| ============================ |
| NUMA resource associativity |
| ============================ |
| |
| Associativity represents the groupings of the various platform resources into |
| domains of substantially similar mean performance relative to resources outside |
| of that domain. Resources subsets of a given domain that exhibit better |
| performance relative to each other than relative to other resources subsets |
| are represented as being members of a sub-grouping domain. This performance |
| characteristic is presented in terms of NUMA node distance within the Linux kernel. |
| From the platform view, these groups are also referred to as domains. |
| |
| PAPR interface currently supports different ways of communicating these resource |
| grouping details to the OS. These are referred to as Form 0, Form 1 and Form2 |
| associativity grouping. Form 0 is the oldest format and is now considered deprecated. |
| |
| Hypervisor indicates the type/form of associativity used via "ibm,architecture-vec-5 property". |
| Bit 0 of byte 5 in the "ibm,architecture-vec-5" property indicates usage of Form 0 or Form 1. |
| A value of 1 indicates the usage of Form 1 associativity. For Form 2 associativity |
| bit 2 of byte 5 in the "ibm,architecture-vec-5" property is used. |
| |
| Form 0 |
| ------ |
| Form 0 associativity supports only two NUMA distances (LOCAL and REMOTE). |
| |
| Form 1 |
| ------ |
| With Form 1 a combination of ibm,associativity-reference-points, and ibm,associativity |
| device tree properties are used to determine the NUMA distance between resource groups/domains. |
| |
| The “ibm,associativity” property contains a list of one or more numbers (domainID) |
| representing the resource’s platform grouping domains. |
| |
| The “ibm,associativity-reference-points” property contains a list of one or more numbers |
| (domainID index) that represents the 1 based ordinal in the associativity lists. |
| The list of domainID indexes represents an increasing hierarchy of resource grouping. |
| |
| ex: |
| { primary domainID index, secondary domainID index, tertiary domainID index.. } |
| |
| Linux kernel uses the domainID at the primary domainID index as the NUMA node id. |
| Linux kernel computes NUMA distance between two domains by recursively comparing |
| if they belong to the same higher-level domains. For mismatch at every higher |
| level of the resource group, the kernel doubles the NUMA distance between the |
| comparing domains. |
| |
| Form 2 |
| ------- |
| Form 2 associativity format adds separate device tree properties representing NUMA node distance |
| thereby making the node distance computation flexible. Form 2 also allows flexible primary |
| domain numbering. With numa distance computation now detached from the index value in |
| "ibm,associativity-reference-points" property, Form 2 allows a large number of primary domain |
| ids at the same domainID index representing resource groups of different performance/latency |
| characteristics. |
| |
| Hypervisor indicates the usage of FORM2 associativity using bit 2 of byte 5 in the |
| "ibm,architecture-vec-5" property. |
| |
| "ibm,numa-lookup-index-table" property contains a list of one or more numbers representing |
| the domainIDs present in the system. The offset of the domainID in this property is |
| used as an index while computing numa distance information via "ibm,numa-distance-table". |
| |
| prop-encoded-array: The number N of the domainIDs encoded as with encode-int, followed by |
| N domainID encoded as with encode-int |
| |
| For ex: |
| "ibm,numa-lookup-index-table" = {4, 0, 8, 250, 252}. The offset of domainID 8 (2) is used when |
| computing the distance of domain 8 from other domains present in the system. For the rest of |
| this document, this offset will be referred to as domain distance offset. |
| |
| "ibm,numa-distance-table" property contains a list of one or more numbers representing the NUMA |
| distance between resource groups/domains present in the system. |
| |
| prop-encoded-array: The number N of the distance values encoded as with encode-int, followed by |
| N distance values encoded as with encode-bytes. The max distance value we could encode is 255. |
| The number N must be equal to the square of m where m is the number of domainIDs in the |
| numa-lookup-index-table. |
| |
| For ex: |
| ibm,numa-lookup-index-table = <3 0 8 40>; |
| ibm,numa-distace-table = <9>, /bits/ 8 < 10 20 80 20 10 160 80 160 10>; |
| |
| :: |
| |
| | 0 8 40 |
| --|------------ |
| | |
| 0 | 10 20 80 |
| | |
| 8 | 20 10 160 |
| | |
| 40| 80 160 10 |
| |
| A possible "ibm,associativity" property for resources in node 0, 8 and 40 |
| |
| { 3, 6, 7, 0 } |
| { 3, 6, 9, 8 } |
| { 3, 6, 7, 40} |
| |
| With "ibm,associativity-reference-points" { 0x3 } |
| |
| "ibm,lookup-index-table" helps in having a compact representation of distance matrix. |
| Since domainID can be sparse, the matrix of distances can also be effectively sparse. |
| With "ibm,lookup-index-table" we can achieve a compact representation of |
| distance information. |