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authorFeng Tang <feng.tang@intel.com>2024-07-29 10:12:02 +0800
committerThomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de>2024-07-31 21:12:09 +0200
commitb4bac279319d3082eb42f074799c7b18ba528c71 (patch)
tree267d1cb1beb13ea4d498cf2cbec16f24bf866fcd /drivers
parent8400291e289ee6b2bf9779ff1c83a291501f017b (diff)
x86/tsc: Use topology_max_packages() to get package number
Commit b50db7095fe0 ("x86/tsc: Disable clocksource watchdog for TSC on qualified platorms") was introduced to solve problem that sometimes TSC clocksource is wrongly judged as unstable by watchdog like 'jiffies', HPET, etc. In it, the hardware package number is a key factor for judging whether to disable the watchdog for TSC, and 'nr_online_nodes' was chosen due to, at that time (kernel v5.1x), it is available in early boot phase before registering 'tsc-early' clocksource, where all non-boot CPUs are not brought up yet. Dave and Rui pointed out there are many cases in which 'nr_online_nodes' is cheated and not accurate, like: * SNC (sub-numa cluster) mode enabled * numa emulation (numa=fake=8 etc.) * numa=off * platforms with CPU-less HBM nodes, CPU-less Optane memory nodes. * 'maxcpus=' cmdline setup, where chopped CPUs could be onlined later * 'nr_cpus=', 'possible_cpus=' cmdline setup, where chopped CPUs can not be onlined after boot The SNC case is the most user-visible case, as many CSP (Cloud Service Provider) enable this feature in their server fleets. When SNC3 enabled, a 2 socket machine will appear to have 6 NUMA nodes, and get impacted by the issue in reality. Thomas' recent patchset of refactoring x86 topology code improves topology_max_packages() greatly, by making it more accurate and available in early boot phase, which works well in most of the above cases. The only exceptions are 'nr_cpus=' and 'possible_cpus=' setup, which may under-estimate the package number. As during topology setup, the boot CPU iterates through all enumerated APIC IDs and either accepts or rejects the APIC ID. For accepted IDs, it figures out which bits of the ID map to the package number. It tracks which package numbers have been seen in a bitmap. topology_max_packages() just returns the number of bits set in that bitmap. 'nr_cpus=' and 'possible_cpus=' can cause more APIC IDs to be rejected and can artificially lower the number of bits in the package bitmap and thus topology_max_packages(). This means that, for example, a system with 8 physical packages might reject all the CPUs on 6 of those packages and be left with only 2 packages and 2 bits set in the package bitmap. It needs the TSC watchdog, but would disable it anyway. This isn't ideal, but it only happens for debug-oriented options. This is fixable by tracking the package numbers for rejected CPUs. But it's not worth the trouble for debugging. So use topology_max_packages() to replace nr_online_nodes(). Reported-by: Dave Hansen <dave.hansen@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Feng Tang <feng.tang@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de> Reviewed-by: Waiman Long <longman@redhat.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/all/20240729021202.180955-1-feng.tang@intel.com Closes: https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/a4860054-0f16-6513-f121-501048431086@intel.com/
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