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1 =========================
2 CPU hotplug in the Kernel
3 =========================
4
5 :Date: September, 2021
6 :Author: Sebastian Andrzej Siewior <bigeasy@linutronix.de>,
7 Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>,
8 Srivatsa Vaddagiri <vatsa@in.ibm.com>,
9 Ashok Raj <ashok.raj@intel.com>,
10 Joel Schopp <jschopp@austin.ibm.com>,
11 Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de>
12
13 Introduction
14 ============
15
16 Modern advances in system architectures have introduced advanced error
17 reporting and correction capabilities in processors. There are couple OEMS that
18 support NUMA hardware which are hot pluggable as well, where physical node
19 insertion and removal require support for CPU hotplug.
20
21 Such advances require CPUs available to a kernel to be removed either for
22 provisioning reasons, or for RAS purposes to keep an offending CPU off
23 system execution path. Hence the need for CPU hotplug support in the
24 Linux kernel.
25
26 A more novel use of CPU-hotplug support is its use today in suspend resume
27 support for SMP. Dual-core and HT support makes even a laptop run SMP kernels
28 which didn't support these methods.
29
30
31 Command Line Switches
32 =====================
33 ``maxcpus=n``
34 Restrict boot time CPUs to *n*. Say if you have four CPUs, using
35 ``maxcpus=2`` will only boot two. You can choose to bring the
36 other CPUs later online.
37
38 ``nr_cpus=n``
39 Restrict the total amount of CPUs the kernel will support. If the number
40 supplied here is lower than the number of physically available CPUs, then
41 those CPUs can not be brought online later.
42
43 ``additional_cpus=n``
44 Use this to limit hotpluggable CPUs. This option sets
45 ``cpu_possible_mask = cpu_present_mask + additional_cpus``
46
47 This option is limited to the IA64 architecture.
48
49 ``possible_cpus=n``
50 This option sets ``possible_cpus`` bits in ``cpu_possible_mask``.
51
52 This option is limited to the X86 and S390 architecture.
53
54 ``cpu0_hotplug``
55 Allow to shutdown CPU0.
56
57 This option is limited to the X86 architecture.
58
59 CPU maps
60 ========
61
62 ``cpu_possible_mask``
63 Bitmap of possible CPUs that can ever be available in the
64 system. This is used to allocate some boot time memory for per_cpu variables
65 that aren't designed to grow/shrink as CPUs are made available or removed.
66 Once set during boot time discovery phase, the map is static, i.e no bits
67 are added or removed anytime. Trimming it accurately for your system needs
68 upfront can save some boot time memory.
69
70 ``cpu_online_mask``
71 Bitmap of all CPUs currently online. Its set in ``__cpu_up()``
72 after a CPU is available for kernel scheduling and ready to receive
73 interrupts from devices. Its cleared when a CPU is brought down using
74 ``__cpu_disable()``, before which all OS services including interrupts are
75 migrated to another target CPU.
76
77 ``cpu_present_mask``
78 Bitmap of CPUs currently present in the system. Not all
79 of them may be online. When physical hotplug is processed by the relevant
80 subsystem (e.g ACPI) can change and new bit either be added or removed
81 from the map depending on the event is hot-add/hot-remove. There are currently
82 no locking rules as of now. Typical usage is to init topology during boot,
83 at which time hotplug is disabled.
84
85 You really don't need to manipulate any of the system CPU maps. They should
86 be read-only for most use. When setting up per-cpu resources almost always use
87 ``cpu_possible_mask`` or ``for_each_possible_cpu()`` to iterate. To macro
88 ``for_each_cpu()`` can be used to iterate over a custom CPU mask.
