xref: /openbmc/qemu/docs/specs/ppc-spapr-numa.rst (revision 41ea8205)
1
2NUMA mechanics for sPAPR (pseries machines)
3============================================
4
5NUMA in sPAPR works different than the System Locality Distance
6Information Table (SLIT) in ACPI. The logic is explained in the LOPAPR
71.1 chapter 15, "Non Uniform Memory Access (NUMA) Option". This
8document aims to complement this specification, providing details
9of the elements that impacts how QEMU views NUMA in pseries.
10
11Associativity and ibm,associativity property
12--------------------------------------------
13
14Associativity is defined as a group of platform resources that has
15similar mean performance (or in our context here, distance) relative to
16everyone else outside of the group.
17
18The format of the ibm,associativity property varies with the value of
19bit 0 of byte 5 of the ibm,architecture-vec-5 property. The format with
20bit 0 equal to zero is deprecated. The current format, with the bit 0
21with the value of one, makes ibm,associativity property represent the
22physical hierarchy of the platform, as one or more lists that starts
23with the highest level grouping up to the smallest. Considering the
24following topology:
25
26::
27
28    Mem M1 ---- Proc P1    |
29    -----------------      | Socket S1  ---|
30          chip C1          |               |
31                                           | HW module 1 (MOD1)
32    Mem M2 ---- Proc P2    |               |
33    -----------------      | Socket S2  ---|
34          chip C2          |
35
36The ibm,associativity property for the processors would be:
37
38* P1: {MOD1, S1, C1, P1}
39* P2: {MOD1, S2, C2, P2}
40
41Each allocable resource has an ibm,associativity property. The LOPAPR
42specification allows multiple lists to be present in this property,
43considering that the same resource can have multiple connections to the
44platform.
45
46Relative Performance Distance and ibm,associativity-reference-points
47--------------------------------------------------------------------
48
49The ibm,associativity-reference-points property is an array that is used
50to define the relevant performance/distance  related boundaries, defining
51the NUMA levels for the platform.
52
53The definition of its elements also varies with the value of bit 0 of byte 5
54of the ibm,architecture-vec-5 property. The format with bit 0 equal to zero
55is also deprecated. With the current format, each integer of the
56ibm,associativity-reference-points represents an 1 based ordinal index (i.e.
57the first element is 1) of the ibm,associativity array. The first
58boundary is the most significant to application performance, followed by
59less significant boundaries. Allocated resources that belongs to the
60same performance boundaries are expected to have relative NUMA distance
61that matches the relevancy of the boundary itself. Resources that belongs
62to the same first boundary will have the shortest distance from each
63other. Subsequent boundaries represents greater distances and degraded
64performance.
65
66Using the previous example, the following setting reference points defines
67three NUMA levels:
68
69* ibm,associativity-reference-points = {0x3, 0x2, 0x1}
70
71The first NUMA level (0x3) is interpreted as the third element of each
72ibm,associativity array, the second level is the second element and
73the third level is the first element. Let's also consider that elements
74belonging to the first NUMA level have distance equal to 10 from each
75other, and each NUMA level doubles the distance from the previous. This
76means that the second would be 20 and the third level 40. For the P1 and
77P2 processors, we would have the following NUMA levels:
78
79::
80
81  * ibm,associativity-reference-points = {0x3, 0x2, 0x1}
82
83  * P1: associativity{MOD1, S1, C1, P1}
84
85  First NUMA level (0x3) => associativity[2] = C1
86  Second NUMA level (0x2) => associativity[1] = S1
87  Third NUMA level (0x1) => associativity[0] = MOD1
88
89  * P2: associativity{MOD1, S2, C2, P2}
90
91  First NUMA level (0x3) => associativity[2] = C2
92  Second NUMA level (0x2) => associativity[1] = S2
93  Third NUMA level (0x1) => associativity[0] = MOD1
94
95  P1 and P2 have the same third NUMA level, MOD1: Distance between them = 40
96
97Changing the ibm,associativity-reference-points array changes the performance
98distance attributes for the same associativity arrays, as the following
99example illustrates:
100
101::
102
103  * ibm,associativity-reference-points = {0x2}
104
105  * P1: associativity{MOD1, S1, C1, P1}
106
107  First NUMA level (0x2) => associativity[1] = S1
108
109  * P2: associativity{MOD1, S2, C2, P2}
110
111  First NUMA level (0x2) => associativity[1] = S2
112
113  P1 and P2 does not have a common performance boundary. Since this is a one level
114  NUMA configuration, distance between them is one boundary above the first
115  level, 20.
116
117
118In a hypothetical platform where all resources inside the same hardware module
119is considered to be on the same performance boundary:
120
121::
122
123  * ibm,associativity-reference-points = {0x1}
124
125  * P1: associativity{MOD1, S1, C1, P1}
126
127  First NUMA level (0x1) => associativity[0] = MOD0
128
129  * P2: associativity{MOD1, S2, C2, P2}
130
131  First NUMA level (0x1) => associativity[0] = MOD0
132
133  P1 and P2 belongs to the same first order boundary. The distance between then
134  is 10.
135
136
137How the pseries Linux guest calculates NUMA distances
138=====================================================
139
140Another key difference between ACPI SLIT and the LOPAPR regarding NUMA is
141how the distances are expressed. The SLIT table provides the NUMA distance
142value between the relevant resources. LOPAPR does not provide a standard
143way to calculate it. We have the ibm,associativity for each resource, which
144provides a common-performance hierarchy,  and the ibm,associativity-reference-points
145array that tells which level of associativity is considered to be relevant
146or not.
147
148The result is that each OS is free to implement and to interpret the distance
149as it sees fit. For the pseries Linux guest, each level of NUMA duplicates
150the distance of the previous level, and the maximum amount of levels is
151limited to MAX_DISTANCE_REF_POINTS = 4 (from arch/powerpc/mm/numa.c in the
152kernel tree). This results in the following distances:
153
154* both resources in the first NUMA level: 10
155* resources one NUMA level apart: 20
156* resources two NUMA levels apart: 40
157* resources three NUMA levels apart: 80
158* resources four NUMA levels apart: 160
159
160
161Consequences for QEMU NUMA tuning
162---------------------------------
163
164The way the pseries Linux guest calculates NUMA distances has a direct effect
165on what QEMU users can expect when doing NUMA tuning. As of QEMU 5.1, this is
166the default ibm,associativity-reference-points being used in the pseries
167machine:
168
169ibm,associativity-reference-points = {0x4, 0x4, 0x2}
170
171The first and second level are equal, 0x4, and a third one was added in
172commit a6030d7e0b35 exclusively for NVLink GPUs support. This means that
173regardless of how the ibm,associativity properties are being created in
174the device tree, the pseries Linux guest will only recognize three scenarios
175as far as NUMA distance goes:
176
177* if the resources belongs to the same first NUMA level = 10
178* second level is skipped since it's equal to the first
179* all resources that aren't a NVLink GPU, it is guaranteed that they will belong
180  to the same third NUMA level, having distance = 40
181* for NVLink GPUs, distance = 80 from everything else
182
183In short, we can summarize the NUMA distances seem in pseries Linux guests, using
184QEMU up to 5.1, as follows:
185
186* local distance, i.e. the distance of the resource to its own NUMA node: 10
187* if it's a NVLink GPU device, distance: 80
188* every other resource, distance: 40
189
190This also means that user input in QEMU command line does not change the
191NUMA distancing inside the guest for the pseries machine.
192