Hi Tony, On 11/13/24 4:17 PM, Tony Luck wrote: > Resctrl uses local memory bandwidth event as input to the feedback > loop when the mba_MBps mount option is used. This means that this > mount option cannot be used on systems that only support monitoring > of total bandwidth. > > Prepare to allow users to choose the input event independently for > each ctrl_mon group. The lack of detail on design and implementation leaves a lot for the reader to decipher. For example, * the change appears to create a contract that rdtgroup.mba_mbps_event is only valid if mba_sc is enabled, this is "documented" in the structure member comment but not connected to the rest of implementation, not here nor later in series. * the patch uses *three* different checks to manage new variables: is_mbm_local_enabled(), is_mba_sc(), and supports_mba_mbps(). Reader is left to decipher that all checks are built on is_mbm_local_enabled() and thus it is ok to use these checks before using the value that is only assigned when is_mbm_local_enabled(). * clearly mba_mbps_default_event cannot always have a value making reader wonder if enum resctrl_event_id needs a "0", takes some deciphering to get confidence that its assignment when is_mbm_local_enabled() fits under the contract that values are only value when is_mba_sc() and thus any code following contract by first checking for mba_sc should never encounter a 0. * based on premise of this work reader may consider what happens if system does not support local MBM. more deciphering needed to get confidence that while mba_mbps_default_event will not be set, since is_mba_sc() still depends on local MBM this still fits under contract that mba_mbps_default_event cannot be used in this case. Of course, it may just me that needs more help to understand what a patch is doing while having little insight into what it intends to do. I thought by sharing some of the questions I felt needed to investigated may give some insight into the difficulty a cryptic changelog creates. Review could be helped significantly if the changelog provides insight into the design decisions. ... > @@ -3611,6 +3613,8 @@ static int rdtgroup_mkdir_ctrl_mon(struct kernfs_node *parent_kn, > rdt_last_cmd_puts("kernfs subdir error\n"); > goto out_del_list; > } > + if (is_mba_sc(NULL)) > + rdtgrp->mba_mbps_event = mba_mbps_default_event; > } > > goto out_unlock; > @@ -3970,6 +3974,8 @@ static void __init rdtgroup_setup_default(void) > rdtgroup_default.closid = RESCTRL_RESERVED_CLOSID; > rdtgroup_default.mon.rmid = RESCTRL_RESERVED_RMID; > rdtgroup_default.type = RDTCTRL_GROUP; > + if (supports_mba_mbps()) > + rdtgroup_default.mba_mbps_event = mba_mbps_default_event; > INIT_LIST_HEAD(&rdtgroup_default.mon.crdtgrp_list); > > list_add(&rdtgroup_default.rdtgroup_list, &rdt_all_groups); I do not see the default resource group's mba_mbps_event ever being reset. This means that if the user mounts resctrl, changes mba_mbps_event, umount resctrl, remount resctrl, then the default resource group will not have the default mba_mbps_event but whatever was set on previous mount. Is this intended? No mention of this behavior in changelog. Reinette