Message ID | 20230728120930.839913695@linutronix.de (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
State | Not Applicable |
Headers | show |
Series | x86/cpu: Rework the topology evaluation | expand |
On 7/28/2023 5:13 AM, Thomas Gleixner wrote: > Topology evaluation is a complete disaster and impenetrable mess. It's > scattered all over the place with some vendor implementatins doing early s/implementatins/implementations > +static void parse_topology(struct topo_scan *tscan, bool early) > +{ > + const struct cpuinfo_topology topo_defaults = { > + .cu_id = 0xff, > + .llc_id = BAD_APICID, > + .l2c_id = BAD_APICID, > + }; > + struct cpuinfo_x86 *c = tscan->c; > + struct { > + u32 unused0 : 16, > + nproc : 8, > + apicid : 8; > + } ebx; > + > + c->topo = topo_defaults; > + > + if (fake_topology(tscan)) > + return; > + Spaces used for indenting "return" instead of a tab.
From: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de> Sent: Friday, July 28, 2023 5:13 AM > > Topology evaluation is a complete disaster and impenetrable mess. It's > scattered all over the place with some vendor implementatins doing early > evaluation and some not. The most horrific part is the permanent > overwriting of smt_max_siblings and __max_die_per_package, instead of > establishing them once on the boot CPU and validating the result on the > APs. > > The goals are: > > - One topology evaluation entry point > > - Proper sharing of pointlessly duplicated code > > - Proper structuring of the evaluation logic and preferences. > > - Evaluating important system wide information only once on the boot CPU > > - Making the 0xb/0x1f leaf parsing less convoluted and actually fixing > the short comings of leaf 0x1f evaluation. > > Start to consolidate the topology evaluation code by providing the entry > points for the early boot CPU evaluation and for the final parsing on the > boot CPU and the APs. > > Move the trivial pieces into that new code: > > - The initialization of cpuinfo_x86::topo > > - The evaluation of CPUID leaf 1, which presets topo::initial_apicid > > - topo_apicid is set to topo::initial_apicid when invoked from early > boot. When invoked for the final evaluation on the boot CPU it reads > the actual APIC ID, which makes apic_get_initial_apicid() obsolete > once everything is converted over. > > Provide a temporary helper function topo_converted() which shields off the > not yet converted CPU vendors from invoking code which would break them. > This shielding covers all vendor CPUs which support SMP, but not the > historical pure UP ones as they only need the topology info init and > eventually the initial APIC initialization. > > Provide two new members in cpuinfo_x86::topo to store the maximum number of > SMT siblings and the number of dies per package and add them to the debugfs > readout. These two members will be used to populate this information on the > boot CPU and to validate the APs against it. > > Signed-off-by: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de> > --- > arch/x86/include/asm/topology.h | 19 +++ > arch/x86/kernel/cpu/Makefile | 3 > arch/x86/kernel/cpu/common.c | 23 +--- > arch/x86/kernel/cpu/cpu.h | 6 + > arch/x86/kernel/cpu/debugfs.c | 37 ++++++ > arch/x86/kernel/cpu/topology.h | 32 +++++ > arch/x86/kernel/cpu/topology_common.c | 187 > ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ > 7 files changed, 290 insertions(+), 17 deletions(-) > [snip] > + > +static void parse_topology(struct topo_scan *tscan, bool early) > +{ > + const struct cpuinfo_topology topo_defaults = { > + .cu_id = 0xff, > + .llc_id = BAD_APICID, > + .l2c_id = BAD_APICID, > + }; > + struct cpuinfo_x86 *c = tscan->c; > + struct { > + u32 unused0 : 16, > + nproc : 8, > + apicid : 8; > + } ebx; > + > + c->topo = topo_defaults; > + > + if (fake_topology(tscan)) > + return; > + > + /* Preset Initial APIC ID from CPUID leaf 1 */ > + cpuid_leaf_reg(1, CPUID_EBX, &ebx); > + c->topo.initial_apicid = ebx.apicid; > + > + /* > + * The initial invocation from early_identify_cpu() happens before > + * the APIC is mapped or X2APIC enabled. For establishing the > + * topology, that's not required. Use the initial APIC ID. > + */ > + if (early) > + c->topo.apicid = c->topo.initial_apicid; > + else > + c->topo.apicid = read_apic_id(); Using the value from the local APIC ID reg turns out to cause a problem in some Hyper-V VM configurations. If a VM has multiple L3 caches (probably due to multiple NUMA nodes) and the # of CPUs in the span of the L3 cache is not a power of 2, the APIC IDs for the CPUs in the span of the 1st L3 cache are sequential starting with 0. But then there is a gap before starting the APIC IDs for the CPUs in the span of the 2nd L3 cache. The gap is repeated if there are additional L3 caches. The CPUID instruction executed on a guest vCPU correctly reports the APIC IDs. However, the ACPI MADT assigns the APIC IDs sequentially with no gaps, and the guest firmware sets the APIC_ID register for each local APIC to match the MADT. When parse_topology() sets the apicid field based on reading the local APIC ID register, the value it sets is different from the initial_apicid value for CPUs in the span of the 2nd and subsequent L3 caches, because there's no gap in the APIC IDs read from the local APIC. Linux boots and runs, but the topology is set up with the wrong span for the L3 cache and for the associated scheduling domains. The old code derives the apicid from the initial_apicid via the phys_pkg_id() callback, so these bad Hyper-V VM configs skate by. The wrong value in the local APIC ID register and MADT does not affect anything, except that the check in validate_apic_and_package_id() fails during boot, and a set of "Firmware bug:" messages is correctly output. Three thoughts: 1) Are Hyper-V VMs the only place where the local APIC ID register might have a bogus value? Probably so, but you never know what might crawl out. 2) The natural response is "Well, fix Hyper-V!" I first had this conversation with the Hyper-V team about 5 years ago. Some cases of the problem were fixed, but some cases remain unfixed. It's a long story. 3) Since Hyper-V code in Linux already has an override for the apic->read() function, it's possible to do a hack in that override so that apicid gets set to the same value as initial_apicid, which matches the old code. Here's the diff: diff --git a/arch/x86/hyperv/hv_apic.c b/arch/x86/hyperv/hv_apic.c index 72d9931da3a2..2e7b18557186 100644 --- a/arch/x86/hyperv/hv_apic.c +++ b/arch/x86/hyperv/hv_apic.c @@ -58,6 +58,8 @@ static u32 hv_apic_read(u32 reg) u32 reg_val, hi; switch (reg) { + case APIC_ID: + return __this_cpu_read(cpu_info.topo.initial_apicid) << 24; case APIC_EOI: rdmsr(HV_X64_MSR_EOI, reg_val, hi); (void)hi; @@ -311,6 +313,7 @@ void __init hv_apic_init(void) * both xapic and x2apic because the field layout is the same. */ apic_update_callback(eoi, hv_apic_eoi_write); + apic->apic_id_registered = NULL; if (!x2apic_enabled()) { apic_update_callback(read, hv_apic_read); apic_update_callback(write, hv_apic_write); Setting apic->apic_id_registered to NULL is necessary because it does read_apic_id() and checks that the value matches an APIC ID that was registered when the MADT was parsed. This test fails for some vCPUs in the VM because the APIC IDs from the MADT are also sequential with no gaps as mentioned above. I don't see any big hazard in bypassing the check. The hv_apic_read() override is used only in VMs with an xapic. I still need to check a few things, but I believe Hyper-V gets MADT and local APIC ID reg numbering correct when an x2apic is used, so I don't think any hacks are needed for that path. Does anyone have suggestions on a different way to handle this that's better than the above diff? Other thoughts? Michael
On Mon, Jul 31 2023 at 04:05, Michael Kelley wrote: >> + /* >> + * The initial invocation from early_identify_cpu() happens before >> + * the APIC is mapped or X2APIC enabled. For establishing the >> + * topology, that's not required. Use the initial APIC ID. >> + */ >> + if (early) >> + c->topo.apicid = c->topo.initial_apicid; >> + else >> + c->topo.apicid = read_apic_id(); > > Using the value from the local APIC ID reg turns out to cause a problem in > some Hyper-V VM configurations. If a VM has multiple L3 caches (probably > due to multiple NUMA nodes) and the # of CPUs in the span of the L3 cache > is not a power of 2, the APIC IDs for the CPUs in the span of the 1st L3 cache > are sequential starting with 0. But then there is a gap before starting the > APIC IDs for the CPUs in the span of the 2nd L3 cache. The gap is > repeated if there are additional L3 caches. > > The CPUID instruction executed on a guest vCPU correctly reports the APIC > IDs. However, the ACPI MADT assigns the APIC IDs sequentially with no > gaps, and the guest firmware sets the APIC_ID register for each local APIC > to match the MADT. When parse_topology() sets the apicid field based on > reading the local APIC ID register, the value it sets is different from the > initial_apicid value for CPUs in the span of the 2nd and subsequent L3 > caches, because there's no gap in the APIC IDs read from the local APIC. > Linux boots and runs, but the topology is set up with the wrong span for > the L3 cache and for the associated scheduling domains. TBH. That's an insanity. MADT and the actual APIC ID determine the topology. So the gaps should be reflected in MADT and the actual APIC IDs should be set correctly if the intent is to provide topology information. Just for the record. This hack works only on Intel today, because AMD init sets topo.apicid = read_apic_id() unconditionally. So this is inconsistent already, no? > The old code derives the apicid from the initial_apicid via the > phys_pkg_id() callback, so these bad Hyper-V VM configs skate by. The > wrong value in the local APIC ID register and MADT does not affect > anything, except that the check in validate_apic_and_package_id() fails > during boot, and a set of "Firmware bug:" messages is correctly > output. So instead of fixing the firmware bugs, hyper-v just moves on and pretends that everything works fine, right? > Three thoughts: > > 1) Are Hyper-V VMs the only place where the local APIC ID register might > have a bogus value? Probably so, but you never know what might crawl > out. Define bogus. MADT is the primary source of information because that's how we know how many CPUs (APICs) are there and what their APIC ID is which we can use to wake them up. So there is a reasonable expectation that this information is consistent with the rest of the system. The Intel SDM clearly says in Vol 3A section 9.4.5 Identifying Logical Processors in an MP System: "After the BIOS has completed the MP initialization protocol, each logical processor can be uniquely identified by its local APIC ID. Software can access these APIC IDs in either of the following ways:" These ways include read from APIC, read MADT, read CPUID and implies that this must be consistent. For X2APIC it's actually written out: "If the local APIC unit supports x2APIC and is operating in x2APIC mode, 32-bit APIC ID can be read by executing a RDMSR instruction to read the processor’s x2APIC ID register. This method is equivalent to executing CPUID leaf 0BH described below." AMD has not been following that in the early 64bit systems as they moved the APIC ID space to start at 32 for the first CPU in the first socket for whatever reasons. But since then the kernel reads back the APIC ID on AMD systems into topo.apicid. But that was long ago and can easily be dealt with because at least the real APIC ID and the MADT/MPTABLE entries are consistent. Hypervisors have their own CPUID space to override functionality with their own magic stuff, but imposing their nutbolt ideas on the architectural part of the system is not only wrong, it's disrespectful against the OS developers who try to keep their system sane. > 2) The natural response is "Well, fix Hyper-V!" I first had this conversation > with the Hyper-V team about 5 years ago. Some cases of the problem were > fixed, but some cases remain unfixed. It's a long story. > > 3) Since Hyper-V code in Linux already has an override for the apic->read() > function, it's possible to do a hack in that override so that apicid gets set to > the same value as initial_apicid, which matches the old code. Here's the diff: This collides massively with the other work I'm doing, which uses the MADT provided information to actually evaluate various topology related things upfront and later during bringup. Thats badly needed because lots of todays infrastructure is based on heuristics and guesswork. But it seems I wasted a month on reworking all of this just to be stopped cold in the tracks by completely undocumented and unnecessary hyper-v abuse. So if Hyper-V insists on abusing the initial APIC ID as read from CPUID for topology information related to L3, then hyper-v should override the cache topology mechanism and not impose this insanity on the basic topology evaluation infrastructure. Yours seriously grumpy tglx
On Mon, Jul 31, 2023 at 02:34:39PM +0200, Thomas Gleixner wrote: > This collides massively with the other work I'm doing, which uses the > MADT provided information to actually evaluate various topology related > things upfront and later during bringup. Thats badly needed because lots > of todays infrastructure is based on heuristics and guesswork. > > But it seems I wasted a month on reworking all of this just to be > stopped cold in the tracks by completely undocumented and unnecessary > hyper-v abuse. > > So if Hyper-V insists on abusing the initial APIC ID as read from CPUID > for topology information related to L3, then hyper-v should override the > cache topology mechanism and not impose this insanity on the basic > topology evaluation infrastructure. So I'm very tempted to suggest you continue with the topology rewrite and let Hyper-V keep the pieces. They're very clearly violating the SDM. Thing as they stand are untenable, the whole topology thing as it exists today is an untenable shitshow. Michael, is there anything you can do early (as in MADT parse early) to fix up the APIC-IDs?
