On 11/12/2020 21:27, Thomas Gleixner wrote: > On Fri, Dec 11 2020 at 09:29, boris ostrovsky wrote: > >> On 12/11/20 7:37 AM, Thomas Gleixner wrote: >>> On Fri, Dec 11 2020 at 13:10, Jürgen Groß wrote: >>>> On 11.12.20 00:20, boris.ostrovsky@xxxxxxxxxx wrote: >>>>> On 12/10/20 2:26 PM, Thomas Gleixner wrote: >>>>>> Change the implementation so that the channel is bound to CPU0 at the XEN >>>>>> level and leave the affinity mask alone. At startup of the interrupt >>>>>> affinity will be assigned out of the affinity mask and the XEN binding will >>>>>> be updated. >>>>> If that's the case then I wonder whether we need this call at all and instead bind at startup time. >>>> After some discussion with Thomas on IRC and xen-devel archaeology the >>>> result is: this will be needed especially for systems running on a >>>> single vcpu (e.g. small guests), as the .irq_set_affinity() callback >>>> won't be called in this case when starting the irq. >> On UP are we not then going to end up with an empty affinity mask? Or >> are we guaranteed to have it set to 1 by interrupt generic code? > An UP kernel does not ever look on the affinity mask. The > chip::irq_set_affinity() callback is not invoked so the mask is > irrelevant. > > A SMP kernel on a UP machine sets CPU0 in the mask so all is good. > >> This is actually why I brought this up in the first place --- a >> potential mismatch between the affinity mask and Xen-specific data >> (e.g. info->cpu and then protocol-specific data in event channel >> code). Even if they are re-synchronized later, at startup time (for >> SMP). > Which is not a problem either. The affinity mask is only relevant for > setting the affinity, but it's not relevant for delivery and never can > be. > >> I don't see anything that would cause a problem right now but I worry >> that this inconsistency may come up at some point. > As long as the affinity mask becomes not part of the event channel magic > this should never matter. > > Look at it from hardware: > > interrupt is affine to CPU0 > > CPU0 runs: > > set_affinity(CPU0 -> CPU1) > local_irq_disable() > > --> interrupt is raised in hardware and pending on CPU0 > > irq hardware is reconfigured to be affine to CPU1 > > local_irq_enable() > > --> interrupt is handled on CPU0 > > the next interrupt will be raised on CPU1 > > So info->cpu which is registered via the hypercall binds the 'hardware > delivery' and whenever the new affinity is written it is rebound to some > other CPU and the next interrupt is then raised on this other CPU. > > It's not any different from the hardware example at least not as far as > I understood the code. Xen's event channels do have a couple of quirks. Binding an event channel always results in one spurious event being delivered. This is to cover notifications which can get lost during the bidirectional setup, or re-setups in certain configurations. Binding an interdomain or pirq event channel always defaults to vCPU0. There is no way to atomically set the affinity while binding. I believe the API predates SMP guest support in Xen, and noone has fixed it up since. As a consequence, the guest will observe the event raised on vCPU0 as part of setting up the event, even if it attempts to set a different affinity immediately afterwards. A little bit of care needs to be taken when binding an event channel on vCPUs other than 0, to ensure that the callback is safe with respect to any remaining state needing initialisation. Beyond this, there is nothing magic I'm aware of. We have seen soft lockups before in certain scenarios, simply due to the quantity of events hitting vCPU0 before irqbalance gets around to spreading the load. This is why there is an attempt to round-robin the userspace event channel affinities by default, but I still don't see why this would need custom affinity logic itself. Thanks, ~Andrew _______________________________________________ Intel-gfx mailing list Intel-gfx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/intel-gfx