File 5a8be788-x86-nmi-start-NMI-watchdog-on-CPU0-after-SMP.patch of Package xen.8005

# Commit a44f1697968e04fcc6145e3bd51c748b57047240
# Date 2018-02-20 10:16:56 +0100
# Author Igor Druzhinin <igor.druzhinin@citrix.com>
# Committer Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
x86/nmi: start NMI watchdog on CPU0 after SMP bootstrap

We're noticing a reproducible system boot hang on certain
Skylake platforms where the BIOS is configured in legacy
boot mode with x2APIC disabled. The system stalls immediately
after writing the first SMP initialization sequence into APIC ICR.

The cause of the problem is watchdog NMI handler execution -
somewhere near the end of NMI handling (after it's already
rescheduled the next NMI) it tries to access IO port 0x61
to get the actual NMI reason on CPU0. Unfortunately, this
port is emulated by BIOS using SMIs and this emulation for
some reason takes more time than we expect during INIT-SIPI-SIPI
sequence. As the result, the system is constantly moving between
NMI and SMI handler and not making any progress.

To avoid this, initialize the watchdog after SMP bootstrap on
CPU0 and, additionally, protect the NMI handler by moving
IO port access before NMI re-scheduling. The latter should also
help in case of post boot CPU onlining. Although we're running
watchdog at much lower frequency at this point, it's neveretheless
possible we may trigger the issue anyway.

Signed-off-by: Igor Druzhinin <igor.druzhinin@citrix.com>
Reviewed-by: Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>

--- a/xen/arch/x86/apic.c
+++ b/xen/arch/x86/apic.c
@@ -704,7 +704,7 @@ void __devinit setup_local_APIC(void)
             printk("No ESR for 82489DX.\n");
     }
 
-    if (nmi_watchdog == NMI_LOCAL_APIC)
+    if (nmi_watchdog == NMI_LOCAL_APIC && smp_processor_id())
         setup_apic_nmi_watchdog();
     apic_pm_activate();
 }
--- a/xen/arch/x86/smpboot.c
+++ b/xen/arch/x86/smpboot.c
@@ -1190,7 +1190,10 @@ void __init smp_cpus_done(void)
     }
 
     if ( nmi_watchdog == NMI_LOCAL_APIC )
+    {
+        setup_apic_nmi_watchdog();
         check_nmi_watchdog();
+    }
 
     setup_ioapic_dest();
 
--- a/xen/arch/x86/traps.c
+++ b/xen/arch/x86/traps.c
@@ -3362,7 +3362,7 @@ static nmi_callback_t nmi_callback = dum
 void do_nmi(struct cpu_user_regs *regs)
 {
     unsigned int cpu = smp_processor_id();
-    unsigned char reason;
+    unsigned char reason = 0;
     bool_t handle_unknown = 0;
 
     ++nmi_count(cpu);
@@ -3370,13 +3370,22 @@ void do_nmi(struct cpu_user_regs *regs)
     if ( nmi_callback(regs, cpu) )
         return;
 
+    /*
+     * Accessing port 0x61 may trap to SMM which has been actually
+     * observed on some production SKX servers. This SMI sometimes
+     * takes enough time for the next NMI tick to happen. By reading
+     * this port before we re-arm the NMI watchdog, we reduce the chance
+     * of having an NMI watchdog expire while in the SMI handler.
+     */
+    if ( cpu == 0 )
+        reason = inb(0x61);
+
     if ( !nmi_watchdog || (!nmi_watchdog_tick(regs) && watchdog_force) )
         handle_unknown = 1;
 
     /* Only the BSP gets external NMIs from the system. */
     if ( cpu == 0 )
     {
-        reason = inb(0x61);
         if ( reason & 0x80 )
             pci_serr_error(regs);
         if ( reason & 0x40 )
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