ARM: mcpm: introduce helpers for platform coherency exit/setup

This provides helper methods to coordinate between CPUs coming down
and CPUs going up, as well as documentation on the used algorithms,
so that cluster teardown and setup
operations are not done for a cluster simultaneously.

For use in the power_down() implementation:
  * __mcpm_cpu_going_down(unsigned int cluster, unsigned int cpu)
  * __mcpm_outbound_enter_critical(unsigned int cluster)
  * __mcpm_outbound_leave_critical(unsigned int cluster)
  * __mcpm_cpu_down(unsigned int cluster, unsigned int cpu)

The power_up_setup() helper should do platform-specific setup in
preparation for turning the CPU on, such as invalidating local caches
or entering coherency.  It must be assembler for now, since it must
run before the MMU can be switched on.  It is passed the affinity level
for which initialization should be performed.

Because the mcpm_sync_struct content is looked-up and modified
with the cache enabled or disabled depending on the code path, it is
crucial to always ensure proper cache maintenance to update main memory
right away.  The sync_cache_*() helpers are used to that end.

Also, in order to prevent a cached writer from interfering with an
adjacent non-cached writer, we ensure each state variable is located to
a separate cache line.

Thanks to Nicolas Pitre and Achin Gupta for the help with this
patch.

Signed-off-by: Dave Martin <dave.martin@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Pitre <nico@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Will Deacon <will.deacon@arm.com>
This commit is contained in:
Dave Martin 2012-07-17 14:25:42 +01:00 committed by Nicolas Pitre
parent 7c2b860534
commit 7fe31d28e8
5 changed files with 828 additions and 2 deletions

View file

@ -0,0 +1,498 @@
Cluster-wide Power-up/power-down race avoidance algorithm
=========================================================
This file documents the algorithm which is used to coordinate CPU and
cluster setup and teardown operations and to manage hardware coherency
controls safely.
The section "Rationale" explains what the algorithm is for and why it is
needed. "Basic model" explains general concepts using a simplified view
of the system. The other sections explain the actual details of the
algorithm in use.
Rationale
---------
In a system containing multiple CPUs, it is desirable to have the
ability to turn off individual CPUs when the system is idle, reducing
power consumption and thermal dissipation.
In a system containing multiple clusters of CPUs, it is also desirable
to have the ability to turn off entire clusters.
Turning entire clusters off and on is a risky business, because it
involves performing potentially destructive operations affecting a group
of independently running CPUs, while the OS continues to run. This
means that we need some coordination in order to ensure that critical
cluster-level operations are only performed when it is truly safe to do
so.
Simple locking may not be sufficient to solve this problem, because
mechanisms like Linux spinlocks may rely on coherency mechanisms which
are not immediately enabled when a cluster powers up. Since enabling or
disabling those mechanisms may itself be a non-atomic operation (such as
writing some hardware registers and invalidating large caches), other
methods of coordination are required in order to guarantee safe
power-down and power-up at the cluster level.
The mechanism presented in this document describes a coherent memory
based protocol for performing the needed coordination. It aims to be as
lightweight as possible, while providing the required safety properties.
Basic model
-----------
Each cluster and CPU is assigned a state, as follows:
DOWN
COMING_UP
UP
GOING_DOWN
+---------> UP ----------+
| v
COMING_UP GOING_DOWN
^ |
+--------- DOWN <--------+
DOWN: The CPU or cluster is not coherent, and is either powered off or
suspended, or is ready to be powered off or suspended.
COMING_UP: The CPU or cluster has committed to moving to the UP state.
It may be part way through the process of initialisation and
enabling coherency.
UP: The CPU or cluster is active and coherent at the hardware
level. A CPU in this state is not necessarily being used
actively by the kernel.
GOING_DOWN: The CPU or cluster has committed to moving to the DOWN
state. It may be part way through the process of teardown and
coherency exit.
Each CPU has one of these states assigned to it at any point in time.
