Since I wrote this , we've made some worthwhile progress on avoiding damaging Samsung hardware. The first is that the samsung-laptop driver appeared to be causing the firmware to attempt to write to an area of memory that was marked in the chipset, triggering a Machine Check Exception. That was what generated the pstore output that caused the problem originally. The driver now refuses to load if EFI is enabled, which avoids the problem. It's not ideal, since it's currently the only mechanism we have for certain functionality on Samsung laptops, but there you go.The second problem was that avoiding crashing on boot didn't actually fix the problem in any fundamental way. Even with pstore disabled, it was possible for userspace to fill the nvram and trigger the same problem. Our first approach to this was to prevent any writes to nvram if the UEFI QueryVariableInfo() call reported that more than 50% of the nvram storage space would be used. That was safe, but led to another issue. The nvram storage area is typically implemented as part of the same flash chip as the firmware. Flash isn't arbitrarily accessible - changing the contents of a block typically involves rewriting the entire block. It's impractical to rewrite the entire nvram area on every write, so what actually happens is that deleting variables just results in them being marked as inactive but doesn't actually free up the space. The firmware can later perform some sort of garbage collection to free it up.This caused us problems, since inactive space that hasn't been garbage collected yet isn't actually available, and as a result firmware implementations tend to count it as used. Say you had 64KB of nvram and wrote 32KB of variables. We'd then refuse to write any more because you'd drop below 50%. So you delete 16KB of the variables you've created and try again. Unfortunately, the firmware still thinks that there's 32KB in use and Linux would still refuse.If you were lucky, rebooting would trigger a garbage collection run. If you weren't, it wouldn't. Problematic. Our next approach was to try to account for the space actually actively used by the variables, rather than relying on what the firmware told us via QueryVariableInfo(). This seems simple enough - just add up the size of all the variables and subtract that from the overall size to determine how much of the "used" space is actually just old inactive variables that can be ignored. However, there's still some problems there. The first is that each variable has some additional overhead associated with it, and the size of that overhead varies depending on the system vendor. We had to make a conservative guess, which could cause problems if systems had large numbers of small variables. The second is that the only variables the kernel can see are those that are flagged as runtime-visible. There may also be a significant quantity of nvram used to store variables that are only visible in boot services code. We could work around this by adding up sizes while we're still in boot services code, but on some systems calling QueryVariableInfo() before ExitBootServices() results in later calls to GetNextVariable() jumping to invalid addresses and crashing the kernel. Not a great approach.Meanwhile, Samsung got back to us and let us know that their systems didn't require more than 5KB of nvram space to be available, which meant we could get rid of the 50% value and replace it with 5KB. The hope was that any system that booted with only 5KB of space available in nvram would trigger a garbage collection run. Unfortunately, it turned out that that wasn't true - some systems will only trigger garbage collection if the OS actually makes an attempt to write a variable that won't otherwise fit.Hence this patch . The new approach is to ask the firmware how much space is available. If the size of the new variable would reduce this to less than 5K, we attempt to create a variable bigger than the remaining space. This should cause the firmware to realise that it's out of room and either (depending on implementation) perform a garbage collection run at runtime or set a flag that will cause the system to perform garbage collection on the next reboot. We then call QueryVariableInfo() again to see whether a garbage collection run actually happened, and if so check whether we now have enough space. If so, we go ahead and write the variable. If not, we tell userspace that there's not enough space.This seems to work in all the situations I've tested, and it should avoid ending up in a situation where a Samsung can end up bricked. However, it's firmware, so who knows whether it's going to break things for someone else.