/* * CDDL HEADER START * * The contents of this file are subject to the terms of the * Common Development and Distribution License (the "License"). * You may not use this file except in compliance with the License. * * You can obtain a copy of the license at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE * or http://www.opensolaris.org/os/licensing. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions * and limitations under the License. * * When distributing Covered Code, include this CDDL HEADER in each * file and include the License file at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE. * If applicable, add the following below this CDDL HEADER, with the * fields enclosed by brackets "[]" replaced with your own identifying * information: Portions Copyright [yyyy] [name of copyright owner] * * CDDL HEADER END */ /* * Copyright (c) 2004, 2010, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. * Copyright (c) 2011, 2016 by Delphix. All rights reserved. * Copyright 2013 Nexenta Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. * Copyright 2014 Josef "Jeff" Sipek * Copyright 2020 Joyent, Inc. * Copyright 2023 Oxide Computer Company * Copyright 2024 MNX Cloud, Inc. */ /* * Copyright (c) 2010, Intel Corporation. * All rights reserved. */ /* * Portions Copyright 2009 Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. */ /* * CPU Identification logic * * The purpose of this file and its companion, cpuid_subr.c, is to help deal * with the identification of CPUs, their features, and their topologies. More * specifically, this file helps drive the following: * * 1. Enumeration of features of the processor which are used by the kernel to * determine what features to enable or disable. These may be instruction set * enhancements or features that we use. * * 2. Enumeration of instruction set architecture (ISA) additions that userland * will be told about through the auxiliary vector. * * 3. Understanding the physical topology of the CPU such as the number of * caches, how many cores it has, whether or not it supports symmetric * multi-processing (SMT), etc. * * ------------------------ * CPUID History and Basics * ------------------------ * * The cpuid instruction was added by Intel roughly around the time that the * original Pentium was introduced. The purpose of cpuid was to tell in a * programmatic fashion information about the CPU that previously was guessed * at. For example, an important part of cpuid is that we can know what * extensions to the ISA exist. If you use an invalid opcode you would get a * #UD, so this method allows a program (whether a user program or the kernel) * to determine what exists without crashing or getting a SIGILL. Of course, * this was also during the era of the clones and the AMD Am5x86. The vendor * name shows up first in cpuid for a reason. * * cpuid information is broken down into ranges called a 'leaf'. Each leaf puts * unique values into the registers %eax, %ebx, %ecx, and %edx and each leaf has * its own meaning. The different leaves are broken down into different regions: * * [ 0, 7fffffff ] This region is called the 'basic' * region. This region is generally defined * by Intel, though some of the original * portions have different meanings based * on the manufacturer. These days, Intel * adds most new features to this region. * AMD adds non-Intel compatible * information in the third, extended * region. Intel uses this for everything * including ISA extensions, CPU * features, cache information, topology, * and more. * * There is a hole carved out of this * region which is reserved for * hypervisors. * * [ 40000000, 4fffffff ] This region, which is found in the * middle of the previous region, is * explicitly promised to never be used by * CPUs. Instead, it is used by hypervisors * to communicate information about * themselves to the operating system. The * values and details are unique for each * hypervisor. * * [ 80000000, ffffffff ] This region is called the 'extended' * region. Some of the low leaves mirror * parts of the basic leaves. This region * has generally been used by AMD for * various extensions. For example, AMD- * specific information about caches, * features, and topology are found in this * region. * * To specify a range, you place the desired leaf into %eax, zero %ebx, %ecx, * and %edx, and then issue the cpuid instruction. At the first leaf in each of * the ranges, one of the primary things returned is the maximum valid leaf in * that range. This allows for discovery of what range of CPUID is valid. * * The CPUs have potentially surprising behavior when using an invalid leaf or * unimplemented leaf. If the requested leaf is within the valid basic or * extended range, but is unimplemented, then %eax, %ebx, %ecx, and %edx will be * set to zero. However, if you specify a leaf that is outside of a valid range, * then instead it will be filled with the last valid _basic_ leaf. For example, * if the maximum basic value is on leaf 0x3, then issuing a cpuid for leaf 4 or * an invalid extended leaf will return the information for leaf 3. * * Some leaves are broken down into sub-leaves. This means that the value * depends on both the leaf asked for in %eax and a secondary register. For * example, Intel uses the value in %ecx on leaf 7 to indicate a sub-leaf to get * additional information. Or when getting topology information in leaf 0xb, the * initial value in %ecx changes which level of the topology that you are * getting information about. * * cpuid values are always kept to 32 bits regardless of whether or not the * program is in 64-bit mode. When executing in 64-bit mode, the upper * 32 bits of the register are always set to zero so that way the values are the * same regardless of execution mode. * * ---------------------- * Identifying Processors * ---------------------- * * We can identify a processor in two steps. The first step looks at cpuid leaf * 0. Leaf 0 contains the processor's vendor information. This is done by * putting a 12 character string in %ebx, %ecx, and %edx. On AMD, it is * 'AuthenticAMD' and on Intel it is 'GenuineIntel'. * * From there, a processor is identified by a combination of three different * values: * * 1. Family * 2. Model * 3. Stepping * * Each vendor uses the family and model to uniquely identify a processor. The * way that family and model are changed depends on the vendor. For example, * Intel has been using family 0x6 for almost all of their processor since the * Pentium Pro/Pentium II era, often called the P6. The model is used to * identify the exact processor. Different models are often used for the client * (consumer) and server parts. Even though each processor often has major * architectural differences, they still are considered the same family by * Intel. * * On the other hand, each major AMD architecture generally has its own family. * For example, the K8 is family 0x10, Bulldozer 0x15, and Zen 0x17. Within it * the model number is used to help identify specific processors. As AMD's * product lines have expanded, they have started putting a mixed bag of * processors into the same family, with each processor under a single * identifying banner (e.g., Milan, Cezanne) using a range of model numbers. We * refer to each such collection as a processor family, distinct from cpuid * family. Importantly, each processor family has a BIOS and Kernel Developer's * Guide (BKDG, older parts) or Processor Programming Reference (PPR) that * defines the processor family's non-architectural features. In general, we'll * use "family" here to mean the family number reported by the cpuid instruction * and distinguish the processor family from it where appropriate. * * The stepping is used to refer to a revision of a specific microprocessor. The * term comes from equipment used to produce masks that are used to create * integrated circuits. * * The information is present in leaf 1, %eax. In technical documentation you * will see the terms extended model and extended family. The original family, * model, and stepping fields were each 4 bits wide. If the values in either * are 0xf, then one is to consult the extended model and extended family, which * take previously reserved bits and allow for a larger number of models and add * 0xf to them. * * When we process this information, we store the full family, model, and * stepping in the struct cpuid_info members cpi_family, cpi_model, and * cpi_step, respectively. Whenever you are performing comparisons with the * family, model, and stepping, you should use these members and not the raw * values from cpuid. If you must use the raw values from cpuid directly, you * must make sure that you add the extended model and family to the base model * and family. * * In general, we do not use information about the family, model, and stepping * to determine whether or not a feature is present; that is generally driven by * specific leaves. However, when something we care about on the processor is * not considered 'architectural' meaning that it is specific to a set of * processors and not promised in the architecture model to be consistent from * generation to generation, then we will fall back on this information. The * most common cases where this comes up is when we have to workaround errata in * the processor, are dealing with processor-specific features such as CPU * performance counters, or we want to provide additional information for things * such as fault management. * * While processors also do have a brand string, which is the name that people * are familiar with when buying the processor, they are not meant for * programmatic consumption. That is what the family, model, and stepping are * for. * * We use the x86_chiprev_t to encode a combination of vendor, processor family, * and stepping(s) that refer to a single or very closely related set of silicon * implementations; while there are sometimes more specific ways to learn of the * presence or absence of a particular erratum or workaround, one may generally * assume that all processors of the same chiprev have the same errata and we * have chosen to represent them this way precisely because that is how AMD * groups them in their revision guides (errata documentation). The processor * family (x86_processor_family_t) may be extracted from the chiprev if that * level of detail is not needed. Processor families are considered unordered * but revisions within a family may be compared for either an exact match or at * least as recent as a reference revision. See the chiprev_xxx() functions * below. * * Similarly, each processor family implements a particular microarchitecture, * which itself may have multiple revisions. In general, non-architectural * features are specific to a processor family, but some may exist across * families containing cores that implement the same microarchitectural revision * (and, such cores share common bugs, too). We provide utility routines * analogous to those for extracting and comparing chiprevs for * microarchitectures as well; see the uarch_xxx() functions. * * Both chiprevs and uarchrevs are defined in x86_archext.h and both are at * present used and available only for AMD and AMD-like processors. * * ------------ * CPUID Passes * ------------ * * As part of performing feature detection, we break this into several different * passes. There used to be a pass 0 that was done from assembly in locore.s to * support processors that have a missing or broken cpuid instruction (notably * certain Cyrix processors) but those were all 32-bit processors which are no * longer supported. Passes are no longer numbered explicitly to make it easier * to break them up or move them around as needed; however, they still have a * well-defined execution ordering enforced by the definition of cpuid_pass_t in * x86_archext.h. The external interface to execute a cpuid pass or determine * whether a pass has been completed consists of cpuid_execpass() and * cpuid_checkpass() respectively. The passes now, in that execution order, * are as follows: * * PRELUDE This pass does not have any dependencies on system * setup; in particular, unlike all subsequent passes it is * guaranteed not to require PCI config space access. It * sets the flag indicating that the processor we are * running on supports the cpuid instruction, which all * 64-bit processors do. This would also be the place to * add any other basic state that is required later on and * can be learned without dependencies. * * IDENT Determine which vendor manufactured the CPU, the family, * model, and stepping information, and compute basic * identifying tags from those values. This is done first * so that machine-dependent code can control the features * the cpuid instruction will report during subsequent * passes if needed, and so that any intervening * machine-dependent code that needs basic identity will * have it available. This includes synthesised * identifiers such as chiprev and uarchrev as well as the * values obtained directly from cpuid. Prior to executing * this pass, machine-depedent boot code is responsible for * ensuring that the PCI configuration space access * functions have been set up and, if necessary, that * determine_platform() has been called. * * BASIC This is the primary pass and is responsible for doing a * large number of different things: * * 1. Gathering a large number of feature flags to * determine which features the CPU support and which * indicate things that we need to do other work in the OS * to enable. Features detected this way are added to the * x86_featureset which can be queried to * determine what we should do. This includes processing * all of the basic and extended CPU features that we care * about. * * 2. Determining the CPU's topology. This includes * information about how many cores and threads are present * in the package. It also is responsible for figuring out * which logical CPUs are potentially part of the same core * and what other resources they might share. For more * information see the 'Topology' section. * * 3. Determining the set of CPU security-specific features * that we need to worry about and determine the * appropriate set of workarounds. * * Pass 1 on the boot CPU occurs before KMDB is started. * * EXTENDED The second pass is done after startup(). Here, we check * other miscellaneous features. Most of this is gathering * additional basic and extended features that we'll use in * later passes or for debugging support. * * DYNAMIC The third pass occurs after the kernel memory allocator * has been fully initialized. This gathers information * where we might need dynamic memory available for our * uses. This includes several varying width leaves that * have cache information and the processor's brand string. * * RESOLVE The fourth and final normal pass is performed after the * kernel has brought most everything online. This is * invoked from post_startup(). In this pass, we go through * the set of features that we have enabled and turn that * into the hardware auxiliary vector features that * userland receives. This is used by userland, primarily * by the run-time link-editor (RTLD), though userland * software could also refer to it directly. * * The function that performs a pass is currently assumed to be infallible, and * all existing implementation are. This simplifies callers by allowing * cpuid_execpass() to return void. Similarly, implementers do not need to check * for a NULL CPU argument; the current CPU's cpu_t is substituted if necessary. * Both of these assumptions can be relaxed if needed by future developments. * Tracking of completed states is handled by cpuid_execpass(). It is programmer * error to attempt to execute a pass before all previous passes have been * completed on the specified CPU, or to request cpuid information before the * pass that captures it has been executed. These conditions can be tested * using cpuid_checkpass(). * * The Microcode Pass * * After a microcode update, we do a selective rescan of the cpuid leaves to * determine what features have changed. Microcode updates can provide more * details about security related features to deal with issues like Spectre and * L1TF. On occasion, vendors have violated their contract and removed bits. * However, we don't try to detect that because that puts us in a situation that * we really can't deal with. As such, the only thing we rescan are security * related features today. See cpuid_pass_ucode(). This pass may be run in a * different sequence on APs and therefore is not part of the sequential order; * It is invoked directly instead of by cpuid_execpass() and its completion * status cannot be checked by cpuid_checkpass(). This could be integrated with * a more complex dependency mechanism if warranted by future developments. * * All of the passes are run on all CPUs. However, for the most part we only * care about what the boot CPU says about this information and use the other * CPUs as a rough guide to sanity check that we have the same feature set. * * We do not support running multiple logical CPUs with disjoint, let alone * different, feature sets. * * ------------------ * Processor Topology * ------------------ * * One of the important things that we need to do is to understand the topology * of the underlying processor. When we say topology in this case, we're trying * to understand the relationship between the logical CPUs that the operating * system sees and the underlying physical layout. Different logical CPUs may * share different resources which can have important consequences for the * performance of the system. For example, they may share caches, execution * units, and more. * * The topology of the processor changes from generation to generation and * vendor to vendor. Along with that, different vendors use different * terminology, and the operating system itself uses occasionally overlapping * terminology. It's important to understand what this topology looks like so * one can understand the different things that we try to calculate and * determine. * * To get started, let's talk about a little bit of terminology that we've used * so far, is used throughout this file, and is fairly generic across multiple * vendors: * * CPU * A central processing unit (CPU) refers to a logical and/or virtual * entity that the operating system can execute instructions on. The * underlying resources for this CPU may be shared between multiple * entities; however, to the operating system it is a discrete unit. * * PROCESSOR and PACKAGE * * Generally, when we use the term 'processor' on its own, we are referring * to the physical entity that one buys and plugs into a board. However, * because processor has been overloaded and one might see it used to mean * multiple different levels, we will instead use the term 'package' for * the rest of this file. The term package comes from the electrical * engineering side and refers to the physical entity that encloses the * electronics inside. Strictly speaking the package can contain more than * just the CPU, for example, on many processors it may also have what's * called an 'integrated graphical processing unit (GPU)'. Because the * package can encapsulate multiple units, it is the largest physical unit * that we refer to. * * SOCKET * * A socket refers to unit on a system board (generally the motherboard) * that can receive a package. A single package, or processor, is plugged * into a single socket. A system may have multiple sockets. Often times, * the term socket is used interchangeably with package and refers to the * electrical component that has plugged in, and not the receptacle itself. * * CORE * * A core refers to the physical instantiation of a CPU, generally, with a * full set of hardware resources available to it. A package may contain * multiple cores inside of it or it may just have a single one. A * processor with more than one core is often referred to as 'multi-core'. * In illumos, we will use the feature X86FSET_CMP to refer to a system * that has 'multi-core' processors. * * A core may expose a single logical CPU to the operating system, or it * may expose multiple CPUs, which we call threads, defined below. * * Some resources may still be shared by cores in the same package. For * example, many processors will share the level 3 cache between cores. * Some AMD generations share hardware resources between cores. For more * information on that see the section 'AMD Topology'. * * THREAD and STRAND * * In this file, generally a thread refers to a hardware resources and not * the operating system's logical abstraction. A thread is always exposed * as an independent logical CPU to the operating system. A thread belongs * to a specific core. A core may have more than one thread. When that is * the case, the threads that are part of the same core are often referred * to as 'siblings'. * * When multiple threads exist, this is generally referred to as * simultaneous multi-threading (SMT). When Intel introduced this in their * processors they called it hyper-threading (HT). When multiple threads * are active in a core, they split the resources of the core. For example, * two threads may share the same set of hardware execution units. * * The operating system often uses the term 'strand' to refer to a thread. * This helps disambiguate it from the software concept. * * CHIP * * Unfortunately, the term 'chip' is dramatically overloaded. At its most * base meaning, it is used to refer to a single integrated circuit, which * may or may not be the only thing in the package. In illumos, when you * see the term 'chip' it is almost always referring to the same thing as * the 'package'. However, many vendors may use chip to refer to one of * many integrated circuits that have been placed in the package. As an * example, see the subsequent definition. * * To try and keep things consistent, we will only use chip when referring * to the entire integrated circuit package, with the exception of the * definition of multi-chip module (because it is in the name) and use the * term 'die' when we want the more general, potential sub-component * definition. * * DIE * * A die refers to an integrated circuit. Inside of the package there may * be a single die or multiple dies. This is sometimes called a 'chip' in * vendor's parlance, but in this file, we use the term die to refer to a * subcomponent. * * MULTI-CHIP MODULE * * A multi-chip module (MCM) refers to putting multiple distinct chips that * are connected together in the same package. When a multi-chip design is * used, generally each chip is manufactured independently and then joined * together in the package. For example, on AMD's Zen microarchitecture * (family 0x17), the package contains several dies (the second meaning of * chip from above) that are connected together. * * CACHE * * A cache is a part of the processor that maintains copies of recently * accessed memory. Caches are split into levels and then into types. * Commonly there are one to three levels, called level one, two, and * three. The lower the level, the smaller it is, the closer it is to the * execution units of the CPU, and the faster it is to access. The layout * and design of the cache come in many different flavors, consult other * resources for a discussion of those. * * Caches are generally split into two types, the instruction and data * cache. The caches contain what their names suggest, the instruction * cache has executable program text, while the data cache has all other * memory that the processor accesses. As of this writing, data is kept * coherent between all of the caches on x86, so if one modifies program * text before it is executed, that will be in the data cache, and the * instruction cache will be synchronized with that change when the * processor actually executes those instructions. This coherency also * covers the fact that data could show up in multiple caches. * * Generally, the lowest level caches are specific to a core. However, the * last layer cache is shared between some number of cores. The number of * CPUs sharing this last level cache is important. This has implications * for the choices that the scheduler makes, as accessing memory that might * be in a remote cache after thread migration can be quite expensive. * * Sometimes, the word cache is abbreviated with a '$', because in US * English the word cache is pronounced the same as cash. So L1D$ refers to * the L1 data cache, and L2$ would be the L2 cache. This will not be used * in the rest of this theory statement for clarity. * * MEMORY CONTROLLER * * The memory controller is a component that provides access to DRAM. Each * memory controller can access a set number of DRAM channels. Each channel * can have a number of DIMMs (sticks of memory) associated with it. A * given package may have more than one memory controller. The association * of the memory controller to a group of cores is important as it is * cheaper to access memory on the controller that you are associated with. * * NUMA * * NUMA or non-uniform memory access, describes a way that systems are * built. On x86, any processor core can address all of the memory in the * system. However, When using multiple sockets or possibly within a * multi-chip module, some of that memory is physically closer and some of * it is further. Memory that is further away is more expensive to access. * Consider the following image of multiple sockets with memory: * * +--------+ +--------+ * | DIMM A | +----------+ +----------+ | DIMM D | * +--------+-+ | | | | +-+------+-+ * | DIMM B |=======| Socket 0 |======| Socket 1 |=======| DIMM E | * +--------+-+ | | | | +-+------+-+ * | DIMM C | +----------+ +----------+ | DIMM F | * +--------+ +--------+ * * In this example, Socket 0 is closer to DIMMs A-C while Socket 1 is * closer to DIMMs D-F. This means that it is cheaper for socket 0 to * access DIMMs A-C and more expensive to access D-F as it has to go * through Socket 1 to get there. The inverse is true for Socket 1. DIMMs * D-F are cheaper than A-C. While the socket form is the most common, when * using multi-chip modules, this can also sometimes occur. For another * example of this that's more involved, see the AMD topology section. * * * Intel Topology * -------------- * * Most Intel processors since Nehalem, (as of this writing the current gen * is Skylake / Cannon Lake) follow a fairly similar pattern. The CPU portion of * the package is a single monolithic die. MCMs currently aren't used. Most * parts have three levels of caches, with the L3 cache being shared between * all of the cores on the package. The L1/L2 cache is generally specific to * an individual core. The following image shows at a simplified level what * this looks like. The memory controller is commonly part of something called * the 'Uncore', that used to be separate physical chips that were not a part of * the package, but are now part of the same chip. * * +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ * | Package | * | +-------------------+ +-------------------+ +-------------------+ | * | | Core | | Core | | Core | | * | | +--------+ +---+ | | +--------+ +---+ | | +--------+ +---+ | | * | | | Thread | | L | | | | Thread | | L | | | | Thread | | L | | | * | | +--------+ | 1 | | | +--------+ | 1 | | | +--------+ | 1 | | | * | | +--------+ | | | | +--------+ | | | | +--------+ | | | | * | | | Thread | | | | | | Thread | | | | | | Thread | | | | | * | | +--------+ +---+ | | +--------+ +---+ | | +--------+ +---+ | | * | | +--------------+ | | +--------------+ | | +--------------+ | | * | | | L2 Cache | | | | L2 Cache | | | | L2 Cache | | | * | | +--------------+ | | +--------------+ | | +--------------+ | | * | +-------------------+ +-------------------+ +-------------------+ | * | +-------------------------------------------------------------------+ | * | | Shared L3 Cache | | * | +-------------------------------------------------------------------+ | * | +-------------------------------------------------------------------+ | * | | Memory Controller | | * | +-------------------------------------------------------------------+ | * +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ * * A side effect of this current architecture is that what we care about from a * scheduling and topology perspective, is simplified. In general we care about * understanding which logical CPUs are part of the same core and socket. * * To determine the relationship between threads and cores, Intel initially used * the identifier in the advanced programmable interrupt controller (APIC). They * also added cpuid leaf 4 to give additional information about the number of * threads and CPUs in the processor. With the addition of x2apic (which * increased the number of addressable logical CPUs from 8-bits to 32-bits), an * additional cpuid topology leaf 0xB was added. * * AMD Topology * ------------ * * When discussing AMD topology, we want to break this into three distinct * generations of topology. There's the basic topology that has been used in * family 0xf+ (Opteron, Athlon64), there's the topology that was introduced * with family 0x15 (Bulldozer), and there's the topology that was introduced * with family 0x17 (Zen), evolved more dramatically in Zen 2 (still family * 0x17), and tweaked slightly in Zen 3 (family 19h). AMD also has some * additional terminology that's worth talking about. * * Until the introduction of family 0x17 (Zen), AMD did not implement something * that they considered SMT. Whether or not the AMD processors have SMT * influences many things including scheduling and reliability, availability, * and serviceability (RAS) features. * * NODE * * AMD uses the term node to refer to a die that contains a number of cores * and I/O resources. Depending on the processor family and model, more * than one node can be present in the package. When there is more than one * node this indicates a multi-chip module. Usually each node has its own * access to memory and I/O devices. This is important and generally * different from the corresponding Intel Nehalem-Skylake+ processors. As a * result, we track this relationship in the operating system. * * In processors with an L3 cache, the L3 cache is generally shared across * the entire node, though the way this is carved up varies from generation * to generation. * * BULLDOZER * * Starting with the Bulldozer family (0x15) and continuing until the * introduction of the Zen microarchitecture, AMD introduced the idea of a * compute unit. In a compute unit, two traditional cores share a number of * hardware resources. Critically, they share the FPU, L1 instruction * cache, and the L2 cache. Several compute units were then combined inside * of a single node. Because the integer execution units, L1 data cache, * and some other resources were not shared between the cores, AMD never * considered this to be SMT. * * ZEN * * The Zen family (0x17) uses a multi-chip module (MCM) design, the module * is called Zeppelin. These modules are similar to the idea of nodes used * previously. Each of these nodes has two DRAM channels which all of the * cores in the node can access uniformly. These nodes are linked together * in the package, creating a NUMA environment. * * The Zeppelin die itself contains two different 'core complexes'. Each * core complex consists of four cores which each have two threads, for a * total of 8 logical CPUs per complex. Unlike other generations, * where all the logical CPUs in a given node share the L3 cache, here each * core complex has its own shared L3 cache. * * A further thing that we need to consider is that in some configurations, * particularly with the Threadripper line of processors, not every die * actually has its memory controllers wired up to actual memory channels. * This means that some cores have memory attached to them and others * don't. * * To put Zen in perspective, consider the following images: * * +--------------------------------------------------------+ * | Core Complex | * | +-------------------+ +-------------------+ +---+ | * | | Core +----+ | | Core +----+ | | | | * | | +--------+ | L2 | | | +--------+ | L2 | | | | | * | | | Thread | +----+ | | | Thread | +----+ | | | | * | | +--------+-+ +--+ | | +--------+-+ +--+ | | L | | * | | | Thread | |L1| | | | Thread | |L1| | | 3 | | * | | +--------+ +--+ | | +--------+ +--+ | | | | * | +-------------------+ +-------------------+ | C | | * | +-------------------+ +-------------------+ | a | | * | | Core +----+ | | Core +----+ | | c | | * | | +--------+ | L2 | | | +--------+ | L2 | | | h | | * | | | Thread | +----+ | | | Thread | +----+ | | e | | * | | +--------+-+ +--+ | | +--------+-+ +--+ | | | | * | | | Thread | |L1| | | | Thread | |L1| | | | | * | | +--------+ +--+ | | +--------+ +--+ | | | | * | +-------------------+ +-------------------+ +---+ | * | | * +--------------------------------------------------------+ * * This first image represents a single Zen core complex that consists of four * cores. * * * +--------------------------------------------------------+ * | Zeppelin Die | * | +--------------------------------------------------+ | * | | I/O Units (PCIe, SATA, USB, etc.) | | * | +--------------------------------------------------+ | * | HH | * | +-----------+ HH +-----------+ | * | | | HH | | | * | | Core |==========| Core | | * | | Complex |==========| Complex | | * | | | HH | | | * | +-----------+ HH +-----------+ | * | HH | * | +--------------------------------------------------+ | * | | Memory Controller | | * | +--------------------------------------------------+ | * | | * +--------------------------------------------------------+ * * This image represents a single Zeppelin Die. Note how both cores are * connected to the same memory controller and I/O units. While each core * complex has its own L3 cache as seen in the first image, they both have * uniform access to memory. * * * PP PP * PP PP * +----------PP---------------------PP---------+ * | PP PP | * | +-----------+ +-----------+ | * | | | | | | * MMMMMMMMM| Zeppelin |==========| Zeppelin |MMMMMMMMM * MMMMMMMMM| Die |==========| Die |MMMMMMMMM * | | | | | | * | +-----------+ooo ...