On Fri, Dec 17, 2021 at 1:08 PM Robin Murphy <robin.murphy@xxxxxxx> wrote: > > On 2021-12-17 18:14, Rob Herring wrote: > > On Fri, Dec 17, 2021 at 10:57 AM Robin Murphy <robin.murphy@xxxxxxx> wrote: > >> > >> Hi Rob, > >> > >> On 2021-12-16 23:31, Rob Herring wrote: > >>> Use the minimum CPU h/w id of the CPUs associated with the cache for the > >>> cache 'id'. This will provide a stable id value for a given system. As > >>> we need to check all possible CPUs, we can't use the shared_cpu_map > >>> which is just online CPUs. There's not a cache to CPUs mapping in DT, so > >>> we have to walk all CPU nodes and then walk cache levels. > >> > >> I believe another expected use of the cache ID exposed in sysfs is to > >> program steering tags for cache stashing (typically in VFIO-based > >> userspace drivers like DPDK so we can't realistically mediate it any > >> other way). There were plans afoot last year to ensure that ACPI PPTT > >> could provide the necessary ID values for arm64 systems which will > >> typically be fairly arbitrary (but unique) due to reflecting underlying > >> interconnect routing IDs. Assuming that there will eventually be some > >> interest in cache stashing on DT-based systems too, we probably want to > >> allow for an explicit ID property on DT cache nodes in a similar manner. > > > > If you have a suggestion for ID values that correspond to the h/w, > > then we can add them. I'd like a bit more than just trusting that ID > > is something real. > > > > While the ACPI folks may be willing to take an arbitrary index, it's > > something we (mostly) avoid for DT. > > Not really. On the CHI side there are two fields - StashNID, which could > be any node ID value depending on the interconnect layout, plus > (optionally) StashLPID to address a specific cache within that node if > it's something like a CPU cluster. However, how a PCIe TLP steering tag > translates to those fields in the resulting CHI flit is largely up to > the root complex. Knowing next to nothing about CHI, this means pretty much nothing to me. :( I would guess there is a bit more to supporting CHI in DT systems than just a cache ID. > I think it's going to be more like a "reg" property than a nice > validatable index. > > >> That said, I think it does make sense to have some kind of > >> auto-generated fallback scheme *as well*, since I'm sure there will be > >> plenty systems which care about MPAM but don't support stashing, and > >> therefore wouldn't have a meaningful set of IDs to populate their DT > >> with. Conversely I think that might also matter for ACPI too - one point > >> I remember from previous discussions is that PPTT may use a compact > >> representation where a single entry represents all equivalent caches at > >> that level, so I'm not sure we can necessarily rely on IDs out of that > >> path being unique either. > > > > AIUI, cache ids break the compact representation. > > Right, firmware authors can't use it if they do want to specify IDs, but > that also means that if we find we *are* consuming a compact PPTT, then > chances are we're not getting meaningful IDs out of it for MPAM to rely on. Sounds like broken firmware is in our future. ;) Or ACPI can default to the same id scheme. Rob