On Mon, Oct 25, 2021 at 10:54:21AM -0500, Patrick Williams wrote: > On Mon, Oct 25, 2021 at 04:09:59PM +0200, Greg Kroah-Hartman wrote: > > On Mon, Oct 25, 2021 at 09:02:40AM -0500, Patrick Williams wrote: > > > On Mon, Oct 25, 2021 at 03:34:05PM +0200, Greg Kroah-Hartman wrote: > > > > On Mon, Oct 25, 2021 at 08:20:05AM -0500, Patrick Williams wrote: > > > > I think "it" is "something needs to be the moderator between the two > > > > operating systems". What is the external entity that handles the > > > > switching between the two? > > > > > > Ah, ok. > > > > > > Those usually end up being system / device specific. In the case of the BIOS > > > flash, most designs I've seen use a SPI mux between the BMC and the host > > > processor or IO hub (PCH on Xeons). The BMC has a GPIO to control the mux. > > > > > > As far as state, the BMC on start-up will go through a set of discovery code to > > > figure out where it left the system prior to getting reset. That involves > > > looking at the power subsystem and usually doing some kind of query to the host > > > to see if it is alive. These queries are mostly system / host-processor design > > > specific. I've seen anything from an IPMI/IPMB message alert from the BMC to > > > the BIOS to ask "are you alive" to reading host processor state over JTAG to > > > figure out if the processors are "making progress". > > > > But which processor is "in control" here over the hardware? > > The BMC. It owns the GPIO that controls the SPI mux. > > But, the BMC is responsible for doing all operations in a way that doesn't mess > up the running host processor(s). Pulling away the SPI flash containing the > BIOS code at an incorrect time might do that. > > > What method > > is used to pass the device from one CPU to another from a logical point > > of view? > > The state of the server as a whole is determined and maintained by the BMC. I'm > simplifying here a bit but the operation "turn on the host processors" implies > "the host processors will access the BIOS" so the BMC must ensure "SPI mux is > switched towards the host" before "turn on the host processors". > > > Sounds like it is another driver that needs to handle all of > > this, so why not have that be the one that adds/removes the devices > > under control here? > > If what you're describing is moving all of the state control logic into the > kernel, I don't think that is feasible. For some systems it would mean moving > yet another entire IPMI stack into the kernel tree. On others it might be > somewhat simpler, but it is still a good amount of code. We could probably > write up more details on the scope of this. > > If what you're describing is a small driver, similar to the board support > drivers that were used before the device tree, that instantiates subordinate > devices it doesn't seem like an unreasonable alternative to DT overlays to me > (for whatever my limited kernel contribution experience counts for). > Something has to be here doing the mediation between the two processors and keeping things straight as to what processor is handling the hardware when. I suggest you focus on that first... Good luck! greg k-h