qemu-e2k/docs/specs/ppc-spapr-numa.rst
Stefan Weil ac9574bc87 docs: Fix some typos (found by codespell)
Fix also a similar typo in a code comment.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Weil <sw@weilnetz.de>
Message-Id: <20201117193448.393472-1-sw@weilnetz.de>
Reviewed-by: Michael S. Tsirkin <mst@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
2020-11-18 09:29:41 +01:00

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NUMA mechanics for sPAPR (pseries machines)
============================================
NUMA in sPAPR works different than the System Locality Distance
Information Table (SLIT) in ACPI. The logic is explained in the LOPAPR
1.1 chapter 15, "Non Uniform Memory Access (NUMA) Option". This
document aims to complement this specification, providing details
of the elements that impacts how QEMU views NUMA in pseries.
Associativity and ibm,associativity property
--------------------------------------------
Associativity is defined as a group of platform resources that has
similar mean performance (or in our context here, distance) relative to
everyone else outside of the group.
The format of the ibm,associativity property varies with the value of
bit 0 of byte 5 of the ibm,architecture-vec-5 property. The format with
bit 0 equal to zero is deprecated. The current format, with the bit 0
with the value of one, makes ibm,associativity property represent the
physical hierarchy of the platform, as one or more lists that starts
with the highest level grouping up to the smallest. Considering the
following topology:
::
Mem M1 ---- Proc P1 |
----------------- | Socket S1 ---|
chip C1 | |
| HW module 1 (MOD1)
Mem M2 ---- Proc P2 | |
----------------- | Socket S2 ---|
chip C2 |
The ibm,associativity property for the processors would be:
* P1: {MOD1, S1, C1, P1}
* P2: {MOD1, S2, C2, P2}
Each allocable resource has an ibm,associativity property. The LOPAPR
specification allows multiple lists to be present in this property,
considering that the same resource can have multiple connections to the
platform.
Relative Performance Distance and ibm,associativity-reference-points
--------------------------------------------------------------------
The ibm,associativity-reference-points property is an array that is used
to define the relevant performance/distance related boundaries, defining
the NUMA levels for the platform.
The definition of its elements also varies with the value of bit 0 of byte 5
of the ibm,architecture-vec-5 property. The format with bit 0 equal to zero
is also deprecated. With the current format, each integer of the
ibm,associativity-reference-points represents an 1 based ordinal index (i.e.
the first element is 1) of the ibm,associativity array. The first
boundary is the most significant to application performance, followed by
less significant boundaries. Allocated resources that belongs to the
same performance boundaries are expected to have relative NUMA distance
that matches the relevancy of the boundary itself. Resources that belongs
to the same first boundary will have the shortest distance from each
other. Subsequent boundaries represents greater distances and degraded
performance.
Using the previous example, the following setting reference points defines
three NUMA levels:
* ibm,associativity-reference-points = {0x3, 0x2, 0x1}
The first NUMA level (0x3) is interpreted as the third element of each
ibm,associativity array, the second level is the second element and
the third level is the first element. Let's also consider that elements
belonging to the first NUMA level have distance equal to 10 from each
other, and each NUMA level doubles the distance from the previous. This
means that the second would be 20 and the third level 40. For the P1 and
P2 processors, we would have the following NUMA levels:
::
* ibm,associativity-reference-points = {0x3, 0x2, 0x1}
* P1: associativity{MOD1, S1, C1, P1}
First NUMA level (0x3) => associativity[2] = C1
Second NUMA level (0x2) => associativity[1] = S1
Third NUMA level (0x1) => associativity[0] = MOD1
* P2: associativity{MOD1, S2, C2, P2}
First NUMA level (0x3) => associativity[2] = C2
Second NUMA level (0x2) => associativity[1] = S2
Third NUMA level (0x1) => associativity[0] = MOD1
P1 and P2 have the same third NUMA level, MOD1: Distance between them = 40
Changing the ibm,associativity-reference-points array changes the performance
distance attributes for the same associativity arrays, as the following
example illustrates:
::
* ibm,associativity-reference-points = {0x2}
* P1: associativity{MOD1, S1, C1, P1}
First NUMA level (0x2) => associativity[1] = S1
* P2: associativity{MOD1, S2, C2, P2}
First NUMA level (0x2) => associativity[1] = S2
P1 and P2 does not have a common performance boundary. Since this is a one level
NUMA configuration, distance between them is one boundary above the first
level, 20.
In a hypothetical platform where all resources inside the same hardware module
is considered to be on the same performance boundary:
::
* ibm,associativity-reference-points = {0x1}
* P1: associativity{MOD1, S1, C1, P1}
First NUMA level (0x1) => associativity[0] = MOD0
* P2: associativity{MOD1, S2, C2, P2}
First NUMA level (0x1) => associativity[0] = MOD0
P1 and P2 belongs to the same first order boundary. The distance between then
is 10.
