Re: [RFC PATCH 2/3] x86/io: implement 256-bit IO read and write

From: Thomas Gleixner
Date: Mon Mar 19 2018 - 10:43:22 EST


On Mon, 19 Mar 2018, Rahul Lakkireddy wrote:

> Use VMOVDQU AVX CPU instruction when available to do 256-bit
> IO read and write.

That's not what the patch does. See below.

> Signed-off-by: Rahul Lakkireddy <rahul.lakkireddy@xxxxxxxxxxx>
> Signed-off-by: Ganesh Goudar <ganeshgr@xxxxxxxxxxx>

That Signed-off-by chain is wrong....

> +#ifdef CONFIG_AS_AVX
> +#include <asm/fpu/api.h>
> +
> +static inline u256 __readqq(const volatile void __iomem *addr)
> +{
> + u256 ret;
> +
> + kernel_fpu_begin();
> + asm volatile("vmovdqu %0, %%ymm0" :
> + : "m" (*(volatile u256 __force *)addr));
> + asm volatile("vmovdqu %%ymm0, %0" : "=m" (ret));
> + kernel_fpu_end();
> + return ret;

You _cannot_ assume that the instruction is available just because
CONFIG_AS_AVX is set. The availability is determined by the runtime
evaluated CPU feature flags, i.e. X86_FEATURE_AVX.

Aside of that I very much doubt that this is faster than 4 consecutive
64bit reads/writes as you have the full overhead of
kernel_fpu_begin()/end() for each access.

You did not provide any numbers for this so its even harder to
determine.

As far as I can tell the code where you are using this is a debug
facility. What's the point? Debug is hardly a performance critical problem.

Thanks,

tglx