On Thu, 2009-12-17 at 18:45 +0000, Jeremy Fitzhardinge wrote:
On 12/17/2009 05:53 AM, Ian Campbell wrote:In practice.
871b72dd "x86: microcode: use smp_call_function_single instead ofDid you see a problem with this in practice, or just by inspection?
set_cpus_allowed, cleanup of synchronization logic" included:
static int mc_sysdev_resume(struct sys_device *dev)
{
[...]
+ /*
+ * All non-bootup cpus are still disabled,
+ * so only CPU 0 will apply ucode here.
+ *
+ * Moreover, there can be no concurrent
+ * updates from any other places at this point.
+ */
+ WARN_ON(cpu != 0);
However suspend/resume under Xen doesn't need to hot unplug all the CPUs, so we
don't; the hypervisor can manage the context save/restore for all CPUs.
The Xen microcode driver will only load in a privileged domain, so IThis was on bare v2.6.32 + your bugfixes branch, there was no domain 0
don't think this path can ever be exercised.
support or Xen microcode driver.
The regular native microcode driver can load in a domU and generally
silently does the right thing (i.e. nothing) apart from this issue.
Distro initscripts will tend to try and load the native driver and they
are very unlikely to special case Xen domU to avoid it.
Regardless, the Xen microcode driver changes aren't upstream yet, soThis issue is in the generic microcode code so it is also needed now. I
there's no need to apply this there yet.
guess once the Xen microcode driver is upstreamed it will fix domU by
suppressing the driver from loading at all except in dom0.
Ian.
Thanks,
J
It would be unnecessary to load microcode.ko in a Xen domU but if it does occur
(e.g. because a distro installs the tools by default) we would like to avoid
the warning on resume.
Since the real constraint here is that we are running on the CPU for which we
would like to load microcode (which in all practical circumstances is CPU0)
just check for that and return if we are resuming a different CPU.
There is no danger of concurrent updates, even if we ignore the fact that all
but one CPUs are unplugged on native, because sysdev_resume() is single
threaded.
Signed-off-by: Ian Campbell<ian.campbell@xxxxxxxxxx>
Cc: Jeremy Fitzhardinge<jeremy@xxxxxxxx>
Cc: Dmitry Adamushko<dmitry.adamushko@xxxxxxxxx>
Cc: Hugh Dickins<hugh@xxxxxxxxxxx>
Cc: Ingo Molnar<mingo@xxxxxxx>
---
arch/x86/kernel/microcode_core.c | 11 +----------
1 files changed, 1 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-)
diff --git a/arch/x86/kernel/microcode_core.c b/arch/x86/kernel/microcode_core.c
index 378e9a8..1153062 100644
--- a/arch/x86/kernel/microcode_core.c
+++ b/arch/x86/kernel/microcode_core.c
@@ -438,18 +438,9 @@ static int mc_sysdev_resume(struct sys_device *dev)
int cpu = dev->id;
struct ucode_cpu_info *uci = ucode_cpu_info + cpu;
- if (!cpu_online(cpu))
+ if (cpu != smp_processor_id())
return 0;
- /*
- * All non-bootup cpus are still disabled,
- * so only CPU 0 will apply ucode here.
- *
- * Moreover, there can be no concurrent
- * updates from any other places at this point.
- */
- WARN_ON(cpu != 0);
-
if (uci->valid&& uci->mc)
microcode_ops->apply_microcode(cpu);