Hi Stefano,

On 02/05/2024 19:13, Stefano Stabellini wrote:
On Mon, 29 Apr 2024, Julien Grall wrote:
Hi Juergen,

On 29/04/2024 12:28, Jürgen Groß wrote:
On 29.04.24 13:04, Julien Grall wrote:
Hi Juergen,

Sorry for the late reply.

On 29/04/2024 11:33, Juergen Gross wrote:
On 08.04.24 09:10, Jan Beulich wrote:
On 27.03.2024 16:22, Juergen Gross wrote:
With lock handling now allowing up to 16384 cpus (spinlocks can
handle
65535 cpus, rwlocks can handle 16384 cpus), raise the allowed limit
for
the number of cpus to be configured to 16383.

The new limit is imposed by IOMMU_CMD_BUFFER_MAX_ENTRIES and
QINVAL_MAX_ENTRY_NR required to be larger than 2 * CONFIG_NR_CPUS.

Signed-off-by: Juergen Gross <jgr...@suse.com>

Acked-by: Jan Beulich <jbeul...@suse.com>

I'd prefer this to also gain an Arm ack, though.

Any comment from Arm side?

Can you clarify what the new limits mean in term of (security) support?
Are we now claiming that Xen will work perfectly fine on platforms with up
to 16383?

If so, I can't comment for x86, but for Arm, I am doubtful that it would
work without any (at least performance) issues. AFAIK, this is also an
untested configuration. In fact I would be surprised if Xen on Arm was
tested with more than a couple of hundreds cores (AFAICT the Ampere CPUs
has 192 CPUs).

I think we should add a security support limit for the number of physical
cpus similar to the memory support limit we already have in place.

For x86 I'd suggest 4096 cpus for security support (basically the limit we
have with this patch), but I'm open for other suggestions, too.

I have no idea about any sensible limits for Arm32/Arm64.

I am not entirely. Bertrand, Michal, Stefano, should we use 192 (the number of
CPUs from Ampere)?

I am OK with that. If we want to be a bit more future proof we could say
256 or 512.

Sorry, I don't follow your argument. A limit can be raised at time point in the future. The question is more whether we are confident that Xen on Arm will run well if a user has a platform with 256/512 pCPUs.

So are you saying that from Xen point of view, you are expecting no difference between 256 and 512. And therefore you would be happy if to backport patches if someone find differences (or even security issues) when using > 256 pCPUs?

Cheers,

--
Julien Grall

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