Re: [PATCH] arm64: acpi: reenumerate topology ids
From: Andrew Jones
Date: Fri Jun 29 2018 - 11:46:17 EST
On Fri, Jun 29, 2018 at 02:29:34PM +0100, Sudeep Holla wrote:
> If it matters a lot, vendors must use UID for consistency. Since OS doesn't
> use those IDs for any particular reason, OS must not care.
That depends. If you look at how topology_logical_package_id() is used in
x86 code you'll see it gets used as an index to an array in a couple
places. If we don't remap arbitrary IDs to counters than we may miss out
on some opportunities to avoid lists.
Also, we're talking about what's visible to users. I think it's much more
likely to break a user app by exposing topology IDs that have values
greater than the linear CPU numbers (even though properly written apps
shouldn't expect them to be strictly <=), than the opposite.
>
> > >
> > > > >
> > > > > So I would like to keep it simple and just have this counters for
> > > > > package ids as demonstrated in Shunyong's patch.
> > > > >
> > > >
> > > > If we don't also handle cores when there are threads, then the cores
> > > > will also end up having weird IDs.
> > > >
> > >
> > > Yes, but if PPTT says it has valid ID, I would prefer that over DT like
> > > generated.
> >
> > Valid *ACPI* ID, which just means it's a guaranteed unique ACPI UID,
> > which isn't likely going to be anything useful to a user.
> >
>
> How is that different from OS generated one from user's perspective ?
> Vendors might assign sockets UID and he may help them to replace one.
> Having some generated counter based id is not helpful.
I agree with this. It's a good argument for maintaining a mapping of
package-id to id-physically-printed-on-a-package somewhere. To avoid
maintaining a mapping it could just be stored directly in
cpu_topology[cpu].package_id, but then how can we tell the difference
between a valid printed-on-package-id and an ACPI offset? We'd still
have to maintain additional state to determine if it's valid or not,
so we could just maintain a mapping instead.
Thanks,
drew