On 7/30/2023 9:05 PM, Michael Kelley (LINUX) wrote: > Does anyone have suggestions on a different way to handle > this that's better than the above diff? Other thoughts? how badly do you need xapic ? Meaning, can x2apic just be used instead always
On 31/07/2023 2:47 pm, Arjan van de Ven wrote: > On 7/30/2023 9:05 PM, Michael Kelley (LINUX) wrote: >> Does anyone have suggestions on a different way to handle >> this that's better than the above diff? Other thoughts? > > how badly do you need xapic ? Meaning, can x2apic just be used instead > always x2APIC under virt is a problem if you don't want to fully emulate an IOMMU just for int-remapping purposes. You don't know a-priori whether a particular guest kernel knows about e.g. the rsvd bit trick in IO-APIC RTEs to allow a 32k destination id. The only generally compatible way is to start in xAPIC mode, leave all the enumeration hints around which say "really really please switch into x2APIC mode", and hope the kernel does. ~Andrew
On Mon, Jul 31 2023 at 15:27, Peter Zijlstra wrote: > On Mon, Jul 31, 2023 at 02:34:39PM +0200, Thomas Gleixner wrote: >> This collides massively with the other work I'm doing, which uses the >> MADT provided information to actually evaluate various topology related >> things upfront and later during bringup. Thats badly needed because lots >> of todays infrastructure is based on heuristics and guesswork. >> >> But it seems I wasted a month on reworking all of this just to be >> stopped cold in the tracks by completely undocumented and unnecessary >> hyper-v abuse. >> >> So if Hyper-V insists on abusing the initial APIC ID as read from CPUID >> for topology information related to L3, then hyper-v should override the >> cache topology mechanism and not impose this insanity on the basic >> topology evaluation infrastructure. > > So I'm very tempted to suggest you continue with the topology rewrite > and let Hyper-V keep the pieces. They're very clearly violating the SDM. > > Thing as they stand are untenable, the whole topology thing as it exists > today is an untenable shitshow. > > Michael, is there anything you can do early (as in MADT parse early) to > fix up the APIC-IDs? I don't think so. Michael, can you please provide me a table of: APICID (real/MADT) APICID (CPUID) from one of the tinker VMs please? Thanks, tglx
From: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de> Sent: Monday, July 31, 2023 8:38 AM > > On Mon, Jul 31 2023 at 15:27, Peter Zijlstra wrote: > > On Mon, Jul 31, 2023 at 02:34:39PM +0200, Thomas Gleixner wrote: > >> This collides massively with the other work I'm doing, which uses the > >> MADT provided information to actually evaluate various topology related > >> things upfront and later during bringup. Thats badly needed because lots > >> of todays infrastructure is based on heuristics and guesswork. > >> > >> But it seems I wasted a month on reworking all of this just to be > >> stopped cold in the tracks by completely undocumented and unnecessary > >> hyper-v abuse. > >> > >> So if Hyper-V insists on abusing the initial APIC ID as read from CPUID > >> for topology information related to L3, then hyper-v should override the > >> cache topology mechanism and not impose this insanity on the basic > >> topology evaluation infrastructure. > > > > So I'm very tempted to suggest you continue with the topology rewrite > > and let Hyper-V keep the pieces. They're very clearly violating the SDM. > > > > Thing as they stand are untenable, the whole topology thing as it exists > > today is an untenable shitshow. > > > > Michael, is there anything you can do early (as in MADT parse early) to > > fix up the APIC-IDs? > > I don't think so. > > Michael, can you please provide me a table of: > > APICID (real/MADT) APICID (CPUID) > > from one of the tinker VMs please? > The VM is an F72s_v2 in Azure running your patch set. The VM has 72 vCPUs in two NUMA nodes across two physical Intel processors, with 36 vCPUs in each NUMA node. The output is from /sys/kernel/debug/x86/topo/cpus, so the initial_apicid is from CPUID, while the apicid is from read_apic_id() and matches the MADT. As expected, the two values match for the first 36 vCPUs, but differ by 28 (decimal) for the remaining 36. initial_apicid: 0 apicid: 0 initial_apicid: 1 apicid: 1 initial_apicid: 2 apicid: 2 initial_apicid: 3 apicid: 3 initial_apicid: 4 apicid: 4 initial_apicid: 5 apicid: 5 initial_apicid: 6 apicid: 6 initial_apicid: 7 apicid: 7 initial_apicid: 8 apicid: 8 initial_apicid: 9 apicid: 9 initial_apicid: a apicid: a initial_apicid: b apicid: b initial_apicid: c apicid: c initial_apicid: d apicid: d initial_apicid: e apicid: e initial_apicid: f apicid: f initial_apicid: 10 apicid: 10 initial_apicid: 11 apicid: 11 initial_apicid: 12 apicid: 12 initial_apicid: 13 apicid: 13 initial_apicid: 14 apicid: 14 initial_apicid: 15 apicid: 15 initial_apicid: 16 apicid: 16 initial_apicid: 17 apicid: 17 initial_apicid: 18 apicid: 18 initial_apicid: 19 apicid: 19 initial_apicid: 1a apicid: 1a initial_apicid: 1b apicid: 1b initial_apicid: 1c apicid: 1c initial_apicid: 1d apicid: 1d initial_apicid: 1e apicid: 1e initial_apicid: 1f apicid: 1f initial_apicid: 20 apicid: 20 initial_apicid: 21 apicid: 21 initial_apicid: 22 apicid: 22 initial_apicid: 23 apicid: 23 initial_apicid: 40 apicid: 24 initial_apicid: 41 apicid: 25 initial_apicid: 42 apicid: 26 initial_apicid: 43 apicid: 27 initial_apicid: 44 apicid: 28 initial_apicid: 45 apicid: 29 initial_apicid: 46 apicid: 2a initial_apicid: 47 apicid: 2b initial_apicid: 48 apicid: 2c initial_apicid: 49 apicid: 2d initial_apicid: 4a apicid: 2e initial_apicid: 4b apicid: 2f initial_apicid: 4c apicid: 30 initial_apicid: 4d apicid: 31 initial_apicid: 4e apicid: 32 initial_apicid: 4f apicid: 33 initial_apicid: 50 apicid: 34 initial_apicid: 51 apicid: 35 initial_apicid: 52 apicid: 36 initial_apicid: 53 apicid: 37 initial_apicid: 54 apicid: 38 initial_apicid: 55 apicid: 39 initial_apicid: 56 apicid: 3a initial_apicid: 57 apicid: 3b initial_apicid: 58 apicid: 3c initial_apicid: 59 apicid: 3d initial_apicid: 5a apicid: 3e initial_apicid: 5b apicid: 3f initial_apicid: 5c apicid: 40 initial_apicid: 5d apicid: 41 initial_apicid: 5e apicid: 42 initial_apicid: 5f apicid: 43 initial_apicid: 60 apicid: 44 initial_apicid: 61 apicid: 45 initial_apicid: 62 apicid: 46 initial_apicid: 63 apicid: 47 Michael
From: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de> Sent: Monday, July 31, 2023 5:35 AM > > On Mon, Jul 31 2023 at 04:05, Michael Kelley wrote: > >> + /* > >> + * The initial invocation from early_identify_cpu() happens before > >> + * the APIC is mapped or X2APIC enabled. For establishing the > >> + * topology, that's not required. Use the initial APIC ID. > >> + */ > >> + if (early) > >> + c->topo.apicid = c->topo.initial_apicid; > >> + else > >> + c->topo.apicid = read_apic_id(); > > > > Using the value from the local APIC ID reg turns out to cause a problem in > > some Hyper-V VM configurations. If a VM has multiple L3 caches (probably > > due to multiple NUMA nodes) and the # of CPUs in the span of the L3 cache > > is not a power of 2, the APIC IDs for the CPUs in the span of the 1st L3 cache > > are sequential starting with 0. But then there is a gap before starting the > > APIC IDs for the CPUs in the span of the 2nd L3 cache. The gap is > > repeated if there are additional L3 caches. > > > > The CPUID instruction executed on a guest vCPU correctly reports the APIC > > IDs. However, the ACPI MADT assigns the APIC IDs sequentially with no > > gaps, and the guest firmware sets the APIC_ID register for each local APIC > > to match the MADT. When parse_topology() sets the apicid field based on > > reading the local APIC ID register, the value it sets is different from the > > initial_apicid value for CPUs in the span of the 2nd and subsequent L3 > > caches, because there's no gap in the APIC IDs read from the local APIC. > > Linux boots and runs, but the topology is set up with the wrong span for > > the L3 cache and for the associated scheduling domains. > > TBH. That's an insanity. MADT and the actual APIC ID determine the > topology. So the gaps should be reflected in MADT and the actual APIC > IDs should be set correctly if the intent is to provide topology > information. > > Just for the record. This hack works only on Intel today, because AMD > init sets topo.apicid = read_apic_id() unconditionally. So this is > inconsistent already, no? > Correct. But given that the L3 cache span in the AMD Zen1 and Zen2 processors is only 8 CPUs, there's much less reason to configure a VM that only uses some of the CPUs in an L3 cache span. Hyper-V does the APIC ID numbering correctly for Zen3 with its 16 CPUs in the L3 cache span. > > The old code derives the apicid from the initial_apicid via the > > phys_pkg_id() callback, so these bad Hyper-V VM configs skate by. The > > wrong value in the local APIC ID register and MADT does not affect > > anything, except that the check in validate_apic_and_package_id() fails > > during boot, and a set of "Firmware bug:" messages is correctly > > output. > > So instead of fixing the firmware bugs, hyper-v just moves on and > pretends that everything works fine, right? What can I say. :-( > > > Three thoughts: > > > > 1) Are Hyper-V VMs the only place where the local APIC ID register might > > have a bogus value? Probably so, but you never know what might crawl > > out. > > Define bogus. MADT is the