From 9a90ed065a155d13db0d0ffeaad5cc54e51c90c6 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Borislav Petkov Date: Thu, 27 May 2021 11:02:26 +0200 Subject: x86/thermal: Fix LVT thermal setup for SMI delivery mode There are machines out there with added value crap^WBIOS which provide an SMI handler for the local APIC thermal sensor interrupt. Out of reset, the BSP on those machines has something like 0x200 in that APIC register (timestamps left in because this whole issue is timing sensitive): [ 0.033858] read lvtthmr: 0x330, val: 0x200 which means: - bit 16 - the interrupt mask bit is clear and thus that interrupt is enabled - bits [10:8] have 010b which means SMI delivery mode. Now, later during boot, when the kernel programs the local APIC, it soft-disables it temporarily through the spurious vector register: setup_local_APIC: ... /* * If this comes from kexec/kcrash the APIC might be enabled in * SPIV. Soft disable it before doing further initialization. */ value = apic_read(APIC_SPIV); value &= ~APIC_SPIV_APIC_ENABLED; apic_write(APIC_SPIV, value); which means (from the SDM): "10.4.7.2 Local APIC State After It Has Been Software Disabled ... * The mask bits for all the LVT entries are set. Attempts to reset these bits will be ignored." And this happens too: [ 0.124111] APIC: Switch to symmetric I/O mode setup [ 0.124117] lvtthmr 0x200 before write 0xf to APIC 0xf0 [ 0.124118] lvtthmr 0x10200 after write 0xf to APIC 0xf0 This results in CPU 0 soft lockups depending on the placement in time when the APIC soft-disable happens. Those soft lockups are not 100% reproducible and the reason for that can only be speculated as no one tells you what SMM does. Likely, it confuses the SMM code that the APIC is disabled and the thermal interrupt doesn't doesn't fire at all, leading to CPU 0 stuck in SMM forever... Now, before 4f432e8bb15b ("x86/mce: Get rid of mcheck_intel_therm_init()") due to how the APIC_LVTTHMR was read before APIC initialization in mcheck_intel_therm_init(), it would read the value with the mask bit 16 clear and then intel_init_thermal() would replicate it onto the APs and all would be peachy - the thermal interrupt would remain enabled. But that commit moved that reading to a later moment in intel_init_thermal(), resulting in reading APIC_LVTTHMR on the BSP too late and with its interrupt mask bit set. Thus, revert back to the old behavior of reading the thermal LVT register before the APIC gets initialized. Fixes: 4f432e8bb15b ("x86/mce: Get rid of mcheck_intel_therm_init()") Reported-by: James Feeney Signed-off-by: Borislav Petkov Cc: Cc: Zhang Rui Cc: Srinivas Pandruvada Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/YKIqDdFNaXYd39wz@zn.tnic --- arch/x86/kernel/setup.c | 9 +++++++++ 1 file changed, 9 insertions(+) (limited to 'arch/x86/kernel/setup.c') diff --git a/arch/x86/kernel/setup.c b/arch/x86/kernel/setup.c index 72920af0b3c0..ff653d608d5f 100644 --- a/arch/x86/kernel/setup.c +++ b/arch/x86/kernel/setup.c @@ -44,6 +44,7 @@ #include #include #include +#include #include #include #include @@ -1226,6 +1227,14 @@ void __init setup_arch(char **cmdline_p) x86_init.timers.wallclock_init(); + /* + * This needs to run before setup_local_APIC() which soft-disables the + * local APIC temporarily and that masks the thermal LVT interrupt, + * leading to softlockups on machines which have configured SMI + * interrupt delivery. + */ + therm_lvt_init(); + mcheck_init(); register_refined_jiffies(CLOCK_TICK_RATE); -- cgit v1.2.3