How the pseries Linux guest calculates NUMA distances
=====================================================
Another key difference between ACPI SLIT and the LOPAPR regarding NUMA is
how the distances are expressed. The SLIT table provides the NUMA distance
value between the relevant resources. LOPAPR does not provide a standard
way to calculate it. We have the ibm,associativity for each resource, which
provides a common-performance hierarchy, and the ibm,associativity-reference-points
array that tells which level of associativity is considered to be relevant
or not.
The result is that each OS is free to implement and to interpret the distance
as it sees fit. For the pseries Linux guest, each level of NUMA duplicates
the distance of the previous level, and the maximum amount of levels is
limited to MAX_DISTANCE_REF_POINTS = 4 (from arch/powerpc/mm/numa.c in the
kernel tree). This results in the following distances:
* both resources in the first NUMA level: 10
* resources one NUMA level apart: 20
* resources two NUMA levels apart: 40
* resources three NUMA levels apart: 80
* resources four NUMA levels apart: 160
pseries NUMA mechanics
======================
Starting in QEMU 5.2, the pseries machine considers user input when setting NUMA
topology of the guest. The overall design is:
* ibm,associativity-reference-points is set to {0x4, 0x3, 0x2, 0x1}, allowing
for 4 distinct NUMA distance values based on the NUMA levels
* ibm,max-associativity-domains supports multiple associativity domains in all
NUMA levels, granting user flexibility
* ibm,associativity for all resources varies with user input
These changes are only effective for pseries-5.2 and newer machines that are
created with more than one NUMA node (disconsidering NUMA nodes created by
the machine itself, e.g. NVLink 2 GPUs). The now legacy support has been
around for such a long time, with users seeing NUMA distances 10 and 40
(and 80 if using NVLink2 GPUs), and there is no need to disrupt the
existing experience of those guests.
To bring the user experience x86 users have when tuning up NUMA, we had
to operate under the current pseries Linux kernel logic described in
`How the pseries Linux guest calculates NUMA distances`_. The result
is that we needed to translate NUMA distance user input to pseries
Linux kernel input.
Translating user distance to kernel distance
--------------------------------------------
User input for NUMA distance can vary from 10 to 254. We need to translate
that to the values that the Linux kernel operates on (10, 20, 40, 80, 160).
This is how it is being done:
* user distance 11 to 30 will be interpreted as 20
* user distance 31 to 60 will be interpreted as 40
* user distance 61 to 120 will be interpreted as 80
* user distance 121 and beyond will be interpreted as 160
* user distance 10 stays 10
The reasoning behind this approximation is to avoid any round up to the local
distance (10), keeping it exclusive to the 4th NUMA level (which is still
exclusive to the node_id). All other ranges were chosen under the developer
discretion of what would be (somewhat) sensible considering the user input.
Any other strategy can be used here, but in the end the reality is that we'll
have to accept that a large array of values will be translated to the same
NUMA topology in the guest, e.g. this user input:
::
0 1 2
0 10 31 120
1 31 10 30
2 120 30 10
And this other user input:
::
0 1 2
0 10 60 61
1 60 10 11
2 61 11 10
Will both be translated to the same values internally:
::
0 1 2
0 10 40 80
1 40 10 20
2 80 20 10
Users are encouraged to use only the kernel values in the NUMA definition to
avoid being taken by surprise with that the guest is actually seeing in the
topology. There are enough potential surprises that are inherent to the
associativity domain assignment process, discussed below.
How associativity domains are assigned
--------------------------------------
LOPAPR allows more than one associativity array (or 'string') per allocated
resource. This would be used to represent that the resource has multiple
connections with the board, and then the operational system, when deciding
NUMA distancing, should consider the associativity information that provides
the shortest distance.
The spapr implementation does not support multiple associativity arrays per
resource, neither does the pseries Linux kernel. We'll have to represent the
NUMA topology using one associativity per resource, which means that choices
and compromises are going to be made.
