On Tue, Sep 20, 2022 at 11:20:47AM +0300, Maxim Levitsky wrote: > If I understand that correctly, the difference between clear_cpu_cap and setup_clear_cpu_cap > is that setup_clear_cpu_cap should be called early when only the boot cpu is running and it > > 1. works on 'boot_cpu_data' which represents the boot cpu. > 2. sets a bit in 'cpu_caps_cleared' which are later applied to all CPUs, including these that are hotplugged. Yes. > On the other hand the clear_cpu_cap just affects the given 'struct cpuinfo_x86'. Yes. > Call of 'clear_cpu_cap(&boot_cpu_data, X86_FEATURE_ARCH_LBR)' is weird since it still affects 'boot_cpu_data' > but doesn't affect 'cpu_caps_cleared' Yes. > I assumed that this was a mistake and the intention was to disable the feature on all CPUs. peterz says yes. > I need this patch because in the next patch, I change the clear_cpu_cap such as it detects being > called on boot_cpu_data and in this case also clears bits in 'cpu_caps_cleared', thus > while this patch does introduce a functional change, the next patch doesn't since this is the only > place where clear_cpu_cap is called explicitly on 'boot_cpu_data' This is not needed - this patch doing setup_clear_cpu_cap() should suffice. But, there must be something you're fixing with this. Which is it? Some weird virt config? > I do now notice that initcalls are run after smp is initialized, which > means that this code doesn't really disable the CPUID feature on all > CPUs at all. Well, not exactly. There's do_pre_smp_calls() which is where the early_initcall() thing is run. So setup_clear_cpu_cap() will make sure that the feature bit is cleared when the APs come online. Do you have a virt configuration where you can test this case where the feature flag is clear on all CPUs when it fails? I.e., "arch_lbr" will disappear in /proc/cpuinfo completely. Thx. -- Regards/Gruss, Boris. https://people.kernel.org/tglx/notes-about-netiquette