On Thu, Apr 15, 2021 at 07:29:38AM +0200, Willy Tarreau wrote: > What Len is saying is that not being interested in a feature is not an > argument for rejecting its adoption,
Oh, I'm not rejecting its adoption - no, don't mean that. > which I'm perfectly fine with. But conversely not being interested in > a feature is also an argument for insisting that its adoption doesn't > harm other use cases (generally speaking, not this specific case > here). Pretty much. What I'd like to see is 0-overhead for current use cases and only overhead for those who want to use it. If that can't be done automagically, then users should request it explicitly. So basically you blow up the xsave buffer only for processes which want to do AMX. And this brings the question about libraries which, if they start using AMX by default - which doesn't sound like they will want to because AMX reportedly will have only a limited? set of users - if libraries start using it by default, then it better be worth the handling of the 8kb buffer per process. If not, this should also be requestable per process so that a simple pipe in Linux: <process> | grep | awk | sed ... and so on is not penalized to allocate and handle by default 8kb for *each* process' buffer in that pipe just because each is linking against glibc which has detected AMX support in CPUID and is using it too for some weird reason like some microbenchmark saying so. All AFAIU, ofc. But my initial question was on the "establishing" part and was asking where we have established anything wrt AMX. Thx. -- Regards/Gruss, Boris. https://people.kernel.org/tglx/notes-about-netiquette