* H. Peter Anvin <h...@zytor.com> wrote:

> On 01/14/2014 04:45 PM, tip-bot for Borislav Petkov wrote:
> > +           rdmsrl(MSR_AMD64_LS_CFG, val);
> > +           if (!(val & BIT(15)))
> > +                   wrmsrl(MSR_AMD64_LS_CFG, val | BIT(15));
> 
> Incidentally, I'm wondering if we shouldn't have a
> set_in_msr()/clear_in_msr() set of functions which would incorporate the
> above construct:
> 
> void set_in_msr(u32 msr, u64 mask)
> {
>       u64 old, new;
> 
>       old = rdmsrl(msr);
>       new = old | mask;
>       if (old != new)
>               wrmsrl(msr, new);
> }
> 
> ... and the obvious equivalent for clear_in_msr().
> 
> The perhaps only question is if it should be "set/clear_bit_in_msr()"
> rather than having to haul a full 64-bit mask in the common case.

I'd suggest the introduction of a standard set of methods operating on 
MSRs:

        msr_read()
        msr_write()
        msr_set_bit()
        msr_clear_bit()
        msr_set_mask()
        msr_clear_mask()

etc.

msr_read() would essentially map to rdmsr_safe(). Each method has a 
return value that can be checked for failure.

Note that the naming of 'msr_set_bit()' and 'msr_clear_bit()' mirrors 
that of bitops, and set_mask/clear_mask is named along a similar 
pattern, so that it's more immediately obvious what's going on.

With such methods in place we could use them in most new code, and 
would use 'raw, unsafe' rdmsr()/wrmsr() only in very specific, 
justified cases.

Thanks,

        Ingo
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