Re: [PATCH 1/2 v3] alpha: add a delay to inb_p, inb_w and inb_l

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On Wed, 13 May 2020, Maciej W. Rozycki wrote:

> On Wed, 13 May 2020, Ivan Kokshaysky wrote:
> 
> > >  Individual PCI port locations correspond to different MMIO locations, so 
> > > yes, accesses to these can be reordered (merging won't happen due to the 
> > > use of the sparse address space).
> > 
> > Correct, it's how Alpha write buffers work. According to 21064 hardware
> > reference manual, these buffers are flushed when one of the following
> > conditions is met:
> > 
> > 1) The write buffer contains at least two valid entries.
> > 2) The write buffer contains one valid entry and at least 256 CPU cycles
> >    have elapsed since the execution of the last write buffer-directed
> >    instruction.
> > 3) The write buffer contains an MB, STQ_C or STL_C instruction.
> > 4) A load miss is pending to an address currently valid in the write
> >    buffer that requires the write buffer to be flushed.
> > 
> > I'm certain that in these rtc/serial cases we've got readX arriving
> > to device *before* preceeding writeX because of 2). That's why small
> > delay (300-1400 ns, apparently depends on CPU frequency) seemingly
> > "fixes" the problem. The 4) is not met because loads and stores are
> > to different ports, and 3) has been broken by commit 92d7223a74.
> > 
> > So I believe that correct fix would be to revert 92d7223a74 and
> > add wmb() before [io]writeX macros to meet memory-barriers.txt
> > requirement. The "wmb" instruction is cheap enough and won't hurt
> > IO performance too much.
> 
>  Hmm, having barriers *afterwards* across all the MMIO accessors, even 
> ones that do not have such a requirement according to memory-barriers.txt, 
> does hurt performance unnecessarily however.  What I think has to be done 
> is adding barriers beforehand, and then only add barriers afterwards where 
> necessary.  Commit 92d7223a74 did a part of that, but did not consistently 
> update all the remaining accessors.
> 
>  So I don't think reverting 92d7223a74 permanently is the right way to go, 
> however it certainly makes sense to do that temporarily to get rid of the 
> fatal regression, sort all the corner cases and then apply the resulting 
> replacement fix.

See Documentation/memory-barriers.txt, the section "KERNEL I/O BARRIER 
EFFECTS"

According to the specification, there must be a barrier before a write to 
the MMIO space (paragraph 3) and after a read from MMIO space (parahraph 
4) - if this causes unnecessary slowdown, the driver should use 
readX_relaxed or writeX_relaxed functions - the *_relaxed functions are 
ordered with each other (see the paragraph "(*) readX_relaxed(), 
writeX_relaxed()"), but they are not ordered with respect to memory 
access.

The commit 92d7223a74 fixes that requirement (although there is no real 
driver that was fixed by this), so I don't think it should be reverted. 
The proper fix should be to add delays to the serial port and readltime 
clock (or perhaps to all IO-port accesses).

> I think ultimately we do want the barriers beforehand, just like the 
> MIPS port has (and survives) in arch/mips/include/asm/io.h.  Observe 

If the MIPS port doesn't have MMIO barrier after read[bwl], then it is 
violating the specification. Perhaps there is no existing driver that is 
hurt by this violation, so this violation survived.

> that unlike the Alpha ISA the MIPS ISA does have nontrivial `rmb' aka 
> the SYNC_RMB hardware instruction.
> 
>   Maciej

Mikulas




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