89
90 Never use anything other than ``cpumask_t`` to represent bitmap of CPUs.
91
92
93 Using CPU hotplug
94 =================
95
96 The kernel option *CONFIG_HOTPLUG_CPU* needs to be enabled. It is currently
97 available on multiple architectures including ARM, MIPS, PowerPC and X86. The
98 configuration is done via the sysfs interface::
99
100 $ ls -lh /sys/devices/system/cpu
101 total 0
102 drwxr-xr-x 9 root root 0 Dec 21 16:33 cpu0
103 drwxr-xr-x 9 root root 0 Dec 21 16:33 cpu1
104 drwxr-xr-x 9 root root 0 Dec 21 16:33 cpu2
105 drwxr-xr-x 9 root root 0 Dec 21 16:33 cpu3
106 drwxr-xr-x 9 root root 0 Dec 21 16:33 cpu4
107 drwxr-xr-x 9 root root 0 Dec 21 16:33 cpu5
108 drwxr-xr-x 9 root root 0 Dec 21 16:33 cpu6
109 drwxr-xr-x 9 root root 0 Dec 21 16:33 cpu7
110 drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 0 Dec 21 16:33 hotplug
111 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 4.0K Dec 21 16:33 offline
112 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 4.0K Dec 21 16:33 online
113 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 4.0K Dec 21 16:33 possible
114 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 4.0K Dec 21 16:33 present
115
116 The files *offline*, *online*, *possible*, *present* represent the CPU masks.
117 Each CPU folder contains an *online* file which controls the logical on (1) and
118 off (0) state. To logically shutdown CPU4::
119
120 $ echo 0 > /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu4/online
121 smpboot: CPU 4 is now offline
122
123 Once the CPU is shutdown, it will be removed from */proc/interrupts*,
124 */proc/cpuinfo* and should also not be shown visible by the *top* command. To
125 bring CPU4 back online::
126
127 $ echo 1 > /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu4/online
128 smpboot: Booting Node 0 Processor 4 APIC 0x1
129
130 The CPU is usable again. This should work on all CPUs. CPU0 is often special
131 and excluded from CPU hotplug. On X86 the kernel option
132 *CONFIG_BOOTPARAM_HOTPLUG_CPU0* has to be enabled in order to be able to
133 shutdown CPU0. Alternatively the kernel command option *cpu0_hotplug* can be
134 used. Some known dependencies of CPU0:
135
136 * Resume from hibernate/suspend. Hibernate/suspend will fail if CPU0 is offline.
137 * PIC interrupts. CPU0 can't be removed if a PIC interrupt is detected.
138
139 Please let Fenghua Yu <fenghua.yu@intel.com> know if you find any dependencies
140 on CPU0.
141
142 The CPU hotplug coordination
143 ============================
144
145 The offline case
146 ----------------
147
148 Once a CPU has been logically shutdown the teardown callbacks of registered
149 hotplug states will be invoked, starting with ``CPUHP_ONLINE`` and terminating
150 at state ``CPUHP_OFFLINE``. This includes:
151
152 * If tasks are frozen due to a suspend operation then *cpuhp_tasks_frozen*
153 will be set to true.
154 * All processes are migrated away from this outgoing CPU to new CPUs.
155 The new CPU is chosen from each process' current cpuset, which may be
156 a subset of all online CPUs.
157 * All interrupts targeted to this CPU are migrated to a new CPU
158 * timers are also migrated to a new CPU
159 * Once all services are migrated, kernel calls an arch specific routine
160 ``__cpu_disable()`` to perform arch specific cleanup.
161
162
163 The CPU hotplug API
164 ===================
165
166 CPU hotplug state machine
167 -------------------------
168
169 CPU hotplug uses a trivial state machine with a linear state space from
170 CPUHP_OFFLINE to CPUHP_ONLINE. Each state has a startup and a teardown
171 callback.
172
173 When a CPU is onlined, the startup callbacks are invoked sequentially until
174 the state CPUHP_ONLINE is reached. They can also be invoked when the
175 callbacks of a state are set up or an instance is added to a multi-instance
176 state.
177
178 When a CPU is offlined the teardown callbacks are invoked in the reverse
179 order sequentially until the state CPUHP_OFFLINE is reached. They can also
180 be invoked when the callbacks of a state are removed or an instance is
181 removed from a multi-instance state.
182
183 If a usage site requires only a callback in one direction of the hotplug
184 operations (CPU online or CPU offline) then the other not-required callback
185 can be set to NULL when the state is set up.
186
187 The state space is divided into three sections:
188
189 * The PREPARE section
190
191 The PREPARE section covers the state space from CPUHP_OFFLINE to
192 CPUHP_BRINGUP_CPU.
193
194 The startup callbacks in this section are invoked before the CPU is
195 started during a CPU online operation. The teardown callbacks are invoked
196 after the CPU has become dysfunctional during a CPU offline operation.
