On Tue, 2011-11-22 at 15:17 +0900, Stefan Reinauer wrote:
On Tue, 22 Nov 2011 08:01:01 +0200, Kyösti Mälkki wrote:
On Tue, 2011-11-22 at 06:30 +0900, Stefan Reinauer wrote:
On 11/22/11 5:20 AM, Kyösti Mälkki wrote:
Hi
Could someone explain the use of boot_cpu() in bootblock_normal.c main()? I thought only the BSP CPU executes this code (currently)?
I am about to push a change that does early SMP init for
hyper-threading
CPUs to allow cache-as-ram implementation. Shared cache remains
disabled
until both/all logical CPUs enable it.
For some CPUs types (like AMD K8) all CPUs / cores start running the reset vector code after power-on.
Stefan
Do the BSP CPU and/or AP CPUs execute bootblock_normal: main() and mainboard/romstage: cache_as_ram_main() in parallel then?
Remember there are no semaphores for shared resources like CMOS_BOOT_BYTE in do_normal_boot() nor any spinlocks for pci_write_config() etc.
non-AP CPUs have to make sure they don't do (non-memory mapped) PCI config space access cycles. This has actually been an issue before and it is a very bad idea to run rom stage on all CPUs. reading CMOS_BOOT_BYTE should be fine. Writing to it should only happen on the BSP.
A lot of K8 boards send their non-BSP processors to sleep in romstage.
Stefan
Then the current bootblock_normal.c and bootblock_common.h are a bit questionable, also AP CPUs do CMOS writes. Reading CMOS is safe only as long as just that one CMOS_BOOT_BYTE is addressed.
The bootblock_common.h directives redefine boot_cpu(). I would understand a non-SMP case where the only CPU may not have a lapic, but otherwise, why?
Kyösti