[PATCH v2 01/15] x86/cpu: Move intel-family to arch-independent headers
Winiarska, Iwona
iwona.winiarska at intel.com
Tue Oct 12 06:21:26 AEDT 2021
On Mon, 2021-10-04 at 21:03 +0200, Borislav Petkov wrote:
> On Tue, Aug 03, 2021 at 01:31:20PM +0200, Iwona Winiarska wrote:
> > Baseboard management controllers (BMC) often run Linux but are usually
> > implemented with non-X86 processors. They can use PECI to access package
> > config space (PCS) registers on the host CPU and since some information,
> > e.g. figuring out the core count, can be obtained using different
> > registers on different CPU generations, they need to decode the family
> > and model.
> >
> > Move the data from arch/x86/include/asm/intel-family.h into a new file
> > include/linux/x86/intel-family.h so that it can be used by other
> > architectures.
> >
> > Signed-off-by: Iwona Winiarska <iwona.winiarska at intel.com>
> > Reviewed-by: Tony Luck <tony.luck at intel.com>
> > Reviewed-by: Dan Williams <dan.j.williams at intel.com>
> > ---
> > To limit tree-wide changes and help people that were expecting
> > intel-family defines in arch/x86 to find it more easily without going
> > through git history, we're not removing the original header
> > completely, we're keeping it as a "stub" that includes the new one.
> > If there is a consensus that the tree-wide option is better,
> > we can choose this approach.
>
> Why can't the linux/ namespace header include the x86 one so that
> nothing changes for arch/x86/?
Same reason why PECI can't just include arch/x86 directly (we're building for
ARM, not x86).
> And if it is really only a handful of families you need, you might just
> as well copy them into the peci headers and slap a comment above it
> saying where they come from and save yourself all that churn...
It's a handful of families for now - but I do expect the list to grow once new
platforms are introduced (and with that - duplicates have to be added in both
places).
Since the churn is relatively low I wanted to start with trying to keep things
clean first.
If you're against that - sure, we can duplicate.
Thanks
-Iwona
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