From 2c3c1048746a4622d8c89a29670120dc8fab93c4 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Daniel Baumann Date: Sun, 7 Apr 2024 20:49:45 +0200 Subject: Adding upstream version 6.1.76. Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann --- Documentation/driver-api/edac.rst | 178 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 178 insertions(+) create mode 100644 Documentation/driver-api/edac.rst (limited to 'Documentation/driver-api/edac.rst') diff --git a/Documentation/driver-api/edac.rst b/Documentation/driver-api/edac.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000..b8c742aa0 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/driver-api/edac.rst @@ -0,0 +1,178 @@ +Error Detection And Correction (EDAC) Devices +============================================= + +Main Concepts used at the EDAC subsystem +---------------------------------------- + +There are several things to be aware of that aren't at all obvious, like +*sockets, *socket sets*, *banks*, *rows*, *chip-select rows*, *channels*, +etc... + +These are some of the many terms that are thrown about that don't always +mean what people think they mean (Inconceivable!). In the interest of +creating a common ground for discussion, terms and their definitions +will be established. + +* Memory devices + +The individual DRAM chips on a memory stick. These devices commonly +output 4 and 8 bits each (x4, x8). Grouping several of these in parallel +provides the number of bits that the memory controller expects: +typically 72 bits, in order to provide 64 bits + 8 bits of ECC data. + +* Memory Stick + +A printed circuit board that aggregates multiple memory devices in +parallel. In general, this is the Field Replaceable Unit (FRU) which +gets replaced, in the case of excessive errors. Most often it is also +called DIMM (Dual Inline Memory Module). + +* Memory Socket + +A physical connector on the motherboard that accepts a single memory +stick. Also called as "slot" on several datasheets. + +* Channel + +A memory controller channel, responsible to communicate with a group of +DIMMs. Each channel has its own independent control (command) and data +bus, and can be used independently or grouped with other channels. + +* Branch + +It is typically the highest hierarchy on a Fully-Buffered DIMM memory +controller. Typically, it contains two channels. Two channels at the +same branch can be used in single mode or in lockstep mode. When +lockstep is enabled, the cacheline is doubled, but it generally brings +some performance penalty. Also, it is generally not possible to point to +just one memory stick when an error occurs, as the error correction code +is calculated using two DIMMs instead of one. Due to that, it is capable +of correcting more errors than on single mode. + +* Single-channel + +The data accessed by the memory controller is contained into one dimm +only. E. g. if the data is 64 bits-wide, the data flows to the CPU using +one 64 bits parallel access. Typically used with SDR, DDR, DDR2 and DDR3 +memories. FB-DIMM and RAMBUS use a different concept for channel, so +this concept doesn't apply there. + +* Double-channel + +The data size accessed by the memory controller is interlaced into two +dimms, accessed at the same time. E. g. if the DIMM is 64 bits-wide (72 +bits with ECC), the data flows to the CPU using a 128 bits parallel +access. + +* Chip-select row + +This is the name of the DRAM signal used to select the DRAM ranks to be +accessed. Common chip-select rows for single channel are 64 bits, for +dual channel 128 bits. It may not be visible by the memory controller, +as some DIMM types have a memory buffer that can hide direct access to +it from the Memory Controller. + +* Single-Ranked stick + +A Single-ranked stick has 1 chip-select row of memory. Motherboards +commonly drive two chip-select pins to a memory stick. A single-ranked +stick, will occupy only one of those rows. The other will be unused. + +.. _doubleranked: + +* Double-Ranked stick + +A double-ranked stick has two chip-select rows which access different +sets of memory devices. The two rows cannot be accessed concurrently. + +* Double-sided stick + +**DEPRECATED TERM**, see :ref:`Double-Ranked stick `. + +A double-sided stick has two chip-select rows which access different sets +of memory devices. The two rows cannot be accessed concurrently. +"Double-sided" is irrespective of the memory devices being mounted on +both sides of the memory stick. + +* Socket set + +All of the memory sticks that are required for a single memory access or +all of the memory sticks spanned by a chip-select row. A single socket +set has two chip-select rows and if double-sided sticks are used these +will occupy those chip-select rows. + +* Bank + +This term is avoided because it is unclear when needing to distinguish +between chip-select rows and socket sets. + + +Memory Controllers +------------------ + +Most of the EDAC core is focused on doing Memory Controller error detection. +The :c:func:`edac_mc_alloc`. It uses internally the struct ``mem_ctl_info`` +to describe the memory controllers, with is an opaque struct for the EDAC +drivers. Only the EDAC core is allowed to touch it. + +.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/edac.h + +.. kernel-doc:: drivers/edac/edac_mc.h + +PCI Controllers +--------------- + +The EDAC subsystem provides a mechanism to handle PCI controllers by calling +the :c:func:`edac_pci_alloc_ctl_info`. It will use the struct +:c:type:`edac_pci_ctl_info` to describe the PCI controllers. + +.. kernel-doc:: drivers/edac/edac_pci.h + +EDAC Blocks +----------- + +The EDAC subsystem also provides a generic mechanism to report errors on +other parts of the hardware via :c:func:`edac_device_alloc_ctl_info` function. + +The structures :c:type:`edac_dev_sysfs_block_attribute`, +:c:type:`edac_device_block`, :c:type:`edac_device_instance` and +:c:type:`edac_device_ctl_info` provide a generic or abstract 'edac_device' +representation at sysfs. + +This set of structures and the code that implements the APIs for the same, provide for registering EDAC type devices which are NOT standard memory or +PCI, like: + +- CPU caches (L1 and L2) +- DMA engines +- Core CPU switches +- Fabric switch units +- PCIe interface controllers +- other EDAC/ECC type devices that can be monitored for + errors, etc. + +It allows for a 2 level set of hierarchy. + +For example, a cache could be composed of L1, L2 and L3 levels of cache. +Each CPU core would have its own L1 cache, while sharing L2 and maybe L3 +caches. On such case, those can be represented via the following sysfs +nodes:: + + /sys/devices/system/edac/.. + + pci/ + mc/ + cpu/cpu0/.. + /L1-cache/ce_count + /ue_count + /L2-cache/ce_count + /ue_count + cpu/cpu1/.. + /L1-cache/ce_count + /ue_count + /L2-cache/ce_count + /ue_count + ... + + the L1 and L2 directories would be "edac_device_block's" + +.. kernel-doc:: drivers/edac/edac_device.h -- cgit v1.2.3