The CPU states are described in the "CPU state" section, below.
Each cluster is also assigned a state, but it is necessary to split the
state value into two parts (the "cluster" state and "inbound" state) and
to introduce additional states in order to avoid races between different
CPUs in the cluster simultaneously modifying the state. The cluster-
level states are described in the "Cluster state" section.
To help distinguish the CPU states from cluster states in this
discussion, the state names are given a CPU_ prefix for the CPU states,
and a CLUSTER_ or INBOUND_ prefix for the cluster states.
CPU state
---------
In this algorithm, each individual core in a multi-core processor is
referred to as a "CPU". CPUs are assumed to be single-threaded:
therefore, a CPU can only be doing one thing at a single point in time.
This means that CPUs fit the basic model closely.
The algorithm defines the following states for each CPU in the system:
CPU_DOWN
CPU_COMING_UP
CPU_UP
CPU_GOING_DOWN
cluster setup and
CPU setup complete policy decision
+-----------> CPU_UP ------------+
| v
CPU_COMING_UP CPU_GOING_DOWN
^ |
+----------- CPU_DOWN <----------+
policy decision CPU teardown complete
or hardware event
The definitions of the four states correspond closely to the states of
the basic model.
Transitions between states occur as follows.
A trigger event (spontaneous) means that the CPU can transition to the
next state as a result of making local progress only, with no
requirement for any external event to happen.
CPU_DOWN:
A CPU reaches the CPU_DOWN state when it is ready for
power-down. On reaching this state, the CPU will typically
power itself down or suspend itself, via a WFI instruction or a
firmware call.
Next state: CPU_COMING_UP
Conditions: none
Trigger events:
a) an explicit hardware power-up operation, resulting
from a policy decision on another CPU;
b) a hardware event, such as an interrupt.
CPU_COMING_UP:
A CPU cannot start participating in hardware coherency until the
cluster is set up and coherent. If the cluster is not ready,
then the CPU will wait in the CPU_COMING_UP state until the
cluster has been set up.
Next state: CPU_UP
Conditions: The CPU's parent cluster must be in CLUSTER_UP.
Trigger events: Transition of the parent cluster to CLUSTER_UP.
Refer to the "Cluster state" section for a description of the
CLUSTER_UP state.
CPU_UP:
When a CPU reaches the CPU_UP state, it is safe for the CPU to
start participating in local coherency.
This is done by jumping to the kernel's CPU resume code.
Note that the definition of this state is slightly different
from the basic model definition: CPU_UP does not mean that the
CPU is coherent yet, but it does mean that it is safe to resume
the kernel. The kernel handles the rest of the resume
procedure, so the remaining steps are not visible as part of the
race avoidance algorithm.
The CPU remains in this state until an explicit policy decision
is made to shut down or suspend the CPU.
Next state: CPU_GOING_DOWN
Conditions: none
Trigger events: explicit policy decision
CPU_GOING_DOWN:
While in this state, the CPU exits coherency, including any
operations required to achieve this (such as cleaning data
caches).
Next state: CPU_DOWN
Conditions: local CPU teardown complete
Trigger events: (spontaneous)
Cluster state
-------------
A cluster is a group of connected CPUs with some common resources.
Because a cluster contains multiple CPUs, it can be doing multiple
things at the same time. This has some implications. In particular, a
CPU can start up while another CPU is tearing the cluster down.
In this discussion, the "outbound side" is the view of the cluster state
as seen by a CPU tearing the cluster down. The "inbound side" is the
view of the cluster state as seen by a CPU setting the CPU up.
In order to enable safe coordination in such situations, it is important
that a CPU which is setting up the cluster can advertise its state
independently of the CPU which is tearing down the cluster. For this
reason, the cluster state is split into two parts:
"cluster" state: The global state of the cluster; or the state
on the outbound side:
CLUSTER_DOWN
CLUSTER_UP
CLUSTER_GOING_DOWN
"inbound" state: The state of the cluster on the inbound side.