+-----------+ | * | HH ooo ... HH | * | HH oo.. HH | * | HH ..oo HH | * | HH ... ooo HH | * | +-----------+... ooo+-----------+ | * | | | | | | * MMMMMMMMM| Zeppelin |==========| Zeppelin |MMMMMMMMM * MMMMMMMMM| Die |==========| Die |MMMMMMMMM * | | | | | | * | +-----------+ +-----------+ | * | PP PP | * +----------PP---------------------PP---------+ * PP PP * PP PP * * This image represents a single Zen package. In this example, it has four * Zeppelin dies, though some configurations only have a single one. In this * example, each die is directly connected to the next. Also, each die is * represented as being connected to memory by the 'M' character and connected * to PCIe devices and other I/O, by the 'P' character. Because each Zeppelin * die is made up of two core complexes, we have multiple different NUMA * domains that we care about for these systems. * * ZEN 2 * * Zen 2 changes things in a dramatic way from Zen 1. Whereas in Zen 1 * each Zeppelin Die had its own I/O die, that has been moved out of the * core complex in Zen 2. The actual core complex looks pretty similar, but * now the die actually looks much simpler: * * +--------------------------------------------------------+ * | Zen 2 Core Complex Die HH | * | HH | * | +-----------+ HH +-----------+ | * | | | HH | | | * | | Core |==========| Core | | * | | Complex |==========| Complex | | * | | | HH | | | * | +-----------+ HH +-----------+ | * | HH | * | HH | * +--------------------------------------------------------+ * * From here, when we add the central I/O die, this changes things a bit. * Each die is connected to the I/O die, rather than trying to interconnect * them directly. The following image takes the same Zen 1 image that we * had earlier and shows what it looks like with the I/O die instead: * * PP PP * PP PP * +---------------------PP----PP---------------------+ * | PP PP | * | +-----------+ PP PP +-----------+ | * | | | PP PP | | | * | | Zen 2 | +-PP----PP-+ | Zen 2 | | * | | Die _| | PP PP | |_ Die | | * | | |o|oooo| |oooo|o| | | * | +-----------+ | | +-----------+ | * | | I/O | | * MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM Die MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM * MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM * | | | | * MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM * MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM * | | | | * | +-----------+ | | +-----------+ | * | | |o|oooo| PP PP |oooo|o| | | * | | Zen 2 -| +-PP----PP-+ |- Zen 2 | | * | | Die | PP PP | Die | | * | | | PP PP | | | * | +-----------+ PP PP +-----------+ | * | PP PP | * +---------------------PP----PP---------------------+ * PP PP * PP PP * * The above has four core complex dies installed, though the Zen 2 EPYC * and ThreadRipper parts allow for up to eight, while the Ryzen parts * generally only have one to two. The more notable difference here is how * everything communicates. Note that memory and PCIe come out of the * central die. This changes the way that one die accesses a resource. It * basically always has to go to the I/O die, where as in Zen 1 it may have * satisfied it locally. In general, this ends up being a better strategy * for most things, though it is possible to still treat everything in four * distinct NUMA domains with each Zen 2 die slightly closer to some memory * and PCIe than otherwise. This also impacts the 'amdzen' nexus driver as * now there is only one 'node' present. * * ZEN 3 * * From an architectural perspective, Zen 3 is a much smaller change from * Zen 2 than Zen 2 was from Zen 1, though it makes up for most of that in * its microarchitectural changes. The biggest thing for us is how the die * changes. In Zen 1 and Zen 2, each core complex still had its own L3 * cache. However, in Zen 3, the L3 is now shared between the entire core * complex die and is no longer partitioned between each core complex. This * means that all cores on the die can share the same L3 cache. Otherwise, * the general layout of the overall package with various core complexes * and an I/O die stays the same. Here's what the Core Complex Die looks * like in a bit more detail: * * +-------------------------------------------------+ * | Zen 3 Core Complex Die | * | +-------------------+ +-------------------+ | * | | Core +----+ | | Core +----+ | | * | | +--------+ | L2 | | | +--------+ | L2 | | | * | | | Thread | +----+ | | | Thread | +----+ | | * | | +--------+-+ +--+ | | +--------+-+ +--+ | | * | | | Thread | |L1| | | | Thread | |L1| | | * | | +--------+ +--+ | | +--------+ +--+ | | * | +-------------------+ +-------------------+ | * | +-------------------+ +-------------------+ | * | | Core +----+ | | Core +----+ | | * | | +--------+ | L2 | | | +--------+ | L2 | | | * | | | Thread | +----+ | | | Thread | +----+ | | * | | +--------+-+ +--+ | | +--------+-+ +--+ | | * | | | Thread | |L1| | | | Thread | |L1| | | * | | +--------+ +--+ | | +--------+ +--+ | | * | +-------------------+ +-------------------+ | * | | * | +--------------------------------------------+ | * | | L3 Cache | | * | +--------------------------------------------+ | * | | * | +-------------------+ +-------------------+ | * | | Core +----+ | | Core +----+ | | * | | +--------+ | L2 | | | +--------+ | L2 | | | * | | | Thread | +----+ | | | Thread | +----+ | | * | | +--------+-+ +--+ | | +--------+-+ +--+ | | * | | | Thread | |L1| | | | Thread | |L1| | | * | | +--------+ +--+ | | +--------+ +--+ | | * | +-------------------+ +-------------------+ | * | +-------------------+ +-------------------+ | * | | Core +----+ | | Core +----+ | | * | | +--------+ | L2 | | | +--------+ | L2 | | | * | | | Thread | +----+ | | | Thread | +----+ | | * | | +--------+-+ +--+ | | +--------+-+ +--+ | | * | | | Thread | |L1| | | | Thread | |L1| | | * | | +--------+ +--+ | | +--------+ +--+ | | * | +-------------------+ +-------------------+ | * +-------------------------------------------------+ * * While it is not pictured, there are connections from the die to the * broader data fabric and additional functional blocks to support that * communication and coherency. * * CPUID LEAVES * * There are a few different CPUID leaves that we can use to try and understand * the actual state of the world. As part of the introduction of family 0xf, AMD * added CPUID leaf 0x80000008. This leaf tells us the number of logical * processors that are in the system. Because families before Zen didn't have * SMT, this was always the number of cores that were in the system. However, it * should always be thought of as the number of logical threads to be consistent * between generations. In addition we also get the size of the APIC ID that is * used to represent the number of logical processors. This is important for * deriving topology information. * * In the Bulldozer family, AMD added leaf 0x8000001E. The information varies a * bit between Bulldozer and later families, but it is quite useful in * determining the topology information. Because this information has changed * across family generations, it's worth calling out what these mean * explicitly. The registers have the following meanings: * * %eax The APIC ID. The entire register is defined to have a 32-bit * APIC ID, even though on systems without x2apic support, it will * be limited to 8 bits. * * %ebx On Bulldozer-era systems this contains information about the * number of cores that are in a compute unit (cores that share * resources). It also contains a per-package compute unit ID that * identifies which compute unit the logical CPU is a part of. * * On Zen-era systems this instead contains the number of threads * per core and the ID of the core that the logical CPU is a part * of. Note, this ID is unique only to the package, it is not * globally unique across the entire system. * * %ecx This contains the number of nodes that exist in the package. It * also contains an ID that identifies which node the logical CPU * is a part of. * * Finally, we also use cpuid leaf 0x8000001D to determine information about the * cache layout to determine which logical CPUs are sharing which caches. * * illumos Topology * ---------------- * * Based on the above we synthesize the information into several different * variables that we store in the 'struct cpuid_info'. We'll go into the details * of what each member is supposed to represent and their uniqueness. In * general, there are two levels of uniqueness that we care about. We care about * an ID that is globally unique. That means that it will be unique across all * entities in the system. For example, the default logical CPU ID is globally * unique. On the other hand, there is some information that we only care about * being unique within the context of a single package / socket. Here are the * variables that we keep track of and their meaning. * * Several of the values that are asking for an identifier, with the exception * of cpi_apicid, are allowed to be synthetic. * * * cpi_apicid * * This is the value of the CPU's APIC id. This should be the full 32-bit * ID if the CPU is using the x2apic. Otherwise, it should be the 8-bit * APIC ID. This value is globally unique between all logical CPUs across * all packages. This is usually required by the APIC. * * cpi_chipid * * This value indicates the ID of the package that the logical CPU is a * part of. This value is allowed to be synthetic. It is usually derived by * taking the CPU's APIC ID and determining how many bits are used to * represent CPU cores in the package. All logical CPUs that are part of * the same package must have the same value. * * cpi_coreid * * This represents the ID of a CPU core. Two logical CPUs should only have * the same cpi_coreid value if they are part of the same core. These * values may be synthetic. On systems that support SMT, this value is * usually derived from the APIC ID, otherwise it is often synthetic and * just set to the value of the cpu_id in the cpu_t. * * cpi_pkgcoreid * * This is similar to the cpi_coreid in that logical CPUs that are part of * the same core should have the same ID. The main difference is that these * values are only required to be unique to a given socket. * * cpi_clogid * * This represents the logical ID of a logical CPU. This value should be * unique within a given socket for each logical CPU. This is allowed to be * synthetic, though it is usually based off of the CPU's apic ID. The * broader system expects that logical CPUs that have are part of the same * core have contiguous numbers. For example, if there were two threads per * core, then the core IDs divided by two should be the same and the first * modulus two should be zero and the second one. For example, IDs 4 and 5 * indicate two logical CPUs that are part of the same core. But IDs 5 and * 6 represent two logical CPUs that are part of different cores. * * While it is common for the cpi_coreid and the cpi_clogid to be derived * from the same source, strictly speaking, they don't have to be and the * two values should be considered logically independent. One should not * try to compare a logical CPU's cpi_coreid and cpi_clogid to determine * some kind of relationship. While this is tempting, we've seen cases on * AMD family 0xf where the system's cpu id is not related to its APIC ID. * * cpi_ncpu_per_chip * * This value indicates the total number of logical CPUs that exist in the * physical package. Critically, this is not the number of logical CPUs * that exist for just the single core. * * This value should be the same for all logical CPUs in the same package. * * cpi_ncore_per_chip * * This value indicates the total number of physical CPU cores that exist * in the package. The system compares this value with cpi_ncpu_per_chip to * determine if simultaneous multi-threading (SMT) is enabled. When * cpi_ncpu_per_chip equals cpi_ncore_per_chip, then there is no SMT and * the X86FSET_HTT feature is not set. If this value is greater than one, * than we consider the processor to have the feature X86FSET_CMP, to * indicate that there is support for more than one core. * * This value should be the same for all logical CPUs in the same package. * * cpi_procnodes_per_pkg * * This value indicates the number of 'nodes' that exist in the package. * When processors are actually a multi-chip module, this represents the * number of such modules that exist in the package. Currently, on Intel * based systems this member is always set to 1. * * This value should be the same for all logical CPUs in the same package. * * cpi_procnodeid * * This value indicates the ID of the node that the logical CPU is a part * of. All logical CPUs that are in the same node must have the same value * here. This value must be unique across all of the packages in the * system. On Intel based systems, this is currently set to the value in * cpi_chipid because there is only one node. * * cpi_cores_per_compunit * * This value indicates the number of cores that are part of a compute * unit. See the AMD topology section for this. This member only has real * meaning currently for AMD Bulldozer family processors. For all other * processors, this should currently be set to 1. * * cpi_compunitid * * This indicates the compute unit that the logical CPU belongs to. For * processors without AMD Bulldozer-style compute units this should be set * to the value of cpi_coreid. * * cpi_ncpu_shr_last_cache * * This indicates the number of logical CPUs that are sharing the same last * level cache. This value should be the same for all CPUs that are sharing * that cache. The last cache refers to the cache that is closest to memory * and furthest away from the CPU. * * cpi_last_lvl_cacheid * * This indicates the ID of the last cache that the logical CPU uses. This * cache is often shared between multiple logical CPUs and is the cache * that is closest to memory and furthest away from the CPU. This value * should be the same for a group of logical CPUs only if they actually * share the same last level cache. IDs should not overlap between * packages. * * cpi_ncore_bits * * This indicates the number of bits that are required to represent all of * the cores in the system. As cores are derived based on their APIC IDs, * we aren't guaranteed a run of APIC IDs starting from zero. It's OK for * this value to be larger than the actual number of IDs that are present * in the system. This is used to size tables by the CMI framework. It is * only filled in for Intel and AMD CPUs. * * cpi_nthread_bits * * This indicates the number of bits required to represent all of the IDs * that cover the logical CPUs that exist on a given core. It's OK for this * value to be larger than the actual number of IDs that are present in the * system. This is used to size tables by the CMI framework. It is * only filled in for Intel and AMD CPUs. * * ----------- * Hypervisors * ----------- * * If trying to manage the differences between vendors wasn't bad enough, it can * get worse thanks to our friend hardware virtualization. Hypervisors are given * the ability to interpose on all cpuid instructions and change them to suit * their purposes. In general, this is necessary as the hypervisor wants to be * able to present a more uniform set of features or not necessarily give the * guest operating system kernel knowledge of all features so it can be * more easily migrated between systems. * * When it comes to trying to determine topology information, this can be a * double edged sword. When a hypervisor doesn't actually implement a cpuid * leaf, it'll often return all zeros. Because of that, you'll often see various * checks scattered about fields being non-zero before we assume we can use * them. * * When it comes to topology information, the hypervisor is often incentivized * to lie to you about topology. This is because it doesn't always actually * guarantee that topology at all. The topology path we take in the system * depends on how the CPU advertises itself. If it advertises itself as an Intel * or AMD CPU, then we basically do our normal path. However, when they don't * use an actual vendor, then that usually turns into multiple one-core CPUs * that we enumerate that are often on different sockets. The actual behavior * depends greatly on what the hypervisor actually exposes to us. * * -------------------- * Exposing Information * -------------------- * * We expose CPUID information in three different forms in the system. * * The first is through the x86_featureset variable. This is used in conjunction * with the is_x86_feature() function. This is queried by x86-specific functions * to determine which features are or aren't present in the system and to make * decisions based upon them. For example, users of this include everything from * parts of the system dedicated to reliability, availability, and * serviceability (RAS), to making decisions about how to handle security * mitigations, to various x86-specific drivers. General purpose or * architecture independent drivers should never be calling this function. * * The second means is through the auxiliary vector. The auxiliary vector is a * series of tagged data that the kernel passes down to a user program when it * begins executing. This information is used to indicate to programs what * instruction set extensions are present. For example, information about the * CPU supporting the machine check architecture (MCA) wouldn't be passed down * since user programs cannot make use of it. However, things like the AVX * instruction sets are. Programs use this information to make run-time * decisions about what features they should use. As an example, the run-time * link-editor (rtld) can relocate different functions depending on the hardware * support available. * * The final form is through a series of accessor functions that all have the * form cpuid_get*. This is used by a number of different subsystems in the * kernel to determine more detailed information about what we're running on, * topology information, etc. Some of these subsystems include processor groups * (uts/common/os/pg.c.), CPU Module Interface (uts/i86pc/os/cmi.c), ACPI, * microcode, and performance monitoring. These functions all ASSERT that the * CPU they're being called on has reached a certain cpuid pass. If the passes * are rearranged, then this needs to be adjusted. * * ----------------------------------------------- * Speculative Execution CPU Side Channel Security * ----------------------------------------------- * * With the advent of the Spectre and Meltdown attacks which exploit speculative * execution in the CPU to create side channels there have been a number of * different attacks and corresponding issues that the operating system needs to * mitigate against. The following list is some of the common, but not * exhaustive, set of issues that we know about and have done some or need to do * more work in the system to mitigate against: * * - Spectre v1 * - swapgs (Spectre v1 variant) * - Spectre v2 * - Meltdown (Spectre v3) * - Rogue Register Read (Spectre v3a) * - Speculative Store Bypass (Spectre v4) * - ret2spec, SpectreRSB * - L1 Terminal Fault (L1TF) * - Microarchitectural Data Sampling (MDS) * - Register File Data Sampling (RFDS) * * Each of these requires different sets of mitigations and has different attack * surfaces. For the most part, this discussion is about protecting the kernel * from non-kernel executing environments such as user processes and hardware * virtual machines. Unfortunately, there are a number of user vs. user * scenarios that exist with these. The rest of this section will describe the * overall approach that the system has taken to address these as well as their * shortcomings. Unfortunately, not all of the above have been handled today. * * SPECTRE v2, ret2spec, SpectreRSB * * The second variant of the spectre attack focuses on performing branch target * injection. This generally impacts indirect call instructions in the system. * There are four different ways to mitigate this issue that are commonly * described today: * * 1. Using Indirect Branch Restricted Speculation (IBRS). * 2. Using Retpolines and RSB Stuffing * 3. Using Enhanced Indirect Branch Restricted Speculation (eIBRS) * 4. Using Automated Indirect Branch Restricted Speculation (AIBRS) * * IBRS uses a feature added to microcode to restrict speculation, among other * things. This form of mitigation has not been used as it has been generally * seen as too expensive and requires reactivation upon various transitions in * the system. * * As a less impactful alternative to IBRS, retpolines were developed by * Google. These basically require one to replace indirect calls with a specific * trampoline that will cause speculation to fail and break the attack. * Retpolines require compiler support. We always build with retpolines in the * external thunk mode. This means that a traditional indirect call is replaced * with a call to one of the __x86_indirect_thunk_ functions. A side effect * of this is that all indirect function calls are performed through a register. * * We have to use a common external location of the thunk and not inline it into * the callsite so that way we can have a single place to patch these functions. * As it turns out, we currently have two different forms of retpolines that * exist in the system: * * 1. A full retpoline * 2. A no-op version * * The first one is used in the general case. Historically, there was an * AMD-specific optimized retopoline variant that was based around using a * serializing lfence instruction; however, in March 2022 it was announced that * this was actually still vulnerable to Spectre v2 and therefore we no longer * use it and it is no longer available in the system. * * The third form described above is the most curious. It turns out that the way * that retpolines are implemented is that they rely on how speculation is * performed on a 'ret' instruction. Intel has continued to optimize this * process (which is partly why we need to have return stack buffer stuffing, * but more on that in a bit) and in processors starting with Cascade Lake * on the server side, it's dangerous to rely on retpolines. Instead, a new * mechanism has been introduced called Enhanced IBRS (eIBRS). * * Unlike IBRS, eIBRS is designed to be enabled once at boot and left on each * physical core. However, if this is the case, we don't want to use retpolines * any more. Therefore if eIBRS is present, we end up turning each retpoline * function (called a thunk) into a jmp instruction. This means that we're still * paying the cost of an extra jump to the external thunk, but it gives us * flexibility and the ability to have a single kernel image that works across a * wide variety of systems and hardware features. * * Unfortunately, this alone is insufficient. First, Skylake systems have * additional speculation for the Return Stack Buffer (RSB) which is used to * return from call instructions which retpolines take advantage of. However, * this problem is not just limited to Skylake and is actually more pernicious. * The SpectreRSB paper introduces several more problems that can arise with * dealing with this. The RSB can be poisoned just like the indirect branch * predictor. This means that one needs to clear the RSB when transitioning * between two different privilege domains. Some examples include: * * - Switching between two different user processes * - Going between user land and the kernel * - Returning to the kernel from a hardware virtual machine * * Mitigating this involves combining a couple of different things. The first is * SMEP (supervisor mode execution protection) which was introduced in Ivy * Bridge. When an RSB entry refers to a user address and we're executing in the * kernel, speculation through it will be stopped when SMEP is enabled. This * protects against a number of the different cases that we would normally be * worried about such as when we enter the kernel from user land. * * To prevent against additional manipulation of the RSB from other contexts * such as a non-root VMX context attacking the kernel we first look to * enhanced IBRS. When eIBRS is present and enabled, then there should be * nothing else that we need to do to protect the kernel at this time. * * Unfortunately, eIBRS or not, we need to manually overwrite the contents of * the return stack buffer. We do this through the x86_rsb_stuff() function. * Currently this is employed on context switch and vmx_exit. The * x86_rsb_stuff() function is disabled only when mitigations in general are. * * If SMEP is not present, then we would have to stuff the RSB every time we * transitioned from user mode to the kernel, which isn't very practical right * now. * * To fully protect user to user and vmx to vmx attacks from these classes of * issues, we would also need to allow them to opt into performing an Indirect * Branch Prediction Barrier (IBPB) on switch. This is not currently wired up. * * The fourth form of mitigation here is specific to AMD and is called Automated * IBRS (AIBRS). This is similar in spirit to eIBRS; however rather than set the * IBRS bit in MSR_IA32_SPEC_CTRL (0x48) we instead set a bit in the EFER * (extended feature enable register) MSR. This bit basically says that IBRS * acts as though it is always active when executing at CPL0 and when executing * in the 'host' context when SEV-SNP is enabled. * * When this is active, AMD states that the RSB is cleared on VMEXIT and * therefore it is unnecessary. While this handles RSB stuffing attacks from SVM * to the kernel, we must still consider the remaining cases that exist, just * like above. While traditionally AMD employed a 32 entry RSB allowing the * traditional technique to work, this is not true on all CPUs. While a write to * IBRS would clear the RSB if the processor supports more than 32 entries (but * not otherwise), AMD states that as long as at leat a single 4 KiB unmapped * guard page is present between user and kernel address spaces and SMEP is * enabled, then there is no need to clear the RSB at all. * * By default, the system will enable RSB stuffing and the required variant of * retpolines and store that information in the x86_spectrev2_mitigation value. * This will be evaluated after a microcode update as well, though it is * expected that microcode updates will not take away features. This may mean * that a late loaded microcode may not end up in the optimal configuration * (though this should be rare). * * Currently we do not build kmdb with retpolines or perform any additional side * channel security mitigations for it. One complication with kmdb is that it * requires its own retpoline thunks and it would need to adjust itself based on * what the kernel does. The threat model of kmdb is more limited and therefore * it may make more sense to investigate using prediction barriers as the whole * system is only executing a single instruction at a time while in kmdb. * * SPECTRE v1, v4 * * The v1 and v4 variants of spectre are not currently mitigated in the * system and require other classes of changes to occur in the code. * * SPECTRE v1 (SWAPGS VARIANT) * * The class of Spectre v1 vulnerabilities aren't all about bounds checks, but * can generally affect any branch-dependent code. The swapgs issue is one * variant of this. If we are coming in from userspace, we can have code like * this: * * cmpw $KCS_SEL, REGOFF_CS(%rsp) * je 1f * movq $0, REGOFF_SAVFP(%rsp) * swapgs * 1: * movq %gs:CPU_THREAD, %rax * * If an attacker can cause a mis-speculation of the branch here, we could skip * the needed swapgs, and use the /user/ %gsbase as the base of the %gs-based * load. If subsequent code can act as the usual Spectre cache gadget, this * would potentially allow KPTI bypass. To fix this, we need an lfence prior to * any use of the %gs override. * * The other case is also an issue: if we're coming into a trap from kernel * space, we could mis-speculate and swapgs the user %gsbase back in prior to * using it. AMD systems are not vulnerable to this version, as a swapgs is * serializing with respect to subsequent uses. But as AMD /does/ need the other * case, and the fix is the same in both cases (an lfence at the branch target * 1: in this example), we'll just do it unconditionally. * * Note that we don't enable user-space "wrgsbase" via CR4_FSGSBASE, making it * harder for user-space to actually set a useful %gsbase value: although it's * not clear, it might still be feasible via lwp_setprivate(), though, so we * mitigate anyway. * * MELTDOWN * * Meltdown, or spectre v3, allowed a user process to read any data in their * address space regardless of whether or not the page tables in question * allowed the user to have the ability to read them. The solution to meltdown * is kernel page table isolation. In this world, there are two page tables that * are used for a process, one in user land and one in the kernel. To implement * this we use per-CPU page tables and switch between the user and kernel * variants when entering and exiting the kernel. For more information about * this process and how the trampolines work, please see the big theory * statements and additional comments in: * * - uts/i86pc/ml/kpti_trampolines.s * - uts/i86pc/vm/hat_i86.c * * While Meltdown only impacted Intel systems and there are also Intel systems * that have Meltdown fixed (called Rogue Data Cache Load), we always have * kernel page table isolation enabled. While this may at first seem weird, an * important thing to remember is that you can't speculatively read an address * if it's never in your page table at all. Having user processes without kernel * pages present provides us with an important layer of defense in the kernel * against any other side channel attacks that exist and have yet to be * discovered. As such, kernel page table isolation (KPTI) is always enabled by * default, no matter the x86 system. * * L1 TERMINAL FAULT * * L1 Terminal Fault (L1TF) takes advantage of an issue in how speculative * execution uses page table entries. Effectively, it is two different problems. * The first is that it ignores the not present bit in the page table entries * when performing speculative execution. This means that something can * speculatively read the listed physical address if it's present in the L1 * cache under certain conditions (see Intel's documentation for the full set of * conditions). Secondly, this can be used to bypass hardware virtualization * extended page tables (EPT) that are part of Intel's hardware virtual machine * instructions. * * For the non-hardware virtualized case, this is relatively easy to deal with. * We must make sure that all unmapped pages have an address of zero. This means * that they could read the first 4k of physical memory; however, we never use * that first page in the operating system and always skip putting it in our * memory map, even if firmware tells us we can use it in our memory map. While * other systems try to put extra metadata in the address and reserved bits, * which led to this being problematic in those cases, we do not. * * For hardware virtual machines things are more complicated. Because they can * construct their own page tables, it isn't hard for them to perform this * attack against any physical address. The one wrinkle is that this physical * address must be in the L1 data cache. Thus Intel added an MSR that we can use * to flush the L1 data cache. We wrap this up in the function * spec_uarch_flush(). This function is also used in the mitigation of * microarchitectural data sampling (MDS) discussed later on. Kernel based * hypervisors such as KVM or bhyve are responsible for performing this before * entering the guest. * * Because this attack takes place in the L1 cache, there's another wrinkle * here. The L1 cache is shared between all logical CPUs in a core in most Intel * designs. This means that when a thread enters a hardware virtualized context * and flushes the L1 data cache, the other thread on the processor may then go * ahead and put new data in it that can be potentially attacked. While one * solution is to disable SMT on the system, another option that is available is * to use a feature for hardware virtualization called 'SMT exclusion'. This * goes through and makes sure that if a HVM is being scheduled on one thread, * then the thing on the other thread is from the same hardware virtual machine. * If an interrupt comes in or the guest exits to the broader system, then the * other SMT thread will be kicked out. * * L1TF can be fully mitigated by hardware. If the RDCL_NO feature is set in the * architecture capabilities MSR (MSR_IA32_ARCH_CAPABILITIES), then we will not * perform L1TF related mitigations. * * MICROARCHITECTURAL DATA SAMPLING * * Microarchitectural data sampling (MDS) is a combination of four discrete * vulnerabilities that are similar issues affecting various parts of the CPU's * microarchitectural implementation around load, store, and fill buffers. * Specifically it is made up of the following subcomponents: * * 1. Microarchitectural Store Buffer Data Sampling (MSBDS) * 2. Microarchitectural Fill Buffer Data Sampling (MFBDS) * 3. Microarchitectural Load Port Data Sampling (MLPDS) * 4. Microarchitectural Data Sampling Uncacheable Memory (MDSUM) * * To begin addressing these, Intel has introduced another feature in microcode * called MD_CLEAR. This changes the verw instruction to operate in a different * way. This allows us to execute the verw instruction in a particular way to * flush the state of the affected parts. The L1TF L1D flush mechanism is also * updated when this microcode is present to flush this state. * * Primarily we need to flush this state whenever we transition from the kernel * to a less privileged context such as user mode or an HVM guest. MSBDS is a * little bit different. Here the structures are statically sized when a logical * CPU is in use and resized when it goes to sleep. Therefore, we also need to * flush the microarchitectural state before the CPU goes idles by calling hlt, * mwait, or another ACPI method. To perform these flushes, we call * x86_md_clear() at all of these transition points. * * If hardware enumerates RDCL_NO, indicating that it is not vulnerable to L1TF, * then we change the spec_uarch_flush() function to point to x86_md_clear(). If * MDS_NO has been set, then this is fully mitigated and x86_md_clear() becomes * a no-op. * * Unfortunately, with this issue hyperthreading rears its ugly head. In * particular, everything we've discussed above is only valid for a single * thread executing on a core. In the case where you have hyper-threading * present, this attack can be performed between threads. The theoretical fix * for this is to ensure that both threads are always in the same security * domain. This means that they are executing in the same ring and mutually * trust each other. Practically speaking, this would mean that a system call * would have to issue an inter-processor interrupt (IPI) to the other thread. * Rather than implement this, we recommend that one disables hyper-threading * through the use of psradm -aS. * * TSX ASYNCHRONOUS ABORT * * TSX Asynchronous Abort (TAA) is another side-channel vulnerability that * behaves like MDS, but leverages Intel's transactional instructions as another * vector. Effectively, when a transaction hits one of these cases (unmapped * page, various cache snoop activity, etc.) then the same data can be exposed * as in the case of MDS. This means that you can attack your twin. * * Intel has described that there are two different ways that we can mitigate * this problem on affected processors: * * 1) We can use the same techniques used to deal with MDS. Flushing the * microarchitectural buffers and disabling hyperthreading will mitigate * this in the same way. * * 2) Using microcode to disable TSX. * * Now, most processors that are subject to MDS (as in they don't have MDS_NO in * the IA32_ARCH_CAPABILITIES MSR) will not receive microcode to disable TSX. * That's OK as we're already doing all such mitigations. On the other hand, * processors with MDS_NO are all supposed to receive microcode updates that * enumerate support for disabling TSX. In general, we'd rather use this method * when available as it doesn't require disabling hyperthreading to be * effective. Currently we basically are relying on microcode for processors * that enumerate MDS_NO. * * Another MDS-variant in a few select Intel Atom CPUs is Register File Data * Sampling: RFDS. This allows an attacker to sample values that were in any * of integer, floating point, or vector registers. This was discovered by * Intel during internal validation work. The existence of the RFDS_NO * capability, or the LACK of a RFDS_CLEAR capability, means we do not have to * act. Intel has said some CPU models immune to RFDS MAY NOT enumerate * RFDS_NO. If RFDS_NO is not set, but RFDS_CLEAR is, we must set x86_md_clear, * and make sure it's using VERW. Unlike MDS, RFDS can't be helped by the * MSR that L1D uses. * * The microcode features are enumerated as part of the IA32_ARCH_CAPABILITIES. * When bit 7 (IA32_ARCH_CAP_TSX_CTRL) is present, then we are given two * different powers. The first allows us to cause all transactions to * immediately abort. The second gives us a means of disabling TSX completely, * which includes removing it from cpuid. If we have support for this in * microcode during the first cpuid pass, then we'll disable TSX completely such * that user land never has a chance to observe the bit. However, if we are late * loading the microcode, then we must use the functionality to cause * transactions to automatically abort. This is necessary for user land's sake. * Once a program sees a cpuid bit, it must not be taken away. * * We track whether or not we should do this based on what cpuid pass we're in. * Whenever we hit cpuid_scan_security() on the boot CPU and we're still on pass * 1 of the cpuid logic, then we can completely turn off TSX. Notably this * should happen twice. Once in the normal cpuid_pass_basic() code and then a * second time after we do the initial microcode update. As a result we need to * be careful in cpuid_apply_tsx() to only use the MSR if we've loaded a * suitable microcode on the current CPU (which happens prior to * cpuid_pass_ucode()). * * If TAA has been fixed, then it will be enumerated in IA32_ARCH_CAPABILITIES * as TAA_NO. In such a case, we will still disable TSX: it's proven to be an * unfortunate feature in a number of ways, and taking the opportunity to * finally be able to turn it off is likely to be of benefit in the future. * * SUMMARY * * The following table attempts to summarize the mitigations for various issues * and what's done in various places: * * - Spectre v1: Not currently mitigated * - swapgs: lfences after swapgs paths * - Spectre v2: Retpolines/RSB Stuffing or eIBRS/AIBRS if HW support * - Meltdown: Kernel Page Table Isolation * - Spectre v3a: Updated CPU microcode * - Spectre v4: Not currently mitigated * - SpectreRSB: SMEP and RSB Stuffing * - L1TF: spec_uarch_flush, SMT exclusion, requires microcode * - MDS: x86_md_clear, requires microcode, disabling SMT * - TAA: x86_md_clear and disabling SMT OR microcode and disabling TSX * - RFDS: microcode with x86_md_clear if RFDS_CLEAR set and RFDS_NO not. * * The following table indicates the x86 feature set bits that indicate that a * given problem has been solved or a notable feature is present: * * - RDCL_NO: Meltdown, L1TF, MSBDS subset of MDS * - MDS_NO: All forms of MDS * - TAA_NO: TAA * - RFDS_NO: RFDS */ #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #ifdef __xpv #include #else #include #endif uint_t x86_vendor = X86_VENDOR_IntelClone; uint_t x86_type = X86_TYPE_OTHER; uint_t x86_clflush_size = 0; #if defined(__xpv) int x86_use_pcid = 0; int x86_use_invpcid = 0; #else int x86_use_pcid = -1; int x86_use_invpcid = -1; #endif typedef enum { X86_SPECTREV2_RETPOLINE, X86_SPECTREV2_ENHANCED_IBRS, X86_SPECTREV2_AUTO_IBRS, X86_SPECTREV2_DISABLED } x86_spectrev2_mitigation_t; uint_t x86_disable_spectrev2 = 0; static x86_spectrev2_mitigation_t x86_spectrev2_mitigation = X86_SPECTREV2_RETPOLINE; /* * The mitigation status for TAA: * X86_TAA_NOTHING -- no mitigation available for TAA side-channels * X86_TAA_DISABLED -- mitigation disabled via x86_disable_taa * X86_TAA_MD_CLEAR -- MDS mitigation also suffices for TAA * X86_TAA_TSX_FORCE_ABORT -- transactions are forced to abort * X86_TAA_TSX_DISABLE -- force abort transactions and hide from CPUID * X86_TAA_HW_MITIGATED -- TSX potentially active but H/W not TAA-vulnerable */ typedef enum { X86_TAA_NOTHING, X86_TAA_DISABLED, X86_TAA_MD_CLEAR, X86_TAA_TSX_FORCE_ABORT, X86_TAA_TSX_DISABLE, X86_TAA_HW_MITIGATED } x86_taa_mitigation_t; uint_t x86_disable_taa = 0; static x86_taa_mitigation_t x86_taa_mitigation = X86_TAA_NOTHING; uint_t pentiumpro_bug4046376; uchar_t x86_featureset[BT_SIZEOFMAP(NUM_X86_FEATURES)]; static char *x86_feature_names[NUM_X86_FEATURES] = { "lgpg", "tsc", "msr", "mtrr", "pge", "de", "cmov", "mmx", "mca", "pae", "cv8", "pat", "sep", "sse", "sse2", "htt", "asysc", "nx", "sse3", "cx16", "cmp", "tscp", "mwait", "sse4a", "cpuid", "ssse3", "sse4_1", "sse4_2", "1gpg", "clfsh", "64", "aes", "pclmulqdq", "xsave", "avx", "vmx", "svm", "topoext", "f16c", "rdrand", "x2apic", "avx2", "bmi1", "bmi2", "fma", "smep", "smap", "adx", "rdseed", "mpx", "avx512f", "avx512dq", "avx512pf", "avx512er", "avx512cd", "avx512bw", "avx512vl", "avx512fma", "avx512vbmi", "avx512_vpopcntdq", "avx512_4vnniw", "avx512_4fmaps", "xsaveopt", "xsavec", "xsaves", "sha", "umip", "pku", "ospke", "pcid", "invpcid", "ibrs", "ibpb", "stibp", "ssbd", "ssbd_virt", "rdcl_no", "ibrs_all", "rsba", "ssb_no", "stibp_all", "flush_cmd", "l1d_vmentry_no", "fsgsbase", "clflushopt", "clwb", "monitorx", "clzero", "xop", "fma4", "tbm", "avx512_vnni", "amd_pcec", "md_clear", "mds_no", "core_thermal", "pkg_thermal", "tsx_ctrl", "taa_no", "ppin", "vaes", "vpclmulqdq", "lfence_serializing", "gfni", "avx512_vp2intersect", "avx512_bitalg", "avx512_vbmi2", "avx512_bf16", "auto_ibrs", "rfds_no", "rfds_clear" }; boolean_t is_x86_feature(void *featureset, uint_t feature) { ASSERT(feature < NUM_X86_FEATURES); return (BT_TEST((ulong_t *)featureset, feature)); } void add_x86_feature(void *featureset, uint_t feature) { ASSERT(feature < NUM_X86_FEATURES); BT_SET((ulong_t *)featureset, feature); } void remove_x86_feature(void *featureset, uint_t feature) { ASSERT(feature < NUM_X86_FEATURES); BT_CLEAR((ulong_t *)featureset, feature); } boolean_t compare_x86_featureset(void *setA, void *setB) { /* * We assume that the unused bits of the bitmap are always zero. */ if (memcmp(setA, setB, BT_SIZEOFMAP(NUM_X86_FEATURES)) == 0) { return (B_TRUE); } else { return (B_FALSE); } } void print_x86_featureset(void *featureset) { uint_t i; for (i = 0; i < NUM_X86_FEATURES; i++) { if (is_x86_feature(featureset, i)) { cmn_err(CE_CONT, "?x86_feature: %s\n", x86_feature_names[i]); } } } /* Note: This is the maximum size for the CPU, not the size of the structure. */ static size_t xsave_state_size = 0; uint64_t xsave_bv_all = (XFEATURE_LEGACY_FP | XFEATURE_SSE); boolean_t xsave_force_disable = B_FALSE; extern int disable_smap; /* * This is set to platform type we are running on. */ static int platform_type = -1; #if !defined(__xpv) /* * Variable to patch if hypervisor platform detection needs to be * disabled (e.g. platform_type will always be HW_NATIVE if this is 0). */ int enable_platform_detection = 1; #endif /* * monitor/mwait info. * * size_actual and buf_actual are the real address and size allocated to get * proper mwait_buf alignement. buf_actual and size_actual should be passed * to kmem_free(). Currently kmem_alloc() and mwait happen to both use * processor cache-line alignment, but this is not guarantied in the furture. */ struct mwait_info { size_t mon_min; /* min size to avoid missed wakeups */ size_t mon_max; /* size to avoid false wakeups */ size_t size_actual; /* size actually allocated */ void *buf_actual; /* memory actually allocated */ uint32_t support; /* processor support of monitor/mwait */ }; /* * xsave/xrestor info. * * This structure contains HW feature bits and the size of the xsave save area. * Note: the kernel declares a fixed size (AVX_XSAVE_SIZE) structure * (xsave_state) to describe the xsave layout. However, at runtime the * per-lwp xsave area is dynamically allocated based on xsav_max_size. The * xsave_state structure simply represents the legacy layout of the beginning * of the xsave area. */ struct xsave_info { uint32_t xsav_hw_features_low; /* Supported HW features */ uint32_t xsav_hw_features_high; /* Supported HW features */ size_t xsav_max_size; /* max size save area for HW features */ size_t ymm_size; /* AVX: size of ymm save area */ size_t ymm_offset; /* AVX: offset for ymm save area */ size_t bndregs_size; /* MPX: size of bndregs save area */ size_t bndregs_offset; /* MPX: offset for bndregs save area */ size_t bndcsr_size; /* MPX: size of bndcsr save area */ size_t bndcsr_offset; /* MPX: offset for bndcsr save area */ size_t opmask_size; /* AVX512: size of opmask save */ size_t opmask_offset; /* AVX512: offset for opmask save */ size_t zmmlo_size; /* AVX512: size of zmm 256 save */ size_t zmmlo_offset; /* AVX512: offset for zmm 256 save */ size_t zmmhi_size; /* AVX512: size of zmm hi reg save */ size_t zmmhi_offset; /* AVX512: offset for zmm hi reg save */ }; /* * These constants determine how many of the elements of the * cpuid we cache in the cpuid_info data structure; the * remaining elements are accessible via the cpuid instruction. */ #define NMAX_CPI_STD 8 /* eax = 0 .. 7 */ #define NMAX_CPI_EXTD 0x22 /* eax = 0x80000000 .. 0x80000021 */ #define NMAX_CPI_TOPO 0x10 /* Sanity check on leaf 8X26, 1F */ /* * See the big theory statement for a more detailed explanation of what some of * these members mean. */ struct cpuid_info { uint_t cpi_pass; /* last pass completed */ /* * standard function information */ uint_t cpi_maxeax; /* fn 0: %eax */ char cpi_vendorstr[13]; /* fn 0: %ebx:%ecx:%edx */ uint_t cpi_vendor; /* enum of cpi_vendorstr */ uint_t cpi_family; /* fn 1: extended family */ uint_t cpi_model; /* fn 1: extended model */ uint_t cpi_step; /* fn 1: stepping */ chipid_t cpi_chipid; /* fn 1: %ebx: Intel: chip # */ /* AMD: package/socket # */ uint_t cpi_brandid; /* fn 1: %ebx: brand ID */ int cpi_clogid; /* fn 1: %ebx: thread # */ uint_t cpi_ncpu_per_chip; /* fn 1: %ebx: logical cpu count */ uint8_t cpi_cacheinfo[16]; /* fn 2: intel-style cache desc */ uint_t cpi_ncache; /* fn 2: number of elements */ uint_t cpi_ncpu_shr_last_cache; /* fn 4: %eax: ncpus sharing cache */ id_t cpi_last_lvl_cacheid; /* fn 4: %eax: derived cache id */ uint_t cpi_cache_leaf_size; /* Number of cache elements */ /* Intel fn: 4, AMD fn: 8000001d */ struct cpuid_regs **cpi_cache_leaves; /* Actual leaves from above */ struct cpuid_regs cpi_std[NMAX_CPI_STD]; /* 0 .. 7 */ struct cpuid_regs cpi_sub7[1]; /* Leaf 7, sub-leaf 1 */ /* * extended function information */ uint_t cpi_xmaxeax; /* fn 0x80000000: %eax */ char cpi_brandstr[49]; /* fn 0x8000000[234] */ uint8_t cpi_pabits; /* fn 0x80000006: %eax */ uint8_t cpi_vabits; /* fn 0x80000006: %eax */ uint8_t cpi_fp_amd_save; /* AMD: FP error pointer save rqd. */ struct cpuid_regs cpi_extd[NMAX_CPI_EXTD]; /* 0x800000XX */ id_t cpi_coreid; /* same coreid => strands share core */ int cpi_pkgcoreid; /* core number within single package */ uint_t cpi_ncore_per_chip; /* AMD: fn 0x80000008: %ecx[7-0] */ /* Intel: fn 4: %eax[31-26] */ /* * These values represent the number of bits that are required to store * information about the number of cores and threads. */ uint_t cpi_ncore_bits; uint_t cpi_nthread_bits; /* * supported feature information */ uint32_t cpi_support[6]; #define STD_EDX_FEATURES 0 #define AMD_EDX_FEATURES 1 #define TM_EDX_FEATURES 2 #define STD_ECX_FEATURES 3 #define AMD_ECX_FEATURES 4 #define STD_EBX_FEATURES 5 /* * Synthesized information, where known. */ x86_chiprev_t cpi_chiprev; /* See X86_CHIPREV_* in x86_archext.h */ const char *cpi_chiprevstr; /* May be NULL if chiprev unknown */ uint32_t cpi_socket; /* Chip package/socket type */ x86_uarchrev_t cpi_uarchrev; /* Microarchitecture and revision */ struct mwait_info cpi_mwait; /* fn 5: monitor/mwait info */ uint32_t cpi_apicid; uint_t cpi_procnodeid; /* AMD: nodeID on HT, Intel: chipid */ uint_t cpi_procnodes_per_pkg; /* AMD: # of nodes in the package */ /* Intel: 1 */ uint_t cpi_compunitid; /* AMD: ComputeUnit ID, Intel: coreid */ uint_t cpi_cores_per_compunit; /* AMD: # of cores in the ComputeUnit */ struct xsave_info cpi_xsave; /* fn D: xsave/xrestor info */ /* * AMD and Intel extended topology information. Leaf 8X26 (AMD) and * eventually leaf 0x1F (Intel). */ uint_t cpi_topo_nleaves; struct cpuid_regs cpi_topo[NMAX_CPI_TOPO]; }; static struct cpuid_info cpuid_info0; /* * These bit fields are defined by the Intel Application Note AP-485 * "Intel Processor Identification and the CPUID Instruction" */ #define CPI_FAMILY_XTD(cpi) BITX((cpi)->cpi_std[1].cp_eax, 27, 20) #define CPI_MODEL_XTD(cpi) BITX((cpi)->cpi_std[1].cp_eax, 19, 16) #define CPI_TYPE(cpi) BITX((cpi)->cpi_std[1].cp_eax, 13, 12) #define CPI_FAMILY(cpi) BITX((cpi)->cpi_std[1].cp_eax, 11, 8) #define CPI_STEP(cpi) BITX((cpi)->cpi_std[1].cp_eax, 3, 0) #define CPI_MODEL(cpi) BITX((cpi)->cpi_std[1].cp_eax, 7, 4) #define CPI_FEATURES_EDX(cpi) ((cpi)->cpi_std[1].cp_edx) #define CPI_FEATURES_ECX(cpi) ((cpi)->cpi_std[1].cp_ecx) #define CPI_FEATURES_XTD_EDX(cpi) ((cpi)->cpi_extd[1].cp_edx) #define CPI_FEATURES_XTD_ECX(cpi) ((cpi)->cpi_extd[1].cp_ecx) #define CPI_FEATURES_7_0_EBX(cpi) ((cpi)->cpi_std[7].cp_ebx) #define CPI_FEATURES_7_0_ECX(cpi) ((cpi)->cpi_std[7].cp_ecx) #define CPI_FEATURES_7_0_EDX(cpi) ((cpi)->cpi_std[7].cp_edx) #define CPI_FEATURES_7_1_EAX(cpi) ((cpi)->cpi_sub7[0].cp_eax) #define CPI_BRANDID(cpi) BITX((cpi)->cpi_std[1].cp_ebx, 7, 0) #define CPI_CHUNKS(cpi) BITX((cpi)->cpi_std[1].cp_ebx, 15, 7) #define CPI_CPU_COUNT(cpi) BITX((cpi)->cpi_std[1].cp_ebx, 23, 16) #define CPI_APIC_ID(cpi) BITX((cpi)->cpi_std[1].cp_ebx, 31, 24) #define CPI_MAXEAX_MAX 0x100 /* sanity control */ #define CPI_XMAXEAX_MAX 0x80000100 #define CPI_FN4_ECX_MAX 0x20 /* sanity: max fn 4 levels */ #define CPI_FNB_ECX_MAX 0x20 /* sanity: max fn B levels */ /* * Function 4 (Deterministic Cache Parameters) macros * Defined by Intel Application Note AP-485 */ #define CPI_NUM_CORES(regs) BITX((regs)->cp_eax, 31, 26) #define CPI_NTHR_SHR_CACHE(regs) BITX((regs)->cp_eax, 25, 14) #define CPI_FULL_ASSOC_CACHE(regs) BITX((regs)->cp_eax, 9, 9) #define CPI_SELF_INIT_CACHE(regs) BITX((regs)->cp_eax, 8, 8) #define CPI_CACHE_LVL(regs) BITX((regs)->cp_eax, 7, 5) #define CPI_CACHE_TYPE(regs) BITX((regs)->cp_eax, 4, 0) #define CPI_CACHE_TYPE_DONE 0 #define CPI_CACHE_TYPE_DATA 1 #define CPI_CACHE_TYPE_INSTR 2 #define CPI_CACHE_TYPE_UNIFIED 3 #define CPI_CPU_LEVEL_TYPE(regs) BITX((regs)->cp_ecx, 15, 8) #define CPI_CACHE_WAYS(regs) BITX((regs)->cp_ebx, 31, 22) #define CPI_CACHE_PARTS(regs) BITX((regs)->cp_ebx, 21, 12) #define CPI_CACHE_COH_LN_SZ(regs) BITX((regs)->cp_ebx, 11, 0) #define CPI_CACHE_SETS(regs) BITX((regs)->cp_ecx, 31, 0) #define CPI_PREFCH_STRIDE(regs) BITX((regs)->cp_edx, 9, 0) /* * A couple of shorthand macros to identify "later" P6-family chips * like the Pentium M and Core. First, the "older" P6-based stuff * (loosely defined as "pre-Pentium-4"): * P6, PII, Mobile PII, PII Xeon, PIII, Mobile PIII, PIII Xeon */ #define IS_LEGACY_P6(cpi) ( \ cpi->cpi_family == 6 && \ (cpi->cpi_model == 1 || \ cpi->cpi_model == 3 || \ cpi->cpi_model == 5 || \ cpi->cpi_model == 6 || \ cpi->cpi_model == 7 || \ cpi->cpi_model == 8 || \ cpi->cpi_model == 0xA || \ cpi->cpi_model == 0xB) \ ) /* A "new F6" is everything with family 6 that's not the above */ #define IS_NEW_F6(cpi) ((cpi->cpi_family == 6) && !IS_LEGACY_P6(cpi)) /* Extended family/model support */ #define IS_EXTENDED_MODEL_INTEL(cpi) (cpi->cpi_family == 0x6 || \ cpi->cpi_family >= 0xf) /* * Info for monitor/mwait idle loop. * * See cpuid section of "Intel 64 and IA-32 Architectures Software Developer's * Manual Volume 2A: Instruction Set Reference, A-M" #25366-022US, November * 2006. * See MONITOR/MWAIT section of "AMD64 Architecture Programmer's Manual * Documentation Updates" #33633, Rev 2.05, December 2006. */ #define MWAIT_SUPPORT (0x00000001) /* mwait supported */ #define MWAIT_EXTENSIONS (0x00000002) /* extenstion supported */ #define MWAIT_ECX_INT_ENABLE (0x00000004) /* ecx 1 extension supported */ #define MWAIT_SUPPORTED(cpi) ((cpi)->cpi_std[1].cp_ecx & CPUID_INTC_ECX_MON) #define MWAIT_INT_ENABLE(cpi) ((cpi)->cpi_std[5].cp_ecx & 0x2) #define MWAIT_EXTENSION(cpi) ((cpi)->cpi_std[5].cp_ecx & 0x1) #define MWAIT_SIZE_MIN(cpi) BITX((cpi)->cpi_std[5].cp_eax, 15, 0) #define MWAIT_SIZE_MAX(cpi) BITX((cpi)->cpi_std[5].cp_ebx, 15, 0) /* * Number of sub-cstates for a given c-state. */ #define MWAIT_NUM_SUBC_STATES(cpi, c_state) \ BITX((cpi)->cpi_std[5].cp_edx, c_state + 3, c_state) /* * XSAVE leaf 0xD enumeration */ #define CPUID_LEAFD_2_YMM_OFFSET 576 #define CPUID_LEAFD_2_YMM_SIZE 256 /* * Common extended leaf names to cut down on typos. */ #define CPUID_LEAF_EXT_0 0x80000000 #define CPUID_LEAF_EXT_8 0x80000008 #define CPUID_LEAF_EXT_1d 0x8000001d #define CPUID_LEAF_EXT_1e 0x8000001e #define CPUID_LEAF_EXT_21 0x80000021 #define CPUID_LEAF_EXT_26 0x80000026 /* * Functions we consume from cpuid_subr.c; don't publish these in a header * file to try and keep people using the expected cpuid_* interfaces. */ extern uint32_t _cpuid_skt(uint_t, uint_t, uint_t, uint_t); extern const char *_cpuid_sktstr(uint_t, uint_t, uint_t, uint_t); extern x86_chiprev_t _cpuid_chiprev(uint_t, uint_t, uint_t, uint_t); extern const char *_cpuid_chiprevstr(uint_t, uint_t, uint_t, uint_t); extern x86_uarchrev_t _cpuid_uarchrev(uint_t, uint_t, uint_t, uint_t); extern uint_t _cpuid_vendorstr_to_vendorcode(char *); /* * Apply up various platform-dependent restrictions where the * underlying platform restrictions mean the CPU can be marked * as less capable than its cpuid instruction would imply. */ #if defined(__xpv) static void platform_cpuid_mangle(uint_t vendor, uint32_t eax, struct cpuid_regs *cp) { switch (eax) { case 1: { uint32_t mcamask = DOMAIN_IS_INITDOMAIN(xen_info) ? 0 : CPUID_INTC_EDX_MCA; cp->cp_edx &= ~(mcamask | CPUID_INTC_EDX_PSE | CPUID_INTC_EDX_VME | CPUID_INTC_EDX_DE | CPUID_INTC_EDX_SEP | CPUID_INTC_EDX_MTRR | CPUID_INTC_EDX_PGE | CPUID_INTC_EDX_PAT | CPUID_AMD_EDX_SYSC | CPUID_INTC_EDX_SEP | CPUID_INTC_EDX_PSE36 | CPUID_INTC_EDX_HTT); break; } case 0x80000001: cp->cp_edx &= ~(CPUID_AMD_EDX_PSE | CPUID_INTC_EDX_VME | CPUID_INTC_EDX_DE | CPUID_AMD_EDX_MTRR | CPUID_AMD_EDX_PGE | CPUID_AMD_EDX_PAT | CPUID_AMD_EDX_PSE36 | CPUID_AMD_EDX_SYSC | CPUID_INTC_EDX_SEP | CPUID_AMD_EDX_TSCP); cp->cp_ecx &= ~CPUID_AMD_ECX_CMP_LGCY; break; default: break; } switch (vendor) { case X86_VENDOR_Intel: switch (eax) { case 4: /* * Zero out the (ncores-per-chip - 1) field */ cp->cp_eax &= 0x03fffffff; break; default: break; } break; case X86_VENDOR_AMD: case X86_VENDOR_HYGON: switch (eax) { case 0x80000001: cp->cp_ecx &= ~CPUID_AMD_ECX_CR8D; break; case CPUID_LEAF_EXT_8: /* * Zero out the (ncores-per-chip - 1) field */ cp->cp_ecx &= 0xffffff00; break; default: break; } break; default: break; } } #else #define platform_cpuid_mangle(vendor, eax, cp) /* nothing */ #endif /* * Some undocumented ways of patching the results of the cpuid * instruction to permit running Solaris 10 on future cpus that * we don't currently support. Could be set to non-zero values * via settings in eeprom. */ uint32_t cpuid_feature_ecx_include; uint32_t cpuid_feature_ecx_exclude; uint32_t cpuid_feature_edx_include; uint32_t cpuid_feature_edx_exclude; /* * Allocate space for mcpu_cpi in the machcpu structure for all non-boot CPUs. */ void cpuid_alloc_space(cpu_t *cpu) { /* * By convention, cpu0 is the boot cpu, which is set up * before memory allocation is available. All other cpus get * their cpuid_info struct allocated here. */ ASSERT(cpu->cpu_id != 0); ASSERT(cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi == NULL); cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi = kmem_zalloc(sizeof (*cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi), KM_SLEEP); } void cpuid_free_space(cpu_t *cpu) { struct cpuid_info *cpi = cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi; int i; ASSERT(cpi != NULL); ASSERT(cpi != &cpuid_info0); /* * Free up any cache leaf related dynamic storage. The first entry was * cached from the standard cpuid storage, so we should not free it. */ for (i = 1; i < cpi->cpi_cache_leaf_size; i++) kmem_free(cpi->cpi_cache_leaves[i], sizeof (struct cpuid_regs)); if (cpi->cpi_cache_leaf_size > 0) kmem_free(cpi->cpi_cache_leaves, cpi->cpi_cache_leaf_size * sizeof (struct cpuid_regs *)); kmem_free(cpi, sizeof (*cpi)); cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi = NULL; } #if !defined(__xpv) /* * Determine the type of the underlying platform. This is used to customize * initialization of various subsystems (e.g. TSC). determine_platform() must * only ever be called once to prevent two processors from seeing different * values of platform_type. Must be called before cpuid_pass_ident(), the * earliest consumer to execute; the identification pass will call * synth_amd_info() to compute the chiprev, which in turn calls get_hwenv(). */ void determine_platform(void) { struct cpuid_regs cp; uint32_t base; uint32_t regs[4]; char *hvstr = (char *)regs; ASSERT(platform_type == -1); platform_type = HW_NATIVE; if (!enable_platform_detection) return; /* * If Hypervisor CPUID bit is set, try to determine hypervisor * vendor signature, and set platform type accordingly. * * References: * http://lkml.org/lkml/2008/10/1/246 * http://kb.vmware.com/kb/1009458 */ cp.cp_eax = 0x1; (void) __cpuid_insn(&cp); if ((cp.cp_ecx & CPUID_INTC_ECX_HV) != 0) { cp.cp_eax = 0x40000000; (void) __cpuid_insn(&cp); regs[0] = cp.cp_ebx; regs[1] = cp.cp_ecx; regs[2] = cp.cp_edx; regs[3] = 0; if (strcmp(hvstr, HVSIG_XEN_HVM) == 0) { platform_type = HW_XEN_HVM; return; } if (strcmp(hvstr, HVSIG_VMWARE) == 0) { platform_type = HW_VMWARE; return; } if (strcmp(hvstr, HVSIG_KVM) == 0) { platform_type = HW_KVM; return; } if (strcmp(hvstr, HVSIG_BHYVE) == 0) { platform_type = HW_BHYVE; return; } if (strcmp(hvstr, HVSIG_MICROSOFT) == 0) { platform_type = HW_MICROSOFT; return; } if (strcmp(hvstr, HVSIG_QEMU_TCG) == 0) { platform_type = HW_QEMU_TCG; return; } } else { /* * Check older VMware hardware versions. VMware hypervisor is * detected by performing an IN operation to VMware hypervisor * port and checking that value returned in %ebx is VMware * hypervisor magic value. * * References: http://kb.vmware.com/kb/1009458 */ vmware_port(VMWARE_HVCMD_GETVERSION, regs); if (regs[1] == VMWARE_HVMAGIC) { platform_type = HW_VMWARE; return; } } /* * Check Xen hypervisor. In a fully virtualized domain, * Xen's pseudo-cpuid function returns a string representing the * Xen signature in %ebx, %ecx, and %edx. %eax contains the maximum * supported cpuid function. We need at least a (base + 2) leaf value * to do what we want to do. Try different base values, since the * hypervisor might use a different one depending on whether Hyper-V * emulation is switched on by default or not. */ for (base = 0x40000000; base < 0x40010000; base += 0x100) { cp.cp_eax = base; (void) __cpuid_insn(&cp); regs[0] = cp.cp_ebx; regs[1] = cp.cp_ecx; regs[2] = cp.cp_edx; regs[3] = 