Re: [PATCH] ACPI: Check _PSS invalidation when BIOS report _PSS withall 0x80000000

From: Len Brown
Date: Fri Dec 12 2008 - 00:37:22 EST


On Mon, 24 Nov 2008, Youquan,Song wrote:

> On Fri, Nov 21, 2008 at 03:08:39PM -0800, Andrew Morton wrote:
> > On Thu, 20 Nov 2008 19:08:36 -0800 (PST)
> > youquan_song@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
> >
> > > Subject: Check _PSS invalidation when BIOS report _PSS with 0x80000000
> > >
> > > When cpu frequencey scaling disable,some BIOS report _PSS with all
> > > 0x80000000.
> > > If kernel treat this case as valid, the kernel will boot crash when load
> > > cpufreq govenors.
> > >
> > > So in order to cover more buggy BIOSs, the patch just check _PSS core
> > > frequencey invalidtion.
> > >
> >
> > It's unclear how many machines this will affect, and what the effects
> > of not having the patch are upon those machines. That is useful
> > information for people who are deciding whcih kernel versions this
> > patch should be merged into.
>
> I meet 2 machines that if the P-states is disabled in BIOS, the kernel
> will boot crash at loading cpufreq_userspace governor because kernel
> consider that P-states validate. I know there are some other machines
> also exist this bug.

What does _PPC say when P-states are disabled on these machines?
If it is disabling the _PSS, maybe we should not be looking at the _PSS?

This would be a good patch if 0x80000000 were actually documented
in the ACPI spec as disabling P-states, but it isn't.

Can you open a bugzilla and attach the acpidump output for
the two failing machines? Are those machines shipped with
P-states enabled by default, or disabled by default?

Also, how, exactly, do we crash when we see these values?

> > Do you think this fix is needed in 2.6.28? 2.6.27.x? 2.6.26.x? etc?
> >
>
> I know that the bug exists in kernel as old as 2.6.18 and also exits on
> 2.6.28, 2.6.27 etc.

So we've been exposed to this BIOS bug for more than 10 releases
and the world has not ended. Unless we're about to be exposed to
a raft of new machines with this BIOS issue, and they have P-states
disabled by default, I'd say this workaround in not urgent.

--
Len Brown, Intel Open Source Technology Center

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