[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-users] [Xen-devel] Kernel crash with acpi_processor, cpu_idle and intel_idle =y
On Sun, Jul 22, 2012 at 06:16:11PM +0200, Mark van Dijk wrote: > Hi everyone, > > When I set CONFIG_ACPI_PROCESSOR, CONFIG_CPU_IDLE and CONFIG_INTEL_IDLE > to y then I cannot boot Xen; there is a crash. If I turn > CONFIG_INTEL_IDLE off then the boot goes well and, after dom0 has > booted, xenpm works and gives some sane output, see below. I have > tested this with kernels 3.2 to 3.4.6. > > Is it impossible to use INTEL_IDLE with Xen? If this is a known issue > then maybe someone can add info to the INTEL_IDLE help text in the > kernel configuration... Could be - without a serial crash it is hard to figure out. Why do you want to use the intel idle driver? Can't you use the xen-acpi-processor driver which does the job of uploading the power management data to the hypervisor. (CONFIG_XEN_ACPI_PROCESSOR is the option you need to have enabled). > > I am using this on a dual CPU motherboard, it has two Xeon W3530 CPUs > (i.e. family 6, model 26, stepping 5). I have also tested this with a > single-CPU Core2 Quad Q6600 and the same situation occurs here, but the > below output is of the W3530 Xeon system. > > While I'm not that familiar with CPUidle, one thing that seems to be > not right is that the maximum idle state here is C3 while the processor > should be able to reach as far as C7. Right, it won't unless you don't compile acpi_pad (CONFIG_ACPI_PROCESSOR). Is # CONFIG_ACPI_PROCESSOR is not set" in your .config? > > Here is the snipped output of two commands: > > # xenpm get-cpufreq-states > cpu id : 0 > total P-states : 11 > usable P-states : 11 > current frequency : 1600 MHz > P0 [2801 MHz]: transition [ 11] > residency [ 866 ms] > P1 [2800 MHz]: transition [ 1] > residency [ 0 ms] > P2 [2667 MHz]: transition [ 0] > residency [ 0 ms] > P3 [2533 MHz]: transition [ 1] > residency [ 1 ms] > P4 [2400 MHz]: transition [ 0] > residency [ 0 ms] > P5 [2267 MHz]: transition [ 2] > residency [ 36 ms] > P6 [2133 MHz]: transition [ 1] > residency [ 0 ms] > P7 [2000 MHz]: transition [ 0] > residency [ 0 ms] > P8 [1867 MHz]: transition [ 0] > residency [ 0 ms] > P9 [1733 MHz]: transition [ 2] > residency [ 0 ms] > *P10 [1600 MHz]: transition [ 9] > residency [ 960 ms] > > > # xenpm get-cpuidle-states > Max possible C-state: C7 > > cpu id : 0 > total C-states : 4 > idle time(ms) : 240266 > C0 : transition [ 39457] > residency [ 10534 ms] > C1 : transition [ 3965] > residency [ 2274 ms] > C2 : transition [ 371] > residency [ 495 ms] > C3 : transition [ 35121] > residency [ 230822 ms] > pc2 : [ 0 ms] > pc3 : [ 0 ms] > pc6 : [ 0 ms] > pc7 : [ 0 ms] > cc3 : [ 0 ms] > cc6 : [ 0 ms] > cc7 : [ 0 ms] > > # xenpm get-cpufreq-para > cpu id : 0 > affected_cpus : 0 > cpuinfo frequency : max [2801000] min [1600000] cur [1600000] > scaling_driver : acpi-cpufreq > scaling_avail_gov : userspace performance powersave ondemand > current_governor : ondemand > ondemand specific : > sampling_rate : max [10000000] min [10000] cur [20000] > up_threshold : 80 > scaling_avail_freq : 2801000 2800000 2667000 2533000 2400000 2267000 > 2133000 2000000 1867000 1733000 *1600000 scaling frequency : max > [2801000] min [1600000] cur [1600000] turbo mode : enabled > > Kind regards, > Mark van Dijk > > PS I am not receiving xen-devel messages but this message does > probably belong there so I'm posting it there too. > > > > -- > > _______________________________________________ > Xen-devel mailing list > Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx > http://lists.xen.org/xen-devel _______________________________________________ Xen-users mailing list Xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xen.org/xen-users
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