INBOUND_NOT_COMING_UP
INBOUND_COMING_UP
The different pairings of these states results in six possible
states for the cluster as a whole:
CLUSTER_UP
+==========> INBOUND_NOT_COMING_UP -------------+
# |
|
CLUSTER_UP <----+ |
INBOUND_COMING_UP | v
^ CLUSTER_GOING_DOWN CLUSTER_GOING_DOWN
# INBOUND_COMING_UP <=== INBOUND_NOT_COMING_UP
CLUSTER_DOWN | |
INBOUND_COMING_UP <----+ |
|
^ |
+=========== CLUSTER_DOWN <------------+
INBOUND_NOT_COMING_UP
Transitions -----> can only be made by the outbound CPU, and
only involve changes to the "cluster" state.
Transitions ===##> can only be made by the inbound CPU, and only
involve changes to the "inbound" state, except where there is no
further transition possible on the outbound side (i.e., the
outbound CPU has put the cluster into the CLUSTER_DOWN state).
The race avoidance algorithm does not provide a way to determine
which exact CPUs within the cluster play these roles. This must
be decided in advance by some other means. Refer to the section
"Last man and first man selection" for more explanation.
CLUSTER_DOWN/INBOUND_NOT_COMING_UP is the only state where the
cluster can actually be powered down.
The parallelism of the inbound and outbound CPUs is observed by
the existence of two different paths from CLUSTER_GOING_DOWN/
INBOUND_NOT_COMING_UP (corresponding to GOING_DOWN in the basic
model) to CLUSTER_DOWN/INBOUND_COMING_UP (corresponding to
COMING_UP in the basic model). The second path avoids cluster
teardown completely.
CLUSTER_UP/INBOUND_COMING_UP is equivalent to UP in the basic
model. The final transition to CLUSTER_UP/INBOUND_NOT_COMING_UP
is trivial and merely resets the state machine ready for the
next cycle.
Details of the allowable transitions follow.
The next state in each case is notated
<cluster state>/<inbound state> (<transitioner>)
where the <transitioner> is the side on which the transition
can occur; either the inbound or the outbound side.
CLUSTER_DOWN/INBOUND_NOT_COMING_UP:
Next state: CLUSTER_DOWN/INBOUND_COMING_UP (inbound)
Conditions: none
Trigger events:
a) an explicit hardware power-up operation, resulting
from a policy decision on another CPU;
b) a hardware event, such as an interrupt.
CLUSTER_DOWN/INBOUND_COMING_UP:
In this state, an inbound CPU sets up the cluster, including
enabling of hardware coherency at the cluster level and any
other operations (such as cache invalidation) which are required
in order to achieve this.
The purpose of this state is to do sufficient cluster-level
setup to enable other CPUs in the cluster to enter coherency
safely.
Next state: CLUSTER_UP/INBOUND_COMING_UP (inbound)
Conditions: cluster-level setup and hardware coherency complete
Trigger events: (spontaneous)
CLUSTER_UP/INBOUND_COMING_UP:
Cluster-level setup is complete and hardware coherency is
enabled for the cluster. Other CPUs in the cluster can safely
enter coherency.
This is a transient state, leading immediately to
CLUSTER_UP/INBOUND_NOT_COMING_UP. All other CPUs on the cluster
should consider treat these two states as equivalent.
Next state: CLUSTER_UP/INBOUND_NOT_COMING_UP (inbound)
Conditions: none
Trigger events: (spontaneous)
CLUSTER_UP/INBOUND_NOT_COMING_UP:
Cluster-level setup is complete and hardware coherency is
enabled for the cluster. Other CPUs in the cluster can safely
enter coherency.
The cluster will remain in this state until a policy decision is
made to power the cluster down.