0; if (strcmp(hvstr, HVSIG_XEN_HVM) == 0 && cp.cp_eax >= (base + 2)) { platform_type &= ~HW_NATIVE; platform_type |= HW_XEN_HVM; return; } } } int get_hwenv(void) { ASSERT(platform_type != -1); return (platform_type); } int is_controldom(void) { return (0); } #else int get_hwenv(void) { return (HW_XEN_PV); } int is_controldom(void) { return (DOMAIN_IS_INITDOMAIN(xen_info)); } #endif /* __xpv */ /* * Gather the extended topology information. This should be the same for both * AMD leaf 8X26 and Intel leaf 0x1F (though the data interpretation varies). */ static void cpuid_gather_ext_topo_leaf(struct cpuid_info *cpi, uint32_t leaf) { uint_t i; for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(cpi->cpi_topo); i++) { struct cpuid_regs *regs = &cpi->cpi_topo[i]; bzero(regs, sizeof (struct cpuid_regs)); regs->cp_eax = leaf; regs->cp_ecx = i; (void) __cpuid_insn(regs); if (CPUID_AMD_8X26_ECX_TYPE(regs->cp_ecx) == CPUID_AMD_8X26_TYPE_DONE) { break; } } cpi->cpi_topo_nleaves = i; } /* * Make sure that we have gathered all of the CPUID leaves that we might need to * determine topology. We assume that the standard leaf 1 has already been done * and that xmaxeax has already been calculated. */ static void cpuid_gather_amd_topology_leaves(cpu_t *cpu) { struct cpuid_info *cpi = cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi; if (cpi->cpi_xmaxeax >= CPUID_LEAF_EXT_8) { struct cpuid_regs *cp; cp = &cpi->cpi_extd[8]; cp->cp_eax = CPUID_LEAF_EXT_8; (void) __cpuid_insn(cp); platform_cpuid_mangle(cpi->cpi_vendor, CPUID_LEAF_EXT_8, cp); } if (is_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_TOPOEXT) && cpi->cpi_xmaxeax >= CPUID_LEAF_EXT_1e) { struct cpuid_regs *cp; cp = &cpi->cpi_extd[0x1e]; cp->cp_eax = CPUID_LEAF_EXT_1e; (void) __cpuid_insn(cp); } if (cpi->cpi_xmaxeax >= CPUID_LEAF_EXT_26) { cpuid_gather_ext_topo_leaf(cpi, CPUID_LEAF_EXT_26); } } /* * Get the APIC ID for this processor. If Leaf B is present and valid, we prefer * it to everything else. If not, and we're on an AMD system where 8000001e is * valid, then we use that. Othewrise, we fall back to the default value for the * APIC ID in leaf 1. */ static uint32_t cpuid_gather_apicid(struct cpuid_info *cpi) { /* * Leaf B changes based on the arguments to it. Because we don't cache * it, we need to gather it again. */ if (cpi->cpi_maxeax >= 0xB) { struct cpuid_regs regs; struct cpuid_regs *cp; cp = ®s; cp->cp_eax = 0xB; cp->cp_edx = cp->cp_ebx = cp->cp_ecx = 0; (void) __cpuid_insn(cp); if (cp->cp_ebx != 0) { return (cp->cp_edx); } } if ((cpi->cpi_vendor == X86_VENDOR_AMD || cpi->cpi_vendor == X86_VENDOR_HYGON) && is_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_TOPOEXT) && cpi->cpi_xmaxeax >= CPUID_LEAF_EXT_1e) { return (cpi->cpi_extd[0x1e].cp_eax); } return (CPI_APIC_ID(cpi)); } /* * For AMD processors, attempt to calculate the number of chips and cores that * exist. The way that we do this varies based on the generation, because the * generations themselves have changed dramatically. * * If cpuid leaf 0x80000008 exists, that generally tells us the number of cores. * However, with the advent of family 17h (Zen) it actually tells us the number * of threads, so we need to look at leaf 0x8000001e if available to determine * its value. Otherwise, for all prior families, the number of enabled cores is * the same as threads. * * If we do not have leaf 0x80000008, then we assume that this processor does * not have anything. AMD's older CPUID specification says there's no reason to * fall back to leaf 1. * * In some virtualization cases we will not have leaf 8000001e or it will be * zero. When that happens we assume the number of threads is one. */ static void cpuid_amd_ncores(struct cpuid_info *cpi, uint_t *ncpus, uint_t *ncores) { uint_t nthreads, nthread_per_core; nthreads = nthread_per_core = 1; if (cpi->cpi_xmaxeax >= CPUID_LEAF_EXT_8) { nthreads = BITX(cpi->cpi_extd[8].cp_ecx, 7, 0) + 1; } else if ((cpi->cpi_std[1].cp_edx & CPUID_INTC_EDX_HTT) != 0) { nthreads = CPI_CPU_COUNT(cpi); } /* * For us to have threads, and know about it, we have to be at least at * family 17h and have the cpuid bit that says we have extended * topology. */ if (cpi->cpi_family >= 0x17 && is_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_TOPOEXT) && cpi->cpi_xmaxeax >= CPUID_LEAF_EXT_1e) { nthread_per_core = BITX(cpi->cpi_extd[0x1e].cp_ebx, 15, 8) + 1; } *ncpus = nthreads; *ncores = nthreads / nthread_per_core; } /* * Seed the initial values for the cores and threads for an Intel based * processor. These values will be overwritten if we detect that the processor * supports CPUID leaf 0xb. */ static void cpuid_intel_ncores(struct cpuid_info *cpi, uint_t *ncpus, uint_t *ncores) { /* * Only seed the number of physical cores from the first level leaf 4 * information. The number of threads there indicate how many share the * L1 cache, which may or may not have anything to do with the number of * logical CPUs per core. */ if (cpi->cpi_maxeax >= 4) { *ncores = BITX(cpi->cpi_std[4].cp_eax, 31, 26) + 1; } else { *ncores = 1; } if ((cpi->cpi_std[1].cp_edx & CPUID_INTC_EDX_HTT) != 0) { *ncpus = CPI_CPU_COUNT(cpi); } else { *ncpus = *ncores; } } static boolean_t cpuid_leafB_getids(cpu_t *cpu) { struct cpuid_info *cpi = cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi; struct cpuid_regs regs; struct cpuid_regs *cp; if (cpi->cpi_maxeax < 0xB) return (B_FALSE); cp = ®s; cp->cp_eax = 0xB; cp->cp_edx = cp->cp_ebx = cp->cp_ecx = 0; (void) __cpuid_insn(cp); /* * Check CPUID.EAX=0BH, ECX=0H:EBX is non-zero, which * indicates that the extended topology enumeration leaf is * available. */ if (cp->cp_ebx != 0) { uint32_t x2apic_id = 0; uint_t coreid_shift = 0; uint_t ncpu_per_core = 1; uint_t chipid_shift = 0; uint_t ncpu_per_chip = 1; uint_t i; uint_t level; for (i = 0; i < CPI_FNB_ECX_MAX; i++) { cp->cp_eax = 0xB; cp->cp_ecx = i; (void) __cpuid_insn(cp); level = CPI_CPU_LEVEL_TYPE(cp); if (level == 1) { x2apic_id = cp->cp_edx; coreid_shift = BITX(cp->cp_eax, 4, 0); ncpu_per_core = BITX(cp->cp_ebx, 15, 0); } else if (level == 2) { x2apic_id = cp->cp_edx; chipid_shift = BITX(cp->cp_eax, 4, 0); ncpu_per_chip = BITX(cp->cp_ebx, 15, 0); } } /* * cpi_apicid is taken care of in cpuid_gather_apicid. */ cpi->cpi_ncpu_per_chip = ncpu_per_chip; cpi->cpi_ncore_per_chip = ncpu_per_chip / ncpu_per_core; cpi->cpi_chipid = x2apic_id >> chipid_shift; cpi->cpi_clogid = x2apic_id & ((1 << chipid_shift) - 1); cpi->cpi_coreid = x2apic_id >> coreid_shift; cpi->cpi_pkgcoreid = cpi->cpi_clogid >> coreid_shift; cpi->cpi_procnodeid = cpi->cpi_chipid; cpi->cpi_compunitid = cpi->cpi_coreid; if (coreid_shift > 0 && chipid_shift > coreid_shift) { cpi->cpi_nthread_bits = coreid_shift; cpi->cpi_ncore_bits = chipid_shift - coreid_shift; } return (B_TRUE); } else { return (B_FALSE); } } static void cpuid_intel_getids(cpu_t *cpu, void *feature) { uint_t i; uint_t chipid_shift = 0; uint_t coreid_shift = 0; struct cpuid_info *cpi = cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi; /* * There are no compute units or processor nodes currently on Intel. * Always set these to one. */ cpi->cpi_procnodes_per_pkg = 1; cpi->cpi_cores_per_compunit = 1; /* * If cpuid Leaf B is present, use that to try and get this information. * It will be the most accurate for Intel CPUs. */ if (cpuid_leafB_getids(cpu)) return; /* * In this case, we have the leaf 1 and leaf 4 values for ncpu_per_chip * and ncore_per_chip. These represent the largest power of two values * that we need to cover all of the IDs in the system. Therefore, we use * those values to seed the number of bits needed to cover information * in the case when leaf B is not available. These values will probably * be larger than required, but that's OK. */ cpi->cpi_nthread_bits = ddi_fls(cpi->cpi_ncpu_per_chip); cpi->cpi_ncore_bits = ddi_fls(cpi->cpi_ncore_per_chip); for (i = 1; i < cpi->cpi_ncpu_per_chip; i <<= 1) chipid_shift++; cpi->cpi_chipid = cpi->cpi_apicid >> chipid_shift; cpi->cpi_clogid = cpi->cpi_apicid & ((1 << chipid_shift) - 1); if (is_x86_feature(feature, X86FSET_CMP)) { /* * Multi-core (and possibly multi-threaded) * processors. */ uint_t ncpu_per_core = 0; if (cpi->cpi_ncore_per_chip == 1) ncpu_per_core = cpi->cpi_ncpu_per_chip; else if (cpi->cpi_ncore_per_chip > 1) ncpu_per_core = cpi->cpi_ncpu_per_chip / cpi->cpi_ncore_per_chip; /* * 8bit APIC IDs on dual core Pentiums * look like this: * * +-----------------------+------+------+ * | Physical Package ID | MC | HT | * +-----------------------+------+------+ * <------- chipid --------> * <------- coreid ---------------> * <--- clogid --> * <------> * pkgcoreid * * Where the number of bits necessary to * represent MC and HT fields together equals * to the minimum number of bits necessary to * store the value of cpi->cpi_ncpu_per_chip. * Of those bits, the MC part uses the number * of bits necessary to store the value of * cpi->cpi_ncore_per_chip. */ for (i = 1; i < ncpu_per_core; i <<= 1) coreid_shift++; cpi->cpi_coreid = cpi->cpi_apicid >> coreid_shift; cpi->cpi_pkgcoreid = cpi->cpi_clogid >> coreid_shift; } else if (is_x86_feature(feature, X86FSET_HTT)) { /* * Single-core multi-threaded processors. */ cpi->cpi_coreid = cpi->cpi_chipid; cpi->cpi_pkgcoreid = 0; } else { /* * Single-core single-thread processors. */ cpi->cpi_coreid = cpu->cpu_id; cpi->cpi_pkgcoreid = 0; } cpi->cpi_procnodeid = cpi->cpi_chipid; cpi->cpi_compunitid = cpi->cpi_coreid; } /* * Historically, AMD has had CMP chips with only a single thread per core. * However, starting in family 17h (Zen), this has changed and they now have * multiple threads. Our internal core id needs to be a unique value. * * To determine the core id of an AMD system, if we're from a family before 17h, * then we just use the cpu id, as that gives us a good value that will be * unique for each core. If instead, we're on family 17h or later, then we need * to do something more complicated. CPUID leaf 0x8000001e can tell us * how many threads are in the system. Based on that, we'll shift the APIC ID. * We can't use the normal core id in that leaf as it's only unique within the * socket, which is perfect for cpi_pkgcoreid, but not us. */ static id_t cpuid_amd_get_coreid(cpu_t *cpu) { struct cpuid_info *cpi = cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi; if (cpi->cpi_family >= 0x17 && is_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_TOPOEXT) && cpi->cpi_xmaxeax >= CPUID_LEAF_EXT_1e) { uint_t nthreads = BITX(cpi->cpi_extd[0x1e].cp_ebx, 15, 8) + 1; if (nthreads > 1) { VERIFY3U(nthreads, ==, 2); return (cpi->cpi_apicid >> 1); } } return (cpu->cpu_id); } /* * IDs on AMD is a more challenging task. This is notable because of the * following two facts: * * 1. Before family 0x17 (Zen), there was no support for SMT and there was * also no way to get an actual unique core id from the system. As such, we * synthesize this case by using cpu->cpu_id. This scheme does not, * however, guarantee that sibling cores of a chip will have sequential * coreids starting at a multiple of the number of cores per chip - that is * usually the case, but if the APIC IDs have been set up in a different * order then we need to perform a few more gymnastics for the pkgcoreid. * * 2. In families 0x15 and 16x (Bulldozer and co.) the cores came in groups * called compute units. These compute units share the L1I cache, L2 cache, * and the FPU. To deal with this, a new topology leaf was added in * 0x8000001e. However, parts of this leaf have different meanings * once we get to family 0x17. */ static void cpuid_amd_getids(cpu_t *cpu, uchar_t *features) { int i, first_half, coreidsz; uint32_t nb_caps_reg; uint_t node2_1; struct cpuid_info *cpi = cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi; struct cpuid_regs *cp; /* * Calculate the core id (this comes from hardware in family 0x17 if it * hasn't been stripped by virtualization). We always set the compute * unit id to the same value. Also, initialize the default number of * cores per compute unit and nodes per package. This will be * overwritten when we know information about a particular family. */ cpi->cpi_coreid = cpuid_amd_get_coreid(cpu); cpi->cpi_compunitid = cpi->cpi_coreid; cpi->cpi_cores_per_compunit = 1; cpi->cpi_procnodes_per_pkg = 1; /* * To construct the logical ID, we need to determine how many APIC IDs * are dedicated to the cores and threads. This is provided for us in * 0x80000008. However, if it's not present (say due to virtualization), * then we assume it's one. This should be present on all 64-bit AMD * processors. It was added in family 0xf (Hammer). */ if (cpi->cpi_xmaxeax >= CPUID_LEAF_EXT_8) { coreidsz = BITX((cpi)->cpi_extd[8].cp_ecx, 15, 12); /* * In AMD parlance chip is really a node while illumos * uses chip as equivalent to socket/package. */ if (coreidsz == 0) { /* Use legacy method */ for (i = 1; i < cpi->cpi_ncore_per_chip; i <<= 1) coreidsz++; if (coreidsz == 0) coreidsz = 1; } } else { /* Assume single-core part */ coreidsz = 1; } cpi->cpi_clogid = cpi->cpi_apicid & ((1 << coreidsz) - 1); /* * The package core ID varies depending on the family. While it may be * tempting to use the CPUID_LEAF_EXT_1e %ebx core id, unfortunately, * this value is the core id in the given node. For non-virtualized * family 17h, we need to take the logical core id and shift off the * threads like we do when getting the core id. Otherwise, we can use * the clogid as is. When family 17h is virtualized, the clogid should * be sufficient as if we don't have valid data in the leaf, then we * won't think we have SMT, in which case the cpi_clogid should be * sufficient. */ if (cpi->cpi_family >= 0x17 && is_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_TOPOEXT) && cpi->cpi_xmaxeax >= CPUID_LEAF_EXT_1e && cpi->cpi_extd[0x1e].cp_ebx != 0) { uint_t nthreads = BITX(cpi->cpi_extd[0x1e].cp_ebx, 15, 8) + 1; if (nthreads > 1) { VERIFY3U(nthreads, ==, 2); cpi->cpi_pkgcoreid = cpi->cpi_clogid >> 1; } else { cpi->cpi_pkgcoreid = cpi->cpi_clogid; } } else { cpi->cpi_pkgcoreid = cpi->cpi_clogid; } /* * Obtain the node ID and compute unit IDs. If we're on family 0x15 * (bulldozer) or newer, then we can derive all of this from leaf * CPUID_LEAF_EXT_1e. Otherwise, the method varies by family. */ if (is_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_TOPOEXT) && cpi->cpi_xmaxeax >= CPUID_LEAF_EXT_1e) { cp = &cpi->cpi_extd[0x1e]; cpi->cpi_procnodes_per_pkg = BITX(cp->cp_ecx, 10, 8) + 1; cpi->cpi_procnodeid = BITX(cp->cp_ecx, 7, 0); /* * For Bulldozer-era CPUs, recalculate the compute unit * information. */ if (cpi->cpi_family >= 0x15 && cpi->cpi_family < 0x17) { cpi->cpi_cores_per_compunit = BITX(cp->cp_ebx, 15, 8) + 1; cpi->cpi_compunitid = BITX(cp->cp_ebx, 7, 0) + (cpi->cpi_ncore_per_chip / cpi->cpi_cores_per_compunit) * (cpi->cpi_procnodeid / cpi->cpi_procnodes_per_pkg); } } else if (cpi->cpi_family == 0xf || cpi->cpi_family >= 0x11) { cpi->cpi_procnodeid = (cpi->cpi_apicid >> coreidsz) & 7; } else if (cpi->cpi_family == 0x10) { /* * See if we are a multi-node processor. * All processors in the system have the same number of nodes */ nb_caps_reg = pci_getl_func(0, 24, 3, 0xe8); if ((cpi->cpi_model < 8) || BITX(nb_caps_reg, 29, 29) == 0) { /* Single-node */ cpi->cpi_procnodeid = BITX(cpi->cpi_apicid, 5, coreidsz); } else { /* * Multi-node revision D (2 nodes per package * are supported) */ cpi->cpi_procnodes_per_pkg = 2; first_half = (cpi->cpi_pkgcoreid <= (cpi->cpi_ncore_per_chip/2 - 1)); if (cpi->cpi_apicid == cpi->cpi_pkgcoreid) { /* We are BSP */ cpi->cpi_procnodeid = (first_half ? 0 : 1); } else { /* We are AP */ /* NodeId[2:1] bits to use for reading F3xe8 */ node2_1 = BITX(cpi->cpi_apicid, 5, 4) << 1; nb_caps_reg = pci_getl_func(0, 24 + node2_1, 3, 0xe8); /* * Check IntNodeNum bit (31:30, but bit 31 is * always 0 on dual-node processors) */ if (BITX(nb_caps_reg, 30, 30) == 0) cpi->cpi_procnodeid = node2_1 + !first_half; else cpi->cpi_procnodeid = node2_1 + first_half; } } } else { cpi->cpi_procnodeid = 0; } cpi->cpi_chipid = cpi->cpi_procnodeid / cpi->cpi_procnodes_per_pkg; cpi->cpi_ncore_bits = coreidsz; cpi->cpi_nthread_bits = ddi_fls(cpi->cpi_ncpu_per_chip / cpi->cpi_ncore_per_chip); } static void spec_uarch_flush_noop(void) { } /* * When microcode is present that mitigates MDS, this wrmsr will also flush the * MDS-related micro-architectural state that would normally happen by calling * x86_md_clear(). */ static void spec_uarch_flush_msr(void) { wrmsr(MSR_IA32_FLUSH_CMD, IA32_FLUSH_CMD_L1D); } /* * This function points to a function that will flush certain * micro-architectural state on the processor. This flush is used to mitigate * three different classes of Intel CPU vulnerabilities: L1TF, MDS, and RFDS. * This function can point to one of three functions: * * - A noop which is done because we either are vulnerable, but do not have * microcode available to help deal with a fix, or because we aren't * vulnerable. * * - spec_uarch_flush_msr which will issue an L1D flush and if microcode to * mitigate MDS is present, also perform the equivalent of the MDS flush; * however, it only flushes the MDS related micro-architectural state on the * current hyperthread, it does not do anything for the twin. * * - x86_md_clear which will flush the MDS related state. This is done when we * have a processor that is vulnerable to MDS, but is not vulnerable to L1TF * (RDCL_NO is set); or if the CPU is vulnerable to RFDS and indicates VERW * can clear it (RFDS_CLEAR is set). */ void (*spec_uarch_flush)(void) = spec_uarch_flush_noop; static void cpuid_update_md_clear(cpu_t *cpu, uchar_t *featureset) { struct cpuid_info *cpi = cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi; /* Non-Intel doesn't concern us here. */ if (cpi->cpi_vendor != X86_VENDOR_Intel) return; /* * While RDCL_NO indicates that one of the MDS vulnerabilities (MSBDS) * has been fixed in hardware, it doesn't cover everything related to * MDS. Therefore we can only rely on MDS_NO to determine that we don't * need to mitigate this. * * We must ALSO check the case of RFDS_NO and if RFDS_CLEAR is set, * because of the small cases of RFDS. */ if ((!is_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_MDS_NO) && is_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_MD_CLEAR)) || (!is_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_RFDS_NO) && is_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_RFDS_CLEAR))) { const uint8_t nop = NOP_INSTR; uint8_t *md = (uint8_t *)x86_md_clear; *md = nop; } membar_producer(); } static void cpuid_update_l1d_flush(cpu_t *cpu, uchar_t *featureset) { boolean_t need_l1d, need_mds, need_rfds; struct cpuid_info *cpi = cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi; /* * If we're not on Intel or we've mitigated all of RDCL, MDS, and RFDS * in hardware, then there's nothing left for us to do for enabling * the flush. We can also go ahead and say that SMT exclusion is * unnecessary. */ if (cpi->cpi_vendor != X86_VENDOR_Intel || (is_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_RDCL_NO) && is_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_MDS_NO) && is_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_RFDS_NO))) { extern int smt_exclusion; smt_exclusion = 0; spec_uarch_flush = spec_uarch_flush_noop; membar_producer(); return; } /* * The locations where we need to perform an L1D flush are required both * for mitigating L1TF and MDS. When verw support is present in * microcode, then the L1D flush will take care of doing that as well. * However, if we have a system where RDCL_NO is present, but we don't * have MDS_NO, then we need to do a verw (x86_md_clear) and not a full * L1D flush. */ if (!is_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_RDCL_NO) && is_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_FLUSH_CMD) && !is_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_L1D_VM_NO)) { need_l1d = B_TRUE; } else { need_l1d = B_FALSE; } if (!is_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_MDS_NO) && is_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_MD_CLEAR)) { need_mds = B_TRUE; } else { need_mds = B_FALSE; } if (!is_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_RFDS_NO) && is_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_RFDS_CLEAR)) { need_rfds = B_TRUE; } else { need_rfds = B_FALSE; } if (need_l1d) { /* * As of Feb, 2024, no CPU needs L1D *and* RFDS mitigation * together. If the following VERIFY trips, we need to add * further fixes here. */ VERIFY(!need_rfds); spec_uarch_flush = spec_uarch_flush_msr; } else if (need_mds || need_rfds) { spec_uarch_flush = x86_md_clear; } else { /* * We have no hardware mitigations available to us. */ spec_uarch_flush = spec_uarch_flush_noop; } membar_producer(); } /* * We default to enabling RSB mitigations. * * NOTE: We used to skip RSB mitigations with eIBRS, but developments around * post-barrier RSB guessing suggests we should enable RSB mitigations always * unless specifically instructed not to. * * AMD indicates that when Automatic IBRS is enabled we do not need to implement * return stack buffer clearing for VMEXIT as it takes care of it. The manual * also states that as long as SMEP and we maintain at least one page between * the kernel and user space (we have much more of a red zone), then we do not * need to clear the RSB. We constrain this to only when Automatic IRBS is * present. */ static void cpuid_patch_rsb(x86_spectrev2_mitigation_t mit) { const uint8_t ret = RET_INSTR; uint8_t *stuff = (uint8_t *)x86_rsb_stuff; switch (mit) { case X86_SPECTREV2_AUTO_IBRS: case X86_SPECTREV2_DISABLED: *stuff = ret; break; default: break; } } static void cpuid_patch_retpolines(x86_spectrev2_mitigation_t mit) { const char *thunks[] = { "_rax", "_rbx", "_rcx", "_rdx", "_rdi", "_rsi", "_rbp", "_r8", "_r9", "_r10", "_r11", "_r12", "_r13", "_r14", "_r15" }; const uint_t nthunks = ARRAY_SIZE(thunks); const char *type; uint_t i; if (mit == x86_spectrev2_mitigation) return; switch (mit) { case X86_SPECTREV2_RETPOLINE: type = "gen"; break; case X86_SPECTREV2_AUTO_IBRS: case X86_SPECTREV2_ENHANCED_IBRS: case X86_SPECTREV2_DISABLED: type = "jmp"; break; default: panic("asked to update retpoline state with unknown state!"); } for (i = 0; i < nthunks; i++) { uintptr_t source, dest; int ssize, dsize; char sourcebuf[64], destbuf[64]; (void) snprintf(destbuf, sizeof (destbuf), "__x86_indirect_thunk%s", thunks[i]); (void) snprintf(sourcebuf, sizeof (sourcebuf), "__x86_indirect_thunk_%s%s", type, thunks[i]); source = kobj_getelfsym(sourcebuf, NULL, &ssize); dest = kobj_getelfsym(destbuf, NULL, &dsize); VERIFY3U(source, !=, 0); VERIFY3U(dest, !=, 0); VERIFY3S(dsize, >=, ssize); bcopy((void *)source, (void *)dest, ssize); } } static void cpuid_enable_enhanced_ibrs(void) { uint64_t val; val = rdmsr(MSR_IA32_SPEC_CTRL); val |= IA32_SPEC_CTRL_IBRS; wrmsr(MSR_IA32_SPEC_CTRL, val); } static void cpuid_enable_auto_ibrs(void) { uint64_t val; val = rdmsr(MSR_AMD_EFER); val |= AMD_EFER_AIBRSE; wrmsr(MSR_AMD_EFER, val); } /* * Determine how we should mitigate TAA or if we need to. Regardless of TAA, if * we can disable TSX, we do so. * * This determination is done only on the boot CPU, potentially after loading * updated microcode. */ static void cpuid_update_tsx(cpu_t *cpu, uchar_t *featureset) { struct cpuid_info *cpi = cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi; VERIFY(cpu->cpu_id == 0); if (cpi->cpi_vendor != X86_VENDOR_Intel) { x86_taa_mitigation = X86_TAA_HW_MITIGATED; return; } if (x86_disable_taa) { x86_taa_mitigation = X86_TAA_DISABLED; return; } /* * If we do not have the ability to disable TSX, then our only * mitigation options are in hardware (TAA_NO), or by using our existing * MDS mitigation as described above. The latter relies upon us having * configured MDS mitigations correctly! This includes disabling SMT if * we want to cross-CPU-thread protection. */ if (!is_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_TSX_CTRL)) { /* * It's not clear whether any parts will enumerate TAA_NO * *without* TSX_CTRL, but let's mark it as such if we see this. */ if (is_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_TAA_NO)) { x86_taa_mitigation = X86_TAA_HW_MITIGATED; return; } if (is_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_MD_CLEAR) && !is_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_MDS_NO)) { x86_taa_mitigation = X86_TAA_MD_CLEAR; } else { x86_taa_mitigation = X86_TAA_NOTHING; } return; } /* * We have TSX_CTRL, but we can only fully disable TSX if we're early * enough in boot. * * Otherwise, we'll fall back to causing transactions to abort as our * mitigation. TSX-using code will always take the fallback path. */ if (cpi->cpi_pass < 4) { x86_taa_mitigation = X86_TAA_TSX_DISABLE; } else { x86_taa_mitigation = X86_TAA_TSX_FORCE_ABORT; } } /* * As mentioned, we should only touch the MSR when we've got a suitable * microcode loaded on this CPU. */ static void cpuid_apply_tsx(x86_taa_mitigation_t taa, uchar_t *featureset) { uint64_t val; switch (taa) { case X86_TAA_TSX_DISABLE: if (!is_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_TSX_CTRL)) return; val = rdmsr(MSR_IA32_TSX_CTRL); val |= IA32_TSX_CTRL_CPUID_CLEAR | IA32_TSX_CTRL_RTM_DISABLE; wrmsr(MSR_IA32_TSX_CTRL, val); break; case X86_TAA_TSX_FORCE_ABORT: if (!is_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_TSX_CTRL)) return; val = rdmsr(MSR_IA32_TSX_CTRL); val |= IA32_TSX_CTRL_RTM_DISABLE; wrmsr(MSR_IA32_TSX_CTRL, val); break; case X86_TAA_HW_MITIGATED: case X86_TAA_MD_CLEAR: case X86_TAA_DISABLED: case X86_TAA_NOTHING: break; } } static void cpuid_scan_security(cpu_t *cpu, uchar_t *featureset) { struct cpuid_info *cpi = cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi; x86_spectrev2_mitigation_t v2mit; if ((cpi->cpi_vendor == X86_VENDOR_AMD || cpi->cpi_vendor == X86_VENDOR_HYGON) && cpi->cpi_xmaxeax >= CPUID_LEAF_EXT_8) { if (cpi->cpi_extd[8].cp_ebx & CPUID_AMD_EBX_IBPB) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_IBPB); if (cpi->cpi_extd[8].cp_ebx & CPUID_AMD_EBX_IBRS) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_IBRS); if (cpi->cpi_extd[8].cp_ebx & CPUID_AMD_EBX_STIBP) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_STIBP); if (cpi->cpi_extd[8].cp_ebx & CPUID_AMD_EBX_STIBP_ALL) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_STIBP_ALL); if (cpi->cpi_extd[8].cp_ebx & CPUID_AMD_EBX_SSBD) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_SSBD); if (cpi->cpi_extd[8].cp_ebx & CPUID_AMD_EBX_VIRT_SSBD) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_SSBD_VIRT); if (cpi->cpi_extd[8].cp_ebx & CPUID_AMD_EBX_SSB_NO) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_SSB_NO); /* * Rather than Enhanced IBRS, AMD has a different feature that * is a bit in EFER that can be enabled and will basically do * the right thing while executing in the kernel. */ if (cpi->cpi_vendor == X86_VENDOR_AMD && (cpi->cpi_extd[8].cp_ebx & CPUID_AMD_EBX_PREFER_IBRS) && cpi->cpi_xmaxeax >= CPUID_LEAF_EXT_21 && (cpi->cpi_extd[0x21].cp_eax & CPUID_AMD_8X21_EAX_AIBRS)) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_AUTO_IBRS); } } else if (cpi->cpi_vendor == X86_VENDOR_Intel && cpi->cpi_maxeax >= 7) { struct cpuid_regs *ecp; ecp = &cpi->cpi_std[7]; if (ecp->cp_edx & CPUID_INTC_EDX_7_0_MD_CLEAR) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_MD_CLEAR); } if (ecp->cp_edx & CPUID_INTC_EDX_7_0_SPEC_CTRL) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_IBRS); add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_IBPB); } if (ecp->cp_edx & CPUID_INTC_EDX_7_0_STIBP) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_STIBP); } /* * Don't read the arch caps MSR on xpv where we lack the * on_trap(). */ #ifndef __xpv if (ecp->cp_edx & CPUID_INTC_EDX_7_0_ARCH_CAPS) { on_trap_data_t otd; /* * Be paranoid and assume we'll get a #GP. */ if (!on_trap(&otd, OT_DATA_ACCESS)) { uint64_t reg; reg = rdmsr(MSR_IA32_ARCH_CAPABILITIES); if (reg & IA32_ARCH_CAP_RDCL_NO) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_RDCL_NO); } if (reg & IA32_ARCH_CAP_IBRS_ALL) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_IBRS_ALL); } if (reg & IA32_ARCH_CAP_RSBA) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_RSBA); } if (reg & IA32_ARCH_CAP_SKIP_L1DFL_VMENTRY) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_L1D_VM_NO); } if (reg & IA32_ARCH_CAP_SSB_NO) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_SSB_NO); } if (reg & IA32_ARCH_CAP_MDS_NO) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_MDS_NO); } if (reg & IA32_ARCH_CAP_TSX_CTRL) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_TSX_CTRL); } if (reg & IA32_ARCH_CAP_TAA_NO) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_TAA_NO); } if (reg & IA32_ARCH_CAP_RFDS_NO) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_RFDS_NO); } if (reg & IA32_ARCH_CAP_RFDS_CLEAR) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_RFDS_CLEAR); } } no_trap(); } #endif /* !