On Fri, Jul 14, 2023 at 06:12:02PM +0800, Aiqun(Maria) Yu wrote:We will check internally to see why it is not happened in current system which have issue.
On 7/14/2023 4:23 PM, Will Deacon wrote:
On Fri, Jul 14, 2023 at 09:56:27AM +0800, Aiqun(Maria) Yu wrote:cpu is cortex A78/A55.
Try to a detailed summarise of the whole discussions, anyone can ignore some
part if you are already know.
* Part 1: Solution for this issue.
While we still want to have options to let third party and end users can
have options:
1.Disable lse atomic cap.
2.*Disallow* far atomic by "CPUECTLR_EL1.atom force near atomic" and
non-cachable mappling for lse atomic only.
Sorry, but this still isn't making sense to me. Which CPUs do you have on
this SoC?
lse atomic is optional to CHI-B for example, some system may have cpu
My understanding of the CPUs from ARM is that LSE atomics are not supposed
to be sent to blocks that don't support them. That doesn't mean you have to
do everything near, however -- you can still execute them at e.g. L2.
For example, the Cortex-X1 TRM states:
| Atomic instructions to cacheable memory can be performed as either
| near atomics or far atomics, depending on where the cache line
| containing the data resides.
|
| When an instruction hits in the L1 data cache in a unique state, then
| it is performed as a near atomic in the L1 memory system. If the atomic
| operation misses in the L1 cache, or the line is shared with another
| core, then the atomic is sent as a far atomic on the core CHI interface.
feature register have lse atomic feature, but the far atomic is not accpeted
by CHI side. It will be simiar issue that we do.
Again, that should not be a problem. Looking at the A55 TRM, it explicitly
says that atomics will be done in the L3 if the interconnect does not
support them. The A78 TRM doesn't talk about this at all, so I defer to
Mark (or anybody else from Arm) on how that works, but one might assumeI checked other Arm cores like A720 TRM. It seems the similar statement:
that it does something similar to the other Arm cores.
we provide the capability for sotfware to do the runtime compatible check. we surely cannot enforce that. If the software is align the rule, it can also funcational fine on the "intermediate support system".
For apps like userspace also needed to check the system capbility as far as* Part 2: Why we need the solution
1. There is also some case far atomic is better performance than near
atomic. end user may still can still try to do allow far atomic.
while this driver is also use kerenl LSE ATOMIC macro, so it can be running
on cpu don't support lse atomic and cpu support lse atomic already.
while current system, cpu have feature register said lse atomic is
supported, but memory controller is not supported is currently not yet
supported.
I think you're forgetting the fact that these instructions can be executed
by userspace, so the kernel option is completely bogus. If you're saying
that cacheable atomics can cause external aborts, then I can write an app
which will crash your device even if you've set this command line option.
That's not something you can enforce, so a malicious application can easily
crash your system.
Will