197
198 The callbacks are invoked on a control CPU as they can't obviously run on
199 the hotplugged CPU which is either not yet started or has become
200 dysfunctional already.
201
202 The startup callbacks are used to setup resources which are required to
203 bring a CPU successfully online. The teardown callbacks are used to free
204 resources or to move pending work to an online CPU after the hotplugged
205 CPU became dysfunctional.
206
207 The startup callbacks are allowed to fail. If a callback fails, the CPU
208 online operation is aborted and the CPU is brought down to the previous
209 state (usually CPUHP_OFFLINE) again.
210
211 The teardown callbacks in this section are not allowed to fail.
212
213 * The STARTING section
214
215 The STARTING section covers the state space between CPUHP_BRINGUP_CPU + 1
216 and CPUHP_AP_ONLINE.
217
218 The startup callbacks in this section are invoked on the hotplugged CPU
219 with interrupts disabled during a CPU online operation in the early CPU
220 setup code. The teardown callbacks are invoked with interrupts disabled
221 on the hotplugged CPU during a CPU offline operation shortly before the
222 CPU is completely shut down.
223
224 The callbacks in this section are not allowed to fail.
225
226 The callbacks are used for low level hardware initialization/shutdown and
227 for core subsystems.
228
229 * The ONLINE section
230
231 The ONLINE section covers the state space between CPUHP_AP_ONLINE + 1 and
232 CPUHP_ONLINE.
233
234 The startup callbacks in this section are invoked on the hotplugged CPU
235 during a CPU online operation. The teardown callbacks are invoked on the
236 hotplugged CPU during a CPU offline operation.
237
238 The callbacks are invoked in the context of the per CPU hotplug thread,
239 which is pinned on the hotplugged CPU. The callbacks are invoked with
240 interrupts and preemption enabled.
241
242 The callbacks are allowed to fail. When a callback fails the hotplug
243 operation is aborted and the CPU is brought back to the previous state.
244
245 CPU online/offline operations
246 -----------------------------
247
248 A successful online operation looks like this::
249
250 [CPUHP_OFFLINE]
251 [CPUHP_OFFLINE + 1]->startup() -> success
252 [CPUHP_OFFLINE + 2]->startup() -> success
253 [CPUHP_OFFLINE + 3] -> skipped because startup == NULL
254 ...
255 [CPUHP_BRINGUP_CPU]->startup() -> success
256 === End of PREPARE section
257 [CPUHP_BRINGUP_CPU + 1]->startup() -> success
258 ...
259 [CPUHP_AP_ONLINE]->startup() -> success
260 === End of STARTUP section
261 [CPUHP_AP_ONLINE + 1]->startup() -> success
262 ...
263 [CPUHP_ONLINE - 1]->startup() -> success
264 [CPUHP_ONLINE]
265
266 A successful offline operation looks like this::
267
268 [CPUHP_ONLINE]
269 [CPUHP_ONLINE - 1]->teardown() -> success
270 ...
271 [CPUHP_AP_ONLINE + 1]->teardown() -> success
272 === Start of STARTUP section
273 [CPUHP_AP_ONLINE]->teardown() -> success
274 ...
275 [CPUHP_BRINGUP_ONLINE - 1]->teardown()
276 ...
277 === Start of PREPARE section
278 [CPUHP_BRINGUP_CPU]->teardown()
279 [CPUHP_OFFLINE + 3]->teardown()
280 [CPUHP_OFFLINE + 2] -> skipped because teardown == NULL
281 [CPUHP_OFFLINE + 1]->teardown()
282 [CPUHP_OFFLINE]
283
284 A failed online operation looks like this::
285
286 [CPUHP_OFFLINE]
287 [CPUHP_OFFLINE + 1]->startup() -> success
288 [CPUHP_OFFLINE + 2]->startup() -> success
289 [CPUHP_OFFLINE + 3] -> skipped because startup == NULL
290 ...
