test_resume cycle it
- * points to userspace page tables (and we must point it at a zero page
- * ourselves).
- *
- * We change T0SZ as part of installing the idmap. This is undone by
- * cpu_uninstall_idmap() in __cpu_suspend_exit().
- */
- cpu_set_reserved_ttbr0();
- local_flush_tlb_all();
- __cpu_set_tcr_t0sz(t0sz);
- write_sysreg(trans_ttbr0, ttbr0_el1);
- isb();
-
+ cpu_install_ttbr0(trans_ttbr0, t0sz);
*phys_dst_addr = virt_to_phys(page);
return 0;