On Tue, May 09 2023 at 14:07, Thomas Gleixner wrote: > On Tue, May 09 2023 at 12:04, Peter Zijlstra wrote: >> On Mon, May 08, 2023 at 09:43:39PM +0200, Thomas Gleixner wrote: >>> + /* >>> + * Sync point with wait_cpu_callin(). The AP doesn't wait here >>> + * but just sets the bit to let the controlling CPU (BSP) know that >>> + * it's got this far. >>> + */ >>> smp_callin(); >>> >>> - /* otherwise gcc will move up smp_processor_id before the cpu_init */ >>> + /* Otherwise gcc will move up smp_processor_id() before cpu_init() */ >>> barrier(); >> >> Not to the detriment of this patch, but this barrier() and it's comment >> seem weird vs smp_callin(). That function ends with an atomic bitop (it >> has to, at the very least it must not be weaker than store-release) but >> also has an explicit wmb() to order setup vs CPU_STARTING. >> >> (arguably that should be a full fence *AND* get a comment) >> >> There is no way the smp_processor_id() referred to in this comment can >> land before cpu_init() even without the barrier(). > > Right. Let me clean that up. So I went and tried to figure out where this comes from. It's from d8f19f2cac70 ("[PATCH] x86-64 merge") in the history tree. One of those well documented combo patches which change world and some more. The context back then was: /* * Dont put anything before smp_callin(), SMP * booting is too fragile that we want to limit the * things done here to the most necessary things. */ cpu_init(); smp_callin(); Dprintk("cpu %d: waiting for commence\n", smp_processor_id()); That still does not explain what the barrier is doing. I tried to harvest mailing list archives, but did not find anything. The back then list discuss@xxxxxxxxxx was never publicly archived... Boris gave me an tarball, but this 'barrier()' add on was nowhere discussed in public. As the barrier has no obvious value, I'm adding a patch upfront which removes it. Thanks, tglx