On Thu, Jan 26, 2023 at 12:45:58PM -0800, Jim Mattson wrote: > On Thu, Jan 26, 2023 at 9:47 AM Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > On 1/26/23 17:06, Jim Mattson wrote: > > >>> Sadly, there isn't a single kernel involved. People running our VMM on > > >>> their desktops are going to be impacted as soon as this patch hits > > >>> that distro. (I don't know if I can say which distro that is.) So, now > > >>> we have to get the VMM folks to urgently accommodate this change and > > >>> get a new distribution out. > > >> > > >> Ok, this is what is needed to make a more informed choice. To be clear, > > >> this is _still_ not public (for example it's not ChromeOS), so there is > > >> at least some control on what version of the VMM they use? Would it > > >> make sense to buy you a few months by deferring this patch to Linux 6.3-6.5? > > > > > > Mainline isn't a problem. I'm more worried about 5.19 LTS. > > > > 5.19 is not LTS, is it? This patch is only in 6.1.7 and 6.1.8 as far as > > stable kernels is concerned, should I ask Greg to revert it there? > > It came to my attention when commit 196c6f0c3e21 ("KVM: x86: Do not > return host topology information from KVM_GET_SUPPORTED_CPUID") broke > some of our tests under 5.10 LTS. > > If it isn't bound for linux-5.19-y, then we have some breathing room. 5.19 is long end-of-life, it dropped off of being maintained back in October of last year. You can always use the front page of kernel.org to determine what is still being maintained. thanks, greg k-h