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2 An ad-hoc collection of notes on IA64 MCA and INIT processing
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5 Feel free to update it with notes about any area that is not clear.
9 MCA/INIT are completely asynchronous. They can occur at any time, when
10 the OS is in any state. Including when one of the cpus is already
11 holding a spinlock. Trying to get any lock from MCA/INIT state is
12 asking for deadlock. Also the state of structures that are protected
13 by locks is indeterminate, including linked lists.
17 The complicated ia64 MCA process. All of this is mandated by Intel's
18 specification for ia64 SAL, error recovery and unwind, it is not as
19 if we have a choice here.
21 * MCA occurs on one cpu, usually due to a double bit memory error.
22 This is the monarch cpu.
24 * SAL sends an MCA rendezvous interrupt (which is a normal interrupt)
25 to all the other cpus, the slaves.
27 * Slave cpus that receive the MCA interrupt call down into SAL, they
28 end up spinning disabled while the MCA is being serviced.
30 * If any slave cpu was already spinning disabled when the MCA occurred
31 then it cannot service the MCA interrupt. SAL waits ~20 seconds then
32 sends an unmaskable INIT event to the slave cpus that have not
35 * Because MCA/INIT can be delivered at any time, including when the cpu
36 is down in PAL in physical mode, the registers at the time of the
37 event are _completely_ undefined. In particular the MCA/INIT
38 handlers cannot rely on the thread pointer, PAL physical mode can
39 (and does) modify TP. It is allowed to do that as long as it resets
40 TP on return. However MCA/INIT events expose us to these PAL
41 internal TP changes. Hence curr_task().
43 * If an MCA/INIT event occurs while the kernel was running (not user
44 space) and the kernel has called PAL then the MCA/INIT handler cannot
45 assume that the kernel stack is in a fit state to be used. Mainly
46 because PAL may or may not maintain the stack pointer internally.
47 Because the MCA/INIT handlers cannot trust the kernel stack, they
48 have to use their own, per-cpu stacks. The MCA/INIT stacks are
49 preformatted with just enough task state to let the relevant handlers
52 * Unlike most other architectures, the ia64 struct task is embedded in
53 the kernel stack[1]. So switching to a new kernel stack means that
54 we switch to a new task as well. Because various bits of the kernel
55 assume that current points into the struct task, switching to a new
56 stack also means a new value for current.
58 * Once all slaves have rendezvoused and are spinning disabled, the
59 monarch is entered. The monarch now tries to diagnose the problem
60 and decide if it can recover or not.
62 * Part of the monarch's job is to look at the state of all the other
63 tasks. The only way to do that on ia64 is to call the unwinder,
66 * The starting point for the unwind depends on whether a task is
67 running or not. That is, whether it is on a cpu or is blocked. The
68 monarch has to determine whether or not a task is on a cpu before it
69 knows how to start unwinding it. The tasks that received an MCA or
70 INIT event are no longer running, they have been converted to blocked
71 tasks. But (and its a big but), the cpus that received the MCA
72 rendezvous interrupt are still running on their normal kernel stacks!
74 * To distinguish between these two cases, the monarch must know which
75 tasks are on a cpu and which are not. Hence each slave cpu that
76 switches to an MCA/INIT stack, registers its new stack using
77 set_curr_task(), so the monarch can tell that the _original_ task is
78 no longer running on that cpu. That gives us a decent chance of
79 getting a valid backtrace of the _original_ task.
81 * MCA/INIT can be nested, to a depth of 2 on any cpu. In the case of a
82 nested error, we want diagnostics on the MCA/INIT handler that
83 failed, not on the task that was originally running. Again this
84 requires set_curr_task() so the MCA/INIT handlers can register their
85 own stack as running on that cpu. Then a recursive error gets a
86 trace of the failing handler's "task".
89 My (Keith Owens) original design called for ia64 to separate its
90 struct task and the kernel stacks. Then the MCA/INIT data would be
91 chained stacks like i386 interrupt stacks. But that required
92 radical surgery on the rest of ia64, plus extra hard wired TLB
93 entries with its associated performance degradation. David
94 Mosberger vetoed that approach. Which meant that separate kernel
95 stacks meant separate "tasks" for the MCA/INIT handlers.
