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Message-Id: <20200423105557.29108-1-psampat@linux.ibm.com>
Date: Thu, 23 Apr 2020 16:25:56 +0530
From: Pratik Rajesh Sampat <psampat@...ux.ibm.com>
To: linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org, linuxppc-dev@...abs.org,
mpe@...erman.id.au, skiboot@...ts.ozlabs.org, oohall@...il.com,
ego@...ux.vnet.ibm.com, linuxram@...ibm.com,
pratik.r.sampat@...il.com, psampat@...ux.ibm.com
Subject: [PATCH v8 0/1] powerpc/powernv: Introduce support and parsing for self-save API
v7: https://lkml.org/lkml/2020/4/16/247
Changelog
v7 --> v8
Simplified kernel design. Introducing an approach which eliminates
the need for having support and preference for SPRs that need to be
saved. Instead a simple self-save property is advertised and if it
exists then self-save is called otherwise self-restore is resorted to.
Complete specification of the approach is described below in the
cover-letter.
Background
==========
The power management framework on POWER systems include core idle
states that lose context. Deep idle states namely "winkle" on POWER8
and "stop4" and "stop5" on POWER9 can be entered by a CPU to save
different levels of power, as a consequence of which all the
hypervisor resources such as SPRs and SCOMs are lost.
For most SPRs, saving and restoration of content for SPRs and SCOMs
is handled by the hypervisor kernel prior to entering an post exit
from an idle state respectively. However, there is a small set of
critical SPRs and XSCOMs that are expected to contain sane values even
before the control is transferred to the hypervisor kernel at system
reset vector.
For this purpose, microcode firmware provides a mechanism to restore
values on certain SPRs. The communication mechanism between the
hypervisor kernel and the microcode is a standard interface called
sleep-winkle-engine (SLW) on Power8 and Stop-API on Power9 which is
abstracted by OPAL calls from the hypervisor kernel. The Stop-API
provides an interface known as the self-restore API, to which the SPR
number and a predefined value to be restored on wake-up from a deep
stop state is supplied.
Motivation to introduce a new Stop-API
======================================
The self-restore API expects not just the SPR number but also the
value with which the SPR is restored. This is good for those SPRs such
as HSPRG0 whose values do not change at runtime, since for them, the
kernel can invoke the self-restore API at boot time once the values of
these SPRs are determined.
However, there are use-cases where-in the value to be saved cannot be
known or cannot be updated in the layer it currently is.
The shortcomings and the new use-cases which cannot be served by the
existing self-restore API, serves as motivation for a new API:
Shortcoming1:
------------
In a special wakeup scenario, SPRs such as PSSCR, whose values can
change at runtime, are compelled to make the self-restore API call
every time before entering a deep-idle state rendering it to be
prohibitively expensive
Shortcoming2:
------------
The value of LPCR is dynamic based on if the CPU is entered a stop
state during cpu idle versus cpu hotplug.
Today, an additional self-restore call is made before entering
CPU-Hotplug to clear the PECE1 bit in stop-API so that if we are
woken up by a special wakeup on an offlined CPU, we go back to stop
with the the bit cleared.
There is a overhead of an extra call
New Use-case:
-------------
In the case where the hypervisor is running on an
ultravisor environment, the boot time is too late in the cycle to make
the self-restore API calls, as these cannot be invoked from an
non-secure context anymore
To address these shortcomings, the firmware provides another API known
as the self-save API. The self-save API only takes the SPR number as a
parameter and will ensure that on wakeup from a deep-stop state the
SPR is restored with the value that it contained prior to entering the
deep-stop.
Contrast between self-save and self-restore APIs
================================================
Before entering
deep idle |---------------|
------------> | HCODE A |
| |---------------|
|---------| |
| CPU |----|
|---------| |
| |---------------|
|------------>| HCODE B |
On waking up |---------------|
from deep idle
When a self-restore API is invoked, the HCODE inserts instructions
into "HCODE B" region of the above figure to restore the content of
the SPR to the said value. The "HCODE B" region gets executed soon
after the CPU wakes up from a deep idle state, thus executing the
inserted instructions, thereby restoring the contents of the SPRs to
the required values.
