On Fri, Sep 15, 2023 at 9:09 AM Russell King (Oracle) <linux@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Fri, Sep 15, 2023 at 02:29:13AM +0000, Salil Mehta wrote: > > On x86, during init, if the MADT entry for LAPIC is found to be > > online-capable and is enabled as well then possible and present > > Note that the ACPI spec says enabled + online-capable isn't defined. > > "The information conveyed by this bit depends on the value of the > Enabled bit. If the Enabled bit is set, this bit is reserved and > must be zero." > > So, if x86 is doing something with the enabled && online-capable > state (other than ignoring the online-capable) then technically it > is doing something that the spec doesn't define And so it is wrong. > - and it's > completely fine if aarch64 does something else (maybe treating it > strictly as per the spec and ignoring online-capable.) That actually is the only compliant thing that can be done. As per the spec (quoted above), a platform firmware setting online-capable to 1 when Enabled is set is not compliant and it is invalid to treat this as meaningful data. As currently defined, online-capable is only applicable to CPUs that are not enabled to start with and its role is to make it clear whether or not they can be enabled later AFAICS. If there is a need to represent the case in which a CPI that is enabled to start with can be disabled, but cannot be enabled again, the spec needs to be updated.