[coreboot] [PATCH] Seabios on Virtutech Simics x86-440bx model
Gleb Natapov
gleb at redhat.com
Thu Nov 5 14:04:39 CET 2009
On Thu, Nov 05, 2009 at 02:02:09PM +0100, Magnus Christensson wrote:
> On 11/05/2009 11:49 AM, Gleb Natapov wrote:
> >On Thu, Nov 05, 2009 at 11:24:17AM +0100, Magnus Christensson wrote:
> >>On 11/05/2009 10:54 AM, Gleb Natapov wrote:
> >>>On Thu, Nov 05, 2009 at 10:30:49AM +0100, Magnus Christensson wrote:
> >>>>On 11/04/2009 03:40 PM, Gleb Natapov wrote:
> >>>>>On Tue, Nov 03, 2009 at 10:30:12PM -0500, Kevin O'Connor wrote:
> >>>>>>On Tue, Nov 03, 2009 at 04:31:32PM +0100, Magnus Christensson wrote:
> >>>>>>>I'm attaching patches for seabios to make it work on the Virtutech
> >>>>>>>Simics x86-440bx model. Please let me know if there is some other list
> >>>>>>>that is preferred for seabios patches.
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>Patches 1-6 and 9 are not really related to the Virtutech model at all,
> >>>>>>>so those would be prime candidates to be included in the mainline
> >>>>>>>version.
> >>>>>l> Thanks Magnus.
> >>>>>>Gleb I'm not sure if you're on the coreboot mailing list - can you
> >>>>>>take a look at these patches as well? A URL is at:
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>>http://permalink.gmane.org/gmane.linux.bios/55487
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>Can I get them in a mbox format somewhere? Want to tested them to be
> >>>>>sure. From review:
> >>>>>1:
> >>>>> OK
> >>>>>
> >>>>>2:
> >>>>> What is the reason for this? x86info --mptable on my 4 core AMD shows
> >>>>>MP Table:
> >>>>># APIC ID Version State Family Model Step Flags
> >>>>># 0 0x10 BSP, usable 16 4 1 0x178bfbff
> >>>>># 1 0x10 AP, usable 16 4 1 0x178bfbff
> >>>>># 2 0x10 AP, usable 16 4 1 0x178bfbff
> >>>>># 3 0x10 AP, usable 16 4 1 0x178bfbff
> >>>>I can think of two reasons for only listing one CPU per package. The
> >>>>first would be performance, in that the OS needs to be aware of
> >>>>multi-threading in order not to slow down high priority tasks with
> >>>>stuff that is usually free when running on multiple processors (like
> >>>>spinlocks). The second reason would be that logical CPUs in the same
> >>>>package share some MSRs, and an OS that isn't aware of that may
> >>>>cease to work in such an environment.
> >>>>
> >>>>Related link:
> >>>>
> >>>>http://software.intel.com/en-us/articles/hyper-threading-implications-and-setup-on-microsoft-operating-systems/
> >>>>
> >>>This list talks about HT. Why not add entry for each core though? I am
> >>>not aware of any MSRs shared between cores
> >>Some MSRs are shared between cores, for example lots of the memory
> >>check MSRs in Nehalem, although an OS that knows about MCs would
> >>probably also know something about how they are shared. Adding
> >>multiple cores to the MPS tables would probably not break anything.
> >>One reason why they are still filtered out in at least some cases
> >>could be that multiple cores and threads are flagged with the same
> >>bit (the HTT bit).
> >>
> >OK. I don't think it is very important for modern guests anyway.
> Right. Anything modern should look at the ACPI tables.
>
> >>>>> From a41c206097e801de29668f99ae9b9342614c716d Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
> >>>>From: Magnus Christensson<mch at virtutech.com>
> >>>>Date: Tue, 3 Nov 2009 12:50:09 +0100
> >>>>Subject: [PATCH 2/8] Only add the first logical CPU in each physical CPU to the MPS tables.
> >>>>
> >>>>---
> >>>> src/mptable.c | 26 ++++++++++++++++++++++----
> >>>> 1 files changed, 22 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-)
> >>>>
> >>>>diff --git a/src/mptable.c b/src/mptable.c
> >>>>index 805fe1b..525188d 100644
> >>>>--- a/src/mptable.c
> >>>>+++ b/src/mptable.c
> >>>>@@ -44,16 +44,32 @@ mptable_init(void)
> >>>> config->spec = 4;
> >>>> memcpy(config->oemid, CONFIG_CPUNAME8, sizeof(config->oemid));
> >>>> memcpy(config->productid, "0.1 ", sizeof(config->productid));
> >>>>- config->entrycount = MaxCountCPUs + 2 + 16;
> >>>> config->lapic = BUILD_APIC_ADDR;
> >>>>
> >>>> // CPU definitions.
> >>>> u32 cpuid_signature, ebx, ecx, cpuid_features;
> >>>> cpuid(1,&cpuid_signature,&ebx,&ecx,&cpuid_features);
> >>>> struct mpt_cpu *cpus = (void*)&config[1];
> >>>>- int i;
> >>>>- for (i = 0; i< MaxCountCPUs; i++) {
> >>>>+ int i, actual_cpu_count;
> >>>>+ for (i = 0, actual_cpu_count = 0; i< MaxCountCPUs; i++) {
> >>>> struct mpt_cpu *cpu =&cpus[i];
> >>>>+ int log_cpus = (ebx>> 16)& 0xff;
> >>>>+
> >>>>+ /* Only populate the MPS tables with the first logical CPU in each
> >>>>+ package */
> >>>>+ if ((cpuid_features& (1<< 28))&&
> >>>>+ log_cpus> 1&&
> >>>>+ ((log_cpus<= 2&& (i& 1) != 0) ||
> >>>>+ (log_cpus<= 4&& (i& 3) != 0) ||
> >>>>+ (log_cpus<= 8&& (i& 7) != 0) ||
> >>>>+ (log_cpus<= 16&& (i& 15) != 0) ||
> >>>>+ (log_cpus<= 32&& (i& 31) != 0) ||
> >>>>+ (log_cpus<= 64&& (i& 63) != 0) ||
> >>>>+ (log_cpus<= 128&& (i& 127) != 0)))
> >>>>+ continue;
> >>>>+
> >>>Isn't this the same as (i& (log_cpus - 1) != 0)?
> >>Yes, as long as log_cpus is a power of 2. But not if it's for example 3.
> >>
> >How about this:
> >
> >static inline unsigned long fls(unsigned long word)
> >{
> > asm("bsr %1,%0"
> > : "=r" (word)
> > : "rm" (word));
> > return word + 1;
> >}
> >
> >log_cpus = 1UL<< fls(atoi(log_cpus) - 1)
> >
> >(i& (log_cpus - 1) != 0)
> Why atoi? Other than that it looks correct (assuming that the inline
> asm syntax is correct which I'm not fluent in).
>
atoi because of wrong cut&paste :) Drop it. Asm is from Linux so syntax is correct.
--
Gleb.
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