Re: [Intel-gfx] [RFC PATCH] drm/i915/gt: Do not treat MCR locking timeouts as errors

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On 10/4/2023 12:35, Andi Shyti wrote:
Hi John,

The MCR steering semaphore is a shared lock entry between i915
and various firmware components.

Getting the lock might sinchronize on some shared resources.
Sometimes though, it might happen that the firmware forgets to
unlock causing unnecessary noise in the driver which keeps doing
what was supposed to do, ignoring the problem.

Do not consider this failure as an error, but just print a debug
message stating that the MCR locking has been skipped.

On the driver side we still have spinlocks that make sure that
the access to the resources is serialized.

Signed-off-by: Andi Shyti <andi.shyti@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Cc: Jonathan Cavitt <jonathan.cavitt@xxxxxxxxx>
Cc: Matt Roper <matthew.d.roper@xxxxxxxxx>
Cc: Nirmoy Das <nirmoy.das@xxxxxxxxx>
---
    drivers/gpu/drm/i915/gt/intel_gt_mcr.c | 6 ++----
    1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-)

diff --git a/drivers/gpu/drm/i915/gt/intel_gt_mcr.c b/drivers/gpu/drm/i915/gt/intel_gt_mcr.c
index 326c2ed1d99b..51eb693df39b 100644
--- a/drivers/gpu/drm/i915/gt/intel_gt_mcr.c
+++ b/drivers/gpu/drm/i915/gt/intel_gt_mcr.c
@@ -395,10 +395,8 @@ void intel_gt_mcr_lock(struct intel_gt *gt, unsigned long *flags)
    	 * would indicate some hardware/firmware is misbehaving and not
    	 * releasing it properly.
    	 */
-	if (err == -ETIMEDOUT) {
-		gt_err_ratelimited(gt, "hardware MCR steering semaphore timed out");
-		add_taint_for_CI(gt->i915, TAINT_WARN);  /* CI is now unreliable */
-	}
+	if (err == -ETIMEDOUT)
+		gt_dbg(gt, "hardware MCR steering semaphore timed out");
    }
    /**
Are we sure this does not warrant a level higher than dbg, such as
notice/warn?
We might make it a warn, but this doesn't change much the economy
of the driver as we will keep doing what we were supposed to do.

Because how can we be sure the two entities will not stomp on
each other toes if we failed to obtain lock?
So far, in all the research I've done, no one looks like using
MCR lock, but yet someone is stuck in it.
If someone has the lock then that someone thinks they are using it. Just
because you can't see what someone piece of IFWI is doing doesn't mean it
isn't doing it. And if it is a genuinely missing unlock then it needs to be
tracked down and fixed with an IFWI update otherwise the system is going to
be unstable from that point on.
But I'm not changing here the behavior of the driver. The driver
will keep doing what was doing before.
And what it is doing is dangerous and can lead to unpredictable results because a critical section resource access is no longer wrapped with a critical section lock. Hence there is an error message to say Here Be Dragons.



Because this most probably won't be noticed by the user, then I
don't see why it should shout out loud that the system is
unusable when most probably it is.
Just because a race condition is hard to hit doesn't mean it won't be hit.

The point of shouting out loud is that we know for a fact a problem has occurred. That problem might lead to nothing or it might lead to subtle data corruption, gross crashes or anything in between.


BTW, at my understanding this is not an IFWI problem. We checked
with different version of IFWI and the issue is the same.
Which implies it is a driver bug after all? In which case you absolutely should not be papering over it in the driver.


Besides we received reports also from systems that are not using
IFWI at all.
There is no system that does not use IFWI. Integrated or discrete, all systems have an IFWI. It's just part of the main BIOS on an integrated platform.

John.


(How can we be sure about
"forgot to unlock" vs "in prolonged active use"?
There is a patch from Jonathan that is testing a different
timeout.

Or if we can be sure, can
we force unlock and take the lock for the driver explicitly?)
I sent a patch with this solution and Matt turned it down.
Presumably because both forcing a lock and ignoring a failed lock are Bad
Things to be doing!
Just because some entity out of our control isn't playing friendly doesn't
mean we can ignore the problem. The lock is there for a reason. If someone
else owns the lock then any steered access by i915 is potentially going to
be routed to the wrong register as the other entity re-directs the steering
behind out back. That is why there is an error message being printed.
Because things are quite possibly going to fail in some unknown manner.
Yes, agree. This has been already discussed here[*] where I sent
such RFC for the sole purpose of receiving some opinions and
check how CI would behave.

BTW, we are already doing this during the GT resume[**]... it's a
bit of a different context, but it still forces the release of
the lock.

This patch, anyway, is not doing this.

Thanks a lot,
Andi

[*] https://patchwork.freedesktop.org/series/124402/
[**] 37280ef5c1c4 ("drm/i915: Clean steer semaphore on resume")




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