291 [CPUHP_BRINGUP_CPU]->startup() -> success
292 === End of PREPARE section
293 [CPUHP_BRINGUP_CPU + 1]->startup() -> success
294 ...
295 [CPUHP_AP_ONLINE]->startup() -> success
296 === End of STARTUP section
297 [CPUHP_AP_ONLINE + 1]->startup() -> success
298 ---
299 [CPUHP_AP_ONLINE + N]->startup() -> fail
300 [CPUHP_AP_ONLINE + (N - 1)]->teardown()
301 ...
302 [CPUHP_AP_ONLINE + 1]->teardown()
303 === Start of STARTUP section
304 [CPUHP_AP_ONLINE]->teardown()
305 ...
306 [CPUHP_BRINGUP_ONLINE - 1]->teardown()
307 ...
308 === Start of PREPARE section
309 [CPUHP_BRINGUP_CPU]->teardown()
310 [CPUHP_OFFLINE + 3]->teardown()
311 [CPUHP_OFFLINE + 2] -> skipped because teardown == NULL
312 [CPUHP_OFFLINE + 1]->teardown()
313 [CPUHP_OFFLINE]
314
315 A failed offline operation looks like this::
316
317 [CPUHP_ONLINE]
318 [CPUHP_ONLINE - 1]->teardown() -> success
319 ...
320 [CPUHP_ONLINE - N]->teardown() -> fail
321 [CPUHP_ONLINE - (N - 1)]->startup()
322 ...
323 [CPUHP_ONLINE - 1]->startup()
324 [CPUHP_ONLINE]
325
326 Recursive failures cannot be handled sensibly. Look at the following
327 example of a recursive fail due to a failed offline operation: ::
328
329 [CPUHP_ONLINE]
330 [CPUHP_ONLINE - 1]->teardown() -> success
331 ...
332 [CPUHP_ONLINE - N]->teardown() -> fail
333 [CPUHP_ONLINE - (N - 1)]->startup() -> success
334 [CPUHP_ONLINE - (N - 2)]->startup() -> fail
335
336 The CPU hotplug state machine stops right here and does not try to go back
337 down again because that would likely result in an endless loop::
338
339 [CPUHP_ONLINE - (N - 1)]->teardown() -> success
340 [CPUHP_ONLINE - N]->teardown() -> fail
341 [CPUHP_ONLINE - (N - 1)]->startup() -> success
342 [CPUHP_ONLINE - (N - 2)]->startup() -> fail
343 [CPUHP_ONLINE - (N - 1)]->teardown() -> success
344 [CPUHP_ONLINE - N]->teardown() -> fail
345
346 Lather, rinse and repeat. In this case the CPU left in state::
347
348 [CPUHP_ONLINE - (N - 1)]
349
350 which at least lets the system make progress and gives the user a chance to
351 debug or even resolve the situation.
352
353 Allocating a state
354 ------------------
355
356 There are two ways to allocate a CPU hotplug state:
357
358 * Static allocation
359
360 Static allocation has to be used when the subsystem or driver has
361 ordering requirements versus other CPU hotplug states. E.g. the PERF core
362 startup callback has to be invoked before the PERF driver startup
363 callbacks during a CPU online operation. During a CPU offline operation
364 the driver teardown callbacks have to be invoked before the core teardown
365 callback. The statically allocated states are described by constants in
366 the cpuhp_state enum which can be found in include/linux/cpuhotplug.h.
367
368 Insert the state into the enum at the proper place so the ordering
369 requirements are fulfilled. The state constant has to be used for state
370 setup and removal.
371
372 Static allocation is also required when the state callbacks are not set
373 up at runtime and are part of the initializer of the CPU hotplug state
374 array in kernel/cpu.c.
375
376 * Dynamic allocation
377
378 When there are no ordering requirements for the state callbacks then
379 dynamic allocation is the preferred method. The state number is allocated
380 by the setup function and returned to the caller on success.
381
382 Only the PREPARE and ONLINE sections provide a dynamic allocation
383 range. The STARTING section does not as most of the callbacks in that
384 section have explicit ordering requirements.
