Date: Fri, 3 May 2019 11:09:03 -0700 From: Mark Millard <marklmi@yahoo.com> To: Justin Hibbits <chmeeedalf@gmail.com>, FreeBSD PowerPC ML <freebsd-ppc@freebsd.org> Subject: Re: 970MP PowerMac G5s: What printf's show about cpu_mp_unleash hangups on the test variant of head -r347003 (found cpu_mp_unleash counterexample) Message-ID: <4D659851-8731-4116-A6B6-33A75E9F0B76@yahoo.com> In-Reply-To: <EF44A358-CC6D-4244-A911-6D4DACFF4B21@yahoo.com> References: <EF44A358-CC6D-4244-A911-6D4DACFF4B21@yahoo.com>
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[Exeriment with instead disabling the code in each of the nop_prio_ routines instead of commenting out specific calls. But mostly: more test runs. It does not support what I thought yesterday's cpu_mp_unlead suggested.] On 2019-May-2, at 22:23, Mark Millard <marklmi at yahoo.com> wrote: > [Note: I still have your requested loop change, my > isync additions, and my libc string compare code > change in what I'm working with for head -r347003 .] >=20 > I started using printf to help identify more about what > code managed to execute vs what code did not for > hang-ups. >=20 > This note is just about cpu_mp_unleash observations and > experiments related to what printf's showed. >=20 > I did: >=20 > static void > cpu_mp_unleash(void *dummy) > { > . . . (omitted as all earlier printf's printed) . . . > printf("cpu_mp_unleash: before DELAY\n"); > /* Let the APs get into the scheduler */ > DELAY(10000); > printf("cpu_mp_unleash: after DELAY\n"); >=20 > } >=20 > What I saw was only the first of the twoDEALY printf's > shown above was printing when cpu_mp_unleash hung up, > such a hangup being the normal case when vt_upgrade > did not hang-up first. >=20 > So I looked at /mnt/usr/src/sys/powerpc/powerpc/clock.c > and its DELAY routine and came up with only one thing > that looked like a useful experiment. Note what I > then commented out: >=20 > # svnlite diff /mnt/usr/src/sys/powerpc/powerpc/clock.c > Index: /mnt/usr/src/sys/powerpc/powerpc/clock.c > =3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D= =3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D= =3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D > --- /mnt/usr/src/sys/powerpc/powerpc/clock.c (revision 347003) > +++ /mnt/usr/src/sys/powerpc/powerpc/clock.c (working copy) > @@ -309,10 +309,10 @@ > TSENTER(); > tb =3D mftb(); > ttb =3D tb + howmany((uint64_t)n * 1000000, ps_per_tick); > - nop_prio_vlow(); > + //nop_prio_vlow(); > while (tb < ttb) > tb =3D mftb(); > - nop_prio_medium(); > + //nop_prio_medium(); > TSEXIT(); > } >=20 > After this change I've not (yet?) seen another cpu_mp_unleash > hangup in my test context. >=20 > Even if not documented to do so, it appears to me that > ori Rx,Rx,Rx code that is behind the nop_prio_vlow() does > something specific on the 970MP's in the 2-socket/2-core-each > G5 PowerMac11,2's --and what it does interferes with making > progress in DELAY, in at least that specific use of it and/or > any others on the ap's during cpu_mp_unleash. >=20 > Of course, this testing process is of a probabilistic context > and I do not have hundreds or more of examples of any specific > condition at this point. But, so far, the change in behavior > seems clear: I went from always-hanging-up-so-far to > always-booting-so-far (when vt_upgrade did not prevent the > test in each context). So I uncommented the 2 calls commented out the contents of the nop_prio_ routines, summarized here via: # egrep -r 'or.*(31,31,31|1,1,1|6,6,6|2,2,2|5,5,5|3,3,3)' = /mnt/usr/src/sys/powerpc/ | more = = /mnt/usr/src/sys/powerpc/include/cpufunc.h: //__asm __volatile("or = 31,31,31"); /mnt/usr/src/sys/powerpc/include/cpufunc.h: //__asm __volatile("or = 1,1,1"); /mnt/usr/src/sys/powerpc/include/cpufunc.h: //__asm __volatile("or = 6,6,6"); /mnt/usr/src/sys/powerpc/include/cpufunc.h: //__asm __volatile("or = 2,2,2"); /mnt/usr/src/sys/powerpc/include/cpufunc.h: //__asm __volatile("or = 5,5,5"); /mnt/usr/src/sys/powerpc/include/cpufunc.h: //__asm __volatile("or = 3,3,3"); Then I've continued running tests based on the rebuild. The results so far are . . . vt_upgrade behavior is unchanged, still frequently hanging-up in the same place. fhanew_init behavior is unchanged, still frequently hanging-up in the same place (when vt_upgrade does not hang-up). It will take some time to get a number of examples where the prior 2 hang-ups do not occur, but for cpu_mp_unlead I have seen a "3 CPUs woken" notice followed by only the "before DELAY" message, no "after DELAY" one. I confirmed with objdump that DELAY did not have the ori Rx,Rx,Rx instructions. So, despite how things looked yesterday with no cpu_mp_unlead hang-ups after using the code with the 2 calls commented out, ori 31,31,31 use is not involved in the latest example, matching your expectations. (And this illustrates why I try to accumulate a fair number of examples over time: the hang-ups are probabilistic and small example counts can be misleading.) =3D=3D=3D Mark Millard marklmi at yahoo.com ( dsl-only.net went away in early 2018-Mar)
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