99 INIT is less complicated than MCA. Pressing the nmi button or using
100 the equivalent command on the management console sends INIT to all
101 cpus. SAL picks one of the cpus as the monarch and the rest are
102 slaves. All the OS INIT handlers are entered at approximately the same
103 time. The OS monarch prints the state of all tasks and returns, after
104 which the slaves return and the system resumes.
106 At least that is what is supposed to happen. Alas there are broken
107 versions of SAL out there. Some drive all the cpus as monarchs. Some
108 drive them all as slaves. Some drive one cpu as monarch, wait for that
109 cpu to return from the OS then drive the rest as slaves. Some versions
110 of SAL cannot even cope with returning from the OS, they spin inside
111 SAL on resume. The OS INIT code has workarounds for some of these
112 broken SAL symptoms, but some simply cannot be fixed from the OS side.
116 The scheduler hooks used by ia64 (curr_task, set_curr_task) are layer
117 violations. Unfortunately MCA/INIT start off as massive layer
118 violations (can occur at _any_ time) and they build from there.
120 At least ia64 makes an attempt at recovering from hardware errors, but
121 it is a difficult problem because of the asynchronous nature of these
122 errors. When processing an unmaskable interrupt we sometimes need
123 special code to cope with our inability to take any locks.
127 How is ia64 MCA/INIT different from x86 NMI?
129 * x86 NMI typically gets delivered to one cpu. MCA/INIT gets sent to
132 * x86 NMI cannot be nested. MCA/INIT can be nested, to a depth of 2
135 * x86 has a separate struct task which points to one of multiple kernel
136 stacks. ia64 has the struct task embedded in the single kernel
137 stack, so switching stack means switching task.
139 * x86 does not call the BIOS so the NMI handler does not have to worry
140 about any registers having changed. MCA/INIT can occur while the cpu
141 is in PAL in physical mode, with undefined registers and an undefined
144 * i386 backtrace is not very sensitive to whether a process is running
145 or not. ia64 unwind is very, very sensitive to whether a process is
150 What happens when MCA/INIT is delivered what a cpu is running user
153 The user mode registers are stored in the RSE area of the MCA/INIT on
154 entry to the OS and are restored from there on return to SAL, so user
155 mode registers are preserved across a recoverable MCA/INIT. Since the
156 OS has no idea what unwind data is available for the user space stack,
157 MCA/INIT never tries to backtrace user space. Which means that the OS
158 does not bother making the user space process look like a blocked task,
159 i.e. the OS does not copy pt_regs and switch_stack to the user space
160 stack. Also the OS has no idea how big the user space RSE and memory
161 stacks are, which makes it too risky to copy the saved state to a user
166 How do we get a backtrace on the tasks that were running when MCA/INIT
169 mca.c:::ia64_mca_modify_original_stack(). That identifies and
170 verifies the original kernel stack, copies the dirty registers from
171 the MCA/INIT stack's RSE to the original stack's RSE, copies the
172 skeleton struct pt_regs and switch_stack to the original stack, fills
173 in the skeleton structures from the PAL minstate area and updates the
174 original stack's thread.ksp. That makes the original stack look
175 exactly like any other blocked task, i.e. it now appears to be
176 sleeping. To get a backtrace, just start with thread.ksp for the
177 original task and unwind like any other sleeping task.
181 How do we identify the tasks that were running when MCA/INIT was
184 If the previous task has been verified and converted to a blocked
185 state, then sos->prev_task on the MCA/INIT stack is updated to point to
186 the previous task. You can look at that field in dumps or debuggers.
187 To help distinguish between the handler and the original tasks,
188 handlers have _TIF_MCA_INIT set in thread_info.flags.
190 The sos data is always in the MCA/INIT handler stack, at offset
191 MCA_SOS_OFFSET. You can get that value from mca_asm.h or calculate it
192 as KERNEL_STACK_SIZE - sizeof(struct pt_regs) - sizeof(struct
193 ia64_sal_os_state), with 16 byte alignment for all structures.
195 Also the comm field of the MCA/INIT task is modified to include the pid
196 of the original task, for humans to use. For example, a comm field of
197 'MCA 12159' means that pid 12159 was running when the MCA was