When a self-save API is invoked, the HCODE inserts instructions into
the "HCODE A" region of the above figure to save the content of the
SPR into some location in memory. It also inserts instructions into
the "HCODE B" region to restore the content of the SPR to the
corresponding value saved in the memory by the instructions in "HCODE
A" region.
Thus, in contrast with self-restore, the self-save API *does not* need
a value to be passed to it, since it ensures that the value of SPR
before entering deep stop is saved, and subsequently the same value is
restored.
Self-save and self-restore are complementary features since,
self-restore can help in restoring a different value in the SPR on
wakeup from a deep-idle state than what it had before entering the
deep idle state. This was used in POWER8 for HSPRG0 to distinguish a
wakeup from Winkle vs Fastsleep.
Limitations of self-save
========================
Ideally all SPRs should be available for self-save, but HID0 is very
tricky to implement in microcode due to various endianess quirks.
Couple of implementation schemes were buggy and hence HID0 was left
out to be self-restore only.
The fallout of this limitation is as follows:
* In Non PEF environment, no issue. Linux will use self-restore for
HID0 as it does today and no functional impact.
* In PEF environment, the HID0 restore value is decided by OPAL during
boot and it is setup for LE hypervisor with radix MMU. This is the
default and current working configuration of a PEF environment.
However if there is a change, then HV Linux will try to change the
HID0 value to something different than what OPAL decided, at which
time deep-stop states will be disabled under this new PEF
environment.
A simple and workable design is achieved by scoping the power
management deep-stop state support only to a known default PEF
environment. Any deviation will affect *only* deep stop-state support
(stop4,5) in that environment and not have any functional impediment
to the environment itself.
In future, if there is a need to support changing of HID0 to various
values under PEF environment and support deep-stop states, it can be
worked out via an ultravisor call or improve the microcode design to
include HID0 in self-save. These future scheme would be an extension
and does not break or make the current implementation scheme
redundant.
Design Choices
==============
Presenting the design choices in front of us:
Design-Choice 1:
----------------
A simple implementation is to just replace self-restore calls with
self-save as it is direct super-set.
Pros:
A simple design, quick to implement
Cons:
* Breaks backward compatibility. Self-restore has historically been
supported in the firmware and an old firmware running on an new
kernel will be incompatible and deep stop states will be cut.
* Furthermore, critical SPRs which need to be restored
before 0x100 vector like HID0 are not supported by self-save.
Design-Choice 2:
----------------
Advertise both self-restore and self-save from OPAL including the set
of registers that each support. The kernel can then choose which API
to go with.
For the sake of simplicity, in case both modes are supported for an
SPR by default self-save would be called for it.
Pros:
* Backwards compatible
Cons:
Overhead in parsing device tree with the SPR list
Design Choice 3:
----------------
The presence of self-save feature is indicated by the
"ibm,opal-self-save" in the device-tree.
Since self-save API supports most of the SPRs supported by
self-restore, when self-save feature is available, we first attempt
a self-save call for an SPR. If that fails, then we fallback to the
self-restore API.
Pros:
* Backwards compatible
* Minimal complexity
Cons:
* The kernel does not know which registers are supported by the
self-save API, so a try-catch model is used. Although this model is
also employed by the current self-restore API.
The patch chooses design choice 3 as an implementation.
The device tree is parsed looking for the property "ibm,opal-self-save"
If self-save is supported then for all SPRs self-save is invoked for all
P9 supported registers. In the case self-save fails corresponding
self-restore call is invoked as a fallback.
Pratik Rajesh Sampat (1):
powerpc/powernv: Introduce support and parsing for self-save API
arch/powerpc/include/asm/opal-api.h | 3 +-
arch/powerpc/include/asm/opal.h | 1 +
arch/powerpc/platforms/powernv/idle.c | 73 ++++++++++++++++++----
arch/powerpc/platforms/powernv/opal-call.c | 1 +
4 files changed, 64 insertions(+), 14 deletions(-)
--
2.17.1
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