__xpv */ if (ecp->cp_edx & CPUID_INTC_EDX_7_0_SSBD) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_SSBD); if (ecp->cp_edx & CPUID_INTC_EDX_7_0_FLUSH_CMD) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_FLUSH_CMD); } /* * Take care of certain mitigations on the non-boot CPU. The boot CPU * will have already run this function and determined what we need to * do. This gives us a hook for per-HW thread mitigations such as * enhanced IBRS, or disabling TSX. */ if (cpu->cpu_id != 0) { switch (x86_spectrev2_mitigation) { case X86_SPECTREV2_ENHANCED_IBRS: cpuid_enable_enhanced_ibrs(); break; case X86_SPECTREV2_AUTO_IBRS: cpuid_enable_auto_ibrs(); break; default: break; } cpuid_apply_tsx(x86_taa_mitigation, featureset); return; } /* * Go through and initialize various security mechanisms that we should * only do on a single CPU. This includes Spectre V2, L1TF, MDS, and * TAA. */ /* * By default we've come in with retpolines enabled. Check whether we * should disable them or enable enhanced or automatic IBRS. RSB * stuffing is enabled by default. Note, we do not allow the use of AMD * optimized retpolines as it was disclosed by AMD in March 2022 that * they were still vulnerable. Prior to that point, we used them. */ if (x86_disable_spectrev2 != 0) { v2mit = X86_SPECTREV2_DISABLED; } else if (is_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_AUTO_IBRS)) { cpuid_enable_auto_ibrs(); v2mit = X86_SPECTREV2_AUTO_IBRS; } else if (is_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_IBRS_ALL)) { cpuid_enable_enhanced_ibrs(); v2mit = X86_SPECTREV2_ENHANCED_IBRS; } else { v2mit = X86_SPECTREV2_RETPOLINE; } cpuid_patch_retpolines(v2mit); cpuid_patch_rsb(v2mit); x86_spectrev2_mitigation = v2mit; membar_producer(); /* * We need to determine what changes are required for mitigating L1TF * and MDS. If the CPU suffers from either of them, then SMT exclusion * is required. * * If any of these are present, then we need to flush u-arch state at * various points. For MDS, we need to do so whenever we change to a * lesser privilege level or we are halting the CPU. For L1TF we need to * flush the L1D cache at VM entry. When we have microcode that handles * MDS, the L1D flush also clears the other u-arch state that the * md_clear does. */ /* * Update whether or not we need to be taking explicit action against * MDS or RFDS. */ cpuid_update_md_clear(cpu, featureset); /* * Determine whether SMT exclusion is required and whether or not we * need to perform an l1d flush. */ cpuid_update_l1d_flush(cpu, featureset); /* * Determine what our mitigation strategy should be for TAA and then * also apply TAA mitigations. */ cpuid_update_tsx(cpu, featureset); cpuid_apply_tsx(x86_taa_mitigation, featureset); } /* * Setup XFeature_Enabled_Mask register. Required by xsave feature. */ void setup_xfem(void) { uint64_t flags = XFEATURE_LEGACY_FP; ASSERT(is_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_XSAVE)); if (is_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_SSE)) flags |= XFEATURE_SSE; if (is_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_AVX)) flags |= XFEATURE_AVX; if (is_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_AVX512F)) flags |= XFEATURE_AVX512; set_xcr(XFEATURE_ENABLED_MASK, flags); xsave_bv_all = flags; } static void cpuid_basic_topology(cpu_t *cpu, uchar_t *featureset) { struct cpuid_info *cpi; cpi = cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi; if (cpi->cpi_vendor == X86_VENDOR_AMD || cpi->cpi_vendor == X86_VENDOR_HYGON) { cpuid_gather_amd_topology_leaves(cpu); } cpi->cpi_apicid = cpuid_gather_apicid(cpi); /* * Before we can calculate the IDs that we should assign to this * processor, we need to understand how many cores and threads it has. */ switch (cpi->cpi_vendor) { case X86_VENDOR_Intel: cpuid_intel_ncores(cpi, &cpi->cpi_ncpu_per_chip, &cpi->cpi_ncore_per_chip); break; case X86_VENDOR_AMD: case X86_VENDOR_HYGON: cpuid_amd_ncores(cpi, &cpi->cpi_ncpu_per_chip, &cpi->cpi_ncore_per_chip); break; default: /* * If we have some other x86 compatible chip, it's not clear how * they would behave. The most common case is virtualization * today, though there are also 64-bit VIA chips. Assume that * all we can get is the basic Leaf 1 HTT information. */ if ((cpi->cpi_std[1].cp_edx & CPUID_INTC_EDX_HTT) != 0) { cpi->cpi_ncore_per_chip = 1; cpi->cpi_ncpu_per_chip = CPI_CPU_COUNT(cpi); } break; } /* * Based on the calculated number of threads and cores, potentially * assign the HTT and CMT features. */ if (cpi->cpi_ncore_per_chip > 1) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_CMP); } if (cpi->cpi_ncpu_per_chip > 1 && cpi->cpi_ncpu_per_chip != cpi->cpi_ncore_per_chip) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_HTT); } /* * Now that has been set up, we need to go through and calculate all of * the rest of the parameters that exist. If we think the CPU doesn't * have either SMT (HTT) or CMP, then we basically go through and fake * up information in some way. The most likely case for this is * virtualization where we have a lot of partial topology information. */ if (!is_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_HTT) && !is_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_CMP)) { /* * This is a single core, single-threaded processor. */ cpi->cpi_procnodes_per_pkg = 1; cpi->cpi_cores_per_compunit = 1; cpi->cpi_compunitid = 0; cpi->cpi_chipid = -1; cpi->cpi_clogid = 0; cpi->cpi_coreid = cpu->cpu_id; cpi->cpi_pkgcoreid = 0; if (cpi->cpi_vendor == X86_VENDOR_AMD || cpi->cpi_vendor == X86_VENDOR_HYGON) { cpi->cpi_procnodeid = BITX(cpi->cpi_apicid, 3, 0); } else { cpi->cpi_procnodeid = cpi->cpi_chipid; } } else { switch (cpi->cpi_vendor) { case X86_VENDOR_Intel: cpuid_intel_getids(cpu, featureset); break; case X86_VENDOR_AMD: case X86_VENDOR_HYGON: cpuid_amd_getids(cpu, featureset); break; default: /* * In this case, it's hard to say what we should do. * We're going to model them to the OS as single core * threads. We don't have a good identifier for them, so * we're just going to use the cpu id all on a single * chip. * * This case has historically been different from the * case above where we don't have HTT or CMP. While they * could be combined, we've opted to keep it separate to * minimize the risk of topology changes in weird cases. */ cpi->cpi_procnodes_per_pkg = 1; cpi->cpi_cores_per_compunit = 1; cpi->cpi_chipid = 0; cpi->cpi_coreid = cpu->cpu_id; cpi->cpi_clogid = cpu->cpu_id; cpi->cpi_pkgcoreid = cpu->cpu_id; cpi->cpi_procnodeid = cpi->cpi_chipid; cpi->cpi_compunitid = cpi->cpi_coreid; break; } } } /* * Gather relevant CPU features from leaf 6 which covers thermal information. We * always gather leaf 6 if it's supported; however, we only look for features on * Intel systems as AMD does not currently define any of the features we look * for below. */ static void cpuid_basic_thermal(cpu_t *cpu, uchar_t *featureset) { struct cpuid_regs *cp; struct cpuid_info *cpi = cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi; if (cpi->cpi_maxeax < 6) { return; } cp = &cpi->cpi_std[6]; cp->cp_eax = 6; cp->cp_ebx = cp->cp_ecx = cp->cp_edx = 0; (void) __cpuid_insn(cp); platform_cpuid_mangle(cpi->cpi_vendor, 6, cp); if (cpi->cpi_vendor != X86_VENDOR_Intel) { return; } if ((cp->cp_eax & CPUID_INTC_EAX_DTS) != 0) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_CORE_THERMAL); } if ((cp->cp_eax & CPUID_INTC_EAX_PTM) != 0) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_PKG_THERMAL); } } /* * This is used when we discover that we have AVX support in cpuid. This * proceeds to scan for the rest of the AVX derived features. */ static void cpuid_basic_avx(cpu_t *cpu, uchar_t *featureset) { struct cpuid_info *cpi = cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi; /* * If we don't have AVX, don't bother with most of this. */ if ((cpi->cpi_std[1].cp_ecx & CPUID_INTC_ECX_AVX) == 0) return; add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_AVX); /* * Intel says we can't check these without also * checking AVX. */ if (cpi->cpi_std[1].cp_ecx & CPUID_INTC_ECX_F16C) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_F16C); if (cpi->cpi_std[1].cp_ecx & CPUID_INTC_ECX_FMA) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_FMA); if (cpi->cpi_std[7].cp_ebx & CPUID_INTC_EBX_7_0_BMI1) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_BMI1); if (cpi->cpi_std[7].cp_ebx & CPUID_INTC_EBX_7_0_BMI2) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_BMI2); if (cpi->cpi_std[7].cp_ebx & CPUID_INTC_EBX_7_0_AVX2) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_AVX2); if (cpi->cpi_std[7].cp_ecx & CPUID_INTC_ECX_7_0_VAES) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_VAES); if (cpi->cpi_std[7].cp_ecx & CPUID_INTC_ECX_7_0_VPCLMULQDQ) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_VPCLMULQDQ); /* * The rest of the AVX features require AVX512. Do not check them unless * it is present. */ if ((cpi->cpi_std[7].cp_ebx & CPUID_INTC_EBX_7_0_AVX512F) == 0) return; add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_AVX512F); if (cpi->cpi_std[7].cp_ebx & CPUID_INTC_EBX_7_0_AVX512DQ) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_AVX512DQ); if (cpi->cpi_std[7].cp_ebx & CPUID_INTC_EBX_7_0_AVX512IFMA) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_AVX512FMA); if (cpi->cpi_std[7].cp_ebx & CPUID_INTC_EBX_7_0_AVX512PF) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_AVX512PF); if (cpi->cpi_std[7].cp_ebx & CPUID_INTC_EBX_7_0_AVX512ER) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_AVX512ER); if (cpi->cpi_std[7].cp_ebx & CPUID_INTC_EBX_7_0_AVX512CD) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_AVX512CD); if (cpi->cpi_std[7].cp_ebx & CPUID_INTC_EBX_7_0_AVX512BW) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_AVX512BW); if (cpi->cpi_std[7].cp_ebx & CPUID_INTC_EBX_7_0_AVX512VL) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_AVX512VL); if (cpi->cpi_std[7].cp_ecx & CPUID_INTC_ECX_7_0_AVX512VBMI) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_AVX512VBMI); if (cpi->cpi_std[7].cp_ecx & CPUID_INTC_ECX_7_0_AVX512VBMI2) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_AVX512_VBMI2); if (cpi->cpi_std[7].cp_ecx & CPUID_INTC_ECX_7_0_AVX512VNNI) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_AVX512VNNI); if (cpi->cpi_std[7].cp_ecx & CPUID_INTC_ECX_7_0_AVX512BITALG) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_AVX512_BITALG); if (cpi->cpi_std[7].cp_ecx & CPUID_INTC_ECX_7_0_AVX512VPOPCDQ) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_AVX512VPOPCDQ); if (cpi->cpi_std[7].cp_edx & CPUID_INTC_EDX_7_0_AVX5124NNIW) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_AVX512NNIW); if (cpi->cpi_std[7].cp_edx & CPUID_INTC_EDX_7_0_AVX5124FMAPS) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_AVX512FMAPS); /* * More features here are in Leaf 7, subleaf 1. Don't bother checking if * we don't need to. */ if (cpi->cpi_std[7].cp_eax < 1) return; if (cpi->cpi_sub7[0].cp_eax & CPUID_INTC_EAX_7_1_AVX512_BF16) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_AVX512_BF16); } /* * PPIN is the protected processor inventory number. On AMD this is an actual * feature bit. However, on Intel systems we need to read the platform * information MSR if we're on a specific model. */ #if !defined(__xpv) static void cpuid_basic_ppin(cpu_t *cpu, uchar_t *featureset) { on_trap_data_t otd; struct cpuid_info *cpi = cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi; switch (cpi->cpi_vendor) { case X86_VENDOR_AMD: /* * This leaf will have already been gathered in the topology * functions. */ if (cpi->cpi_xmaxeax >= CPUID_LEAF_EXT_8) { if (cpi->cpi_extd[8].cp_ebx & CPUID_AMD_EBX_PPIN) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_PPIN); } } break; case X86_VENDOR_Intel: if (cpi->cpi_family != 6) break; switch (cpi->cpi_model) { case INTC_MODEL_IVYBRIDGE_XEON: case INTC_MODEL_HASWELL_XEON: case INTC_MODEL_BROADWELL_XEON: case INTC_MODEL_BROADWELL_XEON_D: case INTC_MODEL_SKYLAKE_XEON: case INTC_MODEL_ICELAKE_XEON: if (!on_trap(&otd, OT_DATA_ACCESS)) { uint64_t value; value = rdmsr(MSR_PLATFORM_INFO); if ((value & MSR_PLATFORM_INFO_PPIN) != 0) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_PPIN); } } no_trap(); break; default: break; } break; default: break; } } #endif /* ! __xpv */ static void cpuid_pass_prelude(cpu_t *cpu, void *arg) { uchar_t *featureset = (uchar_t *)arg; /* * We don't run on any processor that doesn't have cpuid, and could not * possibly have arrived here. */ add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_CPUID); } static void cpuid_pass_ident(cpu_t *cpu, void *arg __unused) { struct cpuid_info *cpi; struct cpuid_regs *cp; /* * We require that virtual/native detection be complete and that PCI * config space access has been set up; at present there is no reliable * way to determine the latter. */ #if !defined(__xpv) ASSERT3S(platform_type, !=, -1); #endif /* !__xpv */ cpi = cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi; ASSERT(cpi != NULL); cp = &cpi->cpi_std[0]; cp->cp_eax = 0; cpi->cpi_maxeax = __cpuid_insn(cp); { uint32_t *iptr = (uint32_t *)cpi->cpi_vendorstr; *iptr++ = cp->cp_ebx; *iptr++ = cp->cp_edx; *iptr++ = cp->cp_ecx; *(char *)&cpi->cpi_vendorstr[12] = '\0'; } cpi->cpi_vendor = _cpuid_vendorstr_to_vendorcode(cpi->cpi_vendorstr); x86_vendor = cpi->cpi_vendor; /* for compatibility */ /* * Limit the range in case of weird hardware */ if (cpi->cpi_maxeax > CPI_MAXEAX_MAX) cpi->cpi_maxeax = CPI_MAXEAX_MAX; if (cpi->cpi_maxeax < 1) return; cp = &cpi->cpi_std[1]; cp->cp_eax = 1; (void) __cpuid_insn(cp); /* * Extract identifying constants for easy access. */ cpi->cpi_model = CPI_MODEL(cpi); cpi->cpi_family = CPI_FAMILY(cpi); if (cpi->cpi_family == 0xf) cpi->cpi_family += CPI_FAMILY_XTD(cpi); /* * Beware: AMD uses "extended model" iff base *FAMILY* == 0xf. * Intel, and presumably everyone else, uses model == 0xf, as * one would expect (max value means possible overflow). Sigh. */ switch (cpi->cpi_vendor) { case X86_VENDOR_Intel: if (IS_EXTENDED_MODEL_INTEL(cpi)) cpi->cpi_model += CPI_MODEL_XTD(cpi) << 4; break; case X86_VENDOR_AMD: if (CPI_FAMILY(cpi) == 0xf) cpi->cpi_model += CPI_MODEL_XTD(cpi) << 4; break; case X86_VENDOR_HYGON: cpi->cpi_model += CPI_MODEL_XTD(cpi) << 4; break; default: if (cpi->cpi_model == 0xf) cpi->cpi_model += CPI_MODEL_XTD(cpi) << 4; break; } cpi->cpi_step = CPI_STEP(cpi); cpi->cpi_brandid = CPI_BRANDID(cpi); /* * Synthesize chip "revision" and socket type */ cpi->cpi_chiprev = _cpuid_chiprev(cpi->cpi_vendor, cpi->cpi_family, cpi->cpi_model, cpi->cpi_step); cpi->cpi_chiprevstr = _cpuid_chiprevstr(cpi->cpi_vendor, cpi->cpi_family, cpi->cpi_model, cpi->cpi_step); cpi->cpi_socket = _cpuid_skt(cpi->cpi_vendor, cpi->cpi_family, cpi->cpi_model, cpi->cpi_step); cpi->cpi_uarchrev = _cpuid_uarchrev(cpi->cpi_vendor, cpi->cpi_family, cpi->cpi_model, cpi->cpi_step); } static void cpuid_pass_basic(cpu_t *cpu, void *arg) { uchar_t *featureset = (uchar_t *)arg; uint32_t mask_ecx, mask_edx; struct cpuid_info *cpi; struct cpuid_regs *cp; int xcpuid; #if !defined(__xpv) extern int idle_cpu_prefer_mwait; #endif cpi = cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi; ASSERT(cpi != NULL); if (cpi->cpi_maxeax < 1) return; /* * This was filled during the identification pass. */ cp = &cpi->cpi_std[1]; /* * *default* assumptions: * - believe %edx feature word * - ignore %ecx feature word * - 32-bit virtual and physical addressing */ mask_edx = 0xffffffff; mask_ecx = 0; cpi->cpi_pabits = cpi->cpi_vabits = 32; switch (cpi->cpi_vendor) { case X86_VENDOR_Intel: if (cpi->cpi_family == 5) x86_type = X86_TYPE_P5; else if (IS_LEGACY_P6(cpi)) { x86_type = X86_TYPE_P6; pentiumpro_bug4046376 = 1; /* * Clear the SEP bit when it was set erroneously */ if (cpi->cpi_model < 3 && cpi->cpi_step < 3) cp->cp_edx &= ~CPUID_INTC_EDX_SEP; } else if (IS_NEW_F6(cpi) || cpi->cpi_family == 0xf) { x86_type = X86_TYPE_P4; /* * We don't currently depend on any of the %ecx * features until Prescott, so we'll only check * this from P4 onwards. We might want to revisit * that idea later. */ mask_ecx = 0xffffffff; } else if (cpi->cpi_family > 0xf) mask_ecx = 0xffffffff; /* * We don't support MONITOR/MWAIT if leaf 5 is not available * to obtain the monitor linesize. */ if (cpi->cpi_maxeax < 5) mask_ecx &= ~CPUID_INTC_ECX_MON; break; case X86_VENDOR_IntelClone: default: break; case X86_VENDOR_AMD: #if defined(OPTERON_ERRATUM_108) if (cpi->cpi_family == 0xf && cpi->cpi_model == 0xe) { cp->cp_eax = (0xf0f & cp->cp_eax) | 0xc0; cpi->cpi_model = 0xc; } else #endif if (cpi->cpi_family == 5) { /* * AMD K5 and K6 * * These CPUs have an incomplete implementation * of MCA/MCE which we mask away. */ mask_edx &= ~(CPUID_INTC_EDX_MCE | CPUID_INTC_EDX_MCA); /* * Model 0 uses the wrong (APIC) bit * to indicate PGE. Fix it here. */ if (cpi->cpi_model == 0) { if (cp->cp_edx & 0x200) { cp->cp_edx &= ~0x200; cp->cp_edx |= CPUID_INTC_EDX_PGE; } } /* * Early models had problems w/ MMX; disable. */ if (cpi->cpi_model < 6) mask_edx &= ~CPUID_INTC_EDX_MMX; } /* * For newer families, SSE3 and CX16, at least, are valid; * enable all */ if (cpi->cpi_family >= 0xf) mask_ecx = 0xffffffff; /* * We don't support MONITOR/MWAIT if leaf 5 is not available * to obtain the monitor linesize. */ if (cpi->cpi_maxeax < 5) mask_ecx &= ~CPUID_INTC_ECX_MON; #if !defined(__xpv) /* * AMD has not historically used MWAIT in the CPU's idle loop. * Pre-family-10h Opterons do not have the MWAIT instruction. We * know for certain that in at least family 17h, per AMD, mwait * is preferred. Families in-between are less certain. */ if (cpi->cpi_family < 0x17) { idle_cpu_prefer_mwait = 0; } #endif break; case X86_VENDOR_HYGON: /* Enable all for Hygon Dhyana CPU */ mask_ecx = 0xffffffff; break; case X86_VENDOR_TM: /* * workaround the NT workaround in CMS 4.1 */ if (cpi->cpi_family == 5 && cpi->cpi_model == 4 && (cpi->cpi_step == 2 || cpi->cpi_step == 3)) cp->cp_edx |= CPUID_INTC_EDX_CX8; break; case X86_VENDOR_Centaur: /* * workaround the NT workarounds again */ if (cpi->cpi_family == 6) cp->cp_edx |= CPUID_INTC_EDX_CX8; break; case X86_VENDOR_Cyrix: /* * We rely heavily on the probing in locore * to actually figure out what parts, if any, * of the Cyrix cpuid instruction to believe. */ switch (x86_type) { case X86_TYPE_CYRIX_486: mask_edx = 0; break; case X86_TYPE_CYRIX_6x86: mask_edx = 0; break; case X86_TYPE_CYRIX_6x86L: mask_edx = CPUID_INTC_EDX_DE | CPUID_INTC_EDX_CX8; break; case X86_TYPE_CYRIX_6x86MX: mask_edx = CPUID_INTC_EDX_DE | CPUID_INTC_EDX_MSR | CPUID_INTC_EDX_CX8 | CPUID_INTC_EDX_PGE | CPUID_INTC_EDX_CMOV | CPUID_INTC_EDX_MMX; break; case X86_TYPE_CYRIX_GXm: mask_edx = CPUID_INTC_EDX_MSR | CPUID_INTC_EDX_CX8 | CPUID_INTC_EDX_CMOV | CPUID_INTC_EDX_MMX; break; case X86_TYPE_CYRIX_MediaGX: break; case X86_TYPE_CYRIX_MII: case X86_TYPE_VIA_CYRIX_III: mask_edx = CPUID_INTC_EDX_DE | CPUID_INTC_EDX_TSC | CPUID_INTC_EDX_MSR | CPUID_INTC_EDX_CX8 | CPUID_INTC_EDX_PGE | CPUID_INTC_EDX_CMOV | CPUID_INTC_EDX_MMX; break; default: break; } break; } #if defined(__xpv) /* * Do not support MONITOR/MWAIT under a hypervisor */ mask_ecx &= ~CPUID_INTC_ECX_MON; /* * Do not support XSAVE under a hypervisor for now */ xsave_force_disable = B_TRUE; #endif /* __xpv */ if (xsave_force_disable) { mask_ecx &= ~CPUID_INTC_ECX_XSAVE; mask_ecx &= ~CPUID_INTC_ECX_AVX; mask_ecx &= ~CPUID_INTC_ECX_F16C; mask_ecx &= ~CPUID_INTC_ECX_FMA; } /* * Now we've figured out the masks that determine * which bits we choose to believe, apply the masks * to the feature words, then map the kernel's view * of these feature words into its feature word. */ cp->cp_edx &= mask_edx; cp->cp_ecx &= mask_ecx; /* * apply any platform restrictions (we don't call this * immediately after __cpuid_insn here, because we need the * workarounds applied above first) */ platform_cpuid_mangle(cpi->cpi_vendor, 1, cp); /* * In addition to ecx and edx, Intel and AMD are storing a bunch of * instruction set extensions in leaf 7's ebx, ecx, and edx. Note, leaf * 7 has sub-leaves determined by ecx. */ if (cpi->cpi_maxeax >= 7) { struct cpuid_regs *ecp; ecp = &cpi->cpi_std[7]; ecp->cp_eax = 7; ecp->cp_ecx = 0; (void) __cpuid_insn(ecp); /* * If XSAVE has been disabled, just ignore all of the * extended-save-area dependent flags here. By removing most of * the leaf 7, sub-leaf 0 flags, that will ensure tha we don't * end up looking at additional xsave dependent leaves right * now. */ if (xsave_force_disable) { ecp->cp_ebx &= ~CPUID_INTC_EBX_7_0_BMI1; ecp->cp_ebx &= ~CPUID_INTC_EBX_7_0_BMI2; ecp->cp_ebx &= ~CPUID_INTC_EBX_7_0_AVX2; ecp->cp_ebx &= ~CPUID_INTC_EBX_7_0_MPX; ecp->cp_ebx &= ~CPUID_INTC_EBX_7_0_ALL_AVX512; ecp->cp_ecx &= ~CPUID_INTC_ECX_7_0_ALL_AVX512; ecp->cp_edx &= ~CPUID_INTC_EDX_7_0_ALL_AVX512; ecp->cp_ecx &= ~CPUID_INTC_ECX_7_0_VAES; ecp->cp_ecx &= ~CPUID_INTC_ECX_7_0_VPCLMULQDQ; ecp->cp_ecx &= ~CPUID_INTC_ECX_7_0_GFNI; } if (ecp->cp_ebx & CPUID_INTC_EBX_7_0_SMEP) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_SMEP); /* * We check disable_smap here in addition to in startup_smap() * to ensure CPUs that aren't the boot CPU don't accidentally * include it in the feature set and thus generate a mismatched * x86 feature set across CPUs. */ if (ecp->cp_ebx & CPUID_INTC_EBX_7_0_SMAP && disable_smap == 0) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_SMAP); if (ecp->cp_ebx & CPUID_INTC_EBX_7_0_RDSEED) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_RDSEED); if (ecp->cp_ebx & CPUID_INTC_EBX_7_0_ADX) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_ADX); if (ecp->cp_ebx & CPUID_INTC_EBX_7_0_FSGSBASE) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_FSGSBASE); if (ecp->cp_ebx & CPUID_INTC_EBX_7_0_CLFLUSHOPT) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_CLFLUSHOPT); if (ecp->cp_ebx & CPUID_INTC_EBX_7_0_INVPCID) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_INVPCID); if (ecp->cp_ecx & CPUID_INTC_ECX_7_0_UMIP) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_UMIP); if (ecp->cp_ecx & CPUID_INTC_ECX_7_0_PKU) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_PKU); if (ecp->cp_ecx & CPUID_INTC_ECX_7_0_OSPKE) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_OSPKE); if (ecp->cp_ecx & CPUID_INTC_ECX_7_0_GFNI) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_GFNI); if (ecp->cp_ebx & CPUID_INTC_EBX_7_0_CLWB) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_CLWB); if (cpi->cpi_vendor == X86_VENDOR_Intel) { if (ecp->cp_ebx & CPUID_INTC_EBX_7_0_MPX) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_MPX); } /* * If we have subleaf 1 available, grab and store that. This is * used for more AVX and related features. */ if (ecp->cp_eax >= 1) { struct cpuid_regs *c71; c71 = &cpi->cpi_sub7[0]; c71->cp_eax = 7; c71->cp_ecx = 1; (void) __cpuid_insn(c71); } } /* * fold in overrides from the "eeprom" mechanism */ cp->cp_edx |= cpuid_feature_edx_include; cp->cp_edx &= ~cpuid_feature_edx_exclude; cp->cp_ecx |= cpuid_feature_ecx_include; cp->cp_ecx &= ~cpuid_feature_ecx_exclude; if (cp->cp_edx & CPUID_INTC_EDX_PSE) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_LARGEPAGE); } if (cp->cp_edx & CPUID_INTC_EDX_TSC) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_TSC); } if (cp->cp_edx & CPUID_INTC_EDX_MSR) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_MSR); } if (cp->cp_edx & CPUID_INTC_EDX_MTRR) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_MTRR); } if (cp->cp_edx & CPUID_INTC_EDX_PGE) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_PGE); } if (cp->cp_edx & CPUID_INTC_EDX_CMOV) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_CMOV); } if (cp->cp_edx & CPUID_INTC_EDX_MMX) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_MMX); } if ((cp->cp_edx & CPUID_INTC_EDX_MCE) != 0 && (cp->cp_edx & CPUID_INTC_EDX_MCA) != 0) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_MCA); } if (cp->cp_edx & CPUID_INTC_EDX_PAE) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_PAE); } if (cp->cp_edx & CPUID_INTC_EDX_CX8) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_CX8); } if (cp->cp_ecx & CPUID_INTC_ECX_CX16) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_CX16); } if (cp->cp_edx & CPUID_INTC_EDX_PAT) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_PAT); } if (cp->cp_edx & CPUID_INTC_EDX_SEP) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_SEP); } if (cp->cp_edx & CPUID_INTC_EDX_FXSR) { /* * In our implementation, fxsave/fxrstor * are prerequisites before we'll even * try and do SSE things. */ if (cp->cp_edx & CPUID_INTC_EDX_SSE) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_SSE); } if (cp->cp_edx & CPUID_INTC_EDX_SSE2) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_SSE2); } if (cp->cp_ecx & CPUID_INTC_ECX_SSE3) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_SSE3); } if (cp->cp_ecx & CPUID_INTC_ECX_SSSE3) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_SSSE3); } if (cp->cp_ecx & CPUID_INTC_ECX_SSE4_1) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_SSE4_1); } if (cp->cp_ecx & CPUID_INTC_ECX_SSE4_2) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_SSE4_2); } if (cp->cp_ecx & CPUID_INTC_ECX_AES) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_AES); } if (cp->cp_ecx & CPUID_INTC_ECX_PCLMULQDQ) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_PCLMULQDQ); } if (cpi->cpi_std[7].cp_ebx & CPUID_INTC_EBX_7_0_SHA) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_SHA); if (cp->cp_ecx & CPUID_INTC_ECX_XSAVE) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_XSAVE); /* We only test AVX & AVX512 when there is XSAVE */ cpuid_basic_avx(cpu, featureset); } } if (cp->cp_ecx & CPUID_INTC_ECX_PCID) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_PCID); } if (cp->cp_ecx & CPUID_INTC_ECX_X2APIC) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_X2APIC); } if (cp->cp_edx & CPUID_INTC_EDX_DE) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_DE); } #if !defined(__xpv) if (cp->cp_ecx & CPUID_INTC_ECX_MON) { /* * We require the CLFLUSH instruction for erratum workaround * to use MONITOR/MWAIT. */ if (cp->cp_edx & CPUID_INTC_EDX_CLFSH) { cpi->cpi_mwait.support |= MWAIT_SUPPORT; add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_MWAIT); } else { extern int idle_cpu_assert_cflush_monitor; /* * All processors we are aware of which have * MONITOR/MWAIT also have CLFLUSH. */ if (idle_cpu_assert_cflush_monitor) { ASSERT((cp->cp_ecx & CPUID_INTC_ECX_MON) && (cp->cp_edx & CPUID_INTC_EDX_CLFSH)); } } } #endif /* __xpv */ if (cp->cp_ecx & CPUID_INTC_ECX_VMX) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_VMX); } if (cp->cp_ecx & CPUID_INTC_ECX_RDRAND) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_RDRAND); /* * Only need it first time, rest of the cpus would follow suit. * we only capture this for the bootcpu. */ if (cp->cp_edx & CPUID_INTC_EDX_CLFSH) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_CLFSH); x86_clflush_size = (BITX(cp->cp_ebx, 15, 8) * 8); } if (is_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_PAE)) cpi->cpi_pabits = 36; if (cpi->cpi_maxeax >= 0xD && !xsave_force_disable) { struct cpuid_regs r, *ecp; ecp = &r; ecp->cp_eax = 0xD; ecp->cp_ecx = 1; ecp->cp_edx = ecp->cp_ebx = 0; (void) __cpuid_insn(ecp); if (ecp->cp_eax & CPUID_INTC_EAX_D_1_XSAVEOPT) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_XSAVEOPT); if (ecp->cp_eax & CPUID_INTC_EAX_D_1_XSAVEC) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_XSAVEC); if (ecp->cp_eax & CPUID_INTC_EAX_D_1_XSAVES) add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_XSAVES); /* * Zen 2 family processors suffer from erratum 1386 that causes * xsaves to not function correctly in some circumstances. There * are no supervisor states in Zen 2 and earlier. Practically * speaking this has no impact for us as we currently do not * leverage compressed xsave formats. To safeguard against * issues in the future where we may opt to using it, we remove * it from the feature set now. While Matisse has a microcode * update available with a fix, not all Zen 2 CPUs do so it's * simpler for the moment to unconditionally remove it. */ if (cpi->cpi_vendor == X86_VENDOR_AMD && uarchrev_uarch(cpi->cpi_uarchrev) <= X86_UARCH_AMD_ZEN2) { remove_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_XSAVES); } } /* * Work on the "extended" feature information, doing * some basic initialization to be used in the extended pass. */ xcpuid = 0; switch (cpi->cpi_vendor) { case X86_VENDOR_Intel: /* * On KVM we know we will have proper support for extended * cpuid. */ if (IS_NEW_F6(cpi) || cpi->cpi_family >= 0xf || (get_hwenv() == HW_KVM && cpi->cpi_family == 6 && (cpi->cpi_model == 6 || cpi->cpi_model == 2))) xcpuid++; break; case X86_VENDOR_AMD: if (cpi->cpi_family > 5 || (cpi->cpi_family == 5 && cpi->cpi_model >= 1)) xcpuid++; break; case X86_VENDOR_Cyrix: /* * Only these Cyrix CPUs are -known- to support * extended cpuid operations. */ if (x86_type == X86_TYPE_VIA_CYRIX_III || x86_type == X86_TYPE_CYRIX_GXm) xcpuid++; break; case X86_VENDOR_HYGON: case X86_VENDOR_Centaur: case X86_VENDOR_TM: default: xcpuid++; break; } if (xcpuid) { cp = &cpi->cpi_extd[0]; cp->cp_eax = CPUID_LEAF_EXT_0; cpi->cpi_xmaxeax = __cpuid_insn(cp); } if (cpi->cpi_xmaxeax & CPUID_LEAF_EXT_0) { if (cpi->cpi_xmaxeax > CPI_XMAXEAX_MAX) cpi->cpi_xmaxeax = CPI_XMAXEAX_MAX; switch (cpi->cpi_vendor) { case X86_VENDOR_Intel: case X86_VENDOR_AMD: case X86_VENDOR_HYGON: if (cpi->cpi_xmaxeax < 0x80000001) break; cp = &cpi->cpi_extd[1]; cp->cp_eax = 0x80000001; (void) __cpuid_insn(cp); if (cpi->cpi_vendor == X86_VENDOR_AMD && cpi->cpi_family == 5 && cpi->cpi_model == 6 && cpi->cpi_step == 6) { /* * K6 model 6 uses bit 10 to indicate SYSC * Later models use bit 11. Fix it here. */ if (cp->cp_edx & 0x400) { cp->cp_edx &= ~0x400; cp->cp_edx |= CPUID_AMD_EDX_SYSC; } } platform_cpuid_mangle(cpi->cpi_vendor, 0x80000001, cp); /* * Compute the additions to the kernel's feature word. */ if (cp->cp_edx & CPUID_AMD_EDX_NX) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_NX); } /* * Regardless whether or not we boot 64-bit, * we should have a way to identify whether * the CPU is capable of running 64-bit. */ if (cp->cp_edx & CPUID_AMD_EDX_LM) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_64); } /* 1 GB large page - enable only for 64 bit kernel */ if (cp->cp_edx & CPUID_AMD_EDX_1GPG) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_1GPG); } if ((cpi->cpi_vendor == X86_VENDOR_AMD || cpi->cpi_vendor == X86_VENDOR_HYGON) && (cpi->cpi_std[1].cp_edx & CPUID_INTC_EDX_FXSR) && (cp->cp_ecx & CPUID_AMD_ECX_SSE4A)) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_SSE4A); } /* * It's really tricky to support syscall/sysret in * the i386 kernel; we rely on sysenter/sysexit * instead. In the amd64 kernel, things are -way- * better. */ if (cp->cp_edx & CPUID_AMD_EDX_SYSC) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_ASYSC); } /* * While we're thinking about system calls, note * that AMD processors don't support sysenter * in long mode at all, so don't try to program them. */ if (x86_vendor == X86_VENDOR_AMD || x86_vendor == X86_VENDOR_HYGON) { remove_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_SEP); } if (cp->cp_edx & CPUID_AMD_EDX_TSCP) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_TSCP); } if (cp->cp_ecx & CPUID_AMD_ECX_SVM) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_SVM); } if (cp->cp_ecx & CPUID_AMD_ECX_TOPOEXT) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_TOPOEXT); } if (cp->cp_ecx & CPUID_AMD_ECX_PCEC) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_AMD_PCEC); } if (cp->cp_ecx & CPUID_AMD_ECX_XOP) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_XOP); } if (cp->cp_ecx & CPUID_AMD_ECX_FMA4) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_FMA4); } if (cp->cp_ecx & CPUID_AMD_ECX_TBM) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_TBM); } if (cp->cp_ecx & CPUID_AMD_ECX_MONITORX) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_MONITORX); } break; default: break; } /* * Get CPUID data about processor cores and hyperthreads. */ switch (cpi->cpi_vendor) { case X86_VENDOR_Intel: if (cpi->cpi_maxeax >= 4) { cp = &cpi->cpi_std[4]; cp->cp_eax = 4; cp->cp_ecx = 0; (void) __cpuid_insn(cp); platform_cpuid_mangle(cpi->cpi_vendor, 4, cp); } /*FALLTHROUGH*/ case X86_VENDOR_AMD: case X86_VENDOR_HYGON: if (cpi->cpi_xmaxeax < CPUID_LEAF_EXT_8) break; cp = &cpi->cpi_extd[8]; cp->cp_eax = CPUID_LEAF_EXT_8; (void) __cpuid_insn(cp); platform_cpuid_mangle(cpi->cpi_vendor, CPUID_LEAF_EXT_8, cp); /* * AMD uses ebx for some extended functions. */ if (cpi->cpi_vendor == X86_VENDOR_AMD || cpi->cpi_vendor == X86_VENDOR_HYGON) { /* * While we're here, check for the AMD "Error * Pointer Zero/Restore" feature. This can be * used to setup the FP save handlers * appropriately. */ if (cp->cp_ebx & CPUID_AMD_EBX_ERR_PTR_ZERO) { cpi->cpi_fp_amd_save = 0; } else { cpi->cpi_fp_amd_save = 1; } if (cp->cp_ebx & CPUID_AMD_EBX_CLZERO) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_CLZERO); } } /* * Virtual and physical address limits from * cpuid override previously guessed values. */ cpi->cpi_pabits = BITX(cp->cp_eax, 7, 0); cpi->cpi_vabits = BITX(cp->cp_eax, 15, 8); break; default: break; } /* * Get CPUID data about TSC Invariance in Deep C-State. */ switch (cpi->cpi_vendor) { case X86_VENDOR_Intel: case X86_VENDOR_AMD: case X86_VENDOR_HYGON: if (cpi->cpi_maxeax >= 7) { cp = &cpi->cpi_extd[7]; cp->cp_eax = 0x80000007; cp->cp_ecx = 0; (void) __cpuid_insn(cp); } break; default: break; } } /* * cpuid_basic_ppin