x86/hyperv: Initialize clockevents after LAPIC is initialized

[ Upstream commit fff7b5e6ee63c5d20406a131b260c619cdd24fd1 ]

With commit 4df4cb9e99, the Hyper-V direct-mode STIMER is actually
initialized before LAPIC is initialized: see

  apic_intr_mode_init()

    x86_platform.apic_post_init()
      hyperv_init()
        hv_stimer_alloc()

    apic_bsp_setup()
      setup_local_APIC()

setup_local_APIC() temporarily disables LAPIC, initializes it and
re-eanble it.  The direct-mode STIMER depends on LAPIC, and when it's
registered, it can be programmed immediately and the timer can fire
very soon:

  hv_stimer_init
    clockevents_config_and_register
      clockevents_register_device
        tick_check_new_device
          tick_setup_device
            tick_setup_periodic(), tick_setup_oneshot()
              clockevents_program_event

When the timer fires in the hypervisor, if the LAPIC is in the
disabled state, new versions of Hyper-V ignore the event and don't inject
the timer interrupt into the VM, and hence the VM hangs when it boots.

Note: when the VM starts/reboots, the LAPIC is pre-enabled by the
firmware, so the window of LAPIC being temporarily disabled is pretty
small, and the issue can only happen once out of 100~200 reboots for
a 40-vCPU VM on one dev host, and on another host the issue doesn't
reproduce after 2000 reboots.

The issue is more noticeable for kdump/kexec, because the LAPIC is
disabled by the first kernel, and stays disabled until the kdump/kexec
kernel enables it. This is especially an issue to a Generation-2 VM
(for which Hyper-V doesn't emulate the PIT timer) when CONFIG_HZ=1000
(rather than CONFIG_HZ=250) is used.

Fix the issue by moving hv_stimer_alloc() to a later place where the
LAPIC timer is initialized.

Fixes: 4df4cb9e99 ("x86/hyperv: Initialize clockevents earlier in CPU onlining")
Signed-off-by: Dexuan Cui <decui@microsoft.com>
Reviewed-by:  Michael Kelley <mikelley@microsoft.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20210116223136.13892-1-decui@microsoft.com
Signed-off-by: Wei Liu <wei.liu@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin <sashal@kernel.org>
This commit is contained in:
Dexuan Cui 2021-01-16 14:31:36 -08:00 committed by Greg Kroah-Hartman
parent 1200a5bc68
commit 4473923b66

View File

@ -312,6 +312,25 @@ static struct syscore_ops hv_syscore_ops = {
.resume = hv_resume,
};
static void (* __initdata old_setup_percpu_clockev)(void);
static void __init hv_stimer_setup_percpu_clockev(void)
{
/*
* Ignore any errors in setting up stimer clockevents
* as we can run with the LAPIC timer as a fallback.
*/
(void)hv_stimer_alloc();
/*
* Still register the LAPIC timer, because the direct-mode STIMER is
* not supported by old versions of Hyper-V. This also allows users
* to switch to LAPIC timer via /sys, if they want to.
*/
if (old_setup_percpu_clockev)
old_setup_percpu_clockev();
}
/*
* This function is to be invoked early in the boot sequence after the
* hypervisor has been detected.
@ -390,10 +409,14 @@ void __init hyperv_init(void)
wrmsrl(HV_X64_MSR_HYPERCALL, hypercall_msr.as_uint64);
/*
* Ignore any errors in setting up stimer clockevents
* as we can run with the LAPIC timer as a fallback.
* hyperv_init() is called before LAPIC is initialized: see
* apic_intr_mode_init() -> x86_platform.apic_post_init() and
* apic_bsp_setup() -> setup_local_APIC(). The direct-mode STIMER
* depends on LAPIC, so hv_stimer_alloc() should be called from
* x86_init.timers.setup_percpu_clockev.
*/
(void)hv_stimer_alloc();
old_setup_percpu_clockev = x86_init.timers.setup_percpu_clockev;
x86_init.timers.setup_percpu_clockev = hv_stimer_setup_percpu_clockev;
hv_apic_init();