Re: MMIO and gcc re-ordering issue

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On Thu, 2008-05-29 at 10:47 -0400, Jes Sorensen wrote:
> >>>>> "Roland" == Roland Dreier <rdreier@xxxxxxxxx> writes:
> 
> >> This is a different issue. We deal with it on powerpc by having
> >> writel set a per-cpu flag and spin_unlock() test it, and do the
> >> barrier if needed there.
> 
> Roland> Cool... I assume you do this for mutex_unlock() etc?
> 
> Roland> Is there any reason why ia64 can't do this too so we can kill
> Roland> mmiowb and save everyone a lot of hassle?  (mips, sh and frv
> Roland> have non-empty mmiowb() definitions too but I'd guess that
> Roland> these are all bugs based on misunderstandings of the mmiowb()
> Roland> semantics...)
> 
> Hi Roland,
> 
> Thats not going to solve the problem on Altix. On Altix the issue is
> that there can be multiple paths through the NUMA fabric from cpuX to
> PCI bridge Y. 
> 
> Consider this uber-cool<tm> ascii art - NR is my abbrevation for NUMA
> router:
> 
>         -------         -------
>         |cpu X|         |cpu Y|
>         -------         -------
>          |   \____  ____/    |
>          |        \/         |
>          |    ____/\____     |
>          |   /          \    |
>          -----          ------
>          |NR 1|         |NR 2|
>          ------         ------
>               \         /
>                \       /
>                 -------
>                 | PCI |
>                 -------
> 
> The problem is that your two writel's, despite being both issued on
> cpu X, due to the spin lock, in your example, can end up with the
> first one going through NR 1 and the second one going through NR 2. If
> there's contention on NR 1, the write going via NR 2 may hit the PCI
> bridge prior to the one going via NR 1.
> 
> Of course, the bigger the system, the worse the problem....
> 
> The only way to guarantee ordering in the above setup, is to either
> make writel() fully ordered or adding the mmiowb()'s inbetween the two
> writel's. On Altix you have to go and read from the PCI brige to
> ensure all writes to it have been flushed, which is also what mmiowb()
> is doing. If writel() was to guarantee this ordering, it would make
> every writel() call extremely expensive :-(

So if a read from the bridge achieves the same effect, can't we just put
one after the writes within the spinlock (an unrelaxed one).  That way
this whole sequence will look like a well understood PCI posting flush
rather than have to muck around with little understood (at least by most
driver writers) io barriers?

James


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