On 08.07.2015 [16:16:23 -0700], Nishanth Aravamudan wrote: > On 08.07.2015 [14:00:56 +1000], Michael Ellerman wrote: > > On Thu, 2015-02-07 at 23:02:02 UTC, Nishanth Aravamudan wrote: > > > Much like on x86, now that powerpc is using USE_PERCPU_NUMA_NODE_ID, we > > > have an ordering issue during boot with early calls to cpu_to_node(). > > > > "now that .." implies we changed something and broke this. What commit was > > it that changed the behaviour? > > Well, that's something I'm trying to still unearth. In the commits > before and after adding USE_PERCPU_NUMA_NODE_ID (8c272261194d > "powerpc/numa: Enable USE_PERCPU_NUMA_NODE_ID"), the dmesg reports: > > pcpu-alloc: [0] 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Ok, I did a bisection, and it seems like prior to commit 1a4d76076cda69b0abf15463a8cebc172406da25 ("percpu: implement asynchronous chunk population"), we emitted the above, e.g.: pcpu-alloc: [0] 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 And after that commit, we emitted: pcpu-alloc: [0] 0 1 2 3 [0] 4 5 6 7 I'm not exactly sure why that changed, but I'm still reading/understanding the commit. Tejun might be able to explain. Tejun, for reference, I noticed on Power systems since the above-mentioned commit, pcpu-alloc is not reflecting the topology of the system correctly -- that is, the pcpu areas are all on node 0 unconditionally (based up on pcpu-alloc's output). Prior to that, there was just one group, it seems like, which completely ignored the NUMA topology. Is this just an ordering thing that changed with the introduction of the async code? Thanks, Nish _______________________________________________ Linuxppc-dev mailing list Linuxppc-dev@lists.ozlabs.org https://lists.ozlabs.org/listinfo/linuxppc-dev