385
386 Setup of a CPU hotplug state
387 ----------------------------
388
389 The core code provides the following functions to setup a state:
390
391 * cpuhp_setup_state(state, name, startup, teardown)
392 * cpuhp_setup_state_nocalls(state, name, startup, teardown)
393 * cpuhp_setup_state_cpuslocked(state, name, startup, teardown)
394 * cpuhp_setup_state_nocalls_cpuslocked(state, name, startup, teardown)
395
396 For cases where a driver or a subsystem has multiple instances and the same
397 CPU hotplug state callbacks need to be invoked for each instance, the CPU
398 hotplug core provides multi-instance support. The advantage over driver
399 specific instance lists is that the instance related functions are fully
400 serialized against CPU hotplug operations and provide the automatic
401 invocations of the state callbacks on add and removal. To set up such a
402 multi-instance state the following function is available:
403
404 * cpuhp_setup_state_multi(state, name, startup, teardown)
405
406 The @state argument is either a statically allocated state or one of the
407 constants for dynamically allocated states - CPUHP_PREPARE_DYN,
408 CPUHP_ONLINE_DYN - depending on the state section (PREPARE, ONLINE) for
409 which a dynamic state should be allocated.
410
411 The @name argument is used for sysfs output and for instrumentation. The
412 naming convention is "subsys:mode" or "subsys/driver:mode",
413 e.g. "perf:mode" or "perf/x86:mode". The common mode names are:
414
415 ======== =======================================================
416 prepare For states in the PREPARE section
417
418 dead For states in the PREPARE section which do not provide
419 a startup callback
420
421 starting For states in the STARTING section
422
423 dying For states in the STARTING section which do not provide
424 a startup callback
425
426 online For states in the ONLINE section
427
428 offline For states in the ONLINE section which do not provide
429 a startup callback
430 ======== =======================================================
431
432 As the @name argument is only used for sysfs and instrumentation other mode
433 descriptors can be used as well if they describe the nature of the state
434 better than the common ones.
435
436 Examples for @name arguments: "perf/online", "perf/x86:prepare",
437 "RCU/tree:dying", "sched/waitempty"
438
439 The @startup argument is a function pointer to the callback which should be
440 invoked during a CPU online operation. If the usage site does not require a
441 startup callback set the pointer to NULL.
442
443 The @teardown argument is a function pointer to the callback which should
444 be invoked during a CPU offline operation. If the usage site does not
445 require a teardown callback set the pointer to NULL.
446
447 The functions differ in the way how the installed callbacks are treated:
448
449 * cpuhp_setup_state_nocalls(), cpuhp_setup_state_nocalls_cpuslocked()
450 and cpuhp_setup_state_multi() only install the callbacks
451
452 * cpuhp_setup_state() and cpuhp_setup_state_cpuslocked() install the
453 callbacks and invoke the @startup callback (if not NULL) for all online
454 CPUs which have currently a state greater than the newly installed
455 state. Depending on the state section the callback is either invoked on
456 the current CPU (PREPARE section) or on each online CPU (ONLINE
457 section) in the context of the CPU's hotplug thread.
458
459 If a callback fails for CPU N then the teardown callback for CPU
460 0 .. N-1 is invoked to rollback the operation. The state setup fails,
461 the callbacks for the state are not installed and in case of dynamic
462 allocation the allocated state is freed.
463
464 The state setup and the callback invocations are serialized against CPU
465 hotplug operations. If the setup function has to be called from a CPU
466 hotplug read locked region, then the _cpuslocked() variants have to be
467 used. These functions cannot be used from within CPU hotplug callbacks.
468
469 The function return values:
470 ======== ===================================================================
471 0 Statically allocated state was successfully set up
472
473 >0 Dynamically allocated state was successfully set up.
474
475 The returned number is the state number which was allocated. If
476 the state callbacks have to be removed later, e.g. module
477 removal, then this number has to be saved by the caller and used
478 as @state argument for the state remove function. For
479 multi-instance states the dynamically allocated state number is
480 also required as @state argument for the instance add/remove
481 operations.
