maxcpus behavior in arm64
Rohit Vaswani
rvaswani at codeaurora.org
Wed May 14 10:49:08 PDT 2014
On 5/14/2014 5:57 AM, Catalin Marinas wrote:
> On Wed, May 14, 2014 at 01:10:17AM +0100, Rohit Vaswani wrote:
>> On 5/13/2014 2:02 PM, Catalin Marinas wrote:
>>> On Tue, May 13, 2014 at 07:56:01PM +0100, Rohit Vaswani wrote:
>>>> I notice that the maxcpus behavior is different in arm64 than from how
>>>> arm uses it.
>>>> in arm64/kernel/smp.c - in smp_prepare_cpus, maxcpus is used to limit
>>>> the cpu_present_mask.
>>>> However in arm/kernel/smp.c - maxcpus is not used as a decision maker to
>>>> set the cpu_preset_mask.
>>>>
>>>> Is this behavior expected and intentionally different in arm and arm64 ?
>>>> This also means that in arm64 (unlike arm)- maxcpus cannot be used to
>>>> boot a subset of total cpus with the
>>>> option of getting the secondary cores online at a later point from
>>>> userspace using hotplug.
>>>> It seems like maxcpus is being treated like nr_cpus in arm64 ?
>>> I don't think there is any particular reason, only that the code has
>>> been derived from arm long time ago and it probably inherited the
>>> original behaviour. In the meantime, arm got commit 7fa22bd5460 (ARM:
>>> 6993/1: platsmp: Allow secondary cpu hotplug with maxcpus=1).
>>>
>>> I'm happy to change the behaviour for arm64. Basically we still call
>>> cpu_prepare() for max_cpus but we initialise the present mask with
>>> init_cpu_present(cpu_possible_mask) as we don't have physical hotplug
>>> for the time being.
>> Thanks. Initializing the present mask with possible mask is good.
>> But, how would one call cpu_prepare on the other CPUS then ?
>> Currently cpu_prepare is called only from smp_prepare_cpus. I was going
>> to suggest calling cpu_prepare for each possible CPU.
>> We could have the for_each_possible_cpu loop in smp_prepare_cpus not
>> depend on max_cpus and call cpu_prepare for the possible cpus.
> For PSCI this would be fine since cpu_prepare() does not bring the CPU
> into the kernel. With spin-table, cpu_prepare brings the CPU up to the
> holding_pen loop. But I don't see a reason why we couldn't do all steps
> in smp_spin_table_cpu_boot() and simply ignore prepare (and we could get
> rid of cpu_prepare altogether).
Agree about smp_spin_table_cpu_boot.
But, w.r.t to PSCI we would need to call cpu_prepare and having those
changes in there is not going to impact spin-table. Sounds good ?
I can send out a patch for this change.
>> I didn't really understand the part of physical hotplug - we have
>> config_hotplug enabled
> What I meant is that possible != present in case of physical hotplug.
>
Thanks,
Rohit Vaswani
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