Damir, We normally test Linux guests here. Can you please give me exact qemu command line. Even the SMP parameters(sockets,cores,threads,dies) will also work. I will try to recreate it locally first. Give me example what works and what does not work.
I have recently sent few more patches to fix another bug. Please check if this makes any difference. https://patchwork.kernel.org/cover/11272063/ https://lore.kernel.org/qemu-devel/157541968844.46157.17994918142533791313.st...@naples-babu.amd.com/ This should apply cleanly on git://github.com/ehabkost/qemu.git (branch x86-next) Note: I will be on vacation until first week of Jan. Responses will be delayed. -- You received this bug notification because you are a member of qemu- devel-ml, which is subscribed to QEMU. https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1856335 Title: Cache Layout wrong on many Zen Arch CPUs Status in QEMU: New Bug description: AMD CPUs have L3 cache per 2, 3 or 4 cores. Currently, TOPOEXT seems to always map Cache ass if it was an 4-Core per CCX CPU, which is incorrect, and costs upwards 30% performance (more realistically 10%) in L3 Cache Layout aware applications. Example on a 4-CCX CPU (1950X /w 8 Cores and no SMT): <cpu mode='custom' match='exact' check='full'> <model fallback='forbid'>EPYC-IBPB</model> <vendor>AMD</vendor> <topology sockets='1' cores='8' threads='1'/> In windows, coreinfo reports correctly: ****---- Unified Cache 1, Level 3, 8 MB, Assoc 16, LineSize 64 ----**** Unified Cache 6, Level 3, 8 MB, Assoc 16, LineSize 64 On a 3-CCX CPU (3960X /w 6 cores and no SMT): <cpu mode='custom' match='exact' check='full'> <model fallback='forbid'>EPYC-IBPB</model> <vendor>AMD</vendor> <topology sockets='1' cores='6' threads='1'/> in windows, coreinfo reports incorrectly: ****-- Unified Cache 1, Level 3, 8 MB, Assoc 16, LineSize 64 ----** Unified Cache 6, Level 3, 8 MB, Assoc 16, LineSize 64 Validated against 3.0, 3.1, 4.1 and 4.2 versions of qemu-kvm. With newer Qemu there is a fix (that does behave correctly) in using the dies parameter: <qemu:arg value='cores=3,threads=1,dies=2,sockets=1'/> The problem is that the dies are exposed differently than how AMD does it natively, they are exposed to Windows as sockets, which means, that if you are nto a business user, you can't ever have a machine with more than two CCX (6 cores) as consumer versions of Windows only supports two sockets. (Should this be reported as a separate bug?) To manage notifications about this bug go to: https://bugs.launchpad.net/qemu/+bug/1856335/+subscriptions