assumes that cpuid_basic_topology has already been * run and thus gathered some of its dependent leaves. */ cpuid_basic_topology(cpu, featureset); cpuid_basic_thermal(cpu, featureset); #if !defined(__xpv) cpuid_basic_ppin(cpu, featureset); #endif if (cpi->cpi_vendor == X86_VENDOR_AMD || cpi->cpi_vendor == X86_VENDOR_HYGON) { if (cpi->cpi_xmaxeax >= CPUID_LEAF_EXT_8 && cpi->cpi_extd[8].cp_ebx & CPUID_AMD_EBX_ERR_PTR_ZERO) { /* Special handling for AMD FP not necessary. */ cpi->cpi_fp_amd_save = 0; } else { cpi->cpi_fp_amd_save = 1; } } /* * Check (and potentially set) if lfence is serializing. * This is useful for accurate rdtsc measurements and AMD retpolines. */ if ((cpi->cpi_vendor == X86_VENDOR_AMD || cpi->cpi_vendor == X86_VENDOR_HYGON) && is_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_SSE2)) { /* * The AMD white paper Software Techniques For Managing * Speculation on AMD Processors details circumstances for when * lfence instructions are serializing. * * On family 0xf and 0x11, it is inherently so. On family 0x10 * and later (excluding 0x11), a bit in the DE_CFG MSR * determines the lfence behavior. Per that whitepaper, AMD has * committed to supporting that MSR on all later CPUs. */ if (cpi->cpi_family == 0xf || cpi->cpi_family == 0x11) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_LFENCE_SER); } else if (cpi->cpi_family >= 0x10) { #if !defined(__xpv) uint64_t val; /* * Be careful when attempting to enable the bit, and * verify that it was actually set in case we are * running in a hypervisor which is less than faithful * about its emulation of this feature. */ on_trap_data_t otd; if (!on_trap(&otd, OT_DATA_ACCESS)) { val = rdmsr(MSR_AMD_DE_CFG); val |= AMD_DE_CFG_LFENCE_DISPATCH; wrmsr(MSR_AMD_DE_CFG, val); val = rdmsr(MSR_AMD_DE_CFG); } else { val = 0; } no_trap(); if ((val & AMD_DE_CFG_LFENCE_DISPATCH) != 0) { add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_LFENCE_SER); } #endif } } else if (cpi->cpi_vendor == X86_VENDOR_Intel && is_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_SSE2)) { /* * Documentation and other OSes indicate that lfence is always * serializing on Intel CPUs. */ add_x86_feature(featureset, X86FSET_LFENCE_SER); } /* * Check the processor leaves that are used for security features. Grab * any additional processor-specific leaves that we may not have yet. */ switch (cpi->cpi_vendor) { case X86_VENDOR_AMD: case X86_VENDOR_HYGON: if (cpi->cpi_xmaxeax >= CPUID_LEAF_EXT_21) { cp = &cpi->cpi_extd[7]; cp->cp_eax = CPUID_LEAF_EXT_21; cp->cp_ecx = 0; (void) __cpuid_insn(cp); } break; default: break; } cpuid_scan_security(cpu, featureset); } /* * Make copies of the cpuid table entries we depend on, in * part for ease of parsing now, in part so that we have only * one place to correct any of it, in part for ease of * later export to userland, and in part so we can look at * this stuff in a crash dump. */ static void cpuid_pass_extended(cpu_t *cpu, void *_arg __unused) { uint_t n, nmax; int i; struct cpuid_regs *cp; uint8_t *dp; uint32_t *iptr; struct cpuid_info *cpi = cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi; if (cpi->cpi_maxeax < 1) return; if ((nmax = cpi->cpi_maxeax + 1) > NMAX_CPI_STD) nmax = NMAX_CPI_STD; /* * (We already handled n == 0 and n == 1 in the basic pass) */ for (n = 2, cp = &cpi->cpi_std[2]; n < nmax; n++, cp++) { /* * leaves 6 and 7 were handled in the basic pass */ if (n == 6 || n == 7) continue; cp->cp_eax = n; /* * CPUID function 4 expects %ecx to be initialized * with an index which indicates which cache to return * information about. The OS is expected to call function 4 * with %ecx set to 0, 1, 2, ... until it returns with * EAX[4:0] set to 0, which indicates there are no more * caches. * * Here, populate cpi_std[4] with the information returned by * function 4 when %ecx == 0, and do the rest in a later pass * when dynamic memory allocation becomes available. * * Note: we need to explicitly initialize %ecx here, since * function 4 may have been previously invoked. */ if (n == 4) cp->cp_ecx = 0; (void) __cpuid_insn(cp); platform_cpuid_mangle(cpi->cpi_vendor, n, cp); switch (n) { case 2: /* * "the lower 8 bits of the %eax register * contain a value that identifies the number * of times the cpuid [instruction] has to be * executed to obtain a complete image of the * processor's caching systems." * * How *do* they make this stuff up? */ cpi->cpi_ncache = sizeof (*cp) * BITX(cp->cp_eax, 7, 0); if (cpi->cpi_ncache == 0) break; cpi->cpi_ncache--; /* skip count byte */ /* * Well, for now, rather than attempt to implement * this slightly dubious algorithm, we just look * at the first 15 .. */ if (cpi->cpi_ncache > (sizeof (*cp) - 1)) cpi->cpi_ncache = sizeof (*cp) - 1; dp = cpi->cpi_cacheinfo; if (BITX(cp->cp_eax, 31, 31) == 0) { uint8_t *p = (void *)&cp->cp_eax; for (i = 1; i < 4; i++) if (p[i] != 0) *dp++ = p[i]; } if (BITX(cp->cp_ebx, 31, 31) == 0) { uint8_t *p = (void *)&cp->cp_ebx; for (i = 0; i < 4; i++) if (p[i] != 0) *dp++ = p[i]; } if (BITX(cp->cp_ecx, 31, 31) == 0) { uint8_t *p = (void *)&cp->cp_ecx; for (i = 0; i < 4; i++) if (p[i] != 0) *dp++ = p[i]; } if (BITX(cp->cp_edx, 31, 31) == 0) { uint8_t *p = (void *)&cp->cp_edx; for (i = 0; i < 4; i++) if (p[i] != 0) *dp++ = p[i]; } break; case 3: /* Processor serial number, if PSN supported */ break; case 4: /* Deterministic cache parameters */ break; case 5: /* Monitor/Mwait parameters */ { size_t mwait_size; /* * check cpi_mwait.support which was set in * cpuid_pass_basic() */ if (!(cpi->cpi_mwait.support & MWAIT_SUPPORT)) break; /* * Protect ourself from insane mwait line size. * Workaround for incomplete hardware emulator(s). */ mwait_size = (size_t)MWAIT_SIZE_MAX(cpi); if (mwait_size < sizeof (uint32_t) || !ISP2(mwait_size)) { #if DEBUG cmn_err(CE_NOTE, "Cannot handle cpu %d mwait " "size %ld", cpu->cpu_id, (long)mwait_size); #endif break; } cpi->cpi_mwait.mon_min = (size_t)MWAIT_SIZE_MIN(cpi); cpi->cpi_mwait.mon_max = mwait_size; if (MWAIT_EXTENSION(cpi)) { cpi->cpi_mwait.support |= MWAIT_EXTENSIONS; if (MWAIT_INT_ENABLE(cpi)) cpi->cpi_mwait.support |= MWAIT_ECX_INT_ENABLE; } break; } default: break; } } /* * XSAVE enumeration */ if (cpi->cpi_maxeax >= 0xD) { struct cpuid_regs regs; boolean_t cpuid_d_valid = B_TRUE; cp = ®s; cp->cp_eax = 0xD; cp->cp_edx = cp->cp_ebx = cp->cp_ecx = 0; (void) __cpuid_insn(cp); /* * Sanity checks for debug */ if ((cp->cp_eax & XFEATURE_LEGACY_FP) == 0 || (cp->cp_eax & XFEATURE_SSE) == 0) { cpuid_d_valid = B_FALSE; } cpi->cpi_xsave.xsav_hw_features_low = cp->cp_eax; cpi->cpi_xsave.xsav_hw_features_high = cp->cp_edx; cpi->cpi_xsave.xsav_max_size = cp->cp_ecx; /* * If the hw supports AVX, get the size and offset in the save * area for the ymm state. */ if (cpi->cpi_xsave.xsav_hw_features_low & XFEATURE_AVX) { cp->cp_eax = 0xD; cp->cp_ecx = 2; cp->cp_edx = cp->cp_ebx = 0; (void) __cpuid_insn(cp); if (cp->cp_ebx != CPUID_LEAFD_2_YMM_OFFSET || cp->cp_eax != CPUID_LEAFD_2_YMM_SIZE) { cpuid_d_valid = B_FALSE; } cpi->cpi_xsave.ymm_size = cp->cp_eax; cpi->cpi_xsave.ymm_offset = cp->cp_ebx; } /* * If the hw supports MPX, get the size and offset in the * save area for BNDREGS and BNDCSR. */ if (cpi->cpi_xsave.xsav_hw_features_low & XFEATURE_MPX) { cp->cp_eax = 0xD; cp->cp_ecx = 3; cp->cp_edx = cp->cp_ebx = 0; (void) __cpuid_insn(cp); cpi->cpi_xsave.bndregs_size = cp->cp_eax; cpi->cpi_xsave.bndregs_offset = cp->cp_ebx; cp->cp_eax = 0xD; cp->cp_ecx = 4; cp->cp_edx = cp->cp_ebx = 0; (void) __cpuid_insn(cp); cpi->cpi_xsave.bndcsr_size = cp->cp_eax; cpi->cpi_xsave.bndcsr_offset = cp->cp_ebx; } /* * If the hw supports AVX512, get the size and offset in the * save area for the opmask registers and zmm state. */ if (cpi->cpi_xsave.xsav_hw_features_low & XFEATURE_AVX512) { cp->cp_eax = 0xD; cp->cp_ecx = 5; cp->cp_edx = cp->cp_ebx = 0; (void) __cpuid_insn(cp); cpi->cpi_xsave.opmask_size = cp->cp_eax; cpi->cpi_xsave.opmask_offset = cp->cp_ebx; cp->cp_eax = 0xD; cp->cp_ecx = 6; cp->cp_edx = cp->cp_ebx = 0; (void) __cpuid_insn(cp); cpi->cpi_xsave.zmmlo_size = cp->cp_eax; cpi->cpi_xsave.zmmlo_offset = cp->cp_ebx; cp->cp_eax = 0xD; cp->cp_ecx = 7; cp->cp_edx = cp->cp_ebx = 0; (void) __cpuid_insn(cp); cpi->cpi_xsave.zmmhi_size = cp->cp_eax; cpi->cpi_xsave.zmmhi_offset = cp->cp_ebx; } if (is_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_XSAVE)) { xsave_state_size = 0; } else if (cpuid_d_valid) { xsave_state_size = cpi->cpi_xsave.xsav_max_size; } else { /* Broken CPUID 0xD, probably in HVM */ cmn_err(CE_WARN, "cpu%d: CPUID.0xD returns invalid " "value: hw_low = %d, hw_high = %d, xsave_size = %d" ", ymm_size = %d, ymm_offset = %d\n", cpu->cpu_id, cpi->cpi_xsave.xsav_hw_features_low, cpi->cpi_xsave.xsav_hw_features_high, (int)cpi->cpi_xsave.xsav_max_size, (int)cpi->cpi_xsave.ymm_size, (int)cpi->cpi_xsave.ymm_offset); if (xsave_state_size != 0) { /* * This must be a non-boot CPU. We cannot * continue, because boot cpu has already * enabled XSAVE. */ ASSERT(cpu->cpu_id != 0); cmn_err(CE_PANIC, "cpu%d: we have already " "enabled XSAVE on boot cpu, cannot " "continue.", cpu->cpu_id); } else { /* * If we reached here on the boot CPU, it's also * almost certain that we'll reach here on the * non-boot CPUs. When we're here on a boot CPU * we should disable the feature, on a non-boot * CPU we need to confirm that we have. */ if (cpu->cpu_id == 0) { remove_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_XSAVE); remove_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_AVX); remove_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_F16C); remove_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_BMI1); remove_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_BMI2); remove_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_FMA); remove_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_AVX2); remove_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_MPX); remove_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_AVX512F); remove_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_AVX512DQ); remove_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_AVX512PF); remove_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_AVX512ER); remove_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_AVX512CD); remove_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_AVX512BW); remove_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_AVX512VL); remove_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_AVX512FMA); remove_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_AVX512VBMI); remove_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_AVX512VNNI); remove_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_AVX512VPOPCDQ); remove_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_AVX512NNIW); remove_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_AVX512FMAPS); remove_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_VAES); remove_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_VPCLMULQDQ); remove_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_GFNI); remove_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_AVX512_VP2INT); remove_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_AVX512_BITALG); remove_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_AVX512_VBMI2); remove_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_AVX512_BF16); xsave_force_disable = B_TRUE; } else { VERIFY(is_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_XSAVE) == B_FALSE); } } } } if ((cpi->cpi_xmaxeax & CPUID_LEAF_EXT_0) == 0) return; if ((nmax = cpi->cpi_xmaxeax - CPUID_LEAF_EXT_0 + 1) > NMAX_CPI_EXTD) nmax = NMAX_CPI_EXTD; /* * Copy the extended properties, fixing them as we go. While we start at * 2 because we've already handled a few cases in the basic pass, the * rest we let ourselves just grab again (e.g. 0x8, 0x21). */ iptr = (void *)cpi->cpi_brandstr; for (n = 2, cp = &cpi->cpi_extd[2]; n < nmax; cp++, n++) { cp->cp_eax = CPUID_LEAF_EXT_0 + n; (void) __cpuid_insn(cp); platform_cpuid_mangle(cpi->cpi_vendor, CPUID_LEAF_EXT_0 + n, cp); switch (n) { case 2: case 3: case 4: /* * Extract the brand string */ *iptr++ = cp->cp_eax; *iptr++ = cp->cp_ebx; *iptr++ = cp->cp_ecx; *iptr++ = cp->cp_edx; break; case 5: switch (cpi->cpi_vendor) { case X86_VENDOR_AMD: /* * The Athlon and Duron were the first * parts to report the sizes of the * TLB for large pages. Before then, * we don't trust the data. */ if (cpi->cpi_family < 6 || (cpi->cpi_family == 6 && cpi->cpi_model < 1)) cp->cp_eax = 0; break; default: break; } break; case 6: switch (cpi->cpi_vendor) { case X86_VENDOR_AMD: /* * The Athlon and Duron were the first * AMD parts with L2 TLB's. * Before then, don't trust the data. */ if (cpi->cpi_family < 6 || (cpi->cpi_family == 6 && cpi->cpi_model < 1)) cp->cp_eax = cp->cp_ebx = 0; /* * AMD Duron rev A0 reports L2 * cache size incorrectly as 1K * when it is really 64K */ if (cpi->cpi_family == 6 && cpi->cpi_model == 3 && cpi->cpi_step == 0) { cp->cp_ecx &= 0xffff; cp->cp_ecx |= 0x400000; } break; case X86_VENDOR_Cyrix: /* VIA C3 */ /* * VIA C3 processors are a bit messed * up w.r.t. encoding cache sizes in %ecx */ if (cpi->cpi_family != 6) break; /* * model 7 and 8 were incorrectly encoded * * xxx is model 8 really broken? */ if (cpi->cpi_model == 7 || cpi->cpi_model == 8) cp->cp_ecx = BITX(cp->cp_ecx, 31, 24) << 16 | BITX(cp->cp_ecx, 23, 16) << 12 | BITX(cp->cp_ecx, 15, 8) << 8 | BITX(cp->cp_ecx, 7, 0); /* * model 9 stepping 1 has wrong associativity */ if (cpi->cpi_model == 9 && cpi->cpi_step == 1) cp->cp_ecx |= 8 << 12; break; case X86_VENDOR_Intel: /* * Extended L2 Cache features function. * First appeared on Prescott. */ default: break; } break; default: break; } } } static const char * intel_cpubrand(const struct cpuid_info *cpi) { int i; ASSERT(is_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_CPUID)); switch (cpi->cpi_family) { case 5: return ("Intel Pentium(r)"); case 6: switch (cpi->cpi_model) { uint_t celeron, xeon; const struct cpuid_regs *cp; case 0: case 1: case 2: return ("Intel Pentium(r) Pro"); case 3: case 4: return ("Intel Pentium(r) II"); case 6: return ("Intel Celeron(r)"); case 5: case 7: celeron = xeon = 0; cp = &cpi->cpi_std[2]; /* cache info */ for (i = 1; i < 4; i++) { uint_t tmp; tmp = (cp->cp_eax >> (8 * i)) & 0xff; if (tmp == 0x40) celeron++; if (tmp >= 0x44 && tmp <= 0x45) xeon++; } for (i = 0; i < 2; i++) { uint_t tmp; tmp = (cp->cp_ebx >> (8 * i)) & 0xff; if (tmp == 0x40) celeron++; else if (tmp >= 0x44 && tmp <= 0x45) xeon++; } for (i = 0; i < 4; i++) { uint_t tmp; tmp = (cp->cp_ecx >> (8 * i)) & 0xff; if (tmp == 0x40) celeron++; else if (tmp >= 0x44 && tmp <= 0x45) xeon++; } for (i = 0; i < 4; i++) { uint_t tmp; tmp = (cp->cp_edx >> (8 * i)) & 0xff; if (tmp == 0x40) celeron++; else if (tmp >= 0x44 && tmp <= 0x45) xeon++; } if (celeron) return ("Intel Celeron(r)"); if (xeon) return (cpi->cpi_model == 5 ? "Intel Pentium(r) II Xeon(tm)" : "Intel Pentium(r) III Xeon(tm)"); return (cpi->cpi_model == 5 ? "Intel Pentium(r) II or Pentium(r) II Xeon(tm)" : "Intel Pentium(r) III or Pentium(r) III Xeon(tm)"); default: break; } default: break; } /* BrandID is present if the field is nonzero */ if (cpi->cpi_brandid != 0) { static const struct { uint_t bt_bid; const char *bt_str; } brand_tbl[] = { { 0x1, "Intel(r) Celeron(r)" }, { 0x2, "Intel(r) Pentium(r) III" }, { 0x3, "Intel(r) Pentium(r) III Xeon(tm)" }, { 0x4, "Intel(r) Pentium(r) III" }, { 0x6, "Mobile Intel(r) Pentium(r) III" }, { 0x7, "Mobile Intel(r) Celeron(r)" }, { 0x8, "Intel(r) Pentium(r) 4" }, { 0x9, "Intel(r) Pentium(r) 4" }, { 0xa, "Intel(r) Celeron(r)" }, { 0xb, "Intel(r) Xeon(tm)" }, { 0xc, "Intel(r) Xeon(tm) MP" }, { 0xe, "Mobile Intel(r) Pentium(r) 4" }, { 0xf, "Mobile Intel(r) Celeron(r)" }, { 0x11, "Mobile Genuine Intel(r)" }, { 0x12, "Intel(r) Celeron(r) M" }, { 0x13, "Mobile Intel(r) Celeron(r)" }, { 0x14, "Intel(r) Celeron(r)" }, { 0x15, "Mobile Genuine Intel(r)" }, { 0x16, "Intel(r) Pentium(r) M" }, { 0x17, "Mobile Intel(r) Celeron(r)" } }; uint_t btblmax = sizeof (brand_tbl) / sizeof (brand_tbl[0]); uint_t sgn; sgn = (cpi->cpi_family << 8) | (cpi->cpi_model << 4) | cpi->cpi_step; for (i = 0; i < btblmax; i++) if (brand_tbl[i].bt_bid == cpi->cpi_brandid) break; if (i < btblmax) { if (sgn == 0x6b1 && cpi->cpi_brandid == 3) return ("Intel(r) Celeron(r)"); if (sgn < 0xf13 && cpi->cpi_brandid == 0xb) return ("Intel(r) Xeon(tm) MP"); if (sgn < 0xf13 && cpi->cpi_brandid == 0xe) return ("Intel(r) Xeon(tm)"); return (brand_tbl[i].bt_str); } } return (NULL); } static const char * amd_cpubrand(const struct cpuid_info *cpi) { ASSERT(is_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_CPUID)); switch (cpi->cpi_family) { case 5: switch (cpi->cpi_model) { case 0: case 1: case 2: case 3: case 4: case 5: return ("AMD-K5(r)"); case 6: case 7: return ("AMD-K6(r)"); case 8: return ("AMD-K6(r)-2"); case 9: return ("AMD-K6(r)-III"); default: return ("AMD (family 5)"); } case 6: switch (cpi->cpi_model) { case 1: return ("AMD-K7(tm)"); case 0: case 2: case 4: return ("AMD Athlon(tm)"); case 3: case 7: return ("AMD Duron(tm)"); case 6: case 8: case 10: /* * Use the L2 cache size to distinguish */ return ((cpi->cpi_extd[6].cp_ecx >> 16) >= 256 ? "AMD Athlon(tm)" : "AMD Duron(tm)"); default: return ("AMD (family 6)"); } default: break; } if (cpi->cpi_family == 0xf && cpi->cpi_model == 5 && cpi->cpi_brandid != 0) { switch (BITX(cpi->cpi_brandid, 7, 5)) { case 3: return ("AMD Opteron(tm) UP 1xx"); case 4: return ("AMD Opteron(tm) DP 2xx"); case 5: return ("AMD Opteron(tm) MP 8xx"); default: return ("AMD Opteron(tm)"); } } return (NULL); } static const char * cyrix_cpubrand(struct cpuid_info *cpi, uint_t type) { ASSERT(is_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_CPUID)); switch (type) { case X86_TYPE_CYRIX_6x86: return ("Cyrix 6x86"); case X86_TYPE_CYRIX_6x86L: return ("Cyrix 6x86L"); case X86_TYPE_CYRIX_6x86MX: return ("Cyrix 6x86MX"); case X86_TYPE_CYRIX_GXm: return ("Cyrix GXm"); case X86_TYPE_CYRIX_MediaGX: return ("Cyrix MediaGX"); case X86_TYPE_CYRIX_MII: return ("Cyrix M2"); case X86_TYPE_VIA_CYRIX_III: return ("VIA Cyrix M3"); default: /* * Have another wild guess .. */ if (cpi->cpi_family == 4 && cpi->cpi_model == 9) return ("Cyrix 5x86"); else if (cpi->cpi_family == 5) { switch (cpi->cpi_model) { case 2: return ("Cyrix 6x86"); /* Cyrix M1 */ case 4: return ("Cyrix MediaGX"); default: break; } } else if (cpi->cpi_family == 6) { switch (cpi->cpi_model) { case 0: return ("Cyrix 6x86MX"); /* Cyrix M2? */ case 5: case 6: case 7: case 8: case 9: return ("VIA C3"); default: break; } } break; } return (NULL); } /* * This only gets called in the case that the CPU extended * feature brand string (0x80000002, 0x80000003, 0x80000004) * aren't available, or contain null bytes for some reason. */ static void fabricate_brandstr(struct cpuid_info *cpi) { const char *brand = NULL; switch (cpi->cpi_vendor) { case X86_VENDOR_Intel: brand = intel_cpubrand(cpi); break; case X86_VENDOR_AMD: brand = amd_cpubrand(cpi); break; case X86_VENDOR_Cyrix: brand = cyrix_cpubrand(cpi, x86_type); break; case X86_VENDOR_NexGen: if (cpi->cpi_family == 5 && cpi->cpi_model == 0) brand = "NexGen Nx586"; break; case X86_VENDOR_Centaur: if (cpi->cpi_family == 5) switch (cpi->cpi_model) { case 4: brand = "Centaur C6"; break; case 8: brand = "Centaur C2"; break; case 9: brand = "Centaur C3"; break; default: break; } break; case X86_VENDOR_Rise: if (cpi->cpi_family == 5 && (cpi->cpi_model == 0 || cpi->cpi_model == 2)) brand = "Rise mP6"; break; case X86_VENDOR_SiS: if (cpi->cpi_family == 5 && cpi->cpi_model == 0) brand = "SiS 55x"; break; case X86_VENDOR_TM: if (cpi->cpi_family == 5 && cpi->cpi_model == 4) brand = "Transmeta Crusoe TM3x00 or TM5x00"; break; case X86_VENDOR_NSC: case X86_VENDOR_UMC: default: break; } if (brand) { (void) strcpy((char *)cpi->cpi_brandstr, brand); return; } /* * If all else fails ... */ (void) snprintf(cpi->cpi_brandstr, sizeof (cpi->cpi_brandstr), "%s %d.%d.%d", cpi->cpi_vendorstr, cpi->cpi_family, cpi->cpi_model, cpi->cpi_step); } /* * This routine is called just after kernel memory allocation * becomes available on cpu0, and as part of mp_startup() on * the other cpus. * * Fixup the brand string, and collect any information from cpuid * that requires dynamically allocated storage to represent. */ static void cpuid_pass_dynamic(cpu_t *cpu, void *_arg __unused) { int i, max, shft, level, size; struct cpuid_regs regs; struct cpuid_regs *cp; struct cpuid_info *cpi = cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi; /* * Deterministic cache parameters * * Intel uses leaf 0x4 for this, while AMD uses leaf 0x8000001d. The * values that are present are currently defined to be the same. This * means we can use the same logic to parse it as long as we use the * appropriate leaf to get the data. If you're updating this, make sure * you're careful about which vendor supports which aspect. * * Take this opportunity to detect the number of threads sharing the * last level cache, and construct a corresponding cache id. The * respective cpuid_info members are initialized to the default case of * "no last level cache sharing". */ cpi->cpi_ncpu_shr_last_cache = 1; cpi->cpi_last_lvl_cacheid = cpu->cpu_id; if ((cpi->cpi_maxeax >= 4 && cpi->cpi_vendor == X86_VENDOR_Intel) || ((cpi->cpi_vendor == X86_VENDOR_AMD || cpi->cpi_vendor == X86_VENDOR_HYGON) && cpi->cpi_xmaxeax >= CPUID_LEAF_EXT_1d && is_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_TOPOEXT))) { uint32_t leaf; if (cpi->cpi_vendor == X86_VENDOR_Intel) { leaf = 4; } else { leaf = CPUID_LEAF_EXT_1d; } /* * Find the # of elements (size) returned by the leaf and along * the way detect last level cache sharing details. */ bzero(®s, sizeof (regs)); cp = ®s; for (i = 0, max = 0; i < CPI_FN4_ECX_MAX; i++) { cp->cp_eax = leaf; cp->cp_ecx = i; (void) __cpuid_insn(cp); if (CPI_CACHE_TYPE(cp) == 0) break; level = CPI_CACHE_LVL(cp); if (level > max) { max = level; cpi->cpi_ncpu_shr_last_cache = CPI_NTHR_SHR_CACHE(cp) + 1; } } cpi->cpi_cache_leaf_size = size = i; /* * Allocate the cpi_cache_leaves array. The first element * references the regs for the corresponding leaf with %ecx set * to 0. This was gathered in cpuid_pass_extended(). */ if (size > 0) { cpi->cpi_cache_leaves = kmem_alloc(size * sizeof (cp), KM_SLEEP); if (cpi->cpi_vendor == X86_VENDOR_Intel) { cpi->cpi_cache_leaves[0] = &cpi->cpi_std[4]; } else { cpi->cpi_cache_leaves[0] = &cpi->cpi_extd[0x1d]; } /* * Allocate storage to hold the additional regs * for the leaf, %ecx == 1 .. cpi_cache_leaf_size. * * The regs for the leaf, %ecx == 0 has already * been allocated as indicated above. */ for (i = 1; i < size; i++) { cp = cpi->cpi_cache_leaves[i] = kmem_zalloc(sizeof (regs), KM_SLEEP); cp->cp_eax = leaf; cp->cp_ecx = i; (void) __cpuid_insn(cp); } } /* * Determine the number of bits needed to represent * the number of CPUs sharing the last level cache. * * Shift off that number of bits from the APIC id to * derive the cache id. */ shft = 0; for (i = 1; i < cpi->cpi_ncpu_shr_last_cache; i <<= 1) shft++; cpi->cpi_last_lvl_cacheid = cpi->cpi_apicid >> shft; } /* * Now fixup the brand string */ if ((cpi->cpi_xmaxeax & CPUID_LEAF_EXT_0) == 0) { fabricate_brandstr(cpi); } else { /* * If we successfully extracted a brand string from the cpuid * instruction, clean it up by removing leading spaces and * similar junk. */ if (cpi->cpi_brandstr[0]) { size_t maxlen = sizeof (cpi->cpi_brandstr); char *src, *dst; dst = src = (char *)cpi->cpi_brandstr; src[maxlen - 1] = '\0'; /* * strip leading spaces */ while (*src == ' ') src++; /* * Remove any 'Genuine' or "Authentic" prefixes */ if (strncmp(src, "Genuine ", 8) == 0) src += 8; if (strncmp(src, "Authentic ", 10) == 0) src += 10; /* * Now do an in-place copy. * Map (R) to (r) and (TM) to (tm). * The era of teletypes is long gone, and there's * -really- no need to shout. */ while (*src != '\0') { if (src[0] == '(') { if (strncmp(src + 1, "R)", 2) == 0) { (void) strncpy(dst, "(r)", 3); src += 3; dst += 3; continue; } if (strncmp(src + 1, "TM)", 3) == 0) { (void) strncpy(dst, "(tm)", 4); src += 4; dst += 4; continue; } } *dst++ = *src++; } *dst = '\0'; /* * Finally, remove any trailing spaces */ while (--dst > cpi->cpi_brandstr) if (*dst == ' ') *dst = '\0'; else break; } else fabricate_brandstr(cpi); } } typedef struct { uint32_t avm_av; uint32_t avm_feat; } av_feat_map_t; /* * These arrays are used to map features that we should add based on x86 * features that are present. As a large number depend on kernel features, * rather than rechecking and clearing CPUID everywhere, we simply map these. * There is an array of these for each hwcap word. Some features aren't tracked * in the kernel x86 featureset and that's ok. They will not show up in here. */ static const av_feat_map_t x86fset_to_av1[] = { { AV_386_CX8, X86FSET_CX8 }, { AV_386_SEP, X86FSET_SEP }, { AV_386_AMD_SYSC, X86FSET_ASYSC }, { AV_386_CMOV, X86FSET_CMOV }, { AV_386_FXSR, X86FSET_SSE }, { AV_386_SSE, X86FSET_SSE }, { AV_386_SSE2, X86FSET_SSE2 }, { AV_386_SSE3, X86FSET_SSE3 }, { AV_386_CX16, X86FSET_CX16 }, { AV_386_TSCP, X86FSET_TSCP }, { AV_386_AMD_SSE4A, X86FSET_SSE4A }, { AV_386_SSSE3, X86FSET_SSSE3 }, { AV_386_SSE4_1, X86FSET_SSE4_1 }, { AV_386_SSE4_2, X86FSET_SSE4_2 }, { AV_386_AES, X86FSET_AES }, { AV_386_PCLMULQDQ, X86FSET_PCLMULQDQ }, { AV_386_XSAVE, X86FSET_XSAVE }, { AV_386_AVX, X86FSET_AVX }, { AV_386_VMX, X86FSET_VMX }, { AV_386_AMD_SVM, X86FSET_SVM } }; static const av_feat_map_t x86fset_to_av2[] = { { AV_386_2_F16C, X86FSET_F16C }, { AV_386_2_RDRAND, X86FSET_RDRAND }, { AV_386_2_BMI1, X86FSET_BMI1 }, { AV_386_2_BMI2, X86FSET_BMI2 }, { AV_386_2_FMA, X86FSET_FMA }, { AV_386_2_AVX2, X86FSET_AVX2 }, { AV_386_2_ADX, X86FSET_ADX }, { AV_386_2_RDSEED, X86FSET_RDSEED }, { AV_386_2_AVX512F, X86FSET_AVX512F }, { AV_386_2_AVX512DQ, X86FSET_AVX512DQ }, { AV_386_2_AVX512IFMA, X86FSET_AVX512FMA }, { AV_386_2_AVX512PF, X86FSET_AVX512PF }, { AV_386_2_AVX512ER, X86FSET_AVX512ER }, { AV_386_2_AVX512CD, X86FSET_AVX512CD }, { AV_386_2_AVX512BW, X86FSET_AVX512BW }, { AV_386_2_AVX512VL, X86FSET_AVX512VL }, { AV_386_2_AVX512VBMI, X86FSET_AVX512VBMI }, { AV_386_2_AVX512VPOPCDQ, X86FSET_AVX512VPOPCDQ }, { AV_386_2_SHA, X86FSET_SHA }, { AV_386_2_FSGSBASE, X86FSET_FSGSBASE }, { AV_386_2_CLFLUSHOPT, X86FSET_CLFLUSHOPT }, { AV_386_2_CLWB, X86FSET_CLWB }, { AV_386_2_MONITORX, X86FSET_MONITORX }, { AV_386_2_CLZERO, X86FSET_CLZERO }, { AV_386_2_AVX512_VNNI, X86FSET_AVX512VNNI }, { AV_386_2_VPCLMULQDQ, X86FSET_VPCLMULQDQ }, { AV_386_2_VAES, X86FSET_VAES }, { AV_386_2_GFNI, X86FSET_GFNI }, { AV_386_2_AVX512_VP2INT, X86FSET_AVX512_VP2INT }, { AV_386_2_AVX512_BITALG, X86FSET_AVX512_BITALG } }; static const av_feat_map_t x86fset_to_av3[] = { { AV_386_3_AVX512_VBMI2, X86FSET_AVX512_VBMI2 }, { AV_386_3_AVX512_BF16, X86FSET_AVX512_BF16 } }; /* * This routine is called out of bind_hwcap() much later in the life * of the kernel (post_startup()). The job of this routine is to resolve * the hardware feature support and kernel support for those features into * what we're actually going to tell applications via the aux vector. * * Most of the aux vector is derived from the x86_featureset array vector where * a given feature indicates that an aux vector should be plumbed through. This * allows the kernel to use one tracking mechanism for these based on whether or * not it has the required hardware support (most often xsave). Most newer * features are added there in case we need them in the kernel. Otherwise, * features are evaluated based on looking at the cpuid features that remain. If * you find yourself wanting to clear out cpuid features for some reason, they * should instead be driven by the feature set so we have a consistent view. */ static void cpuid_pass_resolve(cpu_t *cpu, void *arg) { uint_t *hwcap_out = (uint_t *)arg; struct cpuid_info *cpi; uint_t hwcap_flags = 0, hwcap_flags_2 = 0, hwcap_flags_3 = 0; cpi = cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi; for (uint_t i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(x86fset_to_av1); i++) { if (is_x86_feature(x86_featureset, x86fset_to_av1[i].avm_feat)) { hwcap_flags |= x86fset_to_av1[i].avm_av; } } for (uint_t i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(x86fset_to_av2); i++) { if (is_x86_feature(x86_featureset, x86fset_to_av2[i].avm_feat)) { hwcap_flags_2 |= x86fset_to_av2[i].avm_av; } } for (uint_t i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(x86fset_to_av3); i++) { if (is_x86_feature(x86_featureset, x86fset_to_av3[i].avm_feat)) { hwcap_flags_3 |= x86fset_to_av3[i].avm_av; } } /* * From here on out we're working through features that don't have * corresponding kernel feature flags for various reasons that are * mostly just due to the historical implementation. */ if (cpi->cpi_maxeax >= 1) { uint32_t *edx = &cpi->cpi_support[STD_EDX_FEATURES]; uint32_t *ecx = &cpi->cpi_support[STD_ECX_FEATURES]; *edx = CPI_FEATURES_EDX(cpi); *ecx = CPI_FEATURES_ECX(cpi); /* * [no explicit support required beyond x87 fp context] */ if (!fpu_exists) *edx &= ~(CPUID_INTC_EDX_FPU | CPUID_INTC_EDX_MMX); /* * Now map the supported feature vector to things that we * think userland will care about. */ if (*ecx & CPUID_INTC_ECX_MOVBE) hwcap_flags |= AV_386_MOVBE; if (*ecx & CPUID_INTC_ECX_POPCNT) hwcap_flags |= AV_386_POPCNT; if (*edx & CPUID_INTC_EDX_FPU) hwcap_flags |= AV_386_FPU; if (*edx & CPUID_INTC_EDX_MMX) hwcap_flags |= AV_386_MMX; if (*edx & CPUID_INTC_EDX_TSC) hwcap_flags |= AV_386_TSC; } /* * Check a few miscellaneous features. */ if (cpi->cpi_xmaxeax < 0x80000001) goto resolve_done; switch (cpi->cpi_vendor) { uint32_t *edx, *ecx; case X86_VENDOR_Intel: /* * Seems like Intel duplicated what we necessary * here to make the initial crop of 64-bit OS's work. * Hopefully, those are the only "extended" bits * they'll add. */ /*FALLTHROUGH*/ case X86_VENDOR_AMD: case X86_VENDOR_HYGON: edx = &cpi->cpi_support[AMD_EDX_FEATURES]; ecx = &cpi->cpi_support[AMD_ECX_FEATURES]; *edx = CPI_FEATURES_XTD_EDX(cpi); *ecx = CPI_FEATURES_XTD_ECX(cpi); /* * [no explicit support required beyond * x87 fp context and exception handlers] */ if (!fpu_exists) *edx &= ~(CPUID_AMD_EDX_MMXamd | CPUID_AMD_EDX_3DNow | CPUID_AMD_EDX_3DNowx); /* * Now map the supported feature vector to * things that we think userland will care about. */ if (*edx & CPUID_AMD_EDX_MMXamd) hwcap_flags |= AV_386_AMD_MMX; if (*edx & CPUID_AMD_EDX_3DNow) hwcap_flags |= AV_386_AMD_3DNow; if (*edx & CPUID_AMD_EDX_3DNowx) hwcap_flags |= AV_386_AMD_3DNowx; switch (cpi->cpi_vendor) { case X86_VENDOR_AMD: case X86_VENDOR_HYGON: if (*ecx & CPUID_AMD_ECX_AHF64) hwcap_flags |= AV_386_AHF; if (*ecx & CPUID_AMD_ECX_LZCNT) hwcap_flags |= AV_386_AMD_LZCNT; break; case X86_VENDOR_Intel: if (*ecx & CPUID_AMD_ECX_LZCNT) hwcap_flags |= AV_386_AMD_LZCNT; /* * Aarrgh. * Intel uses a different bit in the same word. */ if (*ecx & CPUID_INTC_ECX_AHF64) hwcap_flags |= AV_386_AHF; break; default: break; } break; default: break; } resolve_done: if (hwcap_out != NULL) { hwcap_out[0] = hwcap_flags; hwcap_out[1] = hwcap_flags_2; hwcap_out[2] = hwcap_flags_3; } } /* * Simulate the cpuid instruction using the data we previously * captured about this CPU. We