---- Original message ----

>"Michael ODonnell" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>I've heard it suggested several times now that features
>like HyperThreading can be enabled or disabled "in the BIOS"
>and I don't understand how that can be possible.  AFAIK a CPU
>either does or doesn't have a given feature and there's nothing
>(short of modifying the CPU's microcode) that any BIOS can do
>to "disable" it, at least not in any way that would prevent a
>capable OS from doing as it pleased once it was booted.  So,
>what's the story?
> 

A lot of the CPU hardware features are controlled by bit flags that enable or 
disable the associated circuitry.  It's one tool for providing backward 
compatibility, or bug workarounds, especially for new features.  The OS would 
be capable of changing them, but should normally respect the bios settings 
(unless it implements *all* of the support required for that hardware feature), 
because otherwise it's likely to enable circuitry that requires bios code that 
is not present - think "unhandled exception".  not good.

Conceptual model for backward compatibility is a new feature, requiring 
low-level support (bios and drivers) to avoid or handle certain catastrophic 
failure modes.  Existing OS versions and/or mobos will not include such 
support.  Ergo, disable the feature by default and require explicit enabling in 
the code that supports it.  Benefits should be intuitively obvious.

If the feature is really significant, the bits to control it may be in a 
register that didn't exist previously.  If the register doesn't exist the 
feature can't be present, if the register does exist it may or may not be 
present and usable.  The HT flag seems to be an example, especially if the 
register was invented for one thing (hyperthread technology) and then bits in 
it were used for a subsequent feature (true multicore technology).

-Brucem
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