[RESEND][PATCH] powerpc/powernv : Save/Restore SPRG3 on entry/exit from stop.
Michael Neuling
mikey at neuling.org
Fri Jul 20 12:41:48 AEST 2018
On Fri, 2018-07-20 at 12:32 +1000, Michael Ellerman wrote:
> Michael Neuling <mikey at neuling.org> writes:
> > On Wed, 2018-07-18 at 13:42 +0530, Gautham R Shenoy wrote:
> > > On Wed, Jul 18, 2018 at 09:24:19AM +1000, Michael Neuling wrote:
> > > >
> > > > > DEFINE(PPC_DBELL_SERVER, PPC_DBELL_SERVER);
> > > > > diff --git a/arch/powerpc/kernel/idle_book3s.S
> > > > > b/arch/powerpc/kernel/idle_book3s.S
> > > > > index d85d551..5069d42 100644
> > > > > --- a/arch/powerpc/kernel/idle_book3s.S
> > > > > +++ b/arch/powerpc/kernel/idle_book3s.S
> > > > > @@ -120,6 +120,9 @@ power9_save_additional_sprs:
> > > > > mfspr r4, SPRN_MMCR2
> > > > > std r3, STOP_MMCR1(r13)
> > > > > std r4, STOP_MMCR2(r13)
> > > > > +
> > > > > + mfspr r3, SPRN_SPRG3
> > > > > + std r3, STOP_SPRG3(r13)
> > > >
> > > > We don't need to save it. Just restore it from paca->sprg_vdso which
> > > > should
> > > > never change.
> > >
> > > Ok. I will respin a patch to restore SPRG3 from paca->sprg_vdso.
> > >
> > > >
> > > > How can we do better at catching these missing SPRGs?
> > >
> > > We can go through the list of SPRs from the POWER9 User Manual and
> > > document explicitly why we don't have to save/restore certain SPRs
> > > during the execution of the stop instruction. Does this sound ok ?
> > >
> > > (Ref: Table 4-8, Section 4.7.3.4 from the POWER9 User Manual
> > > accessible from
> > > https://openpowerfoundation.org/?resource_lib=power9-processor-users-manua
> > > l)
> >
> > I was thinking of a boot time test case built into linux. linux has some
> > boot
> > time test cases which you can enable via CONFIG options.
> >
> > Firstly you could see if an SPR exists using the same trick xmon does in
> > dump_one_spr(). Then once you have a list of usable SPRs, you could write
> > all
> > the known ones (I assume you'd have to leave out some, like the PSSCR), then
> > set
>
> Write what value?
>
> Ideally you want to write a random bit pattern to reduce the chance
> that only some bits are being restored.
The xmon dump_one_spr() trick tries to work around that by writing one random
value and then a different one to see if it really is a nop.
> But you can't do that because writing a value to an SPRs has an effect.
Sure that's a concern but xmon seems to get away with it.
> Some of them might even need to be zero, in which case you can't really
> distinguish that from a non-restored zero.
It doesn't need to be perfect. It just needs to catch more than we have now.
> > the appropriate stop level, make sure you got into that stop level, and then
> > see
> > if that register was changed. Then you'd have an automated list of registers
> > you
> > need to make sure you save/restore at each stop level.
> >
> > Could something like that work?
>
> Maybe.
>
> Ignoring the problem of whether you can write a meaningful value to some
> of the SPRs, I'm not entirely convinced it's going to work. But maybe
> I'm wrong.
Yeah, I'm not convinced it'll work either but it would be a nice piece of test
infrastructure to have if it does work.
We'd still need to marry up the SPR numbers we get from the test to what's
actually being restored in Linux.
> But there's a much simpler solution, we should 1) have a selftest for
> getcpu() and 2) we should be running the glibc (I think?) test suite
> that found this in the first place. It's frankly embarrassing that we
> didn't find this.
Yeah, we should do that also, but how do we catch the next SPR we are missing.
I'd like some systematic way of doing that rather than wack-a-mole.
Mikey
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