Re: [PATCH 1/2] x86/platform: Add a low priority low frequency NMI call chain

From: Mike Travis
Date: Tue Mar 07 2017 - 15:43:06 EST




On 3/7/2017 7:22 AM, Don Zickus wrote:
> On Tue, Mar 07, 2017 at 08:42:10AM +0100, Ingo Molnar wrote:
>>
>> * Mike Travis <mike.travis@xxxxxxx> wrote:
>>
>>> Add a new NMI call chain that is called last after all other NMI handlers
>>> have been checked and did not "handle" the NMI. This mimics the current
>>> NMI_UNKNOWN call chain except it eliminates the WARNING message about
>>> multiple NMI handlers registering on this call chain.
>>>
>>> This call chain dramatically lowers the NMI call frequency when high
>>> frequency NMI tools are in use, notably the perf tools. It is required
>>> for NMI handlers that cannot sustain a high NMI call rate without
>>> ramifications to the system operability.
>>
>> So how about we just turn off that warning instead? I don't remember the last time
>> it actually _helped_ us find any kernel or hardware bug - and it has caused tons
>> of problems...
>
> Yeah, that is one way to solve it. :-)

Actually just removing the WARNING indication and making it an
INFO message would be enough to quiet objections. Is that enough,
or should the message be completely removed for UNKNOWN NMI
handlers, and left in place for IO_CHECK and SERR NMI handlers?

>
> Originally I put that in there because the unknown nmi handlers sometime do
> not return, making it impossible for the second handler to run.

The only two external unknown NMI handlers that I know of is the UV
one and the KGDB one. The KGDB one appears to be only claimed if it
is exiting an NMI_LOCAL event. And the UV one is only claimed if
it as caused by a UV System NMI event. So truly unknown NMI events
eventually get to the internal unknown nmi handler.

> But you are right, it probably hasn't really helped find any problems. I
> wasn't aware of problems it was causing (not that I was looking through
> emails to find them either).
>
> Cheers,
> Don
>
>>
>> It's not like we warn about excess regular IRQs either - we either handle them or
>> at most increase a counter somewhere. We could do the same for NMIs: introduce a
>> counter somewhere that counts the number of seemingly unhandled NMIs.
>>
>> But in any case, we should not spam the kernel log, neither with high, nor with
>> low frequency.
>>
>> Thanks,
>>
>> Ingo