Next state: CLUSTER_GOING_DOWN/INBOUND_NOT_COMING_UP (outbound)
Conditions: none
Trigger events: policy decision to power down the cluster
CLUSTER_GOING_DOWN/INBOUND_NOT_COMING_UP:
An outbound CPU is tearing the cluster down. The selected CPU
must wait in this state until all CPUs in the cluster are in the
CPU_DOWN state.
When all CPUs are in the CPU_DOWN state, the cluster can be torn
down, for example by cleaning data caches and exiting
cluster-level coherency.
To avoid wasteful unnecessary teardown operations, the outbound
should check the inbound cluster state for asynchronous
transitions to INBOUND_COMING_UP. Alternatively, individual
CPUs can be checked for entry into CPU_COMING_UP or CPU_UP.
Next states:
CLUSTER_DOWN/INBOUND_NOT_COMING_UP (outbound)
Conditions: cluster torn down and ready to power off
Trigger events: (spontaneous)
CLUSTER_GOING_DOWN/INBOUND_COMING_UP (inbound)
Conditions: none
Trigger events:
a) an explicit hardware power-up operation,
resulting from a policy decision on another
CPU;
b) a hardware event, such as an interrupt.
CLUSTER_GOING_DOWN/INBOUND_COMING_UP:
The cluster is (or was) being torn down, but another CPU has
come online in the meantime and is trying to set up the cluster
again.
If the outbound CPU observes this state, it has two choices:
a) back out of teardown, restoring the cluster to the
CLUSTER_UP state;
b) finish tearing the cluster down and put the cluster
in the CLUSTER_DOWN state; the inbound CPU will
set up the cluster again from there.
Choice (a) permits the removal of some latency by avoiding
unnecessary teardown and setup operations in situations where
the cluster is not really going to be powered down.
Next states:
CLUSTER_UP/INBOUND_COMING_UP (outbound)
Conditions: cluster-level setup and hardware
coherency complete
Trigger events: (spontaneous)
CLUSTER_DOWN/INBOUND_COMING_UP (outbound)
Conditions: cluster torn down and ready to power off
Trigger events: (spontaneous)
Last man and First man selection
--------------------------------
The CPU which performs cluster tear-down operations on the outbound side
is commonly referred to as the "last man".
The CPU which performs cluster setup on the inbound side is commonly
referred to as the "first man".
The race avoidance algorithm documented above does not provide a
mechanism to choose which CPUs should play these roles.
Last man:
When shutting down the cluster, all the CPUs involved are initially
executing Linux and hence coherent. Therefore, ordinary spinlocks can
be used to select a last man safely, before the CPUs become
non-coherent.
First man:
Because CPUs may power up asynchronously in response to external wake-up
events, a dynamic mechanism is needed to make sure that only one CPU
attempts to play the first man role and do the cluster-level
initialisation: any other CPUs must wait for this to complete before
proceeding.
Cluster-level initialisation may involve actions such as configuring
coherency controls in the bus fabric.
The current implementation in mcpm_head.S uses a separate mutual exclusion
mechanism to do this arbitration. This mechanism is documented in
detail in vlocks.txt.
Features and Limitations
------------------------
Implementation:
The current ARM-based implementation is split between
arch/arm/common/mcpm_head.S (low-level inbound CPU operations) and
arch/arm/common/mcpm_entry.c (everything else):
__mcpm_cpu_going_down() signals the transition of a CPU to the
CPU_GOING_DOWN state.
__mcpm_cpu_down() signals the transition of a CPU to the CPU_DOWN
state.
A CPU transitions to CPU_COMING_UP and then to CPU_UP via the
low-level power-up code in mcpm_head.S. This could
involve CPU-specific setup code, but in the current
implementation it does not.
__mcpm_outbound_enter_critical() and __mcpm_outbound_leave_critical()
handle transitions from CLUSTER_UP to CLUSTER_GOING_DOWN
and from there to CLUSTER_DOWN or back to CLUSTER_UP (in
the case of an aborted cluster power-down).
