xref: /linux/Documentation/arch/x86/topology.rst (revision daa2be74b1b2302004945b2a5e32424e177cc7da)
1.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
2
3============
4x86 Topology
5============
6
7This documents and clarifies the main aspects of x86 topology modelling and
8representation in the kernel. Update/change when doing changes to the
9respective code.
10
11The architecture-agnostic topology definitions are in
12Documentation/admin-guide/cputopology.rst. This file holds x86-specific
13differences/specialities which must not necessarily apply to the generic
14definitions. Thus, the way to read up on Linux topology on x86 is to start
15with the generic one and look at this one in parallel for the x86 specifics.
16
17Needless to say, code should use the generic functions - this file is *only*
18here to *document* the inner workings of x86 topology.
19
20Started by Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de> and Borislav Petkov <bp@alien8.de>.
21
22The main aim of the topology facilities is to present adequate interfaces to
23code which needs to know/query/use the structure of the running system wrt
24threads, cores, packages, etc.
25
26The kernel does not care about the concept of physical sockets because a
27socket has no relevance to software. It's an electromechanical component. In
28the past a socket always contained a single package (see below), but with the
29advent of Multi Chip Modules (MCM) a socket can hold more than one package. So
30there might be still references to sockets in the code, but they are of
31historical nature and should be cleaned up.
32
33The topology of a system is described in the units of:
34
35    - packages
36    - cores
37    - threads
38
39Package
40=======
41Packages contain a number of cores plus shared resources, e.g. DRAM
42controller, shared caches etc.
43
44Modern systems may also use the term 'Die' for package.
45
46AMD nomenclature for package is 'Node'.
47
48Package-related topology information in the kernel:
49
50  - topology_num_threads_per_package()
51
52    The number of threads in a package.
53
54  - topology_num_cores_per_package()
55
56    The number of cores in a package.
57
58  - topology_max_dies_per_package()
59
60    The maximum number of dies in a package.
61
62  - cpuinfo_x86.topo.die_id:
63
64    The physical ID of the die.
65
66  - cpuinfo_x86.topo.pkg_id:
67
68    The physical ID of the package. This information is retrieved via CPUID
69    and deduced from the APIC IDs of the cores in the package.
70
71    Modern systems use this value for the socket. There may be multiple
72    packages within a socket. This value may differ from topo.die_id.
73
74  - cpuinfo_x86.topo.logical_pkg_id:
75
76    The logical ID of the package. As we do not trust BIOSes to enumerate the
77    packages in a consistent way, we introduced the concept of logical package
78    ID so we can sanely calculate the number of maximum possible packages in
79    the system and have the packages enumerated linearly.
80
81  - topology_max_packages():
82
83    The maximum possible number of packages in the system. Helpful for per
84    package facilities to preallocate per package information.
85
86  - cpuinfo_x86.topo.llc_id:
87
88      - On Intel, the first APIC ID of the list of CPUs sharing the Last Level
89        Cache
90
91      - On AMD, the Node ID or Core Complex ID containing the Last Level
92        Cache. In general, it is a number identifying an LLC uniquely on the
93        system.
94
95Cores
96=====
97A core consists of 1 or more threads. It does not matter whether the threads
98are SMT- or CMT-type threads.
99
100AMDs nomenclature for a CMT core is "Compute Unit". The kernel always uses
101"core".
102
103Threads
104=======
105A thread is a single scheduling unit. It's the equivalent to a logical Linux
106CPU.
107
108AMDs nomenclature for CMT threads is "Compute Unit Core". The kernel always
109uses "thread".
110
111Thread-related topology information in the kernel:
112
113  - topology_core_cpumask():
114
115    The cpumask contains all online threads in the package to which a thread
116    belongs.
117
118    The number of online threads is also printed in /proc/cpuinfo "siblings."
119
120  - topology_sibling_cpumask():
121
122    The cpumask contains all online threads in the core to which a thread
123    belongs.
124
125  - topology_logical_package_id():
126
127    The logical package ID to which a thread belongs.
128
129  - topology_physical_package_id():
130
131    The physical package ID to which a thread belongs.
132
133  - topology_core_id();
134
135    The ID of the core to which a thread belongs. It is also printed in /proc/cpuinfo
136    "core_id."
