On Tue, Feb 28 2023 at 17:09, David Woodhouse wrote: > On Tue, 2023-02-28 at 17:13 +0100, Thomas Gleixner wrote: >> As this patch is now part of the parallel boot series and actually >> introduces smpboot_control, the above is neither accurate nor useful. > > Better commit message, add a comment where we abuse current->thread.sp > in the sleep path. Didn't remove the {} which would be added back in > the very next patch. Pushed to my tree for Usama's next round. Ok. > However, we start by introducing one more: smpboot_control. For now this s/we// :) > merely holds the CPU# of the CPU which is coming up. That CPU can then > find its own per-cpu data, and everything else it needs can be found from > there, allowing the other global variables to be removed. > > First to be removed is initial_stack. Each CPU can load %rsp from its > current_task->thread.sp instead. That is already set up with the correct > idle thread for APs. Set up the .sp field in INIT_THREAD on x86 so that > the BSP also finds a suitable stack pointer in the static per-cpu data > when coming up on first boot. > > On resume from S3, the CPU needs a temporary stack because its idle task > is already active. Instead of setting initial_stack, the sleep code can > simply set its own current->thread.sp to point to the temporary stack. > The true stack pointer will get restored with the rest of the CPU > context in do_suspend_lowlevel(). Thanks for writing this up! > + /* > + * As each CPU starts up, it will find its own stack pointer > + * from its current_task->thread.sp. Typically that will be > + * the idle thread for a newly-started AP, or even the boot > + * CPU which will find it set to &init_task in the static > + * per-cpu data. > + * > + * Make the resuming CPU use the temporary stack at startup > + * by setting current->thread.sp to point to that. The true > + * %rsp will be restored with the rest of the CPU context, > + * by do_suspend_lowlevel(). Right, but what restores current->thread.sp? thread.sp is used by unwinders... Thanks, tglx