These functions are more complex than the __mcpm_cpu_*()
functions due to the extra inter-CPU coordination which
is needed for safe transitions at the cluster level.
A cluster transitions from CLUSTER_DOWN back to CLUSTER_UP via
the low-level power-up code in mcpm_head.S. This
typically involves platform-specific setup code,
provided by the platform-specific power_up_setup
function registered via mcpm_sync_init.
Deep topologies:
As currently described and implemented, the algorithm does not
support CPU topologies involving more than two levels (i.e.,
clusters of clusters are not supported). The algorithm could be
extended by replicating the cluster-level states for the
additional topological levels, and modifying the transition
rules for the intermediate (non-outermost) cluster levels.
Colophon
--------
Originally created and documented by Dave Martin for Linaro Limited, in
collaboration with Nicolas Pitre and Achin Gupta.
Copyright (C) 2012-2013 Linaro Limited
Distributed under the terms of Version 2 of the GNU General Public
License, as defined in linux/COPYING.

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@ -16,6 +16,7 @@
#include <asm/mcpm.h>
#include <asm/cacheflush.h>
#include <asm/idmap.h>
#include <asm/cputype.h>
extern unsigned long mcpm_entry_vectors[MAX_NR_CLUSTERS][MAX_CPUS_PER_CLUSTER];
@ -111,3 +112,152 @@ int mcpm_cpu_powered_up(void)
platform_ops->powered_up();
return 0;
}
struct sync_struct mcpm_sync;
/*
* __mcpm_cpu_going_down: Indicates that the cpu is being torn down.
* This must be called at the point of committing to teardown of a CPU.
* The CPU cache (SCTRL.C bit) is expected to still be active.
*/
void __mcpm_cpu_going_down(unsigned int cpu, unsigned int cluster)
{
mcpm_sync.clusters[cluster].cpus[cpu].cpu = CPU_GOING_DOWN;
sync_cache_w(&mcpm_sync.clusters[cluster].cpus[cpu].cpu);
}
/*
* __mcpm_cpu_down: Indicates that cpu teardown is complete and that the
* cluster can be torn down without disrupting this CPU.
* To avoid deadlocks, this must be called before a CPU is powered down.
* The CPU cache (SCTRL.C bit) is expected to be off.
* However L2 cache might or might not be active.
*/
void __mcpm_cpu_down(unsigned int cpu, unsigned int cluster)
{
dmb();
mcpm_sync.clusters[cluster].cpus[cpu].cpu = CPU_DOWN;
sync_cache_w(&mcpm_sync.clusters[cluster].cpus[cpu].cpu);
dsb_sev();
}
/*
* __mcpm_outbound_leave_critical: Leave the cluster teardown critical section.
* @state: the final state of the cluster:
* CLUSTER_UP: no destructive teardown was done and the cluster has been
* restored to the previous state (CPU cache still active); or
* CLUSTER_DOWN: the cluster has been torn-down, ready for power-off
* (CPU cache disabled, L2 cache either enabled or disabled).
*/
void __mcpm_outbound_leave_critical(unsigned int cluster, int state)
{
dmb();
mcpm_sync.clusters[cluster].cluster = state;
sync_cache_w(&mcpm_sync.clusters[cluster].cluster);
dsb_sev();
}
/*
* __mcpm_outbound_enter_critical: Enter the cluster teardown critical section.
* This function should be called by the last man, after local CPU teardown
* is complete. CPU cache expected to be active.
*
* Returns:
* false: the critical section was not entered because an inbound CPU was
* observed, or the cluster is already being set up;
* true: the critical section was entered: it is now safe to tear down the
* cluster.