482
483 <0 Operation failed
484 ======== ===================================================================
485
486 Removal of a CPU hotplug state
487 ------------------------------
488
489 To remove a previously set up state, the following functions are provided:
490
491 * cpuhp_remove_state(state)
492 * cpuhp_remove_state_nocalls(state)
493 * cpuhp_remove_state_nocalls_cpuslocked(state)
494 * cpuhp_remove_multi_state(state)
495
496 The @state argument is either a statically allocated state or the state
497 number which was allocated in the dynamic range by cpuhp_setup_state*(). If
498 the state is in the dynamic range, then the state number is freed and
499 available for dynamic allocation again.
500
501 The functions differ in the way how the installed callbacks are treated:
502
503 * cpuhp_remove_state_nocalls(), cpuhp_remove_state_nocalls_cpuslocked()
504 and cpuhp_remove_multi_state() only remove the callbacks.
505
506 * cpuhp_remove_state() removes the callbacks and invokes the teardown
507 callback (if not NULL) for all online CPUs which have currently a state
508 greater than the removed state. Depending on the state section the
509 callback is either invoked on the current CPU (PREPARE section) or on
510 each online CPU (ONLINE section) in the context of the CPU's hotplug
511 thread.
512
513 In order to complete the removal, the teardown callback should not fail.
514
515 The state removal and the callback invocations are serialized against CPU
516 hotplug operations. If the remove function has to be called from a CPU
517 hotplug read locked region, then the _cpuslocked() variants have to be
518 used. These functions cannot be used from within CPU hotplug callbacks.
519
520 If a multi-instance state is removed then the caller has to remove all
521 instances first.
522
523 Multi-Instance state instance management
524 ----------------------------------------
525
526 Once the multi-instance state is set up, instances can be added to the
527 state:
528
529 * cpuhp_state_add_instance(state, node)
530 * cpuhp_state_add_instance_nocalls(state, node)
531
532 The @state argument is either a statically allocated state or the state
533 number which was allocated in the dynamic range by cpuhp_setup_state_multi().
534
535 The @node argument is a pointer to an hlist_node which is embedded in the
536 instance's data structure. The pointer is handed to the multi-instance
537 state callbacks and can be used by the callback to retrieve the instance
538 via container_of().
539
540 The functions differ in the way how the installed callbacks are treated:
541
542 * cpuhp_state_add_instance_nocalls() and only adds the instance to the
543 multi-instance state's node list.
544
545 * cpuhp_state_add_instance() adds the instance and invokes the startup
546 callback (if not NULL) associated with @state for all online CPUs which
547 have currently a state greater than @state. The callback is only
548 invoked for the to be added instance. Depending on the state section
549 the callback is either invoked on the current CPU (PREPARE section) or
550 on each online CPU (ONLINE section) in the context of the CPU's hotplug
551 thread.
552
553 If a callback fails for CPU N then the teardown callback for CPU
554 0 .. N-1 is invoked to rollback the operation, the function fails and
555 the instance is not added to the node list of the multi-instance state.
556
557 To remove an instance from the state's node list these functions are
558 available:
559
560 * cpuhp_state_remove_instance(state, node)
561 * cpuhp_state_remove_instance_nocalls(state, node)
562
563 The arguments are the same as for the the cpuhp_state_add_instance*()
564 variants above.
565
566 The functions differ in the way how the installed callbacks are treated:
567
568 * cpuhp_state_remove_instance_nocalls() only removes the instance from the
569 state's node list.
570
571 * cpuhp_state_remove_instance() removes the instance and invokes the
572 teardown callback (if not NULL) associated with @state for all online
573 CPUs which have currently a state greater than @state. The callback is
574 only invoked for the to be removed instance. Depending on the state
575 section the callback is either invoked on the current CPU (PREPARE
576 section) or on each online CPU (ONLINE section) in the context of the
577 CPU's hotplug thread.
578
579 In order to complete the removal, the teardown callback should not fail.
580
581 The node list add/remove operations and the callback invocations are
582 serialized against CPU hotplug operations. These functions cannot be used
583 from within CPU hotplug callbacks and CPU hotplug read locked regions.
584
585 Examples
586 --------
587
588 Setup and teardown a statically allocated state in the STARTING section for
589 notifications on online and offline operations::
590
591 ret = cpuhp_setup_state(CPUHP_SUBSYS_STARTING, "subsys:starting", subsys_cpu_starting, subsys_cpu_dying);
592 if (ret < 0)
593 return ret;
594 ....