primary source of information because that's > how we know how many CPUs (APICs) are there and what their APIC ID is > which we can use to wake them up. So there is a reasonable expectation > that this information is consistent with the rest of the system. Commit d49597fd3bc7 "x86/cpu: Deal with broken firmware (VMWare/Xen)" mentions VMware and XEN implementations that violate the spec. The commit is from late 2016. Have these bad systems aged out and no longer need accommodation? > > The Intel SDM clearly says in Vol 3A section 9.4.5 Identifying Logical > Processors in an MP System: > > "After the BIOS has completed the MP initialization protocol, each > logical processor can be uniquely identified by its local APIC > ID. Software can access these APIC IDs in either of the following > ways:" > > These ways include read from APIC, read MADT, read CPUID and implies > that this must be consistent. For X2APIC it's actually written out: > > "If the local APIC unit supports x2APIC and is operating in x2APIC > mode, 32-bit APIC ID can be read by executing a RDMSR instruction to > read the processor’s x2APIC ID register. This method is equivalent to > executing CPUID leaf 0BH described below." > > AMD has not been following that in the early 64bit systems as they moved > the APIC ID space to start at 32 for the first CPU in the first socket > for whatever reasons. But since then the kernel reads back the APIC ID > on AMD systems into topo.apicid. But that was long ago and can easily be > dealt with because at least the real APIC ID and the MADT/MPTABLE > entries are consistent. > > Hypervisors have their own CPUID space to override functionality with > their own magic stuff, but imposing their nutbolt ideas on the > architectural part of the system is not only wrong, it's disrespectful > against the OS developers who try to keep their system sane. > > > 2) The natural response is "Well, fix Hyper-V!" I first had this conversation > > with the Hyper-V team about 5 years ago. Some cases of the problem were > > fixed, but some cases remain unfixed. It's a long story. > > > > 3) Since Hyper-V code in Linux already has an override for the apic->read() > > function, it's possible to do a hack in that override so that apicid gets set to > > the same value as initial_apicid, which matches the old code. Here's the diff: > > This collides massively with the other work I'm doing, which uses the > MADT provided information to actually evaluate various topology related > things upfront and later during bringup. Thats badly needed because lots > of todays infrastructure is based on heuristics and guesswork. Fair enough. And I've re-raised the issue with the Hyper-V team. > > But it seems I wasted a month on reworking all of this just to be > stopped cold in the tracks by completely undocumented and unnecessary > hyper-v abuse. > > So if Hyper-V insists on abusing the initial APIC ID as read from CPUID > for topology information related to L3, then hyper-v should override the > cache topology mechanism and not impose this insanity on the basic > topology evaluation infrastructure. > > Yours seriously grumpy > > tglx
On Mon, Jul 31 2023 at 16:25, Michael Kelley wrote: > From: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de> Sent: Monday, July 31, 2023 5:35 AM >> Define bogus. MADT is the primary source of information because that's >> how we know how many CPUs (APICs) are there and what their APIC ID is >> which we can use to wake them up. So there is a reasonable expectation >> that this information is consistent with the rest of the system. > > Commit d49597fd3bc7 "x86/cpu: Deal with broken firmware (VMWare/Xen)" > mentions VMware and XEN implementations that violate the spec. The > commit is from late 2016. Have these bad systems aged out and no longer > need accommodation? They do, but this commit explicitely uses the MADT/real APIC ID value: c->initial_apicid = apicid; So the new mechanics are accomodating for those, right? Thanks, tglx
On Mon, Jul 31 2023 at 16:10, Michael Kelley wrote: > From: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de> Sent: Monday, July 31, 2023 8:38 AM > The VM is an F72s_v2 in Azure running your patch set. The VM has > 72 vCPUs in two NUMA nodes across two physical Intel processors, with > 36 vCPUs in each NUMA node. > > The output is from /sys/kernel/debug/x86/topo/cpus, so the initial_apicid > is from CPUID, while the apicid is from read_apic_id() and matches the > MADT. As expected, the two values match for the first 36 vCPUs, but differ > by 28 (decimal) for the remaining 36. > > initial_apicid: 0 apicid: 0 ... > initial_apicid: 23 apicid: 23 > initial_apicid: 40 apicid: 24 ... > initial_apicid: 63 apicid: 47 Is there any indication in some other CPUID leaf which lets us deduce this wreckage? I don't think the hypervisor space (0x40000xx) has anything helpful, but staring at the architectural ones provided by hyper-V to the guest might give us an hint. Can you provide a cpuid dump for the boot CPU please? Thanks, tglx
From: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de> Sent: Monday, July 31, 2023 1:49 PM > > On Mon, Jul 31 2023 at 16:10, Michael Kelley wrote: > > From: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de> Sent: Monday, July 31, 2023 8:38 AM > > The VM is an F72s_v2 in Azure running your patch set. The VM has > > 72 vCPUs in two NUMA nodes across two physical Intel processors, with > > 36 vCPUs in each NUMA node. > > > > The output is from /sys/kernel/debug/x86/topo/cpus, so the initial_apicid > > is from CPUID, while the apicid is from read_apic_id() and matches the > > MADT. As expected, the two values match for the first 36 vCPUs, but differ > > by 28 (decimal) for the remaining 36. > > > > initial_apicid: 0 apicid: 0 > ... > > initial_apicid: 23 apicid: 23 > > > initial_apicid: 40 apicid: 24 > ... > > initial_apicid: 63 apicid: 47 > > Is there any indication in some other CPUID leaf which lets us deduce this > wreckage? You can detect being a Hyper-V guest with leaf 0x40000000. See Linux kernel function ms_hyperv_platform(). But I'm not aware of anything to indicate that a specific Hyper-V VM has the APIC numbering problem vs. doesn't have the problem. > > I don't think the hypervisor space (0x40000xx) has anything helpful, but > staring at the architectural ones provided by hyper-V to the guest might > give us an hint. Can you provide a cpuid dump for the boot CPU please? > I'm not sure if you want the raw or decoded output. Here's both. Michael # taskset -c 0 cpuid -r -1 CPU: 0x00000000 0x00: eax=0x00000015 ebx=0x756e6547 ecx=0x6c65746e edx=0x49656e69 0x00000001 0x00: eax=0x000606a6 ebx=0x00400800 ecx=0xfeda3223 edx=0x1f8bfbff 0x00000002 0x00: eax=0x00feff01 ebx=0x000000f0 ecx=0x00000000 edx=0x00000000 0x00000003 0x00: eax=0x00000000 ebx=0x00000000 ecx=0x00000000 edx=0x00000000 0x00000004 0x00: eax=0x7c004121 ebx=0x02c0003f ecx=0x0000003f edx=0x00000000 0x00000004 0x01: eax=0x7c004122 ebx=0x01c0003f ecx=0x0000003f edx=0x00000000 0x00000004 0x02: eax=0x7c004143 ebx=0x04c0003f ecx=0x000003ff edx=0x00000000 0x00000004 0x03: eax=0x7c0fc163 ebx=0x02c0003f ecx=0x0000ffff edx=0x00000000 0x00000005 0x00: eax=0x00000000 ebx=0x00000000 ecx=0x00000000 edx=0x00000000 0x00000006 0x00: eax=0x00000000 ebx=0x00000000 ecx=0x00000000 edx=0x00000000 0x00000007 0x00: eax=0x00000000 ebx=0xd09f2fb9 ecx=0x00000000 edx=0x00000400 0x00000008 0x00: eax=0x00000000 ebx=0x00000000 ecx=0x00000000 edx=0x00000000 0x00000009 0x00: eax=0x00000000 ebx=0x00000000 ecx=0x00000000 edx=0x00000000 0x0000000a 0x00: eax=0x00000000 ebx=0x00000000 ecx=0x00000000 edx=0x00000000 0x0000000b 0x00: eax=0x00000001 ebx=0x00000002 ecx=0x00000100 edx=0x00000000 0x0000000b 0x01: eax=0x00000006 ebx=0x00000040 ecx=0x00000201 edx=0x00000000 0x0000000c 0x00: eax=0x00000000 ebx=0x00000000 ecx=0x00000000 edx=0x00000000 0x0000000d 0x00: eax=0x000000e7 ebx=0x00000a80 ecx=0x00000a80 edx=0x00000000 0x0000000d 0x01: eax=0x0000000b ebx=0x00000980 ecx=0x00000000 edx=0x00000000 0x0000000d 0x02: eax=0x00000100 ebx=0x00000240 ecx=0x00000000 edx=0x00000000 0x0000000d 0x05: eax=0x00000040 ebx=0x00000440 ecx=0x00000000 edx=0x00000000 0x0000000d 0x06: eax=0x00000200 ebx=0x00000480 ecx=0x00000000 edx=0x00000000 0x0000000d 0x07: eax=0x00000400 ebx=0x00000680 ecx=0x00000000 edx=0x00000000 0x0000000e 0x00: eax=0x00000000 ebx=0x00000000 ecx=0x00000000 edx=0x00000000 0x0000000f 0x00: eax=0x00000000 ebx=0x00000000 ecx=0x00000000 edx=0x00000000 0x00000010 0x00: eax=0x00000000 ebx=0x00000000 ecx=0x00000000 edx=0x00000000 0x00000011 0x00: eax=0x00000000 ebx=0x00000000 ecx=0x00000000 edx=0x00000000 0x00000012 0x00: eax=0x00000000 ebx=0x00000000 ecx=0x00000000 edx=0x00000000 0x00000013 0x00: eax=0x00000000 ebx=0x00000000 ecx=0x00000000 edx=0x00000000 0x00000014 0x00: eax=0x00000000 ebx=0x00000000 ecx=0x00000000 edx=0x00000000 0x00000015 0x00: eax=0x00000000 ebx=0x00000000 ecx=0x00000000 edx=0x00000000 0x40000000 0x00: eax=0x4000000a ebx=0x7263694d ecx=0x666f736f edx=0x76482074 0x40000001 0x00: eax=0x31237648 ebx=0x00000000 ecx=0x00000000 edx=0x00000000 0x40000002 0x00: eax=0x00004f7c ebx=0x000a0000 ecx=0x00000001 edx=0x000005b6 0x40000003 0x00: eax=0x00002e7f ebx=0x003b8030 ecx=0x00000002 edx=0x000ed7b2 0x40000004 0x00: eax=0x00064e24 ebx=0x00000fff ecx=0x0000002e edx=0x00000000 0x40000005 0x00: eax=0x000000f0 ebx=0x00000400 ecx=0x00005d00 edx=0x00000000 0x40000006 0x00: eax=0x0000000f ebx=0x00000000 ecx=0x00000000 edx=0x00000000 