*/
bool __mcpm_outbound_enter_critical(unsigned int cpu, unsigned int cluster)
{
unsigned int i;
struct mcpm_sync_struct *c = &mcpm_sync.clusters[cluster];
/* Warn inbound CPUs that the cluster is being torn down: */
c->cluster = CLUSTER_GOING_DOWN;
sync_cache_w(&c->cluster);
/* Back out if the inbound cluster is already in the critical region: */
sync_cache_r(&c->inbound);
if (c->inbound == INBOUND_COMING_UP)
goto abort;
/*
* Wait for all CPUs to get out of the GOING_DOWN state, so that local
* teardown is complete on each CPU before tearing down the cluster.
*
* If any CPU has been woken up again from the DOWN state, then we
* shouldn't be taking the cluster down at all: abort in that case.
*/
sync_cache_r(&c->cpus);
for (i = 0; i < MAX_CPUS_PER_CLUSTER; i++) {
int cpustate;
if (i == cpu)
continue;
while (1) {
cpustate = c->cpus[i].cpu;
if (cpustate != CPU_GOING_DOWN)
break;
wfe();
sync_cache_r(&c->cpus[i].cpu);
}
switch (cpustate) {
case CPU_DOWN:
continue;
default:
goto abort;
}
}
return true;
abort:
__mcpm_outbound_leave_critical(cluster, CLUSTER_UP);
return false;
}
int __mcpm_cluster_state(unsigned int cluster)
{
sync_cache_r(&mcpm_sync.clusters[cluster].cluster);
return mcpm_sync.clusters[cluster].cluster;
}
extern unsigned long mcpm_power_up_setup_phys;
int __init mcpm_sync_init(
void (*power_up_setup)(unsigned int affinity_level))
{
unsigned int i, j, mpidr, this_cluster;
BUILD_BUG_ON(MCPM_SYNC_CLUSTER_SIZE * MAX_NR_CLUSTERS != sizeof mcpm_sync);
BUG_ON((unsigned long)&mcpm_sync & (__CACHE_WRITEBACK_GRANULE - 1));
/*
* Set initial CPU and cluster states.
* Only one cluster is assumed to be active at this point.
*/
for (i = 0; i < MAX_NR_CLUSTERS; i++) {
mcpm_sync.clusters[i].cluster = CLUSTER_DOWN;
mcpm_sync.clusters[i].inbound = INBOUND_NOT_COMING_UP;
for (j = 0; j < MAX_CPUS_PER_CLUSTER; j++)
mcpm_sync.clusters[i].cpus[j].cpu = CPU_DOWN;
}
mpidr = read_cpuid_mpidr();
this_cluster = MPIDR_AFFINITY_LEVEL(mpidr, 1);
for_each_online_cpu(i)
mcpm_sync.clusters[this_cluster].cpus[i].cpu = CPU_UP;
mcpm_sync.clusters[this_cluster].cluster = CLUSTER_UP;
sync_cache_w(&mcpm_sync);
if (power_up_setup) {
mcpm_power_up_setup_phys = virt_to_phys(power_up_setup);
sync_cache_w(&mcpm_power_up_setup_phys);
}
return 0;
}

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@ -7,11 +7,19 @@
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
* it under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 as
* published by the Free Software Foundation.
*
*
* Refer to Documentation/arm/cluster-pm-race-avoidance.txt
* for details of the synchronisation algorithms used here.
*/
#include <linux/linkage.h>
#include <asm/mcpm.h>
.if MCPM_SYNC_CLUSTER_CPUS
.error "cpus must be the first member of struct mcpm_sync_struct"
.endif
.macro pr_dbg string
#if defined(CONFIG_DEBUG_LL) && defined(DEBUG)
b 1901f
@ -57,24 +65,114 @@ ENTRY(mcpm_entry_point)
2: pr_dbg "kernel mcpm_entry_point\n"
/*
* MMU is off so we need to get to mcpm_entry_vectors in a
* MMU is off so we need to get to various variables in a
* position independent way.