try our best to return the truth * about the hardware, independently of kernel support. */ uint32_t cpuid_insn(cpu_t *cpu, struct cpuid_regs *cp) { struct cpuid_info *cpi; struct cpuid_regs *xcp; if (cpu == NULL) cpu = CPU; cpi = cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi; ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(cpu, CPUID_PASS_DYNAMIC)); /* * CPUID data is cached in two separate places: cpi_std for standard * CPUID leaves , and cpi_extd for extended CPUID leaves. */ if (cp->cp_eax <= cpi->cpi_maxeax && cp->cp_eax < NMAX_CPI_STD) { xcp = &cpi->cpi_std[cp->cp_eax]; } else if (cp->cp_eax >= CPUID_LEAF_EXT_0 && cp->cp_eax <= cpi->cpi_xmaxeax && cp->cp_eax < CPUID_LEAF_EXT_0 + NMAX_CPI_EXTD) { xcp = &cpi->cpi_extd[cp->cp_eax - CPUID_LEAF_EXT_0]; } else { /* * The caller is asking for data from an input parameter which * the kernel has not cached. In this case we go fetch from * the hardware and return the data directly to the user. */ return (__cpuid_insn(cp)); } cp->cp_eax = xcp->cp_eax; cp->cp_ebx = xcp->cp_ebx; cp->cp_ecx = xcp->cp_ecx; cp->cp_edx = xcp->cp_edx; return (cp->cp_eax); } boolean_t cpuid_checkpass(const cpu_t *const cpu, const cpuid_pass_t pass) { return (cpu != NULL && cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi != NULL && cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_pass >= pass); } int cpuid_getbrandstr(cpu_t *cpu, char *s, size_t n) { ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(cpu, CPUID_PASS_DYNAMIC)); return (snprintf(s, n, "%s", cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_brandstr)); } int cpuid_is_cmt(cpu_t *cpu) { if (cpu == NULL) cpu = CPU; ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(cpu, CPUID_PASS_BASIC)); return (cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_chipid >= 0); } /* * AMD and Intel both implement the 64-bit variant of the syscall * instruction (syscallq), so if there's -any- support for syscall, * cpuid currently says "yes, we support this". * * However, Intel decided to -not- implement the 32-bit variant of the * syscall instruction, so we provide a predicate to allow our caller * to test that subtlety here. * * XXPV Currently, 32-bit syscall instructions don't work via the hypervisor, * even in the case where the hardware would in fact support it. */ /*ARGSUSED*/ int cpuid_syscall32_insn(cpu_t *cpu) { ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass((cpu == NULL ? CPU : cpu), CPUID_PASS_BASIC)); #if !defined(__xpv) if (cpu == NULL) cpu = CPU; /*CSTYLED*/ { struct cpuid_info *cpi = cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi; if ((cpi->cpi_vendor == X86_VENDOR_AMD || cpi->cpi_vendor == X86_VENDOR_HYGON) && cpi->cpi_xmaxeax >= 0x80000001 && (CPI_FEATURES_XTD_EDX(cpi) & CPUID_AMD_EDX_SYSC)) return (1); } #endif return (0); } int cpuid_getidstr(cpu_t *cpu, char *s, size_t n) { struct cpuid_info *cpi = cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi; static const char fmt[] = "x86 (%s %X family %d model %d step %d clock %d MHz)"; static const char fmt_ht[] = "x86 (chipid 0x%x %s %X family %d model %d step %d clock %d MHz)"; ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(cpu, CPUID_PASS_BASIC)); if (cpuid_is_cmt(cpu)) return (snprintf(s, n, fmt_ht, cpi->cpi_chipid, cpi->cpi_vendorstr, cpi->cpi_std[1].cp_eax, cpi->cpi_family, cpi->cpi_model, cpi->cpi_step, cpu->cpu_type_info.pi_clock)); return (snprintf(s, n, fmt, cpi->cpi_vendorstr, cpi->cpi_std[1].cp_eax, cpi->cpi_family, cpi->cpi_model, cpi->cpi_step, cpu->cpu_type_info.pi_clock)); } const char * cpuid_getvendorstr(cpu_t *cpu) { ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(cpu, CPUID_PASS_IDENT)); return ((const char *)cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_vendorstr); } uint_t cpuid_getvendor(cpu_t *cpu) { ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(cpu, CPUID_PASS_IDENT)); return (cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_vendor); } uint_t cpuid_getfamily(cpu_t *cpu) { ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(cpu, CPUID_PASS_IDENT)); return (cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_family); } uint_t cpuid_getmodel(cpu_t *cpu) { ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(cpu, CPUID_PASS_IDENT)); return (cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_model); } uint_t cpuid_get_ncpu_per_chip(cpu_t *cpu) { ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(cpu, CPUID_PASS_BASIC)); return (cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_ncpu_per_chip); } uint_t cpuid_get_ncore_per_chip(cpu_t *cpu) { ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(cpu, CPUID_PASS_BASIC)); return (cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_ncore_per_chip); } uint_t cpuid_get_ncpu_sharing_last_cache(cpu_t *cpu) { ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(cpu, CPUID_PASS_EXTENDED)); return (cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_ncpu_shr_last_cache); } id_t cpuid_get_last_lvl_cacheid(cpu_t *cpu) { ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(cpu, CPUID_PASS_EXTENDED)); return (cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_last_lvl_cacheid); } uint_t cpuid_getstep(cpu_t *cpu) { ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(cpu, CPUID_PASS_IDENT)); return (cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_step); } uint_t cpuid_getsig(struct cpu *cpu) { ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(cpu, CPUID_PASS_BASIC)); return (cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_std[1].cp_eax); } uint32_t cpuid_getchiprev(struct cpu *cpu) { ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(cpu, CPUID_PASS_IDENT)); return (cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_chiprev); } const char * cpuid_getchiprevstr(struct cpu *cpu) { ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(cpu, CPUID_PASS_IDENT)); return (cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_chiprevstr); } uint32_t cpuid_getsockettype(struct cpu *cpu) { ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(cpu, CPUID_PASS_IDENT)); return (cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_socket); } const char * cpuid_getsocketstr(cpu_t *cpu) { static const char *socketstr = NULL; struct cpuid_info *cpi; ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(cpu, CPUID_PASS_IDENT)); cpi = cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi; /* Assume that socket types are the same across the system */ if (socketstr == NULL) socketstr = _cpuid_sktstr(cpi->cpi_vendor, cpi->cpi_family, cpi->cpi_model, cpi->cpi_step); return (socketstr); } x86_uarchrev_t cpuid_getuarchrev(cpu_t *cpu) { return (cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_uarchrev); } int cpuid_get_chipid(cpu_t *cpu) { ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(cpu, CPUID_PASS_BASIC)); if (cpuid_is_cmt(cpu)) return (cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_chipid); return (cpu->cpu_id); } id_t cpuid_get_coreid(cpu_t *cpu) { ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(cpu, CPUID_PASS_BASIC)); return (cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_coreid); } int cpuid_get_pkgcoreid(cpu_t *cpu) { ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(cpu, CPUID_PASS_BASIC)); return (cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_pkgcoreid); } int cpuid_get_clogid(cpu_t *cpu) { ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(cpu, CPUID_PASS_BASIC)); return (cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_clogid); } int cpuid_get_cacheid(cpu_t *cpu) { ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(cpu, CPUID_PASS_BASIC)); return (cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_last_lvl_cacheid); } uint_t cpuid_get_procnodeid(cpu_t *cpu) { ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(cpu, CPUID_PASS_BASIC)); return (cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_procnodeid); } uint_t cpuid_get_procnodes_per_pkg(cpu_t *cpu) { ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(cpu, CPUID_PASS_BASIC)); return (cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_procnodes_per_pkg); } uint_t cpuid_get_compunitid(cpu_t *cpu) { ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(cpu, CPUID_PASS_BASIC)); return (cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_compunitid); } uint_t cpuid_get_cores_per_compunit(cpu_t *cpu) { ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(cpu, CPUID_PASS_BASIC)); return (cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_cores_per_compunit); } uint32_t cpuid_get_apicid(cpu_t *cpu) { ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(cpu, CPUID_PASS_BASIC)); if (cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_maxeax < 1) { return (UINT32_MAX); } else { return (cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_apicid); } } void cpuid_get_addrsize(cpu_t *cpu, uint_t *pabits, uint_t *vabits) { struct cpuid_info *cpi; if (cpu == NULL) cpu = CPU; cpi = cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi; ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(cpu, CPUID_PASS_BASIC)); if (pabits) *pabits = cpi->cpi_pabits; if (vabits) *vabits = cpi->cpi_vabits; } size_t cpuid_get_xsave_size(void) { return (MAX(cpuid_info0.cpi_xsave.xsav_max_size, sizeof (struct xsave_state))); } /* * Export information about known offsets to the kernel. We only care about * things we have actually enabled support for in %xcr0. */ void cpuid_get_xsave_info(uint64_t bit, size_t *sizep, size_t *offp) { size_t size, off; VERIFY3U(bit & xsave_bv_all, !=, 0); if (sizep == NULL) sizep = &size; if (offp == NULL) offp = &off; switch (bit) { case XFEATURE_LEGACY_FP: case XFEATURE_SSE: *sizep = sizeof (struct fxsave_state); *offp = 0; break; case XFEATURE_AVX: *sizep = cpuid_info0.cpi_xsave.ymm_size; *offp = cpuid_info0.cpi_xsave.ymm_offset; break; case XFEATURE_AVX512_OPMASK: *sizep = cpuid_info0.cpi_xsave.opmask_size; *offp = cpuid_info0.cpi_xsave.opmask_offset; break; case XFEATURE_AVX512_ZMM: *sizep = cpuid_info0.cpi_xsave.zmmlo_size; *offp = cpuid_info0.cpi_xsave.zmmlo_offset; break; case XFEATURE_AVX512_HI_ZMM: *sizep = cpuid_info0.cpi_xsave.zmmhi_size; *offp = cpuid_info0.cpi_xsave.zmmhi_offset; break; default: panic("asked for unsupported xsave feature: 0x%lx", bit); } } /* * Return true if the CPUs on this system require 'pointer clearing' for the * floating point error pointer exception handling. In the past, this has been * true for all AMD K7 & K8 CPUs, although newer AMD CPUs have been changed to * behave the same as Intel. This is checked via the CPUID_AMD_EBX_ERR_PTR_ZERO * feature bit and is reflected in the cpi_fp_amd_save member. */ boolean_t cpuid_need_fp_excp_handling(void) { return (cpuid_info0.cpi_vendor == X86_VENDOR_AMD && cpuid_info0.cpi_fp_amd_save != 0); } /* * Returns the number of data TLB entries for a corresponding * pagesize. If it can't be computed, or isn't known, the * routine returns zero. If you ask about an architecturally * impossible pagesize, the routine will panic (so that the * hat implementor knows that things are inconsistent.) */ uint_t cpuid_get_dtlb_nent(cpu_t *cpu, size_t pagesize) { struct cpuid_info *cpi; uint_t dtlb_nent = 0; if (cpu == NULL) cpu = CPU; cpi = cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi; ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(cpu, CPUID_PASS_BASIC)); /* * Check the L2 TLB info */ if (cpi->cpi_xmaxeax >= 0x80000006) { struct cpuid_regs *cp = &cpi->cpi_extd[6]; switch (pagesize) { case 4 * 1024: /* * All zero in the top 16 bits of the register * indicates a unified TLB. Size is in low 16 bits. */ if ((cp->cp_ebx & 0xffff0000) == 0) dtlb_nent = cp->cp_ebx & 0x0000ffff; else dtlb_nent = BITX(cp->cp_ebx, 27, 16); break; case 2 * 1024 * 1024: if ((cp->cp_eax & 0xffff0000) == 0) dtlb_nent = cp->cp_eax & 0x0000ffff; else dtlb_nent = BITX(cp->cp_eax, 27, 16); break; default: panic("unknown L2 pagesize"); /*NOTREACHED*/ } } if (dtlb_nent != 0) return (dtlb_nent); /* * No L2 TLB support for this size, try L1. */ if (cpi->cpi_xmaxeax >= 0x80000005) { struct cpuid_regs *cp = &cpi->cpi_extd[5]; switch (pagesize) { case 4 * 1024: dtlb_nent = BITX(cp->cp_ebx, 23, 16); break; case 2 * 1024 * 1024: dtlb_nent = BITX(cp->cp_eax, 23, 16); break; default: panic("unknown L1 d-TLB pagesize"); /*NOTREACHED*/ } } return (dtlb_nent); } /* * Return 0 if the erratum is not present or not applicable, positive * if it is, and negative if the status of the erratum is unknown. * * See "Revision Guide for AMD Athlon(tm) 64 and AMD Opteron(tm) * Processors" #25759, Rev 3.57, August 2005 */ int cpuid_opteron_erratum(cpu_t *cpu, uint_t erratum) { struct cpuid_info *cpi = cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi; uint_t eax; /* * Bail out if this CPU isn't an AMD CPU, or if it's * a legacy (32-bit) AMD CPU. */ if (cpi->cpi_vendor != X86_VENDOR_AMD || cpi->cpi_family == 4 || cpi->cpi_family == 5 || cpi->cpi_family == 6) { return (0); } eax = cpi->cpi_std[1].cp_eax; #define SH_B0(eax) (eax == 0xf40 || eax == 0xf50) #define SH_B3(eax) (eax == 0xf51) #define B(eax) (SH_B0(eax) || SH_B3(eax)) #define SH_C0(eax) (eax == 0xf48 || eax == 0xf58) #define SH_CG(eax) (eax == 0xf4a || eax == 0xf5a || eax == 0xf7a) #define DH_CG(eax) (eax == 0xfc0 || eax == 0xfe0 || eax == 0xff0) #define CH_CG(eax) (eax == 0xf82 || eax == 0xfb2) #define CG(eax) (SH_CG(eax) || DH_CG(eax) || CH_CG(eax)) #define SH_D0(eax) (eax == 0x10f40 || eax == 0x10f50 || eax == 0x10f70) #define DH_D0(eax) (eax == 0x10fc0 || eax == 0x10ff0) #define CH_D0(eax) (eax == 0x10f80 || eax == 0x10fb0) #define D0(eax) (SH_D0(eax) || DH_D0(eax) || CH_D0(eax)) #define SH_E0(eax) (eax == 0x20f50 || eax == 0x20f40 || eax == 0x20f70) #define JH_E1(eax) (eax == 0x20f10) /* JH8_E0 had 0x20f30 */ #define DH_E3(eax) (eax == 0x20fc0 || eax == 0x20ff0) #define SH_E4(eax) (eax == 0x20f51 || eax == 0x20f71) #define BH_E4(eax) (eax == 0x20fb1) #define SH_E5(eax) (eax == 0x20f42) #define DH_E6(eax) (eax == 0x20ff2 || eax == 0x20fc2) #define JH_E6(eax) (eax == 0x20f12 || eax == 0x20f32) #define EX(eax) (SH_E0(eax) || JH_E1(eax) || DH_E3(eax) || \ SH_E4(eax) || BH_E4(eax) || SH_E5(eax) || \ DH_E6(eax) || JH_E6(eax)) #define DR_AX(eax) (eax == 0x100f00 || eax == 0x100f01 || eax == 0x100f02) #define DR_B0(eax) (eax == 0x100f20) #define DR_B1(eax) (eax == 0x100f21) #define DR_BA(eax) (eax == 0x100f2a) #define DR_B2(eax) (eax == 0x100f22) #define DR_B3(eax) (eax == 0x100f23) #define RB_C0(eax) (eax == 0x100f40) switch (erratum) { case 1: return (cpi->cpi_family < 0x10); case 51: /* what does the asterisk mean? */ return (B(eax) || SH_C0(eax) || CG(eax)); case 52: return (B(eax)); case 57: return (cpi->cpi_family <= 0x11); case 58: return (B(eax)); case 60: return (cpi->cpi_family <= 0x11); case 61: case 62: case 63: case 64: case 65: case 66: case 68: case 69: case 70: case 71: return (B(eax)); case 72: return (SH_B0(eax)); case 74: return (B(eax)); case 75: return (cpi->cpi_family < 0x10); case 76: return (B(eax)); case 77: return (cpi->cpi_family <= 0x11); case 78: return (B(eax) || SH_C0(eax)); case 79: return (B(eax) || SH_C0(eax) || CG(eax) || D0(eax) || EX(eax)); case 80: case 81: case 82: return (B(eax)); case 83: return (B(eax) || SH_C0(eax) || CG(eax)); case 85: return (cpi->cpi_family < 0x10); case 86: return (SH_C0(eax) || CG(eax)); case 88: return (B(eax) || SH_C0(eax)); case 89: return (cpi->cpi_family < 0x10); case 90: return (B(eax) || SH_C0(eax) || CG(eax)); case 91: case 92: return (B(eax) || SH_C0(eax)); case 93: return (SH_C0(eax)); case 94: return (B(eax) || SH_C0(eax) || CG(eax)); case 95: return (B(eax) || SH_C0(eax)); case 96: return (B(eax) || SH_C0(eax) || CG(eax)); case 97: case 98: return (SH_C0(eax) || CG(eax)); case 99: return (B(eax) || SH_C0(eax) || CG(eax) || D0(eax)); case 100: return (B(eax) || SH_C0(eax)); case 101: case 103: return (B(eax) || SH_C0(eax) || CG(eax) || D0(eax)); case 104: return (SH_C0(eax) || CG(eax) || D0(eax)); case 105: case 106: case 107: return (B(eax) || SH_C0(eax) || CG(eax) || D0(eax)); case 108: return (DH_CG(eax)); case 109: return (SH_C0(eax) || CG(eax) || D0(eax)); case 110: return (D0(eax) || EX(eax)); case 111: return (CG(eax)); case 112: return (B(eax) || SH_C0(eax) || CG(eax) || D0(eax) || EX(eax)); case 113: return (eax == 0x20fc0); case 114: return (SH_E0(eax) || JH_E1(eax) || DH_E3(eax)); case 115: return (SH_E0(eax) || JH_E1(eax)); case 116: return (SH_E0(eax) || JH_E1(eax) || DH_E3(eax)); case 117: return (B(eax) || SH_C0(eax) || CG(eax) || D0(eax)); case 118: return (SH_E0(eax) || JH_E1(eax) || SH_E4(eax) || BH_E4(eax) || JH_E6(eax)); case 121: return (B(eax) || SH_C0(eax) || CG(eax) || D0(eax) || EX(eax)); case 122: return (cpi->cpi_family < 0x10 || cpi->cpi_family == 0x11); case 123: return (JH_E1(eax) || BH_E4(eax) || JH_E6(eax)); case 131: return (cpi->cpi_family < 0x10); case 6336786: /* * Test for AdvPowerMgmtInfo.TscPStateInvariant * if this is a K8 family or newer processor. We're testing for * this 'erratum' to determine whether or not we have a constant * TSC. * * Our current fix for this is to disable the C1-Clock ramping. * However, this doesn't work on newer processor families nor * does it work when virtualized as those devices don't exist. */ if (cpi->cpi_family >= 0x12 || get_hwenv() != HW_NATIVE) { return (0); } if (CPI_FAMILY(cpi) == 0xf) { struct cpuid_regs regs; regs.cp_eax = 0x80000007; (void) __cpuid_insn(®s); return (!(regs.cp_edx & 0x100)); } return (0); case 147: /* * This erratum (K8 #147) is not present on family 10 and newer. */ if (cpi->cpi_family >= 0x10) { return (0); } return (((((eax >> 12) & 0xff00) + (eax & 0xf00)) | (((eax >> 4) & 0xf) | ((eax >> 12) & 0xf0))) < 0xf40); case 6671130: /* * check for processors (pre-Shanghai) that do not provide * optimal management of 1gb ptes in its tlb. */ return (cpi->cpi_family == 0x10 && cpi->cpi_model < 4); case 298: return (DR_AX(eax) || DR_B0(eax) || DR_B1(eax) || DR_BA(eax) || DR_B2(eax) || RB_C0(eax)); case 721: return (cpi->cpi_family == 0x10 || cpi->cpi_family == 0x12); default: return (-1); } } /* * Determine if specified erratum is present via OSVW (OS Visible Workaround). * Return 1 if erratum is present, 0 if not present and -1 if indeterminate. */ int osvw_opteron_erratum(cpu_t *cpu, uint_t erratum) { struct cpuid_info *cpi; uint_t osvwid; static int osvwfeature = -1; uint64_t osvwlength; cpi = cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi; /* confirm OSVW supported */ if (osvwfeature == -1) { osvwfeature = cpi->cpi_extd[1].cp_ecx & CPUID_AMD_ECX_OSVW; } else { /* assert that osvw feature setting is consistent on all cpus */ ASSERT(osvwfeature == (cpi->cpi_extd[1].cp_ecx & CPUID_AMD_ECX_OSVW)); } if (!osvwfeature) return (-1); osvwlength = rdmsr(MSR_AMD_OSVW_ID_LEN) & OSVW_ID_LEN_MASK; switch (erratum) { case 298: /* osvwid is 0 */ osvwid = 0; if (osvwlength <= (uint64_t)osvwid) { /* osvwid 0 is unknown */ return (-1); } /* * Check the OSVW STATUS MSR to determine the state * of the erratum where: * 0 - fixed by HW * 1 - BIOS has applied the workaround when BIOS * workaround is available. (Or for other errata, * OS workaround is required.) * For a value of 1, caller will confirm that the * erratum 298 workaround has indeed been applied by BIOS. * * A 1 may be set in cpus that have a HW fix * in a mixed cpu system. Regarding erratum 298: * In a multiprocessor platform, the workaround above * should be applied to all processors regardless of * silicon revision when an affected processor is * present. */ return (rdmsr(MSR_AMD_OSVW_STATUS + (osvwid / OSVW_ID_CNT_PER_MSR)) & (1ULL << (osvwid % OSVW_ID_CNT_PER_MSR))); default: return (-1); } } static const char assoc_str[] = "associativity"; static const char line_str[] = "line-size"; static const char size_str[] = "size"; static void add_cache_prop(dev_info_t *devi, const char *label, const char *type, uint32_t val) { char buf[128]; /* * ndi_prop_update_int() is used because it is desirable for * DDI_PROP_HW_DEF and DDI_PROP_DONTSLEEP to be set. */ if (snprintf(buf, sizeof (buf), "%s-%s", label, type) < sizeof (buf)) (void) ndi_prop_update_int(DDI_DEV_T_NONE, devi, buf, val); } /* * Intel-style cache/tlb description * * Standard cpuid level 2 gives a randomly ordered * selection of tags that index into a table that describes * cache and tlb properties. */ static const char l1_icache_str[] = "l1-icache"; static const char l1_dcache_str[] = "l1-dcache"; static const char l2_cache_str[] = "l2-cache"; static const char l3_cache_str[] = "l3-cache"; static const char itlb4k_str[] = "itlb-4K"; static const char dtlb4k_str[] = "dtlb-4K"; static const char itlb2M_str[] = "itlb-2M"; static const char itlb4M_str[] = "itlb-4M"; static const char dtlb4M_str[] = "dtlb-4M"; static const char dtlb24_str[] = "dtlb0-2M-4M"; static const char itlb424_str[] = "itlb-4K-2M-4M"; static const char itlb24_str[] = "itlb-2M-4M"; static const char dtlb44_str[] = "dtlb-4K-4M"; static const char sl1_dcache_str[] = "sectored-l1-dcache"; static const char sl2_cache_str[] = "sectored-l2-cache"; static const char itrace_str[] = "itrace-cache"; static const char sl3_cache_str[] = "sectored-l3-cache"; static const char sh_l2_tlb4k_str[] = "shared-l2-tlb-4k"; static const struct cachetab { uint8_t ct_code; uint8_t ct_assoc; uint16_t ct_line_size; size_t ct_size; const char *ct_label; } intel_ctab[] = { /* * maintain descending order! * * Codes ignored - Reason * ---------------------- * 40H - intel_cpuid_4_cache_info() disambiguates l2/l3 cache * f0H/f1H - Currently we do not interpret prefetch size by design */ { 0xe4, 16, 64, 8*1024*1024, l3_cache_str}, { 0xe3, 16, 64, 4*1024*1024, l3_cache_str}, { 0xe2, 16, 64, 2*1024*1024, l3_cache_str}, { 0xde, 12, 64, 6*1024*1024, l3_cache_str}, { 0xdd, 12, 64, 3*1024*1024, l3_cache_str}, { 0xdc, 12, 64, ((1*1024*1024)+(512*1024)), l3_cache_str}, { 0xd8, 8, 64, 4*1024*1024, l3_cache_str}, { 0xd7, 8, 64, 2*1024*1024, l3_cache_str}, { 0xd6, 8, 64, 1*1024*1024, l3_cache_str}, { 0xd2, 4, 64, 2*1024*1024, l3_cache_str}, { 0xd1, 4, 64, 1*1024*1024, l3_cache_str}, { 0xd0, 4, 64, 512*1024, l3_cache_str}, { 0xca, 4, 0, 512, sh_l2_tlb4k_str}, { 0xc0, 4, 0, 8, dtlb44_str }, { 0xba, 4, 0, 64, dtlb4k_str }, { 0xb4, 4, 0, 256, dtlb4k_str }, { 0xb3, 4, 0, 128, dtlb4k_str }, { 0xb2, 4, 0, 64, itlb4k_str }, { 0xb0, 4, 0, 128, itlb4k_str }, { 0x87, 8, 64, 1024*1024, l2_cache_str}, { 0x86, 4, 64, 512*1024, l2_cache_str}, { 0x85, 8, 32, 2*1024*1024, l2_cache_str}, { 0x84, 8, 32, 1024*1024, l2_cache_str}, { 0x83, 8, 32, 512*1024, l2_cache_str}, { 0x82, 8, 32, 256*1024, l2_cache_str}, { 0x80, 8, 64, 512*1024, l2_cache_str}, { 0x7f, 2, 64, 512*1024, l2_cache_str}, { 0x7d, 8, 64, 2*1024*1024, sl2_cache_str}, { 0x7c, 8, 64, 1024*1024, sl2_cache_str}, { 0x7b, 8, 64, 512*1024, sl2_cache_str}, { 0x7a, 8, 64, 256*1024, sl2_cache_str}, { 0x79, 8, 64, 128*1024, sl2_cache_str}, { 0x78, 8, 64, 1024*1024, l2_cache_str}, { 0x73, 8, 0, 64*1024, itrace_str}, { 0x72, 8, 0, 32*1024, itrace_str}, { 0x71, 8, 0, 16*1024, itrace_str}, { 0x70, 8, 0, 12*1024, itrace_str}, { 0x68, 4, 64, 32*1024, sl1_dcache_str}, { 0x67, 4, 64, 16*1024, sl1_dcache_str}, { 0x66, 4, 64, 8*1024, sl1_dcache_str}, { 0x60, 8, 64, 16*1024, sl1_dcache_str}, { 0x5d, 0, 0, 256, dtlb44_str}, { 0x5c, 0, 0, 128, dtlb44_str}, { 0x5b, 0, 0, 64, dtlb44_str}, { 0x5a, 4, 0, 32, dtlb24_str}, { 0x59, 0, 0, 16, dtlb4k_str}, { 0x57, 4, 0, 16, dtlb4k_str}, { 0x56, 4, 0, 16, dtlb4M_str}, { 0x55, 0, 0, 7, itlb24_str}, { 0x52, 0, 0, 256, itlb424_str}, { 0x51, 0, 0, 128, itlb424_str}, { 0x50, 0, 0, 64, itlb424_str}, { 0x4f, 0, 0, 32, itlb4k_str}, { 0x4e, 24, 64, 6*1024*1024, l2_cache_str}, { 0x4d, 16, 64, 16*1024*1024, l3_cache_str}, { 0x4c, 12, 64, 12*1024*1024, l3_cache_str}, { 0x4b, 16, 64, 8*1024*1024, l3_cache_str}, { 0x4a, 12, 64, 6*1024*1024, l3_cache_str}, { 0x49, 16, 64, 4*1024*1024, l3_cache_str}, { 0x48, 12, 64, 3*1024*1024, l2_cache_str}, { 0x47, 8, 64, 8*1024*1024, l3_cache_str}, { 0x46, 4, 64, 4*1024*1024, l3_cache_str}, { 0x45, 4, 32, 2*1024*1024, l2_cache_str}, { 0x44, 4, 32, 1024*1024, l2_cache_str}, { 0x43, 4, 32, 512*1024, l2_cache_str}, { 0x42, 4, 32, 256*1024, l2_cache_str}, { 0x41, 4, 32, 128*1024, l2_cache_str}, { 0x3e, 4, 64, 512*1024, sl2_cache_str}, { 0x3d, 6, 64, 384*1024, sl2_cache_str}, { 0x3c, 4, 64, 256*1024, sl2_cache_str}, { 0x3b, 2, 64, 128*1024, sl2_cache_str}, { 0x3a, 6, 64, 192*1024, sl2_cache_str}, { 0x39, 4, 64, 128*1024, sl2_cache_str}, { 0x30, 8, 64, 32*1024, l1_icache_str}, { 0x2c, 8, 64, 32*1024, l1_dcache_str}, { 0x29, 8, 64, 4096*1024, sl3_cache_str}, { 0x25, 8, 64, 2048*1024, sl3_cache_str}, { 0x23, 8, 64, 1024*1024, sl3_cache_str}, { 0x22, 4, 64, 512*1024, sl3_cache_str}, { 0x0e, 6, 64, 24*1024, l1_dcache_str}, { 0x0d, 4, 32, 16*1024, l1_dcache_str}, { 0x0c, 4, 32, 16*1024, l1_dcache_str}, { 0x0b, 4, 0, 4, itlb4M_str}, { 0x0a, 2, 32, 8*1024, l1_dcache_str}, { 0x08, 4, 32, 16*1024, l1_icache_str}, { 0x06, 4, 32, 8*1024, l1_icache_str}, { 0x05, 4, 0, 32, dtlb4M_str}, { 0x04, 4, 0, 8, dtlb4M_str}, { 0x03, 4, 0, 64, dtlb4k_str}, { 0x02, 4, 0, 2, itlb4M_str}, { 0x01, 4, 0, 32, itlb4k_str}, { 0 } }; static const struct cachetab cyrix_ctab[] = { { 0x70, 4, 0, 32, "tlb-4K" }, { 0x80, 4, 16, 16*1024, "l1-cache" }, { 0 } }; /* * Search a cache table for a matching entry */ static const struct cachetab * find_cacheent(const struct cachetab *ct, uint_t code) { if (code != 0) { for (; ct->ct_code != 0; ct++) if (ct->ct_code <= code) break; if (ct->ct_code == code) return (ct); } return (NULL); } /* * Populate cachetab entry with L2 or L3 cache-information using * cpuid function 4. This function is called from intel_walk_cacheinfo() * when descriptor 0x49 is encountered. It returns 0 if no such cache * information is found. */ static int intel_cpuid_4_cache_info(struct cachetab *ct, struct cpuid_info *cpi) { uint32_t level, i; int ret = 0; for (i = 0; i < cpi->cpi_cache_leaf_size; i++) { level = CPI_CACHE_LVL(cpi->cpi_cache_leaves[i]); if (level == 2 || level == 3) { ct->ct_assoc = CPI_CACHE_WAYS(cpi->cpi_cache_leaves[i]) + 1; ct->ct_line_size = CPI_CACHE_COH_LN_SZ(cpi->cpi_cache_leaves[i]) + 1; ct->ct_size = ct->ct_assoc * (CPI_CACHE_PARTS(cpi->cpi_cache_leaves[i]) + 1) * ct->ct_line_size * (cpi->cpi_cache_leaves[i]->cp_ecx + 1); if (level == 2) { ct->ct_label = l2_cache_str; } else if (level == 3) { ct->ct_label = l3_cache_str; } ret = 1; } } return (ret); } /* * Walk the cacheinfo descriptor, applying 'func' to every valid element * The walk is terminated if the walker returns non-zero. */ static void intel_walk_cacheinfo(struct cpuid_info *cpi, void *arg, int (*func)(void *, const struct cachetab *)) { const struct cachetab *ct; struct cachetab des_49_ct, des_b1_ct; uint8_t *dp; int i; if ((dp = cpi->cpi_cacheinfo) == NULL) return; for (i = 0; i < cpi->cpi_ncache; i++, dp++) { /* * For overloaded descriptor 0x49 we use cpuid function 4 * if supported by the current processor, to create * cache information. * For overloaded descriptor 0xb1 we use X86_PAE flag * to disambiguate the cache information. */ if (*dp == 0x49 && cpi->cpi_maxeax >= 0x4 && intel_cpuid_4_cache_info(&des_49_ct, cpi) == 1) { ct = &des_49_ct; } else if (*dp == 0xb1) { des_b1_ct.ct_code = 0xb1; des_b1_ct.ct_assoc = 4; des_b1_ct.ct_line_size = 0; if (is_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_PAE)) { des_b1_ct.ct_size = 8; des_b1_ct.ct_label = itlb2M_str; } else { des_b1_ct.ct_size = 4; des_b1_ct.ct_label = itlb4M_str; } ct = &des_b1_ct; } else { if ((ct = find_cacheent(intel_ctab, *dp)) == NULL) { continue; } } if (func(arg, ct) != 0) { break; } } } /* * (Like the Intel one, except for Cyrix CPUs) */ static void cyrix_walk_cacheinfo(struct cpuid_info *cpi, void *arg, int (*func)(void *, const struct cachetab *)) { const struct cachetab *ct; uint8_t *dp; int i; if ((dp = cpi->cpi_cacheinfo) == NULL) return; for (i = 0; i < cpi->cpi_ncache; i++, dp++) { /* * Search Cyrix-specific descriptor table first .. */ if ((ct = find_cacheent(cyrix_ctab, *dp)) != NULL) { if (func(arg, ct) != 0) break; continue; } /* * .. else fall back to the Intel one */ if ((ct = find_cacheent(intel_ctab, *dp)) != NULL) { if (func(arg, ct) != 0) break; continue; } } } /* * A cacheinfo walker that adds associativity, line-size, and size properties * to the devinfo node it is passed as an argument. */ static int add_cacheent_props(void *arg, const struct cachetab *ct) { dev_info_t *devi = arg; add_cache_prop(devi, ct->ct_label, assoc_str, ct->ct_assoc); if (ct->ct_line_size != 0) add_cache_prop(devi, ct->ct_label, line_str, ct->ct_line_size); add_cache_prop(devi, ct->ct_label, size_str, ct->ct_size); return (0); } static const char fully_assoc[] = "fully-associative?"; /* * AMD style cache/tlb description * * Extended functions 5 and 6 directly describe properties of * tlbs and various cache levels. */ static void add_amd_assoc(dev_info_t *devi, const char *label, uint_t assoc) { switch (assoc) { case 0: /* reserved; ignore */ break; default: add_cache_prop(devi, label, assoc_str, assoc); break; case 0xff: add_cache_prop(devi, label, fully_assoc, 1); break; } } static void add_amd_tlb(dev_info_t *devi, const char *label, uint_t assoc, uint_t size) { if (size == 0) return; add_cache_prop(devi, label, size_str, size); add_amd_assoc(devi, label, assoc); } static void add_amd_cache(dev_info_t *devi, const char *label, uint_t size, uint_t assoc, uint_t lines_per_tag, uint_t line_size) { if (size == 0 || line_size == 0) return; add_amd_assoc(devi, label, assoc); /* * Most AMD parts have a sectored cache. Multiple cache lines are * associated with each tag. A sector consists of all cache lines * associated with a tag. For example, the AMD K6-III has a sector * size of 2 cache lines per tag. */ if (lines_per_tag != 0) add_cache_prop(devi, label, "lines-per-tag", lines_per_tag); add_cache_prop(devi, label, line_str, line_size); add_cache_prop(devi, label, size_str, size * 1024); } static void add_amd_l2_assoc(dev_info_t *devi, const char *label, uint_t assoc) { switch (assoc) { case 0: /* off */ break; case 1: case 2: case 4: add_cache_prop(devi, label, assoc_str, assoc); break; case 6: add_cache_prop(devi, label, assoc_str, 8); break; case 8: add_cache_prop(devi, label, assoc_str, 16); break; case 0xf: add_cache_prop(devi, label, fully_assoc, 1); break; default: /* reserved; ignore */ break; } } static void add_amd_l2_tlb(dev_info_t *devi, const char *label, uint_t assoc, uint_t size) { if (size == 0 || assoc == 0) return; add_amd_l2_assoc(devi, label, assoc); add_cache_prop(devi, label, size_str, size); } static void add_amd_l2_cache(dev_info_t *devi, const char *label, uint_t size, uint_t assoc, uint_t lines_per_tag, uint_t line_size) { if (size == 0 || assoc == 0 || line_size == 0) return; add_amd_l2_assoc(devi, label, assoc); if (lines_per_tag != 0) add_cache_prop(devi, label, "lines-per-tag", lines_per_tag); add_cache_prop(devi, label, line_str, line_size); add_cache_prop(devi, label, size_str, size * 1024); } static void amd_cache_info(struct cpuid_info *cpi, dev_info_t *devi) { struct cpuid_regs *cp; if (cpi->cpi_xmaxeax < 0x80000005) return; cp = &cpi->cpi_extd[5]; /* * 4M/2M L1 TLB configuration * * We report the size for 2M pages because