On 08.12.2021 15:16, Andrew Cooper wrote:
> On 08/12/2021 11:47, Jan Beulich wrote:
>> With "nosmp" I did observe a flood of "APIC error on CPU0: 04(04), Send
>> accept error" log messages on an AMD system. And rightly so - nothing
>> excludes the use of the shorthand in send_IPI_mask() in this case. Set
>> "unaccounted_cpus" to "true" also when command line restrictions are the
>> cause.
>>
>> Note that PV-shim mode is unaffected by this change, first and foremost
>> because "nosmp" and "maxcpus=" are ignored in this case.
>>
>> Fixes: 5500d265a2a8 ("x86/smp: use APIC ALLBUT destination shorthand when 
>> possible")
>> Signed-off-by: Jan Beulich <[email protected]>
> 
> Acked-by: Andrew Cooper <[email protected]>

Thanks.

>> ---
>> While in "nosmp" mode it's probably benign that we switch to the bigsmp
>> APIC driver simply because there are more than 8 physical CPUs, I
>> suppose that's inefficient when "maxcpus=" with a value between 2 and 8
>> (inclusive) is in use. Question is whether that's worthwhile to find a
>> solution for.
> 
> Honestly, the concept of "nosmp" needs deleting.  We inherited it from
> Linux and it wasn't terribly appropriate even back then.
> 
> Nowadays, even if we happen to boot with 1 cpu, there are normal things
> we talk to (the IOMMUs most obviously) which are smp-like.
> 
> 
> None of these command line restricted settings can be used in
> production, because neither Intel nor AMD support, and both require us
> to boot all logical processors.  Everything playing in this area is a
> maintenance burden only.

But you realize that "nosmp" (nowadays at least) is merely a shorthand for
"maxcpus=1"? I don't think you mean to suggest to delete that option too?
What we did remove long ago, matching what you say, was CONFIG_SMP.

One aspect of my consideration, which I realize only now, would be that
then we'd have a way to test "flat" mode even on larger systems. This may
be relevant with there being less and less systems with no more than 8
CPUs (threads), and hence that mode probably already hasn't been tested
much.

Jan


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