0x40000007 0x00: eax=0x00000000 ebx=0x00000000 ecx=0x00000000 edx=0x00000000 0x40000008 0x00: eax=0x00000000 ebx=0x00000000 ecx=0x00000000 edx=0x00000000 0x40000009 0x00: eax=0x00000000 ebx=0x00000000 ecx=0x00000000 edx=0x00000000 0x4000000a 0x00: eax=0x000e0101 ebx=0x00000000 ecx=0x00000000 edx=0x00000000 0x20000000 0x00: eax=0x00000000 ebx=0x00000000 ecx=0x00000000 edx=0x00000000 0x80000000 0x00: eax=0x80000008 ebx=0x00000000 ecx=0x00000000 edx=0x00000000 0x80000001 0x00: eax=0x00000000 ebx=0x00000000 ecx=0x00000121 edx=0x2c100800 0x80000002 0x00: eax=0x65746e49 ebx=0x2952286c ecx=0x6f655820 edx=0x2952286e 0x80000003 0x00: eax=0x616c5020 ebx=0x756e6974 ecx=0x3338206d edx=0x20433037 0x80000004 0x00: eax=0x20555043 ebx=0x2e322040 ecx=0x48473038 edx=0x0000007a 0x80000005 0x00: eax=0x00000000 ebx=0x00000000 ecx=0x00000000 edx=0x00000000 0x80000006 0x00: eax=0x00000000 ebx=0x00000000 ecx=0x01006040 edx=0x00000000 0x80000007 0x00: eax=0x00000000 ebx=0x00000000 ecx=0x00000000 edx=0x00000000 0x80000008 0x00: eax=0x0000302e ebx=0x00000000 ecx=0x00000000 edx=0x00000000 0x80860000 0x00: eax=0x00000000 ebx=0x00000000 ecx=0x00000000 edx=0x00000000 0xc0000000 0x00: eax=0x00000000 ebx=0x00000000 ecx=0x00000000 edx=0x00000000 CPU: vendor_id = "GenuineIntel" version information (1/eax): processor type = primary processor (0) family = 0x6 (6) model = 0xa (10) stepping id = 0x6 (6) extended family = 0x0 (0) extended model = 0x6 (6) (family synth) = 0x6 (6) (model synth) = 0x6a (106) (simple synth) = Intel Core (Ice Lake) [Sunny Cove] {Sunny Cove}, 10nm miscellaneous (1/ebx): process local APIC physical ID = 0x0 (0) cpu count = 0x40 (64) CLFLUSH line size = 0x8 (8) brand index = 0x0 (0) brand id = 0x00 (0): unknown feature information (1/edx): x87 FPU on chip = true VME: virtual-8086 mode enhancement = true DE: debugging extensions = true PSE: page size extensions = true TSC: time stamp counter = true RDMSR and WRMSR support = true PAE: physical address extensions = true MCE: machine check exception = true CMPXCHG8B inst. = true APIC on chip = true SYSENTER and SYSEXIT = true MTRR: memory type range registers = true PTE global bit = true MCA: machine check architecture = true CMOV: conditional move/compare instr = true PAT: page attribute table = true PSE-36: page size extension = true PSN: processor serial number = false CLFLUSH instruction = true DS: debug store = false ACPI: thermal monitor and clock ctrl = false MMX Technology = true FXSAVE/FXRSTOR = true SSE extensions = true SSE2 extensions = true SS: self snoop = true hyper-threading / multi-core supported = true TM: therm. monitor = false IA64 = false PBE: pending break event = false feature information (1/ecx): PNI/SSE3: Prescott New Instructions = true PCLMULDQ instruction = true DTES64: 64-bit debug store = false MONITOR/MWAIT = false CPL-qualified debug store = false VMX: virtual machine extensions = true SMX: safer mode extensions = false Enhanced Intel SpeedStep Technology = false TM2: thermal monitor 2 = false SSSE3 extensions = true context ID: adaptive or shared L1 data = false SDBG: IA32_DEBUG_INTERFACE = false FMA instruction = true CMPXCHG16B instruction = true xTPR disable = false PDCM: perfmon and debug = false PCID: process context identifiers = true DCA: direct cache access = false SSE4.1 extensions = true SSE4.2 extensions = true x2APIC: extended xAPIC support = false MOVBE instruction = true POPCNT instruction = true time stamp counter deadline = false AES instruction = true XSAVE/XSTOR states = true OS-enabled XSAVE/XSTOR = true AVX: advanced vector extensions = true F16C half-precision convert instruction = true RDRAND instruction = true hypervisor guest status = true cache and TLB information (2): 0xff: cache data is in CPUID leaf 4 0xfe: TLB data is in CPUID leaf 0x18 0xf0: 64 byte prefetching processor serial number = 0006-06A6-0000-0000-0000-0000 deterministic cache parameters (4): --- cache 0 --- cache type = data cache (1) cache level = 0x1 (1) self-initializing cache level = true fully associative cache = false extra threads sharing this cache = 0x1 (1) extra processor cores on this die = 0x1f (31) system coherency line size = 0x40 (64) physical line partitions = 0x1 (1) ways of associativity = 0xc (12) number of sets = 0x40 (64) WBINVD/INVD acts on lower caches = false inclusive to lower caches = false complex cache indexing = false number of sets (s) = 64 (size synth) = 49152 (48 KB) --- cache 1 --- cache type = instruction cache (2) cache level = 0x1 (1) self-initializing cache level = true fully associative cache = false extra threads sharing this cache = 0x1 (1) extra processor cores on this die = 0x1f (31) system coherency line size = 0x40 (64) physical line partitions = 0x1 (1) ways of associativity = 0x8 (8) number of sets = 0x40 (64) WBINVD/INVD acts on lower caches = false inclusive to lower caches = false complex cache indexing = false number of sets (s) = 64 (size synth) = 32768 (32 KB) --- cache 2 --- cache type = unified cache (3) cache level = 0x2 (2) self-initializing cache level = true fully associative cache = false extra threads sharing this cache = 0x1 (1) extra processor cores on this die = 0x1f (31) system coherency line size = 0x40 (64) physical line partitions = 0x1 (1) ways of associativity = 0x14 (20) number of sets = 0x400 (1024) WBINVD/INVD acts on lower caches = false inclusive to lower caches = false complex cache indexing = false number of sets (s) = 1024 (size synth) = 1310720 (1.2 MB) --- cache 3 --- cache type = unified cache (3) cache level = 0x3 (3) self-initializing cache level = true fully associative cache = false extra threads sharing this cache = 0x3f (63) extra processor cores on this die = 0x1f (31) system coherency line size = 0x40 (64) physical line partitions = 0x1 (1) ways of associativity = 0xc (12) number of sets = 0x10000 (65536) WBINVD/INVD acts on lower caches = false inclusive to lower caches = false complex cache indexing = false number of sets (s) = 65536 (size synth) = 50331648 (48 MB) MONITOR/MWAIT (5): smallest monitor-line size (bytes) = 0x0 (0) largest monitor-line size (bytes) = 0x0 (0) enum of Monitor-MWAIT exts supported = false supports intrs as break-event for MWAIT = false number of C0 sub C-states using MWAIT = 0x0 (0) number of C1 sub C-states using MWAIT = 0x0 (0) number of C2 sub C-states using MWAIT = 0x0 (0) number of C3 sub C-states using MWAIT = 0x0 (0) number of C4 sub C-states using MWAIT = 0x0 (0) number of C5 sub C-states using MWAIT = 0x0 (0) number of C6 sub C-states using MWAIT = 0x0 (0) number of C7 sub C-states using MWAIT = 0x0 (0) Thermal and Power Management Features (6): digital thermometer = false Intel Turbo Boost Technology = false ARAT always running APIC timer = false PLN power limit notification = false ECMD extended clock modulation duty = false PTM package thermal management = false HWP base registers = false HWP notification = false HWP activity window = false HWP energy performance preference = false HWP package level request = false HDC base registers = false Intel Turbo Boost Max Technology 3.0 = false HWP capabilities = false HWP PECI override = false flexible HWP = false IA32_HWP_REQUEST MSR fast access mode = false HW_FEEDBACK = false ignoring idle logical processor HWP req = false digital thermometer thresholds = 0x0 (0) hardware coordination feedback = false ACNT2 available = false performance-energy bias capability = false performance capability reporting = false energy efficiency capability reporting = false size of feedback struct (4KB pages) = 0x0 (0) index of CPU's row in feedback struct = 0x0 (0) extended feature flags (7): FSGSBASE instructions = true IA32_TSC_ADJUST MSR supported = false SGX: Software Guard Extensions supported = false BMI1 instructions = true HLE hardware lock elision = true AVX2: advanced vector extensions 2 = true FDP_EXCPTN_ONLY = false SMEP supervisor mode exec protection = true BMI2 instructions = true enhanced REP MOVSB/STOSB = true INVPCID instruction = true RTM: restricted transactional memory = true RDT-CMT/PQoS cache monitoring = false deprecated FPU CS/DS = true MPX: intel memory protection extensions = false RDT-CAT/PQE cache allocation = false AVX512F: AVX-512 foundation instructions = true AVX512DQ: double & quadword instructions = true RDSEED instruction = true ADX instructions = true SMAP: supervisor mode access prevention = true AVX512IFMA: fused multiply add = false PCOMMIT instruction = false CLFLUSHOPT instruction = true CLWB instruction = false Intel processor trace = false AVX512PF: prefetch instructions = false AVX512ER: exponent & reciprocal instrs = false AVX512CD: conflict detection instrs = true SHA instructions = false AVX512BW: byte & word instructions = true AVX512VL: vector length = true PREFETCHWT1 = false AVX512VBMI: vector byte manipulation = false UMIP: user-mode instruction prevention = false PKU protection keys for user-mode = false OSPKE CR4.PKE and RDPKRU/WRPKRU = false WAITPKG instructions = false AVX512_VBMI2: byte VPCOMPRESS, VPEXPAND = false CET_SS: CET shadow stack = false GFNI: Galois Field New Instructions = false VAES instructions = false VPCLMULQDQ instruction = false AVX512_VNNI: neural network instructions = false AVX512_BITALG: bit count/shiffle = false TME: Total Memory Encryption = false AVX512: VPOPCNTDQ instruction = false 5-level paging = false BNDLDX/BNDSTX MAWAU value in 64-bit mode = 0x0 (0) RDPID: read processor D supported = false CLDEMOTE supports