were done at i7core_edac driver. This chapter will cover those differences
1) On Nehalem, there are one Memory Controller per Quick Patch Interconnect
- (QPI). At the driver, the term "socket" means one QPI. It should also be
- associated with the CPU physical socket.
+ (QPI). At the driver, the term "socket" means one QPI. This is
+ associated with a physical CPU socket.
Each MC have 3 physical read channels, 3 physical write channels and
3 logic channels. The driver currenty sees it as just 3 channels.
Each channel can have up to 3 DIMMs.
The minimum known unity is DIMMs. There are no information about csrows.
- As EDAC API maps the minimum unity is csrows, the driver exports one
+ As EDAC API maps the minimum unity is csrows, the driver sequencially
+ maps channel/dimm into different csrows.
+
+ For example, suposing the following layout:
+ Ch0 phy rd0, wr0 (0x063f4031): 2 ranks, UDIMMs
+ dimm 0 1024 Mb offset: 0, bank: 8, rank: 1, row: 0x4000, col: 0x400
+ dimm 1 1024 Mb offset: 4, bank: 8, rank: 1, row: 0x4000, col: 0x400
+ Ch1 phy rd1, wr1 (0x063f4031): 2 ranks, UDIMMs
+ dimm 0 1024 Mb offset: 0, bank: 8, rank: 1, row: 0x4000, col: 0x400
+ Ch2 phy rd3, wr3 (0x063f4031): 2 ranks, UDIMMs
+ dimm 0 1024 Mb offset: 0, bank: 8, rank: 1, row: 0x4000, col: 0x400
+ The driver will map it as:
+ csrow0: channel 0, dimm0
+ csrow1: channel 0, dimm1
+ csrow2: channel 1, dimm0
+ csrow3: channel 2, dimm0
+
+exports one
DIMM per csrow.
- Currently, it also exports the several memory controllers as just one. This
- limit will be removed on future versions of the driver.
+ Each QPI is exported as a different memory controller.
2) Nehalem MC has the hability to generate errors. The driver implements this
functionality via some error injection nodes:
For injecting a memory error, there are some sysfs nodes, under
- /sys/devices/system/edac/mc/mc0/:
+ /sys/devices/system/edac/mc/mc?/:
inject_addrmatch:
Controls the error injection mask register. It is possible to specify
2 for the highest
1 for the lowest
- inject_socket:
- specifies what QPI (or processor socket) will generate the error.
- on Xeon 35xx, it should be 0.
- on Xeon 55xx, it should be 0 or 1.
-
inject_type:
specifies the type of error, being a combination of the following bits:
bit 0 - repeat
echo 2 >/sys/devices/system/edac/mc/mc0/inject_type
echo 64 >/sys/devices/system/edac/mc/mc0/inject_eccmask
echo 3 >/sys/devices/system/edac/mc/mc0/inject_section
- echo 0 >/sys/devices/system/edac/mc/mc0/inject_socket
echo 1 >/sys/devices/system/edac/mc/mc0/inject_enable
dd if=/dev/mem of=/dev/null seek=16k bs=4k count=1 >& /dev/null
+ For socket 1, it is needed to replace "mc0" by "mc1" at the above
+ commands.
+
The generated error message will look like:
EDAC MC0: UE row 0, channel-a= 0 channel-b= 0 labels "-": NON_FATAL (addr = 0x0075b980, socket=0, Dimm=0, Channel=2, syndrome=0x00000040, count=1, Err=8c0000400001009f:4000080482 (read error: read ECC error))
separate sysfs note were created to handle such counters.
They can be read by looking at the contents of "corrected_error_counts"
- counter:
+ counter. Due to hardware limits, the output is different on machines
+ with unregistered memories and machines with registered ones.
+
+ With unregistered memories, it outputs:
$ cat /sys/devices/system/edac/mc/mc0/corrected_error_counts
- dimm0: 15866
- dimm1: 0
- dimm2: 27285
+ all channels UDIMM0: 0 UDIMM1: 0 UDIMM2: 0
+
+ What happens here is that errors on different csrows, but at the same
+ dimm number will increment the same counter.
+ So, in this memory mapping:
+ csrow0: channel 0, dimm0
+ csrow1: channel 0, dimm1
+ csrow2: channel 1, dimm0
+ csrow3: channel 2, dimm0
+ The hardware will increment UDIMM0 for an error at either csrow0, csrow2
+ or csrow3.
+
+ With registered memories, it outputs:
+
+ $cat /sys/devices/system/edac/mc/mc0/corrected_error_counts
+ channel 0 RDIMM0: 0 RDIMM1: 0 RDIMM2: 0
+ channel 1 RDIMM0: 0 RDIMM1: 0 RDIMM2: 0
+ channel 2 RDIMM0: 0 RDIMM1: 0 RDIMM2: 0
+
+ So, with registered memories, there's a direct map between a csrow and a
+ counter.
+
+4) Standard error counters
+
+ The standard error counters are generated when an mcelog error is received
+ by the driver. Since it is counted by software, it is possible that some
+ errors could be lost.