Re: [tip: x86/urgent] x86/acpi: Ignore invalid x2APIC entries

From: Ashok Raj
Date: Thu Nov 30 2023 - 22:28:33 EST


On Thu, Nov 23, 2023 at 12:50:47PM +0000, Zhang Rui wrote:
> Hi, John,
>
> Thanks for catching this issue.
>
> On Wed, 2023-11-22 at 22:19 +0000, John Sperbeck wrote:
> > I have a platform with both LOCAL_APIC and LOCAL_X2APIC entries for
> > each CPU.  However, the ids for the LOCAL_APIC entries are all
> > invalid ids of 255, so they have always been skipped in
> > acpi_parse_lapic()
> > by this code from f3bf1dbe64b6 ("x86/acpi: Prevent LAPIC id 0xff from
> > being
> > accounted"):
> >
> >     /* Ignore invalid ID */
> >     if (processor->id == 0xff)
> >             return 0;
> >
> > With the change in this thread, the return value of 0 means that the
> > 'count' variable in acpi_parse_entries_array() is incremented.  The
> > positive return value means that 'has_lapic_cpus' is set, even though
> > no entries were actually matched.
>
> So in acpi_parse_madt_lapic_entries, without this patch,
> madt_proc[0].count is a positive value on this platform, right?
>
> This sounds like a potential issue because the following checks to fall
> back to MPS mode can also break. (If all LOCAL_APIC entries have
> apic_id 0xff and all LOCAL_X2APIC entries have apic_id 0xffffffff)
>
> >   Then, when the MADT is iterated
> > with acpi_parse_x2apic(), the x2apic entries with ids less than 255
> > are skipped and most of my CPUs aren't recognized.

This smells wrong. If a BIOS is placing some in lapic and some in x2apic
table, its really messed up.

Shouldn't the kernel scan them in some priority and only consider one set of
tables?

Shouldn't the code stop looking once something once a type is found?

sapic is only for IA64 correct?

sapic_entries = acpi_table_parse_madt(ACPI_MADT_TYPE_LOCAL_SAPIC,....)

if sapic_entries
return sapic_entries;

x2apic_count = ...

if x2apic_count
return x2apic_count;

apic_count = ...

Maybe you should add if all entries are marked INVALID for APIC, just
ignore the whole table?

Cheers,
Ashok