AMD uses two * TLB entries for one 4M page. */ add_amd_tlb(devi, "dtlb-2M", BITX(cp->cp_eax, 31, 24), BITX(cp->cp_eax, 23, 16)); add_amd_tlb(devi, "itlb-2M", BITX(cp->cp_eax, 15, 8), BITX(cp->cp_eax, 7, 0)); /* * 4K L1 TLB configuration */ switch (cpi->cpi_vendor) { uint_t nentries; case X86_VENDOR_TM: if (cpi->cpi_family >= 5) { /* * Crusoe processors have 256 TLB entries, but * cpuid data format constrains them to only * reporting 255 of them. */ if ((nentries = BITX(cp->cp_ebx, 23, 16)) == 255) nentries = 256; /* * Crusoe processors also have a unified TLB */ add_amd_tlb(devi, "tlb-4K", BITX(cp->cp_ebx, 31, 24), nentries); break; } /*FALLTHROUGH*/ default: add_amd_tlb(devi, itlb4k_str, BITX(cp->cp_ebx, 31, 24), BITX(cp->cp_ebx, 23, 16)); add_amd_tlb(devi, dtlb4k_str, BITX(cp->cp_ebx, 15, 8), BITX(cp->cp_ebx, 7, 0)); break; } /* * data L1 cache configuration */ add_amd_cache(devi, l1_dcache_str, BITX(cp->cp_ecx, 31, 24), BITX(cp->cp_ecx, 23, 16), BITX(cp->cp_ecx, 15, 8), BITX(cp->cp_ecx, 7, 0)); /* * code L1 cache configuration */ add_amd_cache(devi, l1_icache_str, BITX(cp->cp_edx, 31, 24), BITX(cp->cp_edx, 23, 16), BITX(cp->cp_edx, 15, 8), BITX(cp->cp_edx, 7, 0)); if (cpi->cpi_xmaxeax < 0x80000006) return; cp = &cpi->cpi_extd[6]; /* Check for a unified L2 TLB for large pages */ if (BITX(cp->cp_eax, 31, 16) == 0) add_amd_l2_tlb(devi, "l2-tlb-2M", BITX(cp->cp_eax, 15, 12), BITX(cp->cp_eax, 11, 0)); else { add_amd_l2_tlb(devi, "l2-dtlb-2M", BITX(cp->cp_eax, 31, 28), BITX(cp->cp_eax, 27, 16)); add_amd_l2_tlb(devi, "l2-itlb-2M", BITX(cp->cp_eax, 15, 12), BITX(cp->cp_eax, 11, 0)); } /* Check for a unified L2 TLB for 4K pages */ if (BITX(cp->cp_ebx, 31, 16) == 0) { add_amd_l2_tlb(devi, "l2-tlb-4K", BITX(cp->cp_eax, 15, 12), BITX(cp->cp_eax, 11, 0)); } else { add_amd_l2_tlb(devi, "l2-dtlb-4K", BITX(cp->cp_eax, 31, 28), BITX(cp->cp_eax, 27, 16)); add_amd_l2_tlb(devi, "l2-itlb-4K", BITX(cp->cp_eax, 15, 12), BITX(cp->cp_eax, 11, 0)); } add_amd_l2_cache(devi, l2_cache_str, BITX(cp->cp_ecx, 31, 16), BITX(cp->cp_ecx, 15, 12), BITX(cp->cp_ecx, 11, 8), BITX(cp->cp_ecx, 7, 0)); } /* * There are two basic ways that the x86 world describes it cache * and tlb architecture - Intel's way and AMD's way. * * Return which flavor of cache architecture we should use */ static int x86_which_cacheinfo(struct cpuid_info *cpi) { switch (cpi->cpi_vendor) { case X86_VENDOR_Intel: if (cpi->cpi_maxeax >= 2) return (X86_VENDOR_Intel); break; case X86_VENDOR_AMD: /* * The K5 model 1 was the first part from AMD that reported * cache sizes via extended cpuid functions. */ if (cpi->cpi_family > 5 || (cpi->cpi_family == 5 && cpi->cpi_model >= 1)) return (X86_VENDOR_AMD); break; case X86_VENDOR_HYGON: return (X86_VENDOR_AMD); case X86_VENDOR_TM: if (cpi->cpi_family >= 5) return (X86_VENDOR_AMD); /*FALLTHROUGH*/ default: /* * If they have extended CPU data for 0x80000005 * then we assume they have AMD-format cache * information. * * If not, and the vendor happens to be Cyrix, * then try our-Cyrix specific handler. * * If we're not Cyrix, then assume we're using Intel's * table-driven format instead. */ if (cpi->cpi_xmaxeax >= 0x80000005) return (X86_VENDOR_AMD); else if (cpi->cpi_vendor == X86_VENDOR_Cyrix) return (X86_VENDOR_Cyrix); else if (cpi->cpi_maxeax >= 2) return (X86_VENDOR_Intel); break; } return (-1); } void cpuid_set_cpu_properties(void *dip, processorid_t cpu_id, struct cpuid_info *cpi) { dev_info_t *cpu_devi; int create; cpu_devi = (dev_info_t *)dip; /* device_type */ (void) ndi_prop_update_string(DDI_DEV_T_NONE, cpu_devi, "device_type", "cpu"); /* reg */ (void) ndi_prop_update_int(DDI_DEV_T_NONE, cpu_devi, "reg", cpu_id); /* cpu-mhz, and clock-frequency */ if (cpu_freq > 0) { long long mul; (void) ndi_prop_update_int(DDI_DEV_T_NONE, cpu_devi, "cpu-mhz", cpu_freq); if ((mul = cpu_freq * 1000000LL) <= INT_MAX) (void) ndi_prop_update_int(DDI_DEV_T_NONE, cpu_devi, "clock-frequency", (int)mul); } ASSERT(is_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_CPUID)); /* vendor-id */ (void) ndi_prop_update_string(DDI_DEV_T_NONE, cpu_devi, "vendor-id", cpi->cpi_vendorstr); if (cpi->cpi_maxeax == 0) { return; } /* * family, model, and step */ (void) ndi_prop_update_int(DDI_DEV_T_NONE, cpu_devi, "family", CPI_FAMILY(cpi)); (void) ndi_prop_update_int(DDI_DEV_T_NONE, cpu_devi, "cpu-model", CPI_MODEL(cpi)); (void) ndi_prop_update_int(DDI_DEV_T_NONE, cpu_devi, "stepping-id", CPI_STEP(cpi)); /* type */ switch (cpi->cpi_vendor) { case X86_VENDOR_Intel: create = 1; break; default: create = 0; break; } if (create) (void) ndi_prop_update_int(DDI_DEV_T_NONE, cpu_devi, "type", CPI_TYPE(cpi)); /* ext-family */ switch (cpi->cpi_vendor) { case X86_VENDOR_Intel: case X86_VENDOR_AMD: create = cpi->cpi_family >= 0xf; break; case X86_VENDOR_HYGON: create = 1; break; default: create = 0; break; } if (create) (void) ndi_prop_update_int(DDI_DEV_T_NONE, cpu_devi, "ext-family", CPI_FAMILY_XTD(cpi)); /* ext-model */ switch (cpi->cpi_vendor) { case X86_VENDOR_Intel: create = IS_EXTENDED_MODEL_INTEL(cpi); break; case X86_VENDOR_AMD: create = CPI_FAMILY(cpi) == 0xf; break; case X86_VENDOR_HYGON: create = 1; break; default: create = 0; break; } if (create) (void) ndi_prop_update_int(DDI_DEV_T_NONE, cpu_devi, "ext-model", CPI_MODEL_XTD(cpi)); /* generation */ switch (cpi->cpi_vendor) { case X86_VENDOR_AMD: case X86_VENDOR_HYGON: /* * AMD K5 model 1 was the first part to support this */ create = cpi->cpi_xmaxeax >= 0x80000001; break; default: create = 0; break; } if (create) (void) ndi_prop_update_int(DDI_DEV_T_NONE, cpu_devi, "generation", BITX((cpi)->cpi_extd[1].cp_eax, 11, 8)); /* brand-id */ switch (cpi->cpi_vendor) { case X86_VENDOR_Intel: /* * brand id first appeared on Pentium III Xeon model 8, * and Celeron model 8 processors and Opteron */ create = cpi->cpi_family > 6 || (cpi->cpi_family == 6 && cpi->cpi_model >= 8); break; case X86_VENDOR_AMD: create = cpi->cpi_family >= 0xf; break; case X86_VENDOR_HYGON: create = 1; break; default: create = 0; break; } if (create && cpi->cpi_brandid != 0) { (void) ndi_prop_update_int(DDI_DEV_T_NONE, cpu_devi, "brand-id", cpi->cpi_brandid); } /* chunks, and apic-id */ switch (cpi->cpi_vendor) { /* * first available on Pentium IV and Opteron (K8) */ case X86_VENDOR_Intel: create = IS_NEW_F6(cpi) || cpi->cpi_family >= 0xf; break; case X86_VENDOR_AMD: create = cpi->cpi_family >= 0xf; break; case X86_VENDOR_HYGON: create = 1; break; default: create = 0; break; } if (create) { (void) ndi_prop_update_int(DDI_DEV_T_NONE, cpu_devi, "chunks", CPI_CHUNKS(cpi)); (void) ndi_prop_update_int(DDI_DEV_T_NONE, cpu_devi, "apic-id", cpi->cpi_apicid); if (cpi->cpi_chipid >= 0) { (void) ndi_prop_update_int(DDI_DEV_T_NONE, cpu_devi, "chip#", cpi->cpi_chipid); (void) ndi_prop_update_int(DDI_DEV_T_NONE, cpu_devi, "clog#", cpi->cpi_clogid); } } /* cpuid-features */ (void) ndi_prop_update_int(DDI_DEV_T_NONE, cpu_devi, "cpuid-features", CPI_FEATURES_EDX(cpi)); /* cpuid-features-ecx */ switch (cpi->cpi_vendor) { case X86_VENDOR_Intel: create = IS_NEW_F6(cpi) || cpi->cpi_family >= 0xf; break; case X86_VENDOR_AMD: create = cpi->cpi_family >= 0xf; break; case X86_VENDOR_HYGON: create = 1; break; default: create = 0; break; } if (create) (void) ndi_prop_update_int(DDI_DEV_T_NONE, cpu_devi, "cpuid-features-ecx", CPI_FEATURES_ECX(cpi)); /* ext-cpuid-features */ switch (cpi->cpi_vendor) { case X86_VENDOR_Intel: case X86_VENDOR_AMD: case X86_VENDOR_HYGON: case X86_VENDOR_Cyrix: case X86_VENDOR_TM: case X86_VENDOR_Centaur: create = cpi->cpi_xmaxeax >= 0x80000001; break; default: create = 0; break; } if (create) { (void) ndi_prop_update_int(DDI_DEV_T_NONE, cpu_devi, "ext-cpuid-features", CPI_FEATURES_XTD_EDX(cpi)); (void) ndi_prop_update_int(DDI_DEV_T_NONE, cpu_devi, "ext-cpuid-features-ecx", CPI_FEATURES_XTD_ECX(cpi)); } /* * Brand String first appeared in Intel Pentium IV, AMD K5 * model 1, and Cyrix GXm. On earlier models we try and * simulate something similar .. so this string should always * same -something- about the processor, however lame. */ (void) ndi_prop_update_string(DDI_DEV_T_NONE, cpu_devi, "brand-string", cpi->cpi_brandstr); /* * Finally, cache and tlb information */ switch (x86_which_cacheinfo(cpi)) { case X86_VENDOR_Intel: intel_walk_cacheinfo(cpi, cpu_devi, add_cacheent_props); break; case X86_VENDOR_Cyrix: cyrix_walk_cacheinfo(cpi, cpu_devi, add_cacheent_props); break; case X86_VENDOR_AMD: amd_cache_info(cpi, cpu_devi); break; default: break; } } struct l2info { int *l2i_csz; int *l2i_lsz; int *l2i_assoc; int l2i_ret; }; /* * A cacheinfo walker that fetches the size, line-size and associativity * of the L2 cache */ static int intel_l2cinfo(void *arg, const struct cachetab *ct) { struct l2info *l2i = arg; int *ip; if (ct->ct_label != l2_cache_str && ct->ct_label != sl2_cache_str) return (0); /* not an L2 -- keep walking */ if ((ip = l2i->l2i_csz) != NULL) *ip = ct->ct_size; if ((ip = l2i->l2i_lsz) != NULL) *ip = ct->ct_line_size; if ((ip = l2i->l2i_assoc) != NULL) *ip = ct->ct_assoc; l2i->l2i_ret = ct->ct_size; return (1); /* was an L2 -- terminate walk */ } /* * AMD L2/L3 Cache and TLB Associativity Field Definition: * * Unlike the associativity for the L1 cache and tlb where the 8 bit * value is the associativity, the associativity for the L2 cache and * tlb is encoded in the following table. The 4 bit L2 value serves as * an index into the amd_afd[] array to determine the associativity. * -1 is undefined. 0 is fully associative. */ static int amd_afd[] = {-1, 1, 2, -1, 4, -1, 8, -1, 16, -1, 32, 48, 64, 96, 128, 0}; static void amd_l2cacheinfo(struct cpuid_info *cpi, struct l2info *l2i) { struct cpuid_regs *cp; uint_t size, assoc; int i; int *ip; if (cpi->cpi_xmaxeax < 0x80000006) return; cp = &cpi->cpi_extd[6]; if ((i = BITX(cp->cp_ecx, 15, 12)) != 0 && (size = BITX(cp->cp_ecx, 31, 16)) != 0) { uint_t cachesz = size * 1024; assoc = amd_afd[i]; ASSERT(assoc != -1); if ((ip = l2i->l2i_csz) != NULL) *ip = cachesz; if ((ip = l2i->l2i_lsz) != NULL) *ip = BITX(cp->cp_ecx, 7, 0); if ((ip = l2i->l2i_assoc) != NULL) *ip = assoc; l2i->l2i_ret = cachesz; } } int getl2cacheinfo(cpu_t *cpu, int *csz, int *lsz, int *assoc) { struct cpuid_info *cpi = cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi; struct l2info __l2info, *l2i = &__l2info; l2i->l2i_csz = csz; l2i->l2i_lsz = lsz; l2i->l2i_assoc = assoc; l2i->l2i_ret = -1; switch (x86_which_cacheinfo(cpi)) { case X86_VENDOR_Intel: intel_walk_cacheinfo(cpi, l2i, intel_l2cinfo); break; case X86_VENDOR_Cyrix: cyrix_walk_cacheinfo(cpi, l2i, intel_l2cinfo); break; case X86_VENDOR_AMD: amd_l2cacheinfo(cpi, l2i); break; default: break; } return (l2i->l2i_ret); } #if !defined(__xpv) uint32_t * cpuid_mwait_alloc(cpu_t *cpu) { uint32_t *ret; size_t mwait_size; ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(CPU, CPUID_PASS_EXTENDED)); mwait_size = CPU->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_mwait.mon_max; if (mwait_size == 0) return (NULL); /* * kmem_alloc() returns cache line size aligned data for mwait_size * allocations. mwait_size is currently cache line sized. Neither * of these implementation details are guarantied to be true in the * future. * * First try allocating mwait_size as kmem_alloc() currently returns * correctly aligned memory. If kmem_alloc() does not return * mwait_size aligned memory, then use mwait_size ROUNDUP. * * Set cpi_mwait.buf_actual and cpi_mwait.size_actual in case we * decide to free this memory. */ ret = kmem_zalloc(mwait_size, KM_SLEEP); if (ret == (uint32_t *)P2ROUNDUP((uintptr_t)ret, mwait_size)) { cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_mwait.buf_actual = ret; cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_mwait.size_actual = mwait_size; *ret = MWAIT_RUNNING; return (ret); } else { kmem_free(ret, mwait_size); ret = kmem_zalloc(mwait_size * 2, KM_SLEEP); cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_mwait.buf_actual = ret; cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_mwait.size_actual = mwait_size * 2; ret = (uint32_t *)P2ROUNDUP((uintptr_t)ret, mwait_size); *ret = MWAIT_RUNNING; return (ret); } } void cpuid_mwait_free(cpu_t *cpu) { if (cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi == NULL) { return; } if (cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_mwait.buf_actual != NULL && cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_mwait.size_actual > 0) { kmem_free(cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_mwait.buf_actual, cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_mwait.size_actual); } cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_mwait.buf_actual = NULL; cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_mwait.size_actual = 0; } void patch_tsc_read(int flag) { size_t cnt; switch (flag) { case TSC_NONE: cnt = &_no_rdtsc_end - &_no_rdtsc_start; (void) memcpy((void *)tsc_read, (void *)&_no_rdtsc_start, cnt); break; case TSC_RDTSC_LFENCE: cnt = &_tsc_lfence_end - &_tsc_lfence_start; (void) memcpy((void *)tsc_read, (void *)&_tsc_lfence_start, cnt); break; case TSC_TSCP: cnt = &_tscp_end - &_tscp_start; (void) memcpy((void *)tsc_read, (void *)&_tscp_start, cnt); break; default: /* Bail for unexpected TSC types. (TSC_NONE covers 0) */ cmn_err(CE_PANIC, "Unrecogized TSC type: %d", flag); break; } tsc_type = flag; } int cpuid_deep_cstates_supported(void) { struct cpuid_info *cpi; struct cpuid_regs regs; ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(CPU, CPUID_PASS_BASIC)); ASSERT(is_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_CPUID)); cpi = CPU->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi; switch (cpi->cpi_vendor) { case X86_VENDOR_Intel: if (cpi->cpi_xmaxeax < 0x80000007) return (0); /* * Does TSC run at a constant rate in all C-states? */ regs.cp_eax = 0x80000007; (void) __cpuid_insn(®s); return (regs.cp_edx & CPUID_TSC_CSTATE_INVARIANCE); default: return (0); } } #endif /* !__xpv */ void post_startup_cpu_fixups(void) { #ifndef __xpv /* * Some AMD processors support C1E state. Entering this state will * cause the local APIC timer to stop, which we can't deal with at * this time. */ if (cpuid_getvendor(CPU) == X86_VENDOR_AMD) { on_trap_data_t otd; uint64_t reg; if (!on_trap(&otd, OT_DATA_ACCESS)) { reg = rdmsr(MSR_AMD_INT_PENDING_CMP_HALT); /* Disable C1E state if it is enabled by BIOS */ if ((reg >> AMD_ACTONCMPHALT_SHIFT) & AMD_ACTONCMPHALT_MASK) { reg &= ~(AMD_ACTONCMPHALT_MASK << AMD_ACTONCMPHALT_SHIFT); wrmsr(MSR_AMD_INT_PENDING_CMP_HALT, reg); } } no_trap(); } #endif /* !__xpv */ } void enable_pcid(void) { if (x86_use_pcid == -1) x86_use_pcid = is_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_PCID); if (x86_use_invpcid == -1) { x86_use_invpcid = is_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_INVPCID); } if (!x86_use_pcid) return; /* * Intel say that on setting PCIDE, it immediately starts using the PCID * bits; better make sure there's nothing there. */ ASSERT((getcr3() & MMU_PAGEOFFSET) == PCID_NONE); setcr4(getcr4() | CR4_PCIDE); } /* * Setup necessary registers to enable XSAVE feature on this processor. * This function needs to be called early enough, so that no xsave/xrstor * ops will execute on the processor before the MSRs are properly set up. * * Current implementation has the following assumption: * - cpuid_pass_basic() is done, so that X86 features are known. * - fpu_probe() is done, so that fp_save_mech is chosen. */ void xsave_setup_msr(cpu_t *cpu) { ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(cpu, CPUID_PASS_BASIC)); ASSERT(fp_save_mech == FP_XSAVE); ASSERT(is_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_XSAVE)); /* Enable OSXSAVE in CR4. */ setcr4(getcr4() | CR4_OSXSAVE); /* * Update SW copy of ECX, so that /dev/cpu/self/cpuid will report * correct value. */ cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_std[1].cp_ecx |= CPUID_INTC_ECX_OSXSAVE; setup_xfem(); } /* * Starting with the Westmere processor the local * APIC timer will continue running in all C-states, * including the deepest C-states. */ int cpuid_arat_supported(void) { struct cpuid_info *cpi; struct cpuid_regs regs; ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(CPU, CPUID_PASS_BASIC)); ASSERT(is_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_CPUID)); cpi = CPU->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi; switch (cpi->cpi_vendor) { case X86_VENDOR_Intel: /* * Always-running Local APIC Timer is * indicated by CPUID.6.EAX[2]. */ if (cpi->cpi_maxeax >= 6) { regs.cp_eax = 6; (void) cpuid_insn(NULL, ®s); return (regs.cp_eax & CPUID_INTC_EAX_ARAT); } else { return (0); } default: return (0); } } /* * Check support for Intel ENERGY_PERF_BIAS feature */ int cpuid_iepb_supported(struct cpu *cp) { struct cpuid_info *cpi = cp->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi; struct cpuid_regs regs; ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(cp, CPUID_PASS_BASIC)); ASSERT(is_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_CPUID)); if (!(is_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_MSR))) { return (0); } /* * Intel ENERGY_PERF_BIAS MSR is indicated by * capability bit CPUID.6.ECX.3 */ if ((cpi->cpi_vendor != X86_VENDOR_Intel) || (cpi->cpi_maxeax < 6)) return (0); regs.cp_eax = 0x6; (void) cpuid_insn(NULL, ®s); return (regs.cp_ecx & CPUID_INTC_ECX_PERFBIAS); } /* * Check support for TSC deadline timer * * TSC deadline timer provides a superior software programming * model over local APIC timer that eliminates "time drifts". * Instead of specifying a relative time, software specifies an * absolute time as the target at which the processor should * generate a timer event. */ int cpuid_deadline_tsc_supported(void) { struct cpuid_info *cpi = CPU->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi; struct cpuid_regs regs; ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(CPU, CPUID_PASS_BASIC)); ASSERT(is_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_CPUID)); switch (cpi->cpi_vendor) { case X86_VENDOR_Intel: if (cpi->cpi_maxeax >= 1) { regs.cp_eax = 1; (void) cpuid_insn(NULL, ®s); return (regs.cp_ecx & CPUID_DEADLINE_TSC); } else { return (0); } default: return (0); } } #if !defined(__xpv) /* * Patch in versions of bcopy for high performance Intel Nhm processors * and later... */ void patch_memops(uint_t vendor) { size_t cnt, i; caddr_t to, from; if ((vendor == X86_VENDOR_Intel) && is_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_SSE4_2)) { cnt = &bcopy_patch_end - &bcopy_patch_start; to = &bcopy_ck_size; from = &bcopy_patch_start; for (i = 0; i < cnt; i++) { *to++ = *from++; } } } #endif /* !__xpv */ /* * We're being asked to tell the system how many bits are required to represent * the various thread and strand IDs. While it's tempting to derive this based * on the values in cpi_ncore_per_chip and cpi_ncpu_per_chip, that isn't quite * correct. Instead, this needs to be based on the number of bits that the APIC * allows for these different configurations. We only update these to a larger * value if we find one. */ void cpuid_get_ext_topo(cpu_t *cpu, uint_t *core_nbits, uint_t *strand_nbits) { struct cpuid_info *cpi; VERIFY(cpuid_checkpass(CPU, CPUID_PASS_BASIC)); cpi = cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi; if (cpi->cpi_ncore_bits > *core_nbits) { *core_nbits = cpi->cpi_ncore_bits; } if (cpi->cpi_nthread_bits > *strand_nbits) { *strand_nbits = cpi->cpi_nthread_bits; } } void cpuid_pass_ucode(cpu_t *cpu, uchar_t *fset) { struct cpuid_info *cpi = cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi; struct cpuid_regs cp; /* * Reread the CPUID portions that we need for various security * information. */ if (cpi->cpi_vendor == X86_VENDOR_Intel) { /* * Check if we now have leaf 7 available to us. */ if (cpi->cpi_maxeax < 7) { bzero(&cp, sizeof (cp)); cp.cp_eax = 0; cpi->cpi_maxeax = __cpuid_insn(&cp); if (cpi->cpi_maxeax < 7) return; } bzero(&cp, sizeof (cp)); cp.cp_eax = 7; cp.cp_ecx = 0; (void) __cpuid_insn(&cp); cpi->cpi_std[7] = cp; } else if (cpi->cpi_vendor == X86_VENDOR_AMD || cpi->cpi_vendor == X86_VENDOR_HYGON) { /* No xcpuid support */ if (cpi->cpi_family < 5 || (cpi->cpi_family == 5 && cpi->cpi_model < 1)) return; if (cpi->cpi_xmaxeax < CPUID_LEAF_EXT_8) { bzero(&cp, sizeof (cp)); cp.cp_eax = CPUID_LEAF_EXT_0; cpi->cpi_xmaxeax = __cpuid_insn(&cp); if (cpi->cpi_xmaxeax < CPUID_LEAF_EXT_8) { return; } } /* * Most AMD features are in leaf 8. Automatic IBRS was added in * leaf 0x21. So we also check that. */ bzero(&cp, sizeof (cp)); cp.cp_eax = CPUID_LEAF_EXT_8; (void) __cpuid_insn(&cp); platform_cpuid_mangle(cpi->cpi_vendor, CPUID_LEAF_EXT_8, &cp); cpi->cpi_extd[8] = cp; if (cpi->cpi_xmaxeax < CPUID_LEAF_EXT_21) { return; } bzero(&cp, sizeof (cp)); cp.cp_eax = CPUID_LEAF_EXT_21; (void) __cpuid_insn(&cp); platform_cpuid_mangle(cpi->cpi_vendor, CPUID_LEAF_EXT_21, &cp); cpi->cpi_extd[0x21] = cp; } else { /* * Nothing to do here. Return an empty set which has already * been zeroed for us. */ return; } cpuid_scan_security(cpu, fset); } /* ARGSUSED */ static int cpuid_post_ucodeadm_xc(xc_arg_t arg0, xc_arg_t arg1, xc_arg_t arg2) { uchar_t *fset; boolean_t first_pass = (boolean_t)arg1; fset = (uchar_t *)(arg0 + sizeof (x86_featureset) * CPU->cpu_id); if (first_pass && CPU->cpu_id != 0) return (0); if (!first_pass && CPU->cpu_id == 0) return (0); cpuid_pass_ucode(CPU, fset); return (0); } /* * After a microcode update where the version has changed, then we need to * rescan CPUID. To do this we check every CPU to make sure that they have the * same microcode. Then we perform a cross call to all such CPUs. It's the * caller's job to make sure that no one else can end up doing an update while * this is going on. * * We assume that the system is microcode capable if we're called. */ void cpuid_post_ucodeadm(void) { uint32_t rev; int i; struct cpu *cpu; cpuset_t cpuset; void *argdata; uchar_t *f0; argdata = kmem_zalloc(sizeof (x86_featureset) * NCPU, KM_SLEEP); mutex_enter(&cpu_lock); cpu = cpu_get(0); rev = cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_ucode_info->cui_rev; CPUSET_ONLY(cpuset, 0); for (i = 1; i < max_ncpus; i++) { if ((cpu = cpu_get(i)) == NULL) continue; if (cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_ucode_info->cui_rev != rev) { panic("post microcode update CPU %d has differing " "microcode revision (%u) from CPU 0 (%u)", i, cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_ucode_info->cui_rev, rev); } CPUSET_ADD(cpuset, i); } /* * We do the cross calls in two passes. The first pass is only for the * boot CPU. The second pass is for all of the other CPUs. This allows * the boot CPU to go through and change behavior related to patching or * whether or not Enhanced IBRS needs to be enabled and then allow all * other CPUs to follow suit. */ kpreempt_disable(); xc_sync((xc_arg_t)argdata, B_TRUE, 0, CPUSET2BV(cpuset), cpuid_post_ucodeadm_xc); xc_sync((xc_arg_t)argdata, B_FALSE, 0, CPUSET2BV(cpuset), cpuid_post_ucodeadm_xc); kpreempt_enable(); /* * OK, now look at each CPU and see if their feature sets are equal. */ f0 = argdata; for (i = 1; i < max_ncpus; i++) { uchar_t *fset; if (!CPU_IN_SET(cpuset, i)) continue; fset = (uchar_t *)((uintptr_t)argdata + sizeof (x86_featureset) * i); if (!compare_x86_featureset(f0, fset)) { panic("Post microcode update CPU %d has " "differing security feature (%p) set from CPU 0 " "(%p), not appending to feature set", i, (void *)fset, (void *)f0); } } mutex_exit(&cpu_lock); for (i = 0; i < NUM_X86_FEATURES; i++) { cmn_err(CE_CONT, "?post-ucode x86_feature: %s\n", x86_feature_names[i]); if (is_x86_feature(f0, i)) { add_x86_feature(x86_featureset, i); } } kmem_free(argdata, sizeof (x86_featureset) * NCPU); } typedef void (*cpuid_pass_f)(cpu_t *, void *); typedef struct cpuid_pass_def { cpuid_pass_t cpd_pass; cpuid_pass_f cpd_func; } cpuid_pass_def_t; /* * See block comment at the top; note that cpuid_pass_ucode is not a pass in the * normal sense and should not appear here. */ static const cpuid_pass_def_t cpuid_pass_defs[] = { { CPUID_PASS_PRELUDE, cpuid_pass_prelude }, { CPUID_PASS_IDENT, cpuid_pass_ident }, { CPUID_PASS_BASIC, cpuid_pass_basic }, { CPUID_PASS_EXTENDED, cpuid_pass_extended }, { CPUID_PASS_DYNAMIC, cpuid_pass_dynamic }, { CPUID_PASS_RESOLVE, cpuid_pass_resolve }, }; void cpuid_execpass(cpu_t *cp, cpuid_pass_t pass, void *arg) { VERIFY3S(pass, !=, CPUID_PASS_NONE); if (cp == NULL) cp = CPU; /* * Space statically allocated for BSP, ensure pointer is set */ if (cp->cpu_id == 0 && cp->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi == NULL) cp->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi = &cpuid_info0; ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(cp, pass - 1)); for (uint_t i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(cpuid_pass_defs); i++) { if (cpuid_pass_defs[i].cpd_pass == pass) { cpuid_pass_defs[i].cpd_func(cp, arg); cp->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi->cpi_pass = pass; return; } } panic("unable to execute invalid cpuid pass %d on cpu%d\n", pass, cp->cpu_id); } /* * Extract the processor family from a chiprev. Processor families are not the * same as cpuid families; see comments above and in x86_archext.h. */ x86_processor_family_t chiprev_family(const x86_chiprev_t cr) { return ((x86_processor_family_t)_X86_CHIPREV_FAMILY(cr)); } /* * A chiprev matches its template if the vendor and family are identical and the * revision of the chiprev matches one of the bits set in the template. Callers * may bitwise-OR together chiprevs of the same vendor and family to form the * template, or use the _ANY variant. It is not possible to match chiprevs of * multiple vendors or processor families with a single call. Note that this * function operates on processor families, not cpuid families. */ boolean_t chiprev_matches(const x86_chiprev_t cr, const x86_chiprev_t template) { return (_X86_CHIPREV_VENDOR(cr) == _X86_CHIPREV_VENDOR(template) && _X86_CHIPREV_FAMILY(cr) == _X86_CHIPREV_FAMILY(template) && (_X86_CHIPREV_REV(cr) & _X86_CHIPREV_REV(template)) != 0); } /* * A chiprev is at least min if the vendor and family are identical and the * revision of the chiprev is at least as recent as that of min. Processor * families are considered unordered and cannot be compared using this function. * Note that this function operates on processor families, not cpuid families. * Use of the _ANY chiprev variant with this function is not useful; it will * always return B_FALSE if the _ANY variant is supplied as the minimum * revision. To determine only whether a chiprev is of a given processor * family, test the return value of chiprev_family() instead. */ boolean_t chiprev_at_least(const x86_chiprev_t cr, const x86_chiprev_t min) { return (_X86_CHIPREV_VENDOR(cr) == _X86_CHIPREV_VENDOR(min) && _X86_CHIPREV_FAMILY(cr) == _X86_CHIPREV_FAMILY(min) && _X86_CHIPREV_REV(cr) >= _X86_CHIPREV_REV(min)); } /* * The uarch functions operate in a manner similar to the chiprev functions * above. While it is tempting to allow these to operate on microarchitectures * produced by a specific vendor in an ordered fashion (e.g., ZEN3 is "newer" * than ZEN2), we elect not to do so because a manufacturer may supply * processors of multiple different microarchitecture families each of which may * be internally ordered but unordered with respect to those of other families. */ x86_uarch_t uarchrev_uarch(const x86_uarchrev_t ur) { return ((x86_uarch_t)_X86_UARCHREV_UARCH(ur)); } boolean_t uarchrev_matches(const x86_uarchrev_t ur, const x86_uarchrev_t template) { return (_X86_UARCHREV_VENDOR(ur) == _X86_UARCHREV_VENDOR(template) && _X86_UARCHREV_UARCH(ur) == _X86_UARCHREV_UARCH(template) && (_X86_UARCHREV_REV(ur) & _X86_UARCHREV_REV(template)) != 0); } boolean_t uarchrev_at_least(const x86_uarchrev_t ur, const x86_uarchrev_t min) { return (_X86_UARCHREV_VENDOR(ur) == _X86_UARCHREV_VENDOR(min) && _X86_UARCHREV_UARCH(ur) == _X86_UARCHREV_UARCH(min) && _X86_UARCHREV_REV(ur) >= _X86_UARCHREV_REV(min)); } /* * Topology cache related information. This is yet another cache interface that * we're exposing out intended to be used when we have either Intel Leaf 4 or * AMD Leaf 8x1D (introduced with Zen 1). */ static boolean_t cpuid_cache_topo_sup(const struct cpuid_info *cpi) { switch (cpi->cpi_vendor) { case X86_VENDOR_Intel: if (cpi->cpi_maxeax >= 4) { return (B_TRUE); } break; case X86_VENDOR_AMD: case X86_VENDOR_HYGON: if (cpi->cpi_xmaxeax >= CPUID_LEAF_EXT_1d && is_x86_feature(x86_featureset, X86FSET_TOPOEXT)) { return (B_TRUE); } break; default: break; } return (B_FALSE); } int cpuid_getncaches(struct cpu *cpu, uint32_t *ncache) { const struct cpuid_info *cpi; ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(cpu, CPUID_PASS_DYNAMIC)); cpi = cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi; if (!cpuid_cache_topo_sup(cpi)) { return (ENOTSUP); } *ncache = cpi->cpi_cache_leaf_size; return (0); } int cpuid_getcache(struct cpu *cpu, uint32_t cno, x86_cache_t *cache) { const struct cpuid_info *cpi; const struct cpuid_regs *cp; ASSERT(cpuid_checkpass(cpu, CPUID_PASS_DYNAMIC)); cpi = cpu->cpu_m.mcpu_cpi; if (!cpuid_cache_topo_sup(cpi)) { return (ENOTSUP); } if (cno >= cpi->cpi_cache_leaf_size) { return (EINVAL); } bzero(cache, sizeof (cache)); cp = cpi->cpi_cache_leaves[cno]; switch (CPI_CACHE_TYPE(cp)) { case CPI_CACHE_TYPE_DATA: cache->xc_type = X86_CACHE_TYPE_DATA; break; case CPI_CACHE_TYPE_INSTR: cache->xc_type = X86_CACHE_TYPE_INST; break; case CPI_CACHE_TYPE_UNIFIED: cache->xc_type = X86_CACHE_TYPE_UNIFIED; break; case CPI_CACHE_TYPE_DONE: default: return (EINVAL); } cache->xc_level = CPI_CACHE_LVL(cp); if (CPI_FULL_ASSOC_CACHE(cp) != 0) { cache->xc_flags |= X86_CACHE_F_FULL_ASSOC; } cache->xc_nparts = CPI_CACHE_PARTS(cp) + 1; /* * The number of sets is reserved on AMD if the CPU is tagged as fully * associative, where as it is considered valid on Intel. */ if (cpi->cpi_vendor == X86_VENDOR_AMD && CPI_FULL_ASSOC_CACHE(cp) != 0) { cache->xc_nsets = 1; } else { cache->xc_nsets = CPI_CACHE_SETS(cp) + 1; } cache->xc_nways = CPI_CACHE_WAYS(cp) + 1; cache->xc_line_size = CPI_CACHE_COH_LN_SZ(cp) + 1; cache->xc_size = cache->xc_nparts * cache->xc_nsets * cache->xc_nways * cache->xc_line_size; /* * We're looking for the number of bits to cover the number of CPUs that * are being shared. Normally this would be the value - 1, but the CPUID * value is encoded as the actual value minus one, so we don't modify * this at all. */ cache->xc_apic_shift = highbit(CPI_NTHR_SHR_CACHE(cp)); /* * To construct a unique ID we construct a uint64_t that looks as * follows: * * [47:40] cache level * [39:32] CPUID cache type * [31:00] shifted APIC ID * * The shifted APIC ID gives us a guarantee that a given cache entry is * unique within its peers. The other two numbers give us something that * ensures that something is unique within the CPU. If we just had the * APIC ID shifted over by the indicated number of bits we'd end up with * an ID of zero for the L1I, L1D, L2, and L3. * * The format of this ID is private to the system and can change across * a reboot for the time being. */ cache->xc_id = (uint64_t)cache->xc_level << 40; cache->xc_id |= (uint64_t)cache->xc_type << 32; cache->xc_id |= (uint64_t)cpi->cpi_apicid >> cache->xc_apic_shift; return (0); }