Commit b1f9be93 authored by Cédric Le Goater's avatar Cédric Le Goater Committed by Michael Ellerman

powerpc/xive: Enforce load-after-store ordering when StoreEOI is active

When an interrupt has been handled, the OS notifies the interrupt
controller with a EOI sequence. On a POWER9 system using the XIVE
interrupt controller, this can be done with a load or a store
operation on the ESB interrupt management page of the interrupt. The
StoreEOI operation has less latency and improves interrupt handling
performance but it was deactivated during the POWER9 DD2.0 timeframe
because of ordering issues. We use the LoadEOI today but we plan to
reactivate StoreEOI in future architectures.

There is usually no need to enforce ordering between ESB load and
store operations as they should lead to the same result. E.g. a store
trigger and a load EOI can be executed in any order. Assuming the
interrupt state is PQ=10, a store trigger followed by a load EOI will
return a Q bit. In the reverse order, it will create a new interrupt
trigger from HW. In both cases, the handler processing interrupts is
notified.

In some cases, the XIVE_ESB_SET_PQ_10 load operation is used to
disable temporarily the interrupt source (mask/unmask). When the
source is reenabled, the OS can detect if interrupts were received
while the source was disabled and reinject them. This process needs
special care when StoreEOI is activated. The ESB load and store
operations should be correctly ordered because a XIVE_ESB_STORE_EOI
operation could leave the source enabled if it has not completed
before the loads.

For those cases, we enforce Load-after-Store ordering with a special
load operation offset. To avoid performance impact, this ordering is
only enforced when really needed, that is when interrupt sources are
temporarily disabled with the XIVE_ESB_SET_PQ_10 load. It should not
be needed for other loads.
Signed-off-by: default avatarCédric Le Goater <clg@kaod.org>
Signed-off-by: default avatarMichael Ellerman <mpe@ellerman.id.au>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20200220081506.31209-1-clg@kaod.org
parent 75358ea3
......@@ -37,6 +37,14 @@
#define XIVE_ESB_SET_PQ_10 0xe00 /* Load */
#define XIVE_ESB_SET_PQ_11 0xf00 /* Load */
/*
* Load-after-store ordering
*
* Adding this offset to the load address will enforce
* load-after-store ordering. This is required to use StoreEOI.
*/
#define XIVE_ESB_LD_ST_MO 0x40 /* Load-after-store ordering */
#define XIVE_ESB_VAL_P 0x2
#define XIVE_ESB_VAL_Q 0x1
#define XIVE_ESB_INVALID 0xFF
......
......@@ -2907,6 +2907,11 @@ kvm_cede_exit:
beq 4f
li r0, 0
stb r0, VCPU_CEDED(r9)
/*
* The escalation interrupts are special as we don't EOI them.
* There is no need to use the load-after-store ordering offset
* to set PQ to 10 as we won't use StoreEOI.
*/
li r6, XIVE_ESB_SET_PQ_10
b 5f
4: li r0, 1
......
......@@ -31,6 +31,12 @@ static u8 xive_vm_esb_load(struct xive_irq_data *xd, u32 offset)
{
u64 val;
/*
* The KVM XIVE native device does not use the XIVE_ESB_SET_PQ_10
* load operation, so there is no need to enforce load-after-store
* ordering.
*/
if (xd->flags & XIVE_IRQ_FLAG_SHIFT_BUG)
offset |= offset << 4;
......
......@@ -58,6 +58,9 @@ static u8 GLUE(X_PFX,esb_load)(struct xive_irq_data *xd, u32 offset)
{
u64 val;
if (offset == XIVE_ESB_SET_PQ_10 && xd->flags & XIVE_IRQ_FLAG_STORE_EOI)
offset |= XIVE_ESB_LD_ST_MO;
if (xd->flags & XIVE_IRQ_FLAG_SHIFT_BUG)
offset |= offset << 4;
......
......@@ -196,6 +196,9 @@ static notrace u8 xive_esb_read(struct xive_irq_data *xd, u32 offset)
{
u64 val;
if (offset == XIVE_ESB_SET_PQ_10 && xd->flags & XIVE_IRQ_FLAG_STORE_EOI)
offset |= XIVE_ESB_LD_ST_MO;
/* Handle HW errata */
if (xd->flags & XIVE_IRQ_FLAG_SHIFT_BUG)
offset |= offset << 4;
......
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