cache line demote = false MOVDIRI instruction = false MOVDIR64B instruction = false ENQCMD instruction = false SGX_LC: SGX launch config supported = false AVX512_4VNNIW: neural network instrs = false AVX512_4FMAPS: multiply acc single prec = false fast short REP MOV = false AVX512_VP2INTERSECT: intersect mask regs = false VERW md-clear microcode support = true hybrid part = false PCONFIG instruction = false CET_IBT: CET indirect branch tracking = false IBRS/IBPB: indirect branch restrictions = false STIBP: 1 thr indirect branch predictor = false L1D_FLUSH: IA32_FLUSH_CMD MSR = false IA32_ARCH_CAPABILITIES MSR = false IA32_CORE_CAPABILITIES MSR = false SSBD: speculative store bypass disable = false Direct Cache Access Parameters (9): PLATFORM_DCA_CAP MSR bits = 0 Architecture Performance Monitoring Features (0xa/eax): version ID = 0x0 (0) number of counters per logical processor = 0x0 (0) bit width of counter = 0x0 (0) length of EBX bit vector = 0x0 (0) Architecture Performance Monitoring Features (0xa/ebx): core cycle event not available = false instruction retired event not available = false reference cycles event not available = false last-level cache ref event not available = false last-level cache miss event not avail = false branch inst retired event not available = false branch mispred retired event not avail = false Architecture Performance Monitoring Features (0xa/edx): number of fixed counters = 0x0 (0) bit width of fixed counters = 0x0 (0) anythread deprecation = false x2APIC features / processor topology (0xb): extended APIC ID = 0 --- level 0 --- level number = 0x0 (0) level type = thread (1) bit width of level = 0x1 (1) number of logical processors at level = 0x2 (2) --- level 1 --- level number = 0x1 (1) level type = core (2) bit width of level = 0x6 (6) number of logical processors at level = 0x40 (64) XSAVE features (0xd/0): XCR0 lower 32 bits valid bit field mask = 0x000000e7 XCR0 upper 32 bits valid bit field mask = 0x00000000 XCR0 supported: x87 state = true XCR0 supported: SSE state = true XCR0 supported: AVX state = true XCR0 supported: MPX BNDREGS = false XCR0 supported: MPX BNDCSR = false XCR0 supported: AVX-512 opmask = true XCR0 supported: AVX-512 ZMM_Hi256 = true XCR0 supported: AVX-512 Hi16_ZMM = true IA32_XSS supported: PT state = false XCR0 supported: PKRU state = false XCR0 supported: CET_U state = false XCR0 supported: CET_S state = false IA32_XSS supported: HDC state = false bytes required by fields in XCR0 = 0x00000a80 (2688) bytes required by XSAVE/XRSTOR area = 0x00000a80 (2688) XSAVE features (0xd/1): XSAVEOPT instruction = true XSAVEC instruction = true XGETBV instruction = false XSAVES/XRSTORS instructions = true SAVE area size in bytes = 0x00000980 (2432) IA32_XSS lower 32 bits valid bit field mask = 0x00000000 IA32_XSS upper 32 bits valid bit field mask = 0x00000000 AVX/YMM features (0xd/2): AVX/YMM save state byte size = 0x00000100 (256) AVX/YMM save state byte offset = 0x00000240 (576) supported in IA32_XSS or XCR0 = XCR0 (user state) 64-byte alignment in compacted XSAVE = false AVX-512 opmask features (0xd/5): AVX-512 opmask save state byte size = 0x00000040 (64) AVX-512 opmask save state byte offset = 0x00000440 (1088) supported in IA32_XSS or XCR0 = XCR0 (user state) 64-byte alignment in compacted XSAVE = false AVX-512 ZMM_Hi256 features (0xd/6): AVX-512 ZMM_Hi256 save state byte size = 0x00000200 (512) AVX-512 ZMM_Hi256 save state byte offset = 0x00000480 (1152) supported in IA32_XSS or XCR0 = XCR0 (user state) 64-byte alignment in compacted XSAVE = false AVX-512 Hi16_ZMM features (0xd/7): AVX-512 Hi16_ZMM save state byte size = 0x00000400 (1024) AVX-512 Hi16_ZMM save state byte offset = 0x00000680 (1664) supported in IA32_XSS or XCR0 = XCR0 (user state) 64-byte alignment in compacted XSAVE = false Quality of Service Monitoring Resource Type (0xf/0): Maximum range of RMID = 0 supports L3 cache QoS monitoring = false Resource Director Technology Allocation (0x10/0): L3 cache allocation technology supported = false L2 cache allocation technology supported = false memory bandwidth allocation supported = false 0x00000011 0x00: eax=0x00000000 ebx=0x00000000 ecx=0x00000000 edx=0x00000000 Software Guard Extensions (SGX) capability (0x12/0): SGX1 supported = false SGX2 supported = false SGX ENCLV E*VIRTCHILD, ESETCONTEXT = false SGX ENCLS ETRACKC, ERDINFO, ELDBC, ELDUC = false MISCSELECT.EXINFO supported: #PF & #GP = false MISCSELECT.CPINFO supported: #CP = false MaxEnclaveSize_Not64 (log2) = 0x0 (0) MaxEnclaveSize_64 (log2) = 0x0 (0) 0x00000013 0x00: eax=0x00000000 ebx=0x00000000 ecx=0x00000000 edx=0x00000000 Intel Processor Trace (0x14): IA32_RTIT_CR3_MATCH is accessible = false configurable PSB & cycle-accurate = false IP & TraceStop filtering; PT preserve = false MTC timing packet; suppress COFI-based = false PTWRITE support = false power event trace support = false ToPA output scheme support = false ToPA can hold many output entries = false single-range output scheme support = false output to trace transport = false IP payloads have LIP values & CS = false Time Stamp Counter/Core Crystal Clock Information (0x15): TSC/clock ratio = 0/0 nominal core crystal clock = 0 Hz hypervisor_id = "Microsoft Hv" hypervisor interface identification (0x40000001/eax): version = "Hv#1" hypervisor system identity (0x40000002): build = 20348 version = 10.0 service pack = 1 service branch = 0 service number = 1462 hypervisor feature identification (0x40000003/eax): VP run time = true partition reference counter = true basic synIC MSRs = true synthetic timer MSRs = true APIC access MSRs = true hypercall MSRs = true access virtual process index MSR = true virtual system reset MSR = false map/unmap statistics pages MSR = false reference TSC access = true guest idle state MSR = true TSC/APIC frequency MSRs = true guest debugging MSRs = false hypervisor partition creation flags (0x40000003/ebx): CreatePartitions = false AccessPartitionId = false AccessMemoryPool = false AdjustMessageBuffers = false PostMessages = true SignalEvents = true CreatePort = false ConnectPort = false AccessStats = false Debugging = false CPUManagement = false ConfigureProfiler = false AccessVSM = true AccessVpRegisters = true EnableExtendedHypercalls = true StartVirtualProcessor = true hypervisor power management features (0x40000003/ecx): maximum process power state = 0x2 (2) hypervisor feature identification (0x40000003/edx): MWAIT available = false guest debugging support available = true performance monitor support available = false CPU dynamic partitioning events avail = false hypercall XMM input parameters available = true virtual guest idle state available = true hypervisor sleep state available = false query NUMA distance available = true determine timer frequency available = true inject synthetic machine check available = true guest crash MSRs available = true debug MSRs available = false NPIEP available = true disable hypervisor available = false extended gva ranges for flush virt addrs = true hypercall XMM register return available = true sint polling mode available = true hypercall MSR lock available = true use direct synthetic timers = true hypervisor recommendations (0x40000004/eax): use hypercalls for AS switches = false use hypercalls for local TLB flushes = false use hypercalls for remote TLB flushes = true use MSRs to access EOI, ICR, TPR = false use MSRs to initiate system RESET = false use relaxed timing = true use DMA remapping = false use interrupt remapping = false use x2APIC MSRs = false deprecate AutoEOI = true use SyntheticClusterIpi hypercall = true use ExProcessorMasks = true hypervisor is nested with Hyper-V = false use INT for MBEC system calls = false use enlightened VMCS interface = true maximum number of spinlock retry attempts = 0xfff (4095) hypervisor implementation limits (0x40000005): maximum number of virtual processors = 0xf0 (240) maximum number of logical processors = 0x400 (1024) maximum number of physical interrupt vectors for remapping = 0x5d00 (23808) hypervisor hardware features used (0x40000006/eax): APIC overlay assist = true MSR bitmaps = true performance counters = true second-level address translation = true DMA remapping = false interrupt remapping = false memory patrol scrubber = false DMA protection = false HPET requested = false synthetic timers are volatile = false hypervisor root partition enlightenments (0x40000007): StartLogicalProcessor = false CreateRootvirtualProcessor = false ProcessorPowerManagement = false MwaitIdleStates = false LogicalProcessorIdling = false hypervisor shared virtual memory (0x40000008): SvmSupported = false MaxPasidSpacePasidCount = 0x0 (0) hypervisor nested hypervisor features (0x40000009): AccessSynicRegs = false AccessIntrCtrlRegs = false AccessHypercallMsrs = false AccessVpIndex = false AccessReenlightenmentControls = false XmmRegistersForFastHypercallAvailable = false FastHypercallOutputAvailable = false SintPoillingModeAvailable = false hypervisor nested virtualization features (0x4000000a): enlightened VMCS version (low) = 0x1 (1) enlightened VMCS version (high) = 0x1 (1) direct virtual flush hypercalls support = true HvFlushGuestPhysicalAddress* hypercalls = true enlightened MSR bitmap support = true extended feature flags (0x80000001/edx): SYSCALL and SYSRET instructions = true execution disable = true 1-GB large page support = true RDTSCP = true 64-bit extensions technology available = true Intel feature flags (0x80000001/ecx): LAHF/SAHF supported in 64-bit mode = true LZCNT advanced bit manipulation = true 3DNow! PREFETCH/PREFETCHW instructions = true brand = "Intel(R) Xeon(R) Platinum 8370C CPU @ 2.80GHz" L1 TLB/cache information: 2M/4M pages & L1 TLB (0x80000005/eax): instruction # entries = 0x0 (0) instruction associativity = 0x0 (0) data # entries = 0x0 (0) data associativity = 0x0 (0) L1 TLB/cache information: 4K pages & L1 TLB (0x80000005/ebx): instruction # entries = 0x0 (0) instruction associativity = 0x0 (0) data # entries = 0x0 (0) data associativity = 0x0 (0) L1 data cache information (0x80000005/ecx): line size (bytes) = 0x0 (0) lines per tag = 0x0 (0) associativity = 0x0 (0) size (KB) = 0x0 (0) L1 instruction cache information (0x80000005/edx): line size (bytes) = 0x0 (0) lines per tag = 0x0 (0) associativity = 0x0 (0) size (KB) = 0x0 (0) L2 TLB/cache information: 2M/4M pages & L2 TLB (0x80000006/eax): instruction # entries = 0x0 (0) instruction associativity = L2 off (0) data # entries = 0x0 (0) data associativity = L2 off (0) L2 TLB/cache information: 4K pages & L2 TLB (0x80000006/ebx): instruction # entries = 0x0 (0) instruction associativity = L2 off (0) data # entries = 0x0 (0) data associativity = L2 off (0) L2 unified cache information (0x80000006/ecx): line size (bytes) = 0x40 (64) lines per tag = 0x0 (0) associativity = 8-way (6) size (KB) = 0x100 (256) L3 cache information (0x80000006/edx): line size (bytes) = 0x0 (0) lines per tag = 0x0 (0) associativity = L2 off (0) size (in 512KB units) = 0x0 (0) RAS Capability (0x80000007/ebx): MCA overflow recovery support = false SUCCOR support = false HWA: hardware assert support = false scalable MCA support = false Advanced Power Management Features (0x80000007/ecx): CmpUnitPwrSampleTimeRatio = 0x0 (0) Advanced Power Management Features (0x80000007/edx): TS: temperature sensing diode = false FID: frequency ID control = false VID: voltage ID control = false TTP: thermal trip = false TM: thermal monitor = false STC: software thermal control = false 100 MHz multiplier control = false hardware P-State control = false TscInvariant = false CPB: core performance boost = false read-only effective frequency interface = false processor feedback interface = false APM power reporting = false connected standby = false RAPL: running average power limit = false Physical Address and Linear Address Size (0x80000008/eax): maximum physical address bits = 0x2e (46) maximum linear (virtual) address bits = 0x30 (48) maximum guest physical address bits = 0x0 (0) Extended Feature Extensions ID (0x80000008/ebx): CLZERO instruction = false instructions retired count support = false always save/restore error pointers = false RDPRU instruction = false memory bandwidth enforcement = false WBNOINVD instruction = false IBPB: indirect branch prediction barrier = false IBRS: indirect branch restr speculation = false STIBP: 1 thr indirect branch predictor = false STIBP always on preferred mode = false ppin processor id number supported = false SSBD: speculative store bypass disable = false virtualized SSBD = false SSBD fixed in hardware = false Size Identifiers (0x80000008/ecx): number of CPU cores = 0x1 (1) ApicIdCoreIdSize = 0x0 (0) performance time-stamp counter size = 0x0 (0) Feature Extended Size (0x80000008/edx): RDPRU instruction max input support = 0x0 (0) (multi-processing synth) = multi-core (c=32), hyper-threaded (t=2) (multi-processing method) = Intel leaf 0xb (APIC widths synth): CORE_width=6 SMT_width=1 (APIC synth): PKG_ID=0 CORE_ID=0 SMT_ID=0 (uarch synth) = Intel Sunny Cove {Sunny Cove}, 10nm (synth) = Intel Core (Ice Lake) [Sunny Cove] {Sunny Cove}, 10nm
On Mon, Jul 31 2023 at 21:27, Michael Kelley wrote: > From: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de> Sent: Monday, July 31, 2023 1:49 PM >> Is there any indication in some other CPUID leaf which lets us deduce this >> wreckage? > > You can detect being a Hyper-V guest with leaf 0x40000000. See Linux > kernel function ms_hyperv_platform(). But I'm not aware of anything > to indicate that a specific Hyper-V VM has the APIC numbering problem > vs. doesn't have the problem. That's what I said :) here: >> I don't think the hypervisor space (0x40000xx) has anything helpful, but >> staring at the architectural ones provided by hyper-V to the guest might >> give us an hint. Can you provide a cpuid dump for the boot CPU please? >> > > I'm not sure if you want the raw or decoded output. Here's both. Either way is fine. Clearly the hyper-v BIOS people put a lot of thoughts into this: > x2APIC features / processor topology (0xb): > extended APIC ID = 0 > --- level 0 --- > level number = 0x0 (0) > level type = thread (1) > bit width of level = 0x1 (1) > number of logical processors at level = 0x2 (2) > --- level 1 --- > level number = 0x1 (1) > level type = core (2) > bit width of level = 0x6 (6) > number of logical processors at level = 0x40 (64) FAIL: ^^^^^ While that field is not meant for topology evaluation it is at least expected to tell the actual number of logical processors at that level which are actually available. The CPUID APIC ID aka initial_apicid clearly tells that the topology has 36 logical CPUs in package 0 and 36 in package 1 according to your table. On real hardware this looks like this: --- level 1 --- level number = 0x1 (1) level type = core (2) bit width of level = 0x6 (6) number of logical processors at level = 0x38 (56) Which corresponds to reality and is consistent. But sure, consistency is overrated. Thanks, tglx
Hello Thomas, On Fri, Jul 28, 2023 at 02:13:08PM +0200, Thomas Gleixner wrote: > Topology evaluation is a complete disaster and impenetrable mess. It's > scattered all over the place with some vendor implementatins doing early > evaluation and some not. The most horrific part is the permanent > overwriting of smt_max_siblings and __max_die_per_package, instead of > establishing them once on the boot CPU and validating the result on the > APs. > > The goals are: > > - One topology evaluation entry point > > - Proper sharing of pointlessly duplicated code > > - Proper structuring of the evaluation logic and preferences. > > - Evaluating important system wide information only once on the boot CPU > > - Making the 0xb/0x1f leaf parsing less convoluted and actually fixing > the short comings of leaf 0x1f evaluation. > > Start to consolidate the topology evaluation code by providing the entry > points for the early boot CPU evaluation and for the final parsing on the > boot CPU and the APs. > > Move the trivial pieces into that new code: > > - The initialization of cpuinfo_x86::topo > > - The evaluation of CPUID leaf 1, which presets topo::initial_apicid > > - topo_apicid is set to topo::initial_apicid when invoked from early > boot. When invoked for the final evaluation on the boot CPU it reads > the actual APIC ID, which makes apic_get_initial_apicid() obsolete > once everything is converted over. > > Provide a temporary helper function topo_converted() which shields off the > not yet converted CPU vendors from invoking code which would break them. > This shielding covers all vendor CPUs which support SMP, but not the > historical pure UP ones as they only need the topology info init and > eventually the initial APIC initialization. > > Provide two new members in cpuinfo_x86::topo to store the maximum number of > SMT siblings and the number of dies per package and add them to the debugfs > readout. These two members will be used to populate this information on the > boot CPU and to validate the APs against it. > > Signed-off-by: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de> > --- > arch/x86/include/asm/topology.h | 19 +++ > arch/x86/kernel/cpu/Makefile | 3 > arch/x86/kernel/cpu/common.c | 23 +--- > arch/x86/kernel/cpu/cpu.h | 6 + > arch/x86/kernel/cpu/debugfs.c | 37 ++++++ > arch/x86/kernel/cpu/topology.h | 32 +++++ > arch/x86/kernel/cpu/topology_common.c | 187 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ > 7 files changed, 290 insertions(+), 17 deletions(-) > > --- a/arch/x86/include/asm/topology.h > +++ b/arch/x86/include/asm/topology.h > @@ -102,6 +102,25 @@ static inline void setup_node_to_cpumask > > #include <asm-generic/topology.h> > > +/* Topology information */ > +enum x86_topology_domains { > + TOPO_SMT_DOMAIN, > + TOPO_CORE_DOMAIN, > + TOPO_MODULE_DOMAIN, > + TOPO_TILE_DOMAIN, > + TOPO_DIE_DOMAIN, > + TOPO_PKG_DOMAIN, > + TOPO_ROOT_DOMAIN, > + TOPO_MAX_DOMAIN, > +}; > + [..snip..] > +static void topo_set_ids(struct topo_scan *tscan) > +{ > + struct cpuinfo_x86 *c = tscan->c; > + u32 apicid = c->topo.apicid; > + > + c->topo.pkg_id = topo_shift_apicid(apicid, TOPO_ROOT_DOMAIN); Shouldn't this use TOPO_PKG_DOMAIN instead of TOPO_ROOT_DOMAIN ? > + c->topo.die_id = topo_shift_apicid(apicid, TOPO_DIE_DOMAIN); > + > + /* Relative core ID */ > + c->topo.core_id = topo_relative_domain_id(apicid, TOPO_CORE_DOMAIN); > +} > + -- Thanks and Regards gautham.
On Tue, Aug 01 2023 at 12:35, Gautham R. Shenoy wrote: > On Fri, Jul 28, 2023 at 02:13:08PM +0200, Thomas Gleixner wrote: >> +static void topo_set_ids(struct topo_scan *tscan) >> +{ >> + struct cpuinfo_x86 *c = tscan->c; >> + u32 apicid = c->topo.apicid; >> + >> + c->topo.pkg_id = topo_shift_apicid(apicid, TOPO_ROOT_DOMAIN); > > Shouldn't this use TOPO_PKG_DOMAIN instead of TOPO_ROOT_DOMAIN ? Yup. It does not make a difference in that case. That's why I didn't notice, but let me fix this for conistency sake.
