On Tue, Jun 14, 2022 at 06:58:30PM +0200, Peter Zijlstra wrote: > On Tue, Jun 14, 2022 at 12:19:29PM +0100, Mark Rutland wrote: > > On Wed, Jun 08, 2022 at 04:27:23PM +0200, Peter Zijlstra wrote: > > > Hi All! (omg so many) > > > > Hi Peter, > > > > Sorry for the delay; my plate has also been rather full recently. I'm beginning > > to page this in now. > > No worries; we all have too much to do ;-) > > > > These here few patches mostly clear out the utter mess that is cpuidle vs rcuidle. > > > > > > At the end of the ride there's only 2 real RCU_NONIDLE() users left > > > > > > arch/arm64/kernel/suspend.c: RCU_NONIDLE(__cpu_suspend_exit()); > > > drivers/perf/arm_pmu.c: RCU_NONIDLE(armpmu_start(event, PERF_EF_RELOAD)); > > > > The latter of these is necessary because apparently PM notifiers are called > > with RCU not watching. Is that still the case today (or at the end of this > > series)? If so, that feels like fertile land for more issues (yaey...). If not, > > we should be able to drop this. > > That should be fixed; fingers crossed :-) Cool; I'll try to give that a spin when I'm sat next to some relevant hardware. :) > > > kernel/cfi.c: RCU_NONIDLE({ > > > > > > (the CFI one is likely dead in the kCFI rewrite) and there's only a hand full > > > of trace_.*_rcuidle() left: > > > > > > kernel/trace/trace_preemptirq.c: trace_irq_enable_rcuidle(CALLER_ADDR0, CALLER_ADDR1); > > > kernel/trace/trace_preemptirq.c: trace_irq_disable_rcuidle(CALLER_ADDR0, CALLER_ADDR1); > > > kernel/trace/trace_preemptirq.c: trace_irq_enable_rcuidle(CALLER_ADDR0, caller_addr); > > > kernel/trace/trace_preemptirq.c: trace_irq_disable_rcuidle(CALLER_ADDR0, caller_addr); > > > kernel/trace/trace_preemptirq.c: trace_preempt_enable_rcuidle(a0, a1); > > > kernel/trace/trace_preemptirq.c: trace_preempt_disable_rcuidle(a0, a1); > > > > > > All of them are in 'deprecated' code that is unused for GENERIC_ENTRY. > > I think those are also unused on arm64 too? > > > > If not, I can go attack that. > > My grep spots: > > arch/arm64/kernel/entry-common.c: trace_hardirqs_on(); > arch/arm64/include/asm/daifflags.h: trace_hardirqs_off(); > arch/arm64/include/asm/daifflags.h: trace_hardirqs_off(); Ah; I hadn't realised those used trace_.*_rcuidle() behind the scenes. That affects local_irq_{enable,disable,restore}() too (which is what the daifflags.h bits are emulating), and also the generic entry code's irqentry_exit(). So it feels to me like we should be fixing those more generally? e.g. say that with a new STRICT_ENTRY[_RCU], we can only call trace_hardirqs_{on,off}() with RCU watching, and alter the definition of those? > The _on thing should be replaced with something like: > > trace_hardirqs_on_prepare(); > lockdep_hardirqs_on_prepare(); > instrumentation_end(); > rcu_irq_exit(); > lockdep_hardirqs_on(CALLER_ADDR0); > > (as I think you know, since you have some of that already). And > something similar for the _off thing, but with _off_finish(). Sure; I knew that was necessary for the outermost parts of entry (and I think that's all handled), I just hadn't realised that trace_hardirqs_{on,off} did the rcuidle thing in the middle. It'd be nice to not have to open-code the whole sequence everywhere for the portions which run after entry and are instrumentable, so (as above) I reckon we want to make trace_hardirqs_{on,off}() not do the rcuidle part unnecessarily (which IIUC is an end-goal anyway)? > > > I've touched a _lot_ of code that I can't test and likely broken some of it :/ > > > In particular, the whole ARM cpuidle stuff was quite involved with OMAP being > > > the absolute 'winner'. > > > > > > I'm hoping Mark can help me sort the remaining ARM64 bits as he moves that to > > > GENERIC_ENTRY. > > > > Moving to GENERIC_ENTRY as a whole is going to take a tonne of work > > (refactoring both arm64 and the generic portion to be more amenable to each > > other), but we can certainly move closer to that for the bits that matter here. > > I know ... been there etc.. :-) > > > Maybe we want a STRICT_ENTRY option to get rid of all the deprecated stuff that > > we can select regardless of GENERIC_ENTRY to make that easier. > > Possible yeah. > > > > I've also got a note that says ARM64 can probably do a WFE based > > > idle state and employ TIF_POLLING_NRFLAG to avoid some IPIs. > > > > Possibly; I'm not sure how much of a win that'll be given that by default we'll > > have a ~10KHz WFE wakeup from the timer, but we could take a peek. > > Ohh.. I didn't know it woke up *that* often. I just know Will made use > of it in things like smp_cond_load_relaxed() which would be somewhat > similar to a very shallow idle state that looks at the TIF word. We'll get some saving, I'm just not sure where that falls on the curve of idle states. FWIW the wakeup *can* be disabled (and it'd be nice to when we have WFxT instructions which take a timeout), it jsut happens to be on by default for reasons. Thanks, Mark. _______________________________________________ Virtualization mailing list Virtualization@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/virtualization