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Re: [RFC PATCH v2 5/6] hw/arm/virt-acpi-build: Add PPTT table


From: wangyanan (Y)
Subject: Re: [RFC PATCH v2 5/6] hw/arm/virt-acpi-build: Add PPTT table
Date: Thu, 13 May 2021 13:10:10 +0800
User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64; rv:78.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/78.4.0

Hi Drew,

I got a question below, and hope your reply. Thanks!
On 2021/4/13 16:07, Yanan Wang wrote:
Add the Processor Properties Topology Table (PPTT) to present
CPU topology information to ACPI guests. Note, while a DT boot
Linux guest with a non-flat CPU topology will see socket and
core IDs being sequential integers starting from zero, e.g.
with -smp 4,sockets=2,cores=2,threads=1

a DT boot produces

  cpu:  0 package_id:  0 core_id:  0
  cpu:  1 package_id:  0 core_id:  1
  cpu:  2 package_id:  1 core_id:  0
  cpu:  3 package_id:  1 core_id:  1

an ACPI boot produces

  cpu:  0 package_id: 36 core_id:  0
  cpu:  1 package_id: 36 core_id:  1
  cpu:  2 package_id: 96 core_id:  2
  cpu:  3 package_id: 96 core_id:  3

This is due to several reasons:

  1) DT cpu nodes do not have an equivalent field to what the PPTT
     ACPI Processor ID must be, i.e. something equal to the MADT CPU
     UID or equal to the UID of an ACPI processor container. In both
     ACPI cases those are platform dependant IDs assigned by the
     vendor.

  2) While QEMU is the vendor for a guest, if the topology specifies
     SMT (> 1 thread), then, with ACPI, it is impossible to assign a
     core-id the same value as a package-id, thus it is not possible
     to have package-id=0 and core-id=0. This is because package and
     core containers must be in the same ACPI namespace and therefore
     must have unique UIDs.

  3) ACPI processor containers are not required for PPTT tables to
     be used and, due to the limitations of which IDs are selected
     described above in (2), they are not helpful for QEMU, so we
     don't build them with this patch. In the absence of them, Linux
     assigns its own unique IDs. The maintainers have chosen not to use
     counters from zero, but rather ACPI table offsets, which explains
     why the numbers are so much larger than with DT.

  4) When there is no SMT (threads=1) the core IDs for ACPI boot guests
     match the logical CPU IDs, because these IDs must be equal to the
     MADT CPU UID (as no processor containers are present), and QEMU
     uses the logical CPU ID for these MADT IDs.

Tested-by: Jiajie Li <lijiajie11@huawei.com>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Jones <drjones@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Ying Fang <fangying1@huawei.com>
Signed-off-by: Yanan Wang <wangyanan55@huawei.com>
---
  hw/arm/virt-acpi-build.c | 63 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
  1 file changed, 63 insertions(+)

diff --git a/hw/arm/virt-acpi-build.c b/hw/arm/virt-acpi-build.c
index 2ad5dad1bf..03fd812d5a 100644
--- a/hw/arm/virt-acpi-build.c
+++ b/hw/arm/virt-acpi-build.c
@@ -436,6 +436,64 @@ build_srat(GArray *table_data, BIOSLinker *linker, 
VirtMachineState *vms)
                   vms->oem_table_id);
  }
+/* PPTT */
+static void
+build_pptt(GArray *table_data, BIOSLinker *linker, VirtMachineState *vms)
+{
+    int pptt_start = table_data->len;
+    int uid = 0, cpus = 0, socket = 0;
+    MachineState *ms = MACHINE(vms);
+    unsigned int smp_cores = ms->smp.cores;
+    unsigned int smp_threads = ms->smp.threads;
+
+    acpi_data_push(table_data, sizeof(AcpiTableHeader));
+
+    for (socket = 0; cpus < ms->possible_cpus->len; socket++) {
+        uint32_t socket_offset = table_data->len - pptt_start;
+        int core;
+
+        build_processor_hierarchy_node(
+            table_data, 1, /* Physical package */
+            0, socket, /* No parent */
+            NULL, 0);  /* No private resources */
+
+        for (core = 0; core < smp_cores; core++) {
+            uint32_t core_offset = table_data->len - pptt_start;
+            int thread;
+
+            if (smp_threads <= 1) {
+                build_processor_hierarchy_node(
+                    table_data,
+                    (1 << 1) | /* ACPI Processor ID valid */
+                    (1 << 3),  /* ACPI 6.3 - Node is a Leaf */
+                    socket_offset, uid++, /* Parent is a Socket */
+                    NULL, 0);  /* No private resources */
+            } else {
+                build_processor_hierarchy_node(
+                    table_data, 0,
+                    socket_offset, core, /* Parent is a Socket */
+                    NULL, 0); /* No private resources */
+
+                for (thread = 0; thread < smp_threads; thread++) {
+                    build_processor_hierarchy_node(
+                        table_data,
+                        (1 << 1) | /* ACPI Processor ID valid */
+                        (1 << 2) | /* ACPI 6.3 - Processor is a Thread */
+                        (1 << 3),  /* ACPI 6.3 - Node is a Leaf */
+                        core_offset, uid++, /* Parent is a Core */
+                        NULL, 0);  /* No private resources */
+                }
+            }
+        }
+        cpus += smp_cores * smp_threads;
+    }
+
+    build_header(linker, table_data,
+                 (void *)(table_data->data + pptt_start), "PPTT",
+                 table_data->len - pptt_start, 2,
+                 vms->oem_id, vms->oem_table_id);
+}
+
  /* GTDT */
  static void
  build_gtdt(GArray *table_data, BIOSLinker *linker, VirtMachineState *vms)
@@ -707,6 +765,11 @@ void virt_acpi_build(VirtMachineState *vms, 
AcpiBuildTables *tables)
      acpi_add_table(table_offsets, tables_blob);
      build_madt(tables_blob, tables->linker, vms);
+ if (ms->smp.cpus > 1 && !vmc->no_cpu_topology) {
I'm not really sure why we need to care about "ms->smp.cpus > 1" here?

IMO, just like MADT in which we create both ENABLED and DISABLED
gicc nodes no matter of number of ENABLED nodes is one or not, we
should create PPTT table for all the possible cpus and not care about
number of smp cpus, too. This will be more consistent with the ACPI
specification and the PPTT table will be used for ACPI cpu hotplug in
the future even with  "smp.cpus == 1".

Care of "smp.cpus > 1" in the DT cpu-map part makes sense to me,
because we are required to only add present cpu nodes to the DT and
Linux Doc says that a cpu-map is not needed for uniprocessor systems.

Thanks,
Yanan
+        acpi_add_table(table_offsets, tables_blob);
+        build_pptt(tables_blob, tables->linker, vms);
+    }
+
      acpi_add_table(table_offsets, tables_blob);
      build_gtdt(tables_blob, tables->linker, vms);



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