[PATCH] kexec: force x86_64 arches to boot kdump kernels on boot cpu
Eric W. Biederman
ebiederm at xmission.com
Thu Dec 6 19:33:31 EST 2007
Vivek Goyal <vgoyal at redhat.com> writes:
> On Thu, Dec 06, 2007 at 04:39:51PM -0500, Neil Horman wrote:
>> On Fri, Nov 30, 2007 at 09:51:31AM -0500, Neil Horman wrote:
>> > On Fri, Nov 30, 2007 at 09:42:50AM -0500, Vivek Goyal wrote:
>> <snip>
>> >
>> > Thats what I'm doing at the moment. I'm working on a RHEL5 patch at the
> moment
>> > (since thats whats on the production system thats failing), and will forward
>> > port it once its working
>> >
>> > And not to split hairs, but techically thats not our _only_ choice. We
> could
>> > force kdump boots on cpu0 as well ;)
>> >
>> > Thanks
>> > Neil
>> >
>> > > Thanks
>> > > Vivek
>> >
>>
>>
>> Sorry to have been quiet on this issue for a few days. Interesting news to
>> report, though. So I was working on a patch to do early apic enabling on
>> x86_64, and had something working for the old 2.6.18 kernel that we were
>> origionally testing on. Unfortunately while it worked on 2.6.18 it failed
>> miserably on 2.6.24-rc3-mm2, causing check_timer to consistently report that
> the
>> timer interrupt wasn't getting received (even though we could successfully run
>> calibrate_delay). Vivek and I were digging into this, when I ran accross the
>> description of the hypertransport configuration register in the opteron
>> specification. It contains a bit that, suprise, configures the ht bus to
> either
>> unicast interrupts delivered accross the ht bus to a single cpu, or to
> broadcast
>> it to all cpus. Since it seemed more likely that the 8259 in the nvidia
>> southbridge was transporting legacy mode interrupts over the ht bus than
>> directly to cpu0 via an actual wire, I wrote the attached patch to add a quirk
>> for nvidia chipsets, which scanned for hypertransport controllers, and ensured
>> that that broadcast bit was set. Test results indicate that this solves the
>> problem, and kdump kernels boot just fine on the affected system.
>>
>
> Hi Neil,
>
> Should we disable this broadcasting feature once we are through? Otherwise
> in normal systems it might mean extra traffic on hypertransport. There
> is no need for every interrupt to be broadcasted in normal systems?
My feel is that if it is for legacy interrupts only it should not be a problem.
Let's investigate and see if we can unconditionally enable this quirk
for all opteron systems.
Eric
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