Re: [PATCH v2 0/9] Introduce SMT level and add PowerPC support
From: Michael Ellerman
Date: Thu Jun 29 2023 - 07:10:53 EST
Sachin Sant <sachinp@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes:
>> On 28-Jun-2023, at 3:35 PM, Laurent Dufour <ldufour@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>
>> I'm taking over the series Michael sent previously [1] which is smartly
>> reviewing the initial series I sent [2]. This series is addressing the
>> comments sent by Thomas and me on the Michael's one.
>>
>> Here is a short introduction to the issue this series is addressing:
>>
>> When a new CPU is added, the kernel is activating all its threads. This
>> leads to weird, but functional, result when adding CPU on a SMT 4 system
>> for instance.
>>
>> Here the newly added CPU 1 has 8 threads while the other one has 4 threads
>> active (system has been booted with the 'smt-enabled=4' kernel option):
>>
>> ltcden3-lp12:~ # ppc64_cpu --info
>> Core 0: 0* 1* 2* 3* 4 5 6 7
>> Core 1: 8* 9* 10* 11* 12* 13* 14* 15*
>>
>> This mixed SMT level may confused end users and/or some applications.
>>
>
> Thanks for the patches Laurent.
>
> Is the SMT level retained even when dynamically changing SMT values?
> I am observing difference in behaviour with and without smt-enabled
> kernel command line option.
>
> When smt-enabled= option is specified SMT level is retained across
> cpu core remove and add.
>
> Without this option but changing SMT level during runtime using
> ppc64_cpu —smt=<level>, the SMT level is not retained after
> cpu core add.
That's because ppc64_cpu is not using the sysfs SMT control file, it's
just onlining/offlining threads manually.
If you run:
$ ppc64_cpu --smt=4
And then also do:
$ echo 4 > /sys/devices/system/cpu/smt/control
It should work as expected?
ppc64_cpu will need to be updated to do that automatically.
cheers