Consider the following NUMA topology entered by user input:
::
0 1 2 3
0 10 40 20 40
1 40 10 80 40
2 20 80 10 20
3 40 40 20 10
All the associativity arrays are initialized with NUMA id in all associativity
domains:
* node 0: 0 0 0 0
* node 1: 1 1 1 1
* node 2: 2 2 2 2
* node 3: 3 3 3 3
Honoring just the relative distances of node 0 to every other node, we find the
NUMA level matches (considering the reference points {0x4, 0x3, 0x2, 0x1}) for
each distance:
* distance from 0 to 1 is 40 (no match at 0x4 and 0x3, will match
at 0x2)
* distance from 0 to 2 is 20 (no match at 0x4, will match at 0x3)
* distance from 0 to 3 is 40 (no match at 0x4 and 0x3, will match
at 0x2)
We'll copy the associativity domains of node 0 to all other nodes, based on
the NUMA level matches. Between 0 and 1, a match in 0x2, we'll also copy
the domains 0x2 and 0x1 from 0 to 1 as well. This will give us:
* node 0: 0 0 0 0
* node 1: 0 0 1 1
Doing the same to node 2 and node 3, these are the associativity arrays
after considering all matches with node 0:
* node 0: 0 0 0 0
* node 1: 0 0 1 1
* node 2: 0 0 0 2
* node 3: 0 0 3 3
The distances related to node 0 are accounted for. For node 1, and keeping
in mind that we don't need to revisit node 0 again, the distance from
node 1 to 2 is 80, matching at 0x1, and distance from 1 to 3 is 40,
match in 0x2. Repeating the same logic of copying all domains up to
the NUMA level match:
* node 0: 0 0 0 0
* node 1: 1 0 1 1
* node 2: 1 0 0 2
* node 3: 1 0 3 3
In the last step we will analyze just nodes 2 and 3. The desired distance
between 2 and 3 is 20, i.e. a match in 0x3:
* node 0: 0 0 0 0
* node 1: 1 0 1 1
* node 2: 1 0 0 2
* node 3: 1 0 0 3
The kernel will read these arrays and will calculate the following NUMA topology for
the guest:
::
0 1 2 3
0 10 40 20 20
1 40 10 40 40
2 20 40 10 20
3 20 40 20 10
Note that this is not what the user wanted - the desired distance between
0 and 3 is 40, we calculated it as 20. This is what the current logic and
implementation constraints of the kernel and QEMU will provide inside the
LOPAPR specification.
Users are welcome to use this knowledge and experiment with the input to get
the NUMA topology they want, or as closer as they want. The important thing
is to keep expectations up to par with what we are capable of provide at this
moment: an approximation.
Limitations of the implementation
---------------------------------
As mentioned above, the pSeries NUMA distance logic is, in fact, a way to approximate
user choice. The Linux kernel, and PAPR itself, does not provide QEMU with the ways
to fully map user input to actual NUMA distance the guest will use. These limitations
creates two notable limitations in our support:
* Asymmetrical topologies aren't supported. We only support NUMA topologies where
the distance from node A to B is always the same as B to A. We do not support
any A-B pair where the distance back and forth is asymmetric. For example, the
following topology isn't supported and the pSeries guest will not boot with this
user input:
::
0 1
0 10 40
1 20 10
* 'non-transitive' topologies will be poorly translated to the guest. This is the
kind of topology where the distance from a node A to B is X, B to C is X, but
the distance A to C is not X. E.g.:
::
0 1 2 3
0 10 20 20 40
1 20 10 80 40
2 20 80 10 20
3 40 40 20 10
In the example above, distance 0 to 2 is 20, 2 to 3 is 20, but 0 to 3 is 40.
The kernel will always match with the shortest associativity domain possible,
and we're attempting to retain the previous established relations between the
nodes. This means that a distance equal to 20 between nodes 0 and 2 and the
same distance 20 between nodes 2 and 3 will cause the distance between 0 and 3
to also be 20.
Legacy (5.1 and older) pseries NUMA mechanics
=============================================
In short, we can summarize the NUMA distances seem in pseries Linux guests, using
QEMU up to 5.1, as follows:
* local distance, i.e. the distance of the resource to its own NUMA node: 10
* if it's a NVLink GPU device, distance: 80
* every other resource, distance: 40
The way the pseries Linux guest calculates NUMA distances has a direct effect
on what QEMU users can expect when doing NUMA tuning. As of QEMU 5.1, this is
the default ibm,associativity-reference-points being used in the pseries
machine:
ibm,associativity-reference-points = {0x4, 0x4, 0x2}
The first and second level are equal, 0x4, and a third one was added in
commit a6030d7e0b35 exclusively for NVLink GPUs support. This means that
regardless of how the ibm,associativity properties are being created in
the device tree, the pseries Linux guest will only recognize three scenarios
as far as NUMA distance goes:
* if the resources belongs to the same first NUMA level = 10
* second level is skipped since it's equal to the first
* all resources that aren't a NVLink GPU, it is guaranteed that they will belong
to the same third NUMA level, having distance = 40
* for NVLink GPUs, distance = 80 from everything else
This also means that user input in QEMU command line does not change the
NUMA distancing inside the guest for the pseries machine.