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authorThomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de>2024-05-17 17:40:36 +0300
committerGreg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>2024-06-12 12:39:57 +0300
commit268ea2acacf01c1be3f0ba002df8b216d7b7d8ae (patch)
tree0ce628a8a5abd90af22f617b9d8fcfa6f362f746
parent6ca67a5fe1c606d1fbe24c30a9fc0bdc43a18554 (diff)
downloadlinux-268ea2acacf01c1be3f0ba002df8b216d7b7d8ae.tar.xz
x86/topology: Handle bogus ACPI tables correctly
commit 9d22c96316ac59ed38e80920c698fed38717b91b upstream. The ACPI specification clearly states how the processors should be enumerated in the MADT: "To ensure that the boot processor is supported post initialization, two guidelines should be followed. The first is that OSPM should initialize processors in the order that they appear in the MADT. The second is that platform firmware should list the boot processor as the first processor entry in the MADT. ... Failure of OSPM implementations and platform firmware to abide by these guidelines can result in both unpredictable and non optimal platform operation." The kernel relies on that ordering to detect the real BSP on crash kernels which is important to avoid sending a INIT IPI to it as that would cause a full machine reset. On a Dell XPS 16 9640 the BIOS ignores this rule and enumerates the CPUs in the wrong order. As a consequence the kernel falsely detects a crash kernel and disables the corresponding CPU. Prevent this by checking the IA32_APICBASE MSR for the BSP bit on the boot CPU. If that bit is set, then the MADT based BSP detection can be safely ignored. If the kernel detects a mismatch between the BSP bit and the first enumerated MADT entry then emit a firmware bug message. This obviously also has to be taken into account when the boot APIC ID and the first enumerated APIC ID match. If the boot CPU does not have the BSP bit set in the APICBASE MSR then there is no way for the boot CPU to determine which of the CPUs is the real BSP. Sending an INIT to the real BSP would reset the machine so the only sane way to deal with that is to limit the number of CPUs to one and emit a corresponding warning message. Fixes: 5c5682b9f87a ("x86/cpu: Detect real BSP on crash kernels") Reported-by: Carsten Tolkmit <ctolkmit@ennit.de> Signed-off-by: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de> Tested-by: Carsten Tolkmit <ctolkmit@ennit.de> Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/87le48jycb.ffs@tglx Closes: https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=218837 Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
-rw-r--r--arch/x86/kernel/cpu/topology.c53
1 files changed, 50 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/arch/x86/kernel/cpu/topology.c b/arch/x86/kernel/cpu/topology.c
index d17c9b71eb4a..621a151ccf7d 100644
--- a/arch/x86/kernel/cpu/topology.c
+++ b/arch/x86/kernel/cpu/topology.c
@@ -128,6 +128,9 @@ static void topo_set_cpuids(unsigned int cpu, u32 apic_id, u32 acpi_id)
static __init bool check_for_real_bsp(u32 apic_id)
{
+ bool is_bsp = false, has_apic_base = boot_cpu_data.x86 >= 6;
+ u64 msr;
+
/*
* There is no real good way to detect whether this a kdump()
* kernel, but except on the Voyager SMP monstrosity which is not
@@ -144,17 +147,61 @@ static __init bool check_for_real_bsp(u32 apic_id)
if (topo_info.real_bsp_apic_id != BAD_APICID)
return false;
+ /*
+ * Check whether the enumeration order is broken by evaluating the
+ * BSP bit in the APICBASE MSR. If the CPU does not have the
+ * APICBASE MSR then the BSP detection is not possible and the
+ * kernel must rely on the firmware enumeration order.
+ */
+ if (has_apic_base) {
+ rdmsrl(MSR_IA32_APICBASE, msr);
+ is_bsp = !!(msr & MSR_IA32_APICBASE_BSP);
+ }
+
if (apic_id == topo_info.boot_cpu_apic_id) {
- topo_info.real_bsp_apic_id = apic_id;
- return false;
+ /*
+ * If the boot CPU has the APIC BSP bit set then the
+ * firmware enumeration is agreeing. If the CPU does not
+ * have the APICBASE MSR then the only choice is to trust
+ * the enumeration order.
+ */
+ if (is_bsp || !has_apic_base) {
+ topo_info.real_bsp_apic_id = apic_id;
+ return false;
+ }
+ /*
+ * If the boot APIC is enumerated first, but the APICBASE
+ * MSR does not have the BSP bit set, then there is no way
+ * to discover the real BSP here. Assume a crash kernel and
+ * limit the number of CPUs to 1 as an INIT to the real BSP
+ * would reset the machine.
+ */
+ pr_warn("Enumerated BSP APIC %x is not marked in APICBASE MSR\n", apic_id);
+ pr_warn("Assuming crash kernel. Limiting to one CPU to prevent machine INIT\n");
+ set_nr_cpu_ids(1);
+ goto fwbug;
}
- pr_warn("Boot CPU APIC ID not the first enumerated APIC ID: %x > %x\n",
+ pr_warn("Boot CPU APIC ID not the first enumerated APIC ID: %x != %x\n",
topo_info.boot_cpu_apic_id, apic_id);
+
+ if (is_bsp) {
+ /*
+ * The boot CPU has the APIC BSP bit set. Use it and complain
+ * about the broken firmware enumeration.
+ */
+ topo_info.real_bsp_apic_id = topo_info.boot_cpu_apic_id;
+ goto fwbug;
+ }
+
pr_warn("Crash kernel detected. Disabling real BSP to prevent machine INIT\n");
topo_info.real_bsp_apic_id = apic_id;
return true;
+
+fwbug:
+ pr_warn(FW_BUG "APIC enumeration order not specification compliant\n");
+ return false;
}
static unsigned int topo_unit_count(u32 lvlid, enum x86_topology_domains at_level,