On Wed, 5 Oct 2016, Tim Chen wrote:
> On Wed, 2016-10-05 at 16:35 +0200, Thomas Gleixner wrote:
> > > + if (itmt_supported) {
> > > +         itmt_sysctl_header =
> > > +                 register_sysctl_table(itmt_root_table);
> > > +         if (!itmt_sysctl_header) {
> > > +                 mutex_unlock(&itmt_update_mutex);
> > > +                 return;
> > So you now have a state of capable which cannot be enabled. Whats the
> > point?
> 
> For multi-socket system where ITMT is not enabled by default, the operator
> can still decide to enable it via sysctl.

With a sysctl which failed to be installed. Good luck with that.
 
> > > +         }
> > > +         /*
> > > +          * ITMT capability automatically enables ITMT
> > > +          * scheduling for small systems (single node).
> > > +          */
> > > +         if (topology_num_packages() == 1)
> > > +                 sysctl_sched_itmt_enabled = 1;
> > > + } else {
> > > +         if (itmt_sysctl_header)
> > > +                 unregister_sysctl_table(itmt_sysctl_header);
> > > + }
> > > +
> > > + if (sysctl_sched_itmt_enabled) {
> > > +         /* disable sched_itmt if we are no longer ITMT capable */
> > > +         if (!itmt_supported)
> > 
> > How do you get here if itmt is not supported? 
> 
> If the OS decides to turn off ITMT for any reason, (i.e. invoke 
> sched_set_itmt_support(false) after it has turned on itmt_support
> before), this is the logic to do it.  We don't turn off ITMT support
> after it has been turned on today, in the future the OS may.

Then please make this two functions (set/clear) so one can actually follow
the logic. The above is just too convoluted.

Thanks,

        tglx

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