[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [PATCH 3/7] x86/boot: Collect the Raw CPU Policy earlier on boot
On 17.06.2024 19:30, Andrew Cooper wrote: > On 17/06/2024 11:25 am, Jan Beulich wrote: >> On 14.06.2024 20:26, Andrew Cooper wrote: >>> On 23/05/2024 4:44 pm, Jan Beulich wrote: >>>> On 23.05.2024 13:16, Andrew Cooper wrote: >>>>> This is a tangle, but it's a small step in the right direction. >>>>> >>>>> xstate_init() is shortly going to want data from the Raw policy. >>>>> calculate_raw_cpu_policy() is sufficiently separate from the other >>>>> policies to >>>>> be safe to do. >>>>> >>>>> No functional change. >>>>> >>>>> Signed-off-by: Andrew Cooper <andrew.cooper3@xxxxxxxxxx> >>>> Would you mind taking a look at >>>> https://lists.xen.org/archives/html/xen-devel/2021-04/msg01335.html >>>> to make clear (to me at least) in how far we can perhaps find common >>>> grounds >>>> on what wants doing when? (Of course the local version I have has been >>>> constantly re-based, so some of the function names would have changed from >>>> what's visible there.) >>> That's been covered several times, at least in part. >>> >>> I want to eventually move the host policy too, but I'm not willing to >>> compound the mess we've currently got just to do it earlier. It's just >>> creating even more obstacles to doing it nicely. >>> >>> Nothing in this series needs (or indeed should) use the host policy. >> Hmm, I'm irritated: You talk about host policy here, ... >> >>> The same is true of your AMX series. You're (correctly) breaking the >>> uniform allocation size and (when policy selection is ordered WRT vCPU >>> creation, as discussed) it becomes solely depend on the guest policy. >> ... then guest policy, and ... >> >>> xsave.c really has no legitimate use for the host policy once the >>> uniform allocation size aspect has gone away. >> ... then host policy again. > > Yes. Notice how host policy is always referred to in the negative. > > The raw policy should be used for everything pertaining to the > instruction ABI itself, and the guest policy for sizing information. > >> Whereas my patch switches to using the raw >> policy, simply to eliminate redundant data. > > Except it doesn't. The latest posted version of your series contains: > > -static u32 __read_mostly xsave_cntxt_size; > +#define xsave_cntxt_size (host_cpuid_policy.xstate.max_size | 0) That's "x86/xstate: replace xsave_cntxt_size and drop XCNTXT_MASK", but what I referenced in the context here is "x86/xstate: drop xstate_offsets[] and xstate_sizes[]". If there use of the host policy is wrong in your opinion, then can you please reply there to clarify what's wrong with the justification for doing so? (See also below.) > and you've even stated that I should have acked this patch simply on its > age. Well, it's not quite "simply on its age". Part of me thinks that our rules should permit for things to go in when no-one looked at them despite reminders, but the other part of me knows that then we'll move back to what we had in the old days, where all kinds of (subtle or supposedly obvious) breakage would be introduced. So it's more like "considering its age, it really should have had replies". Anyway, there was now a vague promise that this series is going to be helped make progress in the 4.20 cycle. > I acked the patches that were good, and you did committed them at the > time. Then I put together this series to fix the bugs the latent bugs > which you were making less latent; this series really is the same one > discussed back then, and really does have some 2020/2021 author dates in it. > > > It is, AFAICT, not safe to move the calculation of the host policy as > early as you did, without arranging for setup_{force,clear}_cap() to > edit the host policy synchronously. Recalculating a second time later > isn't good enough, because you've created an asymmetry for most of boot > between two pieces of state which are supposed to be in sync, and that > you're intentionally starting to use. So yes - while I do intend to > eventually make the host policy usable that early too, I'm really not > happy doing so in a manner that has "ticking timebomb" written all over it. That's a fair concern. My counter argument is that right now the host policy can't possibly be used ahead of when its calculated prior to that patch (i.e. ahead of the 2nd calculation after the patch). Yes, care will need to be taken (for the time being) to, between the two points, only access parts which can't change again during the 2nd calculation. Considering the plans to invoke identify_cpu() earlier, it simply didn't appear necessary to, transiently, change setup_{force,clear}_cap(). > As to xsave_cntxt_size, it can (and should) be eliminated entirely when > xstate_alloc_save_area() can use the guest policy to size the allocation. Again I'm confused, I'm afraid: xsave_cntxt_size isn't really used for much guest-ish right now; its main use is in xstate_init(). Hence why that other patch is replacing it by use of the host policy. Perhaps you're simply suggesting that its present uses aren't quite right then; as you say, that sole truly guest related use in xstate_alloc_save_area() is there only because right now we need to over-estimate the eventual size needed. For that purpose, host policy is the right thing to use, imo. xsave_cntxt_size going away altogether at some point is no reason to, transiently, switch it from being an actual variable to referencing the host policy. It's just that if it can be made go away earlier, that part of that other patch could then simply be dropped. Jan
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