*/
adr r5, 3f
ldr r6, [r5]
ldmia r5, {r6, r7, r8}
add r6, r5, r6 @ r6 = mcpm_entry_vectors
ldr r7, [r5, r7] @ r7 = mcpm_power_up_setup_phys
add r8, r5, r8 @ r8 = mcpm_sync
mov r0, #MCPM_SYNC_CLUSTER_SIZE
mla r8, r0, r10, r8 @ r8 = sync cluster base
@ Signal that this CPU is coming UP:
mov r0, #CPU_COMING_UP
mov r5, #MCPM_SYNC_CPU_SIZE
mla r5, r9, r5, r8 @ r5 = sync cpu address
strb r0, [r5]
@ At this point, the cluster cannot unexpectedly enter the GOING_DOWN
@ state, because there is at least one active CPU (this CPU).
@ Note: the following is racy as another CPU might be testing
@ the same flag at the same moment. That'll be fixed later.
ldrb r0, [r8, #MCPM_SYNC_CLUSTER_CLUSTER]
cmp r0, #CLUSTER_UP @ cluster already up?
bne mcpm_setup @ if not, set up the cluster
@ Otherwise, skip setup:
b mcpm_setup_complete
mcpm_setup:
@ Control dependency implies strb not observable before previous ldrb.
@ Signal that the cluster is being brought up:
mov r0, #INBOUND_COMING_UP
strb r0, [r8, #MCPM_SYNC_CLUSTER_INBOUND]
dmb
@ Any CPU trying to take the cluster into CLUSTER_GOING_DOWN from this
@ point onwards will observe INBOUND_COMING_UP and abort.
@ Wait for any previously-pending cluster teardown operations to abort
@ or complete:
mcpm_teardown_wait:
ldrb r0, [r8, #MCPM_SYNC_CLUSTER_CLUSTER]
cmp r0, #CLUSTER_GOING_DOWN
bne first_man_setup
wfe
b mcpm_teardown_wait
first_man_setup:
dmb
@ If the outbound gave up before teardown started, skip cluster setup:
cmp r0, #CLUSTER_UP
beq mcpm_setup_leave
@ power_up_setup is now responsible for setting up the cluster:
cmp r7, #0
mov r0, #1 @ second (cluster) affinity level
blxne r7 @ Call power_up_setup if defined
dmb
mov r0, #CLUSTER_UP
strb r0, [r8, #MCPM_SYNC_CLUSTER_CLUSTER]
dmb
mcpm_setup_leave:
@ Leave the cluster setup critical section:
mov r0, #INBOUND_NOT_COMING_UP
strb r0, [r8, #MCPM_SYNC_CLUSTER_INBOUND]
dsb
sev
mcpm_setup_complete:
@ If a platform-specific CPU setup hook is needed, it is
@ called from here.
cmp r7, #0
mov r0, #0 @ first (CPU) affinity level
blxne r7 @ Call power_up_setup if defined
dmb
@ Mark the CPU as up:
mov r0, #CPU_UP
strb r0, [r5]
@ Observability order of CPU_UP and opening of the gate does not matter.
mcpm_entry_gated:
ldr r5, [r6, r4, lsl #2] @ r5 = CPU entry vector
cmp r5, #0
wfeeq
beq mcpm_entry_gated
dmb
pr_dbg "released\n"
bx r5
.align 2
3: .word mcpm_entry_vectors - .
.word mcpm_power_up_setup_phys - 3b
.word mcpm_sync - 3b
ENDPROC(mcpm_entry_point)
@ -84,3 +182,7 @@ ENDPROC(mcpm_entry_point)
.type mcpm_entry_vectors, #object
ENTRY(mcpm_entry_vectors)
.space 4 * MAX_NR_CLUSTERS * MAX_CPUS_PER_CLUSTER
.type mcpm_power_up_setup_phys, #object
ENTRY(mcpm_power_up_setup_phys)
.space 4 @ set by mcpm_sync_init()

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@ -24,6 +24,9 @@
#ifndef __ASSEMBLY__
#include <linux/types.h>
#include <asm/cacheflush.h>
/*
* Platform specific code should use this symbol to set up secondary
* entry location for processors to use when released from reset.