595 cpuhp_remove_state(CPUHP_SUBSYS_STARTING);
596
597 Setup and teardown a dynamically allocated state in the ONLINE section
598 for notifications on offline operations::
599
600 state = cpuhp_setup_state(CPUHP_ONLINE_DYN, "subsys:offline", NULL, subsys_cpu_offline);
601 if (state < 0)
602 return state;
603 ....
604 cpuhp_remove_state(state);
605
606 Setup and teardown a dynamically allocated state in the ONLINE section
607 for notifications on online operations without invoking the callbacks::
608
609 state = cpuhp_setup_state_nocalls(CPUHP_ONLINE_DYN, "subsys:online", subsys_cpu_online, NULL);
610 if (state < 0)
611 return state;
612 ....
613 cpuhp_remove_state_nocalls(state);
614
615 Setup, use and teardown a dynamically allocated multi-instance state in the
616 ONLINE section for notifications on online and offline operation::
617
618 state = cpuhp_setup_state_multi(CPUHP_ONLINE_DYN, "subsys:online", subsys_cpu_online, subsys_cpu_offline);
619 if (state < 0)
620 return state;
621 ....
622 ret = cpuhp_state_add_instance(state, &inst1->node);
623 if (ret)
624 return ret;
625 ....
626 ret = cpuhp_state_add_instance(state, &inst2->node);
627 if (ret)
628 return ret;
629 ....
630 cpuhp_remove_instance(state, &inst1->node);
631 ....
632 cpuhp_remove_instance(state, &inst2->node);
633 ....
634 remove_multi_state(state);
635
636
637 Testing of hotplug states
638 =========================
639
640 One way to verify whether a custom state is working as expected or not is to
641 shutdown a CPU and then put it online again. It is also possible to put the CPU
642 to certain state (for instance *CPUHP_AP_ONLINE*) and then go back to
643 *CPUHP_ONLINE*. This would simulate an error one state after *CPUHP_AP_ONLINE*
644 which would lead to rollback to the online state.
645
646 All registered states are enumerated in ``/sys/devices/system/cpu/hotplug/states`` ::
647
648 $ tail /sys/devices/system/cpu/hotplug/states
649 138: mm/vmscan:online
650 139: mm/vmstat:online
651 140: lib/percpu_cnt:online
652 141: acpi/cpu-drv:online
653 142: base/cacheinfo:online
654 143: virtio/net:online
655 144: x86/mce:online
656 145: printk:online
657 168: sched:active
658 169: online
659
660 To rollback CPU4 to ``lib/percpu_cnt:online`` and back online just issue::
661
662 $ cat /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu4/hotplug/state
663 169
664 $ echo 140 > /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu4/hotplug/target
665 $ cat /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu4/hotplug/state
666 140
667
668 It is important to note that the teardown callback of state 140 have been
669 invoked. And now get back online::
670
671 $ echo 169 > /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu4/hotplug/target
672 $ cat /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu4/hotplug/state
673 169
674
675 With trace events enabled, the individual steps are visible, too::
676
677 # TASK-PID CPU# TIMESTAMP FUNCTION
678 # | | | | |
679 bash-394 [001] 22.976: cpuhp_enter: cpu: 0004 target: 140 step: 169 (cpuhp_kick_ap_work)
680 cpuhp/4-31 [004] 22.977: cpuhp_enter: cpu: 0004 target: 140 step: 168 (sched_cpu_deactivate)
681 cpuhp/4-31 [004] 22.990: cpuhp_exit: cpu: 0004 state: 168 step: 168 ret: 0
682 cpuhp/4-31 [004] 22.991: cpuhp_enter: cpu: 0004 target: 140 step: 144 (mce_cpu_pre_down)
683 cpuhp/4-31 [004] 22.992: cpuhp_exit: cpu: 0004 state: 144 step: 144 ret: 0