Michael! On Tue, Aug 01 2023 at 00:12, Thomas Gleixner wrote: > On Mon, Jul 31 2023 at 21:27, Michael Kelley wrote: > Clearly the hyper-v BIOS people put a lot of thoughts into this: > >> x2APIC features / processor topology (0xb): >> extended APIC ID = 0 >> --- level 0 --- >> level number = 0x0 (0) >> level type = thread (1) >> bit width of level = 0x1 (1) >> number of logical processors at level = 0x2 (2) >> --- level 1 --- >> level number = 0x1 (1) >> level type = core (2) >> bit width of level = 0x6 (6) >> number of logical processors at level = 0x40 (64) > > FAIL: ^^^^^ > > While that field is not meant for topology evaluation it is at least > expected to tell the actual number of logical processors at that level > which are actually available. > > The CPUID APIC ID aka initial_apicid clearly tells that the topology has > 36 logical CPUs in package 0 and 36 in package 1 according to your > table. > > On real hardware this looks like this: > > --- level 1 --- > level number = 0x1 (1) > level type = core (2) > bit width of level = 0x6 (6) > number of logical processors at level = 0x38 (56) > > Which corresponds to reality and is consistent. But sure, consistency is > overrated. So I looked really hard to find some hint how to detect this situation on the boot CPU, which allows us to mitigate it, but there is none at all. So we are caught between a rock and a hard place, which provides us two mutually exclusive options to chose from: 1) Have a sane topology evaluation mechanism which solves the known problems of hybrid systems, wrong sizing estimates and other unpleasantries. 2) Support the Hyper-V BIOS trainwreck forever. Unsurprisingly #2 is not really an option as #1 is a crucial issue for the kernel and we need it resolved urgently as of yesterday. So while I'm definitely a strong supporter of no-regression policy, I have to make an argument here why this particular issue is _not_ covered: 1) Hyper-V BIOS/firmware violates the firmware specification and requirements which are clearly spelled out in the SDM. 2) This violatation is reported on every boot with one promiment message per brought up AP where the initial APIC ID as provided by CPUID leaf 0xB deviates from the APIC ID read from "hardware", which is also provided by MADT starting with CPU 36 in the provided example: "[FIRMWARE BUG] CPU36: APIC id mismatch. Firmware: 40 APIC: 24" repeating itself up to CPU71 with the relevant diverging APIC IDs. At least that's what the upstream kernel produces according to validate_apic_and_package_id() in such an situation. 3) This is known for years and the Hyper-V Linux team tried to get this resolved, but obviously their arguments fell on deaf ears. IOW, the firmware BUG message has been ignored willfully for years due to "works for me, why should I care?" attitude. Seriously, kernel development cannot be held hostage forever by the wilful ignorance of a BIOS team, which refuses to adhere to specifications and defines their own world order. The x86 maintainer team is chosing the lesser of two evils and lets those who created the problem and refused to resolve it deal with the outcome. Just to clarify. This is not preventing affected guests from booting. The worst consequence is a slight performance regression because the firmware provided topology information is not matching reality and therefore the scheduler placement vs. L3 affinity sucks. That's clearly not a kernel problem. I'm happy to aid accelerating this thought process by elevating the existing pr_err(FW_BUG....) to a solid WARN_ON_ONCE(). See below. Thanks, tglx --- --- a/arch/x86/kernel/cpu/common.c +++ b/arch/x86/kernel/cpu/common.c @@ -1688,7 +1688,7 @@ static void validate_apic_and_package_id apicid = apic->cpu_present_to_apicid(cpu); - if (apicid != c->topo.apicid) { + if (WARN_ON_ONCE(apicid != c->topo.apicid)) { pr_err(FW_BUG "CPU%u: APIC id mismatch. Firmware: %x APIC: %x\n", cpu, apicid, c->topo.initial_apicid); }
On 01/08/2023 11:25 pm, Thomas Gleixner wrote: > --- a/arch/x86/kernel/cpu/common.c > +++ b/arch/x86/kernel/cpu/common.c > @@ -1688,7 +1688,7 @@ static void validate_apic_and_package_id > > apicid = apic->cpu_present_to_apicid(cpu); > > - if (apicid != c->topo.apicid) { > + if (WARN_ON_ONCE(apicid != c->topo.apicid)) { > pr_err(FW_BUG "CPU%u: APIC id mismatch. Firmware: %x APIC: %x\n", While you're fixing this, care to remove the chaotic-evil path of mixing %u and %x with no 0x prefix? ~Andrew
From: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de> Sent: Tuesday, August 1, 2023 3:25 PM > > Michael! > > On Tue, Aug 01 2023 at 00:12, Thomas Gleixner wrote: > > On Mon, Jul 31 2023 at 21:27, Michael Kelley wrote: > > Clearly the hyper-v BIOS people put a lot of thoughts into this: > > > >> x2APIC features / processor topology (0xb): > >> extended APIC ID = 0 > >> --- level 0 --- > >> level number = 0x0 (0) > >> level type = thread (1) > >> bit width of level = 0x1 (1) > >> number of logical processors at level = 0x2 (2) > >> --- level 1 --- > >> level number = 0x1 (1) > >> level type = core (2) > >> bit width of level = 0x6 (6) > >> number of logical processors at level = 0x40 (64) > > > > FAIL: ^^^^^ > > > > While that field is not meant for topology evaluation it is at least > > expected to tell the actual number of logical processors at that level > > which are actually available. > > > > The CPUID APIC ID aka initial_apicid clearly tells that the topology has > > 36 logical CPUs in package 0 and 36 in package 1 according to your > > table. > > > > On real hardware this looks like this: > > > > --- level 1 --- > > level number = 0x1 (1) > > level type = core (2) > > bit width of level = 0x6 (6) > > number of logical processors at level = 0x38 (56) > > > > Which corresponds to reality and is consistent. But sure, consistency is > > overrated. > > So I looked really hard to find some hint how to detect this situation > on the boot CPU, which allows us to mitigate it, but there is none at > all. > > So we are caught between a rock and a hard place, which provides us two > mutually exclusive options to chose from: > > 1) Have a sane topology evaluation mechanism which solves the known > problems of hybrid systems, wrong sizing estimates and other > unpleasantries. > > 2) Support the Hyper-V BIOS trainwreck forever. > > Unsurprisingly #2 is not really an option as #1 is a crucial issue for > the kernel and we need it resolved urgently as of yesterday. > > So while I'm definitely a strong supporter of no-regression policy, I > have to make an argument here why this particular issue is _not_ > covered: > > 1) Hyper-V BIOS/firmware violates the firmware specification and > requirements which are clearly spelled out in the SDM. > > 2) This violatation is reported on every boot with one promiment > message per brought up AP where the initial APIC ID as provided by > CPUID leaf 0xB deviates from the APIC ID read from "hardware", which is > also provided by MADT starting with CPU 36 in the provided example: > > "[FIRMWARE BUG] CPU36: APIC id mismatch. Firmware: 40 APIC: 24" > > repeating itself up to CPU71 with the relevant diverging APIC IDs. > > At least that's what the upstream kernel produces according to > validate_apic_and_package_id() in such an situation. > > 3) This is known for years and the Hyper-V Linux team tried to get this > resolved, but obviously their arguments fell on deaf ears. > > IOW, the firmware BUG message has been ignored willfully for years > due to "works for me, why should I care?" attitude. > > Seriously, kernel development cannot be held hostage forever by the > wilful ignorance of a BIOS team, which refuses to adhere to > specifications and defines their own world order. > > The x86 maintainer team is chosing the lesser of two evils and lets > those who created the problem and refused to resolve it deal with the > outcome. Fair enough. I don't have any basis to argue otherwise. I'm in discussions with the Hyper-V team about getting it fully fixed in Hyper-V, and it looks like there's some movement to make it happen. > > Just to clarify. This is not preventing affected guests from booting. > The worst consequence is a slight performance regression because the > firmware provided topology information is not matching reality and > therefore the scheduler placement vs. L3 affinity sucks. That's clearly > not a kernel problem. Yes, if Linux will still boots and runs, that helps. Then it really is up the (virtual) firmware in Hyper-V to provide the correct topology information so performance is as expected. > > I'm happy to aid accelerating this thought process by elevating the > existing pr_err(FW_BUG....) to a solid WARN_ON_ONCE(). See below. Your choice. In this particular case, it won't make a difference either way. Michael > > Thanks, > > tglx > --- > --- a/arch/x86/kernel/cpu/common.c > +++ b/arch/x86/kernel/cpu/common.c > @@ -1688,7 +1688,7 @@ static void validate_apic_and_package_id > > apicid = apic->cpu_present_to_apicid(cpu); > > - if (apicid != c->topo.apicid) { > + if (WARN_ON_ONCE(apicid != c->topo.apicid)) { > pr_err(FW_BUG "CPU%u: APIC id mismatch. Firmware: %x APIC: %x\n", > cpu, apicid, c->topo.initial_apicid); > }
--- a/arch/x86/include/asm/topology.h +++ b/arch/x86/include/asm/topology.h @@ -102,6 +102,25 @@ static inline void setup_node_to_cpumask #include <asm-generic/topology.h> +/* Topology information */ +enum x86_topology_domains { + TOPO_SMT_DOMAIN, + TOPO_CORE_DOMAIN, + TOPO_MODULE_DOMAIN, + TOPO_TILE_DOMAIN, + TOPO_DIE_DOMAIN, + TOPO_PKG_DOMAIN, + TOPO_ROOT_DOMAIN, + TOPO_MAX_DOMAIN, +}; + +struct x86_topology_system { + unsigned int dom_shifts[TOPO_MAX_DOMAIN]; + unsigned int dom_size[TOPO_MAX_DOMAIN]; +}; + +extern struct x86_topology_system x86_topo_system; + extern const struct cpumask *cpu_coregroup_mask(int cpu); extern const struct cpumask *cpu_clustergroup_mask(int cpu); --- a/arch/x86/kernel/cpu/Makefile +++ b/arch/x86/kernel/cpu/Makefile @@ -17,7 +17,8 @@ KMSAN_SANITIZE_common.o := n # As above, instrumenting secondary CPU boot code causes boot hangs. KCSAN_SANITIZE_common.o := n -obj-y := cacheinfo.o scattered.o topology.o +obj-y := cacheinfo.o scattered.o +obj-y += topology_common.o topology.o obj-y += common.o obj-y += rdrand.o obj-y += match.o --- a/arch/x86/kernel/cpu/common.c +++ b/arch/x86/kernel/cpu/common.c @@ -1553,6 +1553,8 @@ static void __init early_identify_cpu(st setup_force_cpu_cap(X86_FEATURE_CPUID); cpu_parse_early_param(); + cpu_init_topology(c); + if (this_cpu->c_early_init) this_cpu->c_early_init(c); @@ -1563,6 +1565,7 @@ static void __init early_identify_cpu(st this_cpu->c_bsp_init(c); } else { setup_clear_cpu_cap(X86_FEATURE_CPUID); + cpu_init_topology(c); } setup_force_cpu_cap(X86_FEATURE_ALWAYS); @@ -1708,18 +1711,6 @@ static void generic_identify(struct cpui get_cpu_address_sizes(c); - if (c->cpuid_level >= 0x00000001) { - c->topo.initial_apicid = (cpuid_ebx(1) >> 24) & 0xFF; -#ifdef CONFIG_X86_32 -# ifdef CONFIG_SMP - c->topo.apicid = apic->phys_pkg_id(c->topo.initial_apicid, 0); -# else - c->topo.apicid = c->topo.initial_apicid; -# endif -#endif - c->topo.pkg_id = c->topo.initial_apicid; - } - get_model_name(c); /* Default name */ /* @@ -1778,9 +1769,6 @@ static void identify_cpu(struct cpuinfo_ c->x86_model_id[0] = '\0'; /* Unset */ c->x86_max_cores = 1; c->x86_coreid_bits = 0; - c->topo.cu_id = 0xff; - c->topo.llc_id = BAD_APICID; - c->topo.l2c_id = BAD_APICID; #ifdef CONFIG_X86_64 c->x86_clflush_size = 64; c->x86_phys_bits = 36; @@ -1799,6 +1787,8 @@ static void identify_cpu(struct cpuinfo_ generic_identify(c); + cpu_parse_topology(c); + if (this_cpu->c_identify) this_cpu->c_identify(c); @@ -1806,7 +1796,8 @@ static void identify_cpu(struct cpuinfo_ apply_forced_caps(c); #ifdef CONFIG_X86_64 - c->topo.apicid = apic->phys_pkg_id(c->topo.initial_apicid, 0); + if (!topo_is_converted(c)) + c->topo.apicid = apic->phys_pkg_id(c->topo.initial_apicid, 0); #endif /* --- a/arch/x86/kernel/cpu/cpu.h +++ b/arch/x86/kernel/cpu/cpu.h @@ -2,6 +2,11 @@ #ifndef ARCH_X86_CPU_H #define ARCH_X86_CPU_H +#include <asm/cpu.h> +#include <asm/topology.h> + +#include "topology.h" + /* attempt to consolidate cpu attributes */ struct cpu_dev { const char *c_vendor; @@ -95,4 +100,5 @@ static inline bool spectre_v2_in_eibrs_m mode == SPECTRE_V2_EIBRS_RETPOLINE || mode == SPECTRE_V2_EIBRS_LFENCE; } + #endif /* ARCH_X86_CPU_H */ --- a/arch/x86/kernel/cpu/debugfs.c +++ b/arch/x86/kernel/cpu/debugfs.c @@ -5,6 +5,8 @@ #include <asm/apic.h> #include <asm/processor.h> +#include "cpu.h" + static int cpu_debug_show(struct seq_file *m, void *p) { unsigned long cpu = (unsigned long)m->private; @@ -43,12 +45,47 @@ static const struct file_operations dfs_ .release = single_release, }; +static int dom_debug_show(struct seq_file *m, void *p) +{ + static const char *domain_names[TOPO_ROOT_DOMAIN] = { + [TOPO_SMT_DOMAIN] = "Thread", + [TOPO_CORE_DOMAIN] = "Core", + [TOPO_MODULE_DOMAIN] = "Module", + [TOPO_TILE_DOMAIN] = "Tile", + [TOPO_DIE_DOMAIN] = "Die", + [TOPO_PKG_DOMAIN] = "Package", + }; + unsigned int dom, nthreads = 1; + + for (dom = 0; dom < TOPO_ROOT_DOMAIN; dom++) { + nthreads *= x86_topo_system.dom_size[dom]; + seq_printf(m, "domain: %-10s shift: %u dom_size: %5u max_threads: %5u\n", + domain_names[dom], x86_topo_system.dom_shifts[dom], + x86_topo_system.dom_size[dom], nthreads); + } + return 0; +} + +static int dom_debug_open(struct inode *inode, struct file *file) +{ + return single_open(file, dom_debug_show, inode->i_private); +} + +static const struct file_operations dfs_dom_ops = { + .open = dom_debug_open, + .read = seq_read, + .llseek = seq_lseek, + .release = single_release, +}; + static __init int cpu_init_debugfs(void) { struct dentry *dir, *base = debugfs_create_dir("topo", arch_debugfs_dir); unsigned long id; char name [10]; + debugfs_create_file("domains", 0444, base, NULL, &dfs_dom_ops); + dir = debugfs_create_dir("cpus", base); for_each_possible_cpu(id) { sprintf(name, "%lu", id); --- /dev/null +++ b/arch/x86/kernel/cpu/topology.h @@ -0,0 +1,32 @@ +/* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 */ +#ifndef ARCH_X86_TOPOLOGY_H +#define ARCH_X86_TOPOLOGY_H + +struct topo_scan { + struct cpuinfo_x86 *c; + unsigned int dom_shifts[TOPO_MAX_DOMAIN]; + unsigned int dom_ncpus[TOPO_MAX_DOMAIN]; + +}; + +bool topo_is_converted(struct cpuinfo_x86 *c); +void cpu_init_topology(struct cpuinfo_x86 *c); +void cpu_parse_topology(struct cpuinfo_x86 *c); +void topology_set_dom(struct topo_scan *tscan, enum x86_topology_domains dom, + unsigned int shift, unsigned int ncpus); + +static inline u32 topo_shift_apicid(u32 apicid, enum x86_topology_domains dom) +{ + if (dom == TOPO_SMT_DOMAIN) + return apicid; + return apicid >> x86_topo_system.dom_shifts[dom - 1]; +} + +static inline u32 topo_relative_domain_id(u32 apicid, enum x86_topology_domains dom) +{ + if (dom != TOPO_SMT_DOMAIN) + apicid >>= x86_topo_system.dom_shifts[dom - 1]; + return apicid & (x86_topo_system.dom_size[dom] - 1); +} + +#endif /* ARCH_X86_TOPOLOGY_H */ --- /dev/null +++ b/arch/x86/kernel/cpu/topology_common.c @@ -0,0 +1,187 @@ +// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 +#include <linux/cpu.h> + +#include <xen/xen.h> + +#include <asm/apic.h> +#include <asm/processor.h> +#include <asm/smp.h> + +#include "cpu.h" + +struct x86_topology_system x86_topo_system __ro_after_init; + +void topology_set_dom(struct topo_scan *tscan, enum x86_topology_domains dom, + unsigned int shift, unsigned int ncpus) +{ + tscan->dom_shifts[dom] = shift; + tscan->dom_ncpus[dom] = ncpus; + + /* Propagate to the upper levels */ + for (dom++; dom < TOPO_MAX_DOMAIN; dom++) { + tscan->dom_shifts[dom] = tscan->dom_shifts[dom - 1]; + tscan->dom_ncpus[dom] = tscan->dom_ncpus[dom - 1]; + } +} + +bool topo_is_converted(struct cpuinfo_x86 *c) +{ + /* Temporary until everything is converted over. */ + switch (boot_cpu_data.x86_vendor) { + case X86_VENDOR_AMD: + case X86_VENDOR_CENTAUR: + case X86_VENDOR_INTEL: + case X86_VENDOR_HYGON: + case X86_VENDOR_ZHAOXIN: + return false; + default: + /* Let all UP systems use the below */ + return true; + } +} + +static bool fake_topology(struct topo_scan *tscan) +{ + /* + * Preset the CORE level shift for CPUID less systems and XEN_PV, + * which has useless CPUID information. + */ + topology_set_dom(tscan, TOPO_SMT_DOMAIN, 0, 1); + topology_set_dom(tscan, TOPO_CORE_DOMAIN, 1, 1); + + return tscan->c->cpuid_level < 1 || xen_pv_domain(); +} + +static void parse_topology(struct topo_scan *tscan, bool early) +{ + const struct cpuinfo_topology topo_defaults = { + .cu_id = 0xff, + .llc_id = BAD_APICID, + .l2c_id = BAD_APICID, + }; + struct cpuinfo_x86 *c = tscan->c; + struct { + u32 unused0 : 16, + nproc : 8, + apicid : 8; + } ebx; + + c->topo = topo_defaults; + + if (fake_topology(tscan)) + return; + + /* Preset Initial APIC ID from CPUID leaf 1 */ + cpuid_leaf_reg(1, CPUID_EBX, &ebx); + c->topo.initial_apicid = ebx.apicid; + + /* + * The initial invocation from early_identify_cpu() happens before + * the APIC is mapped or X2APIC enabled. For establishing the + * topology, that's not required. Use the initial APIC ID. + */ + if (early) + c->topo.apicid = c->topo.initial_apicid; + else + c->topo.apicid = read_apic_id(); + + /* The above is sufficient for UP */ + if (!IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_SMP)) + return; +} + +static void topo_set_ids(struct topo_scan *tscan) +{ + struct cpuinfo_x86 *c = tscan->c; + u32 apicid = c->topo.apicid; + + c->topo.pkg_id = topo_shift_apicid(apicid, TOPO_ROOT_DOMAIN); + c->topo.die_id = topo_shift_apicid(apicid, TOPO_DIE_DOMAIN); + + /* Relative core ID */ + c->topo.core_id = topo_relative_domain_id(apicid, TOPO_CORE_DOMAIN); +} + +static void topo_set_max_cores(struct topo_scan *tscan) +{ + /* + * Bug compatible for now. This is broken on hybrid systems: + * 8 cores SMT + 8 cores w/o SMT + * tscan.dom_ncpus[TOPO_CORE_DOMAIN] = 24; 24 / 2 = 12 !! + * + * Cannot be fixed without further topology enumeration changes. + */ + tscan->c->x86_max_cores = tscan->dom_ncpus[TOPO_CORE_DOMAIN] >> + x86_topo_system.dom_shifts[TOPO_SMT_DOMAIN]; +} + +void cpu_parse_topology(struct cpuinfo_x86 *c) +{ + unsigned int dom, cpu = smp_processor_id(); + struct topo_scan tscan = { .c = c, }; + + parse_topology(&tscan, false); + + if (!topo_is_converted(c)) + return; + + for (dom = TOPO_SMT_DOMAIN; dom < TOPO_MAX_DOMAIN; dom++) { + if (tscan.dom_shifts[dom] == x86_topo_system.dom_shifts[dom]) + continue; + pr_err(FW_BUG "CPU%d: Topology domain %u shift %u != %u\n", cpu, dom, + tscan.dom_shifts[dom], x86_topo_system.dom_shifts[dom]); + } + + /* Bug compatible with the existing parsers */ + if (tscan.dom_ncpus[TOPO_SMT_DOMAIN] > smp_num_siblings) { + if (system_state == SYSTEM_BOOTING) { + pr_warn_once("CPU%d: SMT detected and enabled late\n", cpu); + smp_num_siblings = tscan.dom_ncpus[TOPO_SMT_DOMAIN]; + } else { + pr_warn_once("CPU%d: SMT detected after init. Too late!\n", cpu); + } + } + + topo_set_ids(&tscan); + topo_set_max_cores(&tscan); +} + +void __init cpu_init_topology(struct cpuinfo_x86 *c) +{ + struct topo_scan tscan = { .c = c, }; + unsigned int dom, sft; + + parse_topology(&tscan, true); + + if (!topo_is_converted(c)) + return; + + /* Copy the shift values and calculate the unit sizes. */ + memcpy(x86_topo_system.dom_shifts, tscan.dom_shifts, sizeof(x86_topo_system.dom_shifts)); + + dom = TOPO_SMT_DOMAIN; + x86_topo_system.dom_size[dom] = 1U << x86_topo_system.dom_shifts[dom]; + + for (dom++; dom < TOPO_MAX_DOMAIN; dom++) { + sft = x86_topo_system.dom_shifts[dom] - x86_topo_system.dom_shifts[dom - 1]; + x86_topo_system.dom_size[dom] = 1U << sft; + } + + topo_set_ids(&tscan); + topo_set_max_cores(&tscan); + + /* + * Bug compatible with the existing code. If the boot CPU does not + * have SMT this ends up with one sibling. This needs way deeper + * changes further down the road to get it right during early boot. + */ + smp_num_siblings = tscan.dom_ncpus[TOPO_SMT_DOMAIN]; + + /* + * Neither it's clear whether there are as many dies as the APIC + * space indicating die level is. But assume that the actual number + * of CPUs gives a proper indication for now to stay bug compatible. + */ + __max_die_per_package = tscan.dom_ncpus[TOPO_DIE_DOMAIN] / + tscan.dom_ncpus[TOPO_DIE_DOMAIN - 1]; +}
Topology evaluation is a complete disaster and impenetrable mess. It's scattered all over the place with some vendor implementatins doing early evaluation and some not. The most horrific part is the permanent overwriting of smt_max_siblings and __max_die_per_package, instead of establishing them once on the boot CPU and validating the result on the APs. The goals are: - One topology evaluation entry point - Proper sharing of pointlessly duplicated code - Proper structuring of the evaluation logic and preferences. - Evaluating important system wide information only once on the boot CPU - Making the 0xb/0x1f leaf parsing less convoluted and actually fixing the short comings of leaf 0x1f evaluation. Start to consolidate the topology evaluation code by providing the entry points for the early boot CPU evaluation and for the final parsing on the boot CPU and the APs. Move the trivial pieces into that new code: - The initialization of cpuinfo_x86::topo - The evaluation of CPUID leaf 1, which presets topo::initial_apicid - topo_apicid is set to topo::initial_apicid when invoked from early boot. When invoked for the final evaluation on the boot CPU it reads the actual APIC ID, which makes apic_get_initial_apicid() obsolete once everything is converted over. Provide a temporary helper function topo_converted() which shields off the not yet converted CPU vendors from invoking code which would break them. This shielding covers all vendor CPUs which support SMP, but not the historical pure UP ones as they only need the topology info init and eventually the initial APIC initialization. Provide two new members in cpuinfo_x86::topo to store the maximum number of SMT siblings and the number of dies per package and add them to the debugfs readout. These two members will be used to populate this information on the boot CPU and to validate the APs against it. Signed-off-by: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de> --- arch/x86/include/asm/topology.h | 19 +++ arch/x86/kernel/cpu/Makefile | 3 arch/x86/kernel/cpu/common.c | 23 +--- arch/x86/kernel/cpu/cpu.h | 6 + arch/x86/kernel/cpu/debugfs.c | 37 ++++++ arch/x86/kernel/cpu/topology.h | 32 +++++ arch/x86/kernel/cpu/topology_common.c | 187 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 7 files changed, 290 insertions(+), 17 deletions(-)