On Tue, Dec 10, 2019 at 7:05 PM Tao Xu <tao3.xu@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > On 12/10/19 9:18 PM, Tao Xu wrote: > > On 12/10/2019 4:27 PM, Rafael J. Wysocki wrote: > >> On Tue, Dec 10, 2019 at 9:19 AM Tao Xu <tao3.xu@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >>> > >>> On 12/10/2019 4:06 PM, Rafael J. Wysocki wrote: > >>>> On Tue, Dec 10, 2019 at 2:04 AM Tao Xu <tao3.xu@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >>>>> > >>>>> On 12/9/2019 6:01 PM, Rafael J. Wysocki wrote: > >>>>>> On Mon, Dec 2, 2019 at 8:03 AM Tao Xu <tao3.xu@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >>>>>>> > >>>>>>> In chapter 5.2.27.5, Table 5-147: Field "Cache Attributes" of > >>>>>>> ACPI 6.3 spec: 0 is "None", 1 is "Direct Mapped", 2 is "Complex > >>>>>>> Cache > >>>>>>> Indexing" for Cache Associativity; 0 is "None", 1 is "Write Back", > >>>>>>> 2 is "Write Through" for Write Policy. > >>>>>> > >>>>>> Well, I'm not sure what the connection between the above statement, > >>>>>> which is correct AFAICS, and the changes made by the patch is. > >>>>>> > >>>>>> Is that the *_OTHER symbol names are confusing or something deeper? > >>>>>> > >>>>> > >>>>> Because in include/acpi/actbl1.h: > >>>>> > >>>>> #define ACPI_HMAT_CA_NONE (0) > >>>>> > >>>>> ACPI_HMAT_CA_NONE is 0, but in include/linux/node.h: > >>>>> > >>>>> enum cache_indexing { > >>>>> NODE_CACHE_DIRECT_MAP, > >>>>> NODE_CACHE_INDEXED, > >>>>> NODE_CACHE_OTHER, > >>>>> }; > >>>>> NODE_CACHE_OTHER is 2, and for otner enum: > >>>>> > >>>>> case ACPI_HMAT_CA_DIRECT_MAPPED: > >>>>> tcache->cache_attrs.indexing = > >>>>> NODE_CACHE_DIRECT_MAP; > >>>>> break; > >>>>> case ACPI_HMAT_CA_COMPLEX_CACHE_INDEXING: > >>>>> tcache->cache_attrs.indexing = NODE_CACHE_INDEXED; > >>>>> break; > >>>>> in include/acpi/actbl1.h: > >>>>> > >>>>> #define ACPI_HMAT_CA_DIRECT_MAPPED (1) > >>>>> #define ACPI_HMAT_CA_COMPLEX_CACHE_INDEXING (2) > >>>>> > >>>>> but in include/linux/node.h: > >>>>> > >>>>> NODE_CACHE_DIRECT_MAP is 0, NODE_CACHE_INDEXED is 1. This is > >>>>> incorrect. > >>>> > >>>> Why is it incorrect? > >>> > >>> Sorry I paste the wrong pre-define. > >>> > >>> This is the incorrect line: > >>> > >>> case ACPI_HMAT_CA_DIRECT_MAPPED: > >>> tcache->cache_attrs.indexing = NODE_CACHE_DIRECT_MAP; > >>> > >>> ACPI_HMAT_CA_DIRECT_MAPPED is 1, NODE_CACHE_DIRECT_MAP is 0. That means > >>> if HMAT table input 1 for cache_attrs.indexing, kernel store 0 in > >>> cache_attrs.indexing. But in ACPI 6.3, 0 means "None". So for the whole > >>> switch codes: > >> > >> This is a mapping between the ACPI-defined values and the generic ones > >> defined in the kernel. There is not rule I know of by which they must > >> be the same numbers. Or is there such a rule which I'm missing? > >> > >> As long as cache_attrs.indexing is used consistently going forward, > >> the difference between the ACPI-defined numbers and its values > >> shouldn't matter, should it? > >> > > Yes, it will not influence the ACPI HMAT tables. Only influence is the > > sysfs, as in > > https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/admin-guide/mm/numaperf.html: > > > > # tree sys/devices/system/node/node0/memory_side_cache/ > > /sys/devices/system/node/node0/memory_side_cache/ > > |-- index1 > > | |-- indexing > > | |-- line_size > > | |-- size > > | `-- write_policy > > > > indexing is parsed in this file, so it can be read by user-space. > > Although now there is no user-space tool use this information to do some > > thing. But I am wondering if it is used in the future, someone use it to > > show the memory side cache information to user or use it to do > > performance turning. > > I finish a test using emulated ACPI HMAT from QEMU > (branch:hmat https://github.com/taoxu916/qemu.git) > > And I get the kernel log and sysfs output: > [ 0.954288] HMAT: Cache: Domain:0 Size:20480 Attrs:00081111 SMBIOS > Handles:0 > [ 0.954835] HMAT: Cache: Domain:1 Size:15360 Attrs:00081111 SMBIOS > Handles:0 > > /sys/devices/system/node/node0/memory_side_cache/index1 # cat indexing > 0 > /sys/devices/system/node/node0/memory_side_cache/index1 # cat write_policy > 0 > > Note that 'Attrs' is printed using %x, so we can get: > (attrs & ACPI_HMAT_CACHE_ASSOCIATIVITY) >> 8 = 1, > (attrs & ACPI_HMAT_WRITE_POLICY) >> 12 = 1 > > but we get 0 in sysfs, so if user or software read this information and > read the ACPI 6.3 spec, will think there is 'none' for Cache > Associativity or Write Policy. The sysfs interface is not meant to reflect the ACPI values. This sysfs information may be populated by another platform firmware (non-ACPI). I would have preferred that these files use text values rather than numbers. However, at least the ABI documentation gives the expected translation: What: /sys/devices/system/node/nodeX/memory_side_cache/indexY/indexing Date: December 2018 Contact: Keith Busch <keith.busch@xxxxxxxxx> Description: The caches associativity indexing: 0 for direct mapped, non-zero if indexed. What: /sys/devices/system/node/nodeX/memory_side_cache/indexY/write_policy Date: December 2018 Contact: Keith Busch <keith.busch@xxxxxxxxx> Description: The cache write policy: 0 for write-back, 1 for write-through, other or unknown.