137
138
139
140System topology examples
141========================
142
143.. note::
144  The alternative Linux CPU enumeration depends on how the BIOS enumerates the
145  threads. Many BIOSes enumerate all threads 0 first and then all threads 1.
146  That has the "advantage" that the logical Linux CPU numbers of threads 0 stay
147  the same whether threads are enabled or not. That's merely an implementation
148  detail and has no practical impact.
149
1501) Single Package, Single Core::
151
152   [package 0] -> [core 0] -> [thread 0] -> Linux CPU 0
153
1542) Single Package, Dual Core
155
156   a) One thread per core::
157
158	[package 0] -> [core 0] -> [thread 0] -> Linux CPU 0
159		    -> [core 1] -> [thread 0] -> Linux CPU 1
160
161   b) Two threads per core::
162
163	[package 0] -> [core 0] -> [thread 0] -> Linux CPU 0
164				-> [thread 1] -> Linux CPU 1
165		    -> [core 1] -> [thread 0] -> Linux CPU 2
166				-> [thread 1] -> Linux CPU 3
167
168      Alternative enumeration::
169
170	[package 0] -> [core 0] -> [thread 0] -> Linux CPU 0
171				-> [thread 1] -> Linux CPU 2
172		    -> [core 1] -> [thread 0] -> Linux CPU 1
173				-> [thread 1] -> Linux CPU 3
174
175      AMD nomenclature for CMT systems::
176
177	[node 0] -> [Compute Unit 0] -> [Compute Unit Core 0] -> Linux CPU 0
178				     -> [Compute Unit Core 1] -> Linux CPU 1
179		 -> [Compute Unit 1] -> [Compute Unit Core 0] -> Linux CPU 2
180				     -> [Compute Unit Core 1] -> Linux CPU 3
181
1824) Dual Package, Dual Core
183
184   a) One thread per core::
185
186	[package 0] -> [core 0] -> [thread 0] -> Linux CPU 0
187		    -> [core 1] -> [thread 0] -> Linux CPU 1
188
189	[package 1] -> [core 0] -> [thread 0] -> Linux CPU 2
190		    -> [core 1] -> [thread 0] -> Linux CPU 3
191
192   b) Two threads per core::
193
194	[package 0] -> [core 0] -> [thread 0] -> Linux CPU 0
195				-> [thread 1] -> Linux CPU 1
196		    -> [core 1] -> [thread 0] -> Linux CPU 2
197				-> [thread 1] -> Linux CPU 3
198
199	[package 1] -> [core 0] -> [thread 0] -> Linux CPU 4
200				-> [thread 1] -> Linux CPU 5
201		    -> [core 1] -> [thread 0] -> Linux CPU 6
202				-> [thread 1] -> Linux CPU 7
203
204      Alternative enumeration::
205
206	[package 0] -> [core 0] -> [thread 0] -> Linux CPU 0
207				-> [thread 1] -> Linux CPU 4
208		    -> [core 1] -> [thread 0] -> Linux CPU 1
209				-> [thread 1] -> Linux CPU 5
210
211	[package 1] -> [core 0] -> [thread 0] -> Linux CPU 2
212				-> [thread 1] -> Linux CPU 6
213		    -> [core 1] -> [thread 0] -> Linux CPU 3
214				-> [thread 1] -> Linux CPU 7
215
216      AMD nomenclature for CMT systems::
217
218	[node 0] -> [Compute Unit 0] -> [Compute Unit Core 0] -> Linux CPU 0
219				     -> [Compute Unit Core 1] -> Linux CPU 1
220		 -> [Compute Unit 1] -> [Compute Unit Core 0] -> Linux CPU 2
221				     -> [Compute Unit Core 1] -> Linux CPU 3
222
223	[node 1] -> [Compute Unit 0] -> [Compute Unit Core 0] -> Linux CPU 4
224				     -> [Compute Unit Core 1] -> Linux CPU 5
225		 -> [Compute Unit 1] -> [Compute Unit Core 0] -> Linux CPU 6
226				     -> [Compute Unit Core 1] -> Linux CPU 7
227