[PATCH RFC v4 02/15] ACPI: processor: Register all CPUs from acpi_processor_get_info()

Rafael J. Wysocki rafael at kernel.org
Wed Apr 10 07:19:50 PDT 2024


On Wed, Apr 10, 2024 at 3:50 PM Jonathan Cameron
<Jonathan.Cameron at huawei.com> wrote:
>
> On Wed, 10 Apr 2024 15:28:18 +0200
> "Rafael J. Wysocki" <rafael at kernel.org> wrote:
>
> > On Wed, Apr 10, 2024 at 2:43 PM Jonathan Cameron
> > <Jonathan.Cameron at huawei.com> wrote:
> > >
> > > > >
> > > > > > diff --git a/drivers/base/cpu.c b/drivers/base/cpu.c
> > > > > > index 47de0f140ba6..13d052bf13f4 100644
> > > > > > --- a/drivers/base/cpu.c
> > > > > > +++ b/drivers/base/cpu.c
> > > > > > @@ -553,7 +553,11 @@ static void __init cpu_dev_register_generic(void)
> > > > > >  {
> > > > > >         int i, ret;
> > > > > >
> > > > > > -       if (!IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_GENERIC_CPU_DEVICES))
> > > > > > +       /*
> > > > > > +        * When ACPI is enabled, CPUs are registered via
> > > > > > +        * acpi_processor_get_info().
> > > > > > +        */
> > > > > > +       if (!IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_GENERIC_CPU_DEVICES) || !acpi_disabled)
> > > > > >                 return;
> > > > >
> > > > > Honestly, this looks like a quick hack to me and it absolutely
> > > > > requires an ACK from the x86 maintainers to go anywhere.
> > > > Will address this separately.
> > > >
> > >
> > > So do people prefer this hack, or something along lines of the following?
> > >
> > > static int __init cpu_dev_register_generic(void)
> > > {
> > >         int i, ret = 0;
> > >
> > >         for_each_online_cpu(i) {
> > >                 if (!get_cpu_device(i)) {
> > >                         ret = arch_register_cpu(i);
> > >                         if (ret)
> > >                                 pr_warn("register_cpu %d failed (%d)\n", i, ret);
> > >                 }
> > >         }
> > >         //Probably just eat the error.
> > >         return 0;
> > > }
> > > subsys_initcall_sync(cpu_dev_register_generic);
> >
> > I would prefer something like the above.
> >
> > I actually thought that arch_register_cpu() might return something
> > like -EPROBE_DEFER when it cannot determine whether or not the CPU is
> > really available.
>
> Ok. That would end up looking much more like the original code I think.
> So we wouldn't have this late registration at all, or keep it for DT
> on arm64?  I'm not sure that's a clean solution though leaves
> the x86 path alone.

I'm not sure why DT on arm64 would need to do late registration.

There is this chain of calls in the mainline today:

driver_init()
  cpu_dev_init()
    cpu_dev_register_generic()

the last of which registers CPUs on arm64/DT systems IIUC. I don't see
a need to change this behavior.

On arm64/ACPI, though, arch_register_cpu() cannot make progress until
it can look into the ACPI Namespace, so I would just make it return
-EPROBE_DEFER or equivalent then and the ACPI enumeration will find
the CPU and basically treat it as one that has just appeared.

> If we get rid of this catch all, solution would be to move the
> !acpi_disabled check into the arm64 version of arch_cpu_register()
> because we would only want the delayed registration path to be
> used on ACPI cases where the question of CPU availability can't
> yet be resolved.

Exactly.

This is similar (if not equivalent even) to a CPU becoming available
between the cpu_dev_register_generic() call and the ACPI enumeration.

> >
> > Then, the ACPI processor enumeration path may take care of registering
> > CPU that have not been registered so far and in the more-or-less the
> > same way regardless of the architecture (modulo some arch-specific
> > stuff).
>
> If I understand correctly, in acpi_processor_get_info() we'd end up
> with a similar check on whether it was already registered (the x86 path)
> or had be deferred (arm64 / acpi).
>
> >
> > In the end, it should be possible to avoid changing the behavior of
> > x86 and loongarch in this series.
>
> Possible, yes, but result if I understand correctly is we end up with
> very different flows and replication of functionality between the
> early registration and the late one. I'm fine with that if you prefer it!

But that's what is there today, isn't it?

I think this can be changed to reduce the duplication, but I'd prefer
to do that later, when the requisite functionality is in place and we
just do the consolidation.  In that case, if anything goes wrong, we
can take a step back and reconsider without deferring the arm64 CPU
hotplug support.

> >
> > > Which may look familiar at it's effectively patch 3 from v3 which was dealing
> > > with CPUs missing from DSDT (something we think doesn't happen).
> > >
> > > It might be possible to elide the arch_register_cpu() in
> > > make_present() but that will mean we use different flows in this patch set
> > > for the hotplug and initially present cases which is a bit messy.
> > >
> > > I've tested this lightly on arm64 and x86 ACPI + DT booting and it "seems" fine.
> >
> > Sounds promising.
>
> Possibly not that relevant though if proposal is to drop this approach. :(
> At least I now have test setups!

Great!



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