@ -130,5 +133,75 @@ struct mcpm_platform_ops {
*/
int __init mcpm_platform_register(const struct mcpm_platform_ops *ops);
/* Synchronisation structures for coordinating safe cluster setup/teardown: */
/*
* When modifying this structure, make sure you update the MCPM_SYNC_ defines
* to match.
*/
struct mcpm_sync_struct {
/* individual CPU states */
struct {
s8 cpu __aligned(__CACHE_WRITEBACK_GRANULE);
} cpus[MAX_CPUS_PER_CLUSTER];
/* cluster state */
s8 cluster __aligned(__CACHE_WRITEBACK_GRANULE);
/* inbound-side state */
s8 inbound __aligned(__CACHE_WRITEBACK_GRANULE);
};
struct sync_struct {
struct mcpm_sync_struct clusters[MAX_NR_CLUSTERS];
};
extern unsigned long sync_phys; /* physical address of *mcpm_sync */
void __mcpm_cpu_going_down(unsigned int cpu, unsigned int cluster);
void __mcpm_cpu_down(unsigned int cpu, unsigned int cluster);
void __mcpm_outbound_leave_critical(unsigned int cluster, int state);
bool __mcpm_outbound_enter_critical(unsigned int this_cpu, unsigned int cluster);
int __mcpm_cluster_state(unsigned int cluster);
int __init mcpm_sync_init(
void (*power_up_setup)(unsigned int affinity_level));
#else
/*
* asm-offsets.h causes trouble when included in .c files, and cacheflush.h
* cannot be included in asm files. Let's work around the conflict like this.
*/
#include <asm/asm-offsets.h>
#define __CACHE_WRITEBACK_GRANULE CACHE_WRITEBACK_GRANULE
#endif /* ! __ASSEMBLY__ */
/* Definitions for mcpm_sync_struct */
#define CPU_DOWN 0x11
#define CPU_COMING_UP 0x12
#define CPU_UP 0x13
#define CPU_GOING_DOWN 0x14
#define CLUSTER_DOWN 0x21
#define CLUSTER_UP 0x22
#define CLUSTER_GOING_DOWN 0x23
#define INBOUND_NOT_COMING_UP 0x31
#define INBOUND_COMING_UP 0x32
/*
* Offsets for the mcpm_sync_struct members, for use in asm.
* We don't want to make them global to the kernel via asm-offsets.c.
*/
#define MCPM_SYNC_CLUSTER_CPUS 0
#define MCPM_SYNC_CPU_SIZE __CACHE_WRITEBACK_GRANULE
#define MCPM_SYNC_CLUSTER_CLUSTER \
(MCPM_SYNC_CLUSTER_CPUS + MCPM_SYNC_CPU_SIZE * MAX_CPUS_PER_CLUSTER)
#define MCPM_SYNC_CLUSTER_INBOUND \
(MCPM_SYNC_CLUSTER_CLUSTER + __CACHE_WRITEBACK_GRANULE)
#define MCPM_SYNC_CLUSTER_SIZE \
(MCPM_SYNC_CLUSTER_INBOUND + __CACHE_WRITEBACK_GRANULE)
#endif

View file

@ -149,6 +149,9 @@ int main(void)
DEFINE(DMA_BIDIRECTIONAL, DMA_BIDIRECTIONAL);
DEFINE(DMA_TO_DEVICE, DMA_TO_DEVICE);
DEFINE(DMA_FROM_DEVICE, DMA_FROM_DEVICE);
BLANK();
DEFINE(CACHE_WRITEBACK_GRANULE, __CACHE_WRITEBACK_GRANULE);
BLANK();
#ifdef CONFIG_KVM_ARM_HOST
DEFINE(VCPU_KVM, offsetof(struct kvm_vcpu, kvm));
DEFINE(VCPU_MIDR, offsetof(struct kvm_vcpu, arch.midr));