Re: [PATCH v6 0/6] RISC-V Hardware Probing User Interface

From: Conor Dooley
Date: Tue Apr 11 2023 - 10:17:57 EST


Hey Evan,

On Fri, Apr 07, 2023 at 04:10:57PM -0700, Evan Green wrote:
>
> There's been a bunch of off-list discussions about this, including at
> Plumbers. The original plan was to do something involving providing an
> ISA string to userspace, but ISA strings just aren't sufficient for a
> stable ABI any more: in order to parse an ISA string users need the
> version of the specifications that the string is written to, the version
> of each extension (sometimes at a finer granularity than the RISC-V
> releases/versions encode), and the expected use case for the ISA string
> (ie, is it a U-mode or M-mode string). That's a lot of complexity to
> try and keep ABI compatible and it's probably going to continue to grow,
> as even if there's no more complexity in the specifications we'll have
> to deal with the various ISA string parsing oddities that end up all
> over userspace.
>
> Instead this patch set takes a very different approach and provides a set
> of key/value pairs that encode various bits about the system. The big
> advantage here is that we can clearly define what these mean so we can
> ensure ABI stability, but it also allows us to encode information that's
> unlikely to ever appear in an ISA string (see the misaligned access
> performance, for example). The resulting interface looks a lot like
> what arm64 and x86 do, and will hopefully fit well into something like
> ACPI in the future.
>
> The actual user interface is a syscall, with a vDSO function in front of
> it. The vDSO function can answer some queries without a syscall at all,
> and falls back to the syscall for cases it doesn't have answers to.
> Currently we prepopulate it with an array of answers for all keys and
> a CPU set of "all CPUs". This can be adjusted as necessary to provide
> fast answers to the most common queries.
>
> An example series in glibc exposing this syscall and using it in an
> ifunc selector for memcpy can be found at [1].
>
> I was asked about the performance delta between this and something like
> sysfs. I created a small test program [2] and ran it on a Nezha D1
> Allwinner board. Doing each operation 100000 times and dividing, these
> operations take the following amount of time:
> - open()+read()+close() of /sys/kernel/cpu_byteorder: 3.8us
> - access("/sys/kernel/cpu_byteorder", R_OK): 1.3us
> - riscv_hwprobe() vDSO and syscall: .0094us
> - riscv_hwprobe() vDSO with no syscall: 0.0091us
>
> These numbers get farther apart if we query multiple keys, as sysfs will
> scale linearly with the number of keys, where the dedicated syscall
> stays the same. To frame these numbers, I also did a tight
> fork/exec/wait loop, which I measured as 4.8ms. So doing 4
> open/read/close operations is a delta of about 0.3%, versus a single vDSO
> call is a delta of essentially zero.

Two nits w.r.t. build bot complaints...

On patch 2:
arch/riscv/include/uapi/asm/unistd.h:54:1: warning: initializer overrides prior initialization of this subobject [-Winitializer-overrides]
I think this one is kinda spurious, all of the syscalls complain like
this (and do on arm64 too IIRC). There was a patch from Guo somewhere to
disable -Winitializer-overrides in this case, I should go find out what
happened to it.

On patch 4:
arch/riscv/kernel/cpufeature.c:29:1: warning: symbol '__pcpu_scope_misaligned_access_speed' was not declared. Should it be static?

Probably because cos cpufeature.c doesn't include the header of the same
name... Perhaps Palmer could fix that one up on application?

Cheers,
Conor.

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