684 cpuhp/4-31 [004] 22.993: cpuhp_multi_enter: cpu: 0004 target: 140 step: 143 (virtnet_cpu_down_prep)
685 cpuhp/4-31 [004] 22.994: cpuhp_exit: cpu: 0004 state: 143 step: 143 ret: 0
686 cpuhp/4-31 [004] 22.995: cpuhp_enter: cpu: 0004 target: 140 step: 142 (cacheinfo_cpu_pre_down)
687 cpuhp/4-31 [004] 22.996: cpuhp_exit: cpu: 0004 state: 142 step: 142 ret: 0
688 bash-394 [001] 22.997: cpuhp_exit: cpu: 0004 state: 140 step: 169 ret: 0
689 bash-394 [005] 95.540: cpuhp_enter: cpu: 0004 target: 169 step: 140 (cpuhp_kick_ap_work)
690 cpuhp/4-31 [004] 95.541: cpuhp_enter: cpu: 0004 target: 169 step: 141 (acpi_soft_cpu_online)
691 cpuhp/4-31 [004] 95.542: cpuhp_exit: cpu: 0004 state: 141 step: 141 ret: 0
692 cpuhp/4-31 [004] 95.543: cpuhp_enter: cpu: 0004 target: 169 step: 142 (cacheinfo_cpu_online)
693 cpuhp/4-31 [004] 95.544: cpuhp_exit: cpu: 0004 state: 142 step: 142 ret: 0
694 cpuhp/4-31 [004] 95.545: cpuhp_multi_enter: cpu: 0004 target: 169 step: 143 (virtnet_cpu_online)
695 cpuhp/4-31 [004] 95.546: cpuhp_exit: cpu: 0004 state: 143 step: 143 ret: 0
696 cpuhp/4-31 [004] 95.547: cpuhp_enter: cpu: 0004 target: 169 step: 144 (mce_cpu_online)
697 cpuhp/4-31 [004] 95.548: cpuhp_exit: cpu: 0004 state: 144 step: 144 ret: 0
698 cpuhp/4-31 [004] 95.549: cpuhp_enter: cpu: 0004 target: 169 step: 145 (console_cpu_notify)
699 cpuhp/4-31 [004] 95.550: cpuhp_exit: cpu: 0004 state: 145 step: 145 ret: 0
700 cpuhp/4-31 [004] 95.551: cpuhp_enter: cpu: 0004 target: 169 step: 168 (sched_cpu_activate)
701 cpuhp/4-31 [004] 95.552: cpuhp_exit: cpu: 0004 state: 168 step: 168 ret: 0
702 bash-394 [005] 95.553: cpuhp_exit: cpu: 0004 state: 169 step: 140 ret: 0
703
704 As it an be seen, CPU4 went down until timestamp 22.996 and then back up until
705 95.552. All invoked callbacks including their return codes are visible in the
706 trace.
707
708 Architecture's requirements
709 ===========================
710
711 The following functions and configurations are required:
712
713 ``CONFIG_HOTPLUG_CPU``
714 This entry needs to be enabled in Kconfig
715
716 ``__cpu_up()``
717 Arch interface to bring up a CPU
718
719 ``__cpu_disable()``
720 Arch interface to shutdown a CPU, no more interrupts can be handled by the
721 kernel after the routine returns. This includes the shutdown of the timer.
722
723 ``__cpu_die()``
724 This actually supposed to ensure death of the CPU. Actually look at some
725 example code in other arch that implement CPU hotplug. The processor is taken
726 down from the ``idle()`` loop for that specific architecture. ``__cpu_die()``
727 typically waits for some per_cpu state to be set, to ensure the processor dead
728 routine is called to be sure positively.
729
730 User Space Notification
731 =======================
732
733 After CPU successfully onlined or offline udev events are sent. A udev rule like::
734
735 SUBSYSTEM=="cpu", DRIVERS=="processor", DEVPATH=="/devices/system/cpu/*", RUN+="the_hotplug_receiver.sh"
736
737 will receive all events. A script like::
738
739 #!/bin/sh
740
741 if [ "${ACTION}" = "offline" ]
742 then
743 echo "CPU ${DEVPATH##*/} offline"
744
745 elif [ "${ACTION}" = "online" ]
746 then
747 echo "CPU ${DEVPATH##*/} online"
748
749 fi
750
751 can process the event further.
752
753 Kernel Inline Documentations Reference
754 ======================================
755
756 .. kernel-doc:: include/linux/cpuhotplug.h