xref: /freebsd/share/man/man4/smp.4 (revision 81ad6265)
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2.\"	Steve Passe <fsmp@FreeBSD.org>.  All rights reserved.
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24.\" $FreeBSD$
25.\"
26.Dd January 4, 2019
27.Dt SMP 4
28.Os
29.Sh NAME
30.Nm SMP
31.Nd description of the FreeBSD Symmetric Multi-Processor kernel
32.Sh SYNOPSIS
33.Cd options SMP
34.Sh DESCRIPTION
35The
36.Nm
37kernel implements symmetric multi-processor support.
38.Pp
39.Nm
40support can be disabled by setting the loader tunable
41.Va kern.smp.disabled
42to 1.
43.Pp
44The number of CPUs detected by the system is available in
45the read-only sysctl variable
46.Va hw.ncpu .
47.Pp
48The number of online threads per CPU core is available in the read-only sysctl
49variable
50.Va kern.smp.threads_per_core .
51The number of physical CPU cores detected by the system is available in the
52read-only sysctl variable
53.Va kern.smp.cores .
54.Pp
55.Fx
56allows specific CPUs on a multi-processor system to be disabled.
57This can be done using the
58.Va hint.lapic.X.disabled
59tunable, where X is the APIC ID of a CPU.
60Setting this tunable to 1 will result in the corresponding CPU being
61disabled.
62.Pp
63.Fx
64supports simultaneous multithreading on x86 and powerpc platforms.
65On x86, the logical CPUs can be disabled by setting the
66.Va machdep.hyperthreading_allowed
67tunable to zero.
68.Pp
69The
70.Xr sched_ule 4
71scheduler implements CPU topology detection and adjusts the scheduling
72algorithms to make better use of modern multi-core CPUs.
73The sysctl variable
74.Va kern.sched.topology_spec
75reflects the detected CPU hardware in a parsable XML format.
76The top level XML tag is <groups>, which encloses one or more <group> tags
77containing data about individual CPU groups.
78A CPU group contains CPUs that are detected to be "close" together, usually
79by being cores in a single multi-core processor.
80Attributes available in a <group> tag are "level", corresponding to the
81nesting level of the CPU group and "cache-level", corresponding to the
82level of CPU caches shared by the CPUs in the group.
83The <group> tag contains the <cpu> and <flags> tags.
84The <cpu> tag describes CPUs in the group.
85Its attributes are "count", corresponding to the number of CPUs in the
86group and "mask", corresponding to the integer binary mask in which
87each bit position set to 1 signifies a CPU belonging to the group.
88The contents (CDATA) of the <cpu> tag is the comma-delimited list
89of CPU indexes (derived from the "mask" attribute).
90The <flags> tag contains special tags (if any) describing the relation
91of the CPUs in the group.
92The possible flags are currently "HTT" and "SMT", corresponding to
93the various implementations of hardware multithreading.
94An example topology_spec output for a system consisting of
95two quad-core processors is:
96.Bd -literal
97<groups>
98  <group level="1" cache-level="0">
99    <cpu count="8" mask="0xff">0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7</cpu>
100    <flags></flags>
101    <children>
102      <group level="2" cache-level="0">
103        <cpu count="4" mask="0xf">0, 1, 2, 3</cpu>
104        <flags></flags>
105      </group>
106      <group level="2" cache-level="0">
107        <cpu count="4" mask="0xf0">4, 5, 6, 7</cpu>
108        <flags></flags>
109      </group>
110    </children>
111  </group>
112</groups>
113.Ed
114.Pp
115This information is used internally by the kernel to schedule related
116tasks on CPUs that are closely grouped together.
117.Sh COMPATIBILITY
118Support for multi-processor systems is present for all Tier-1 and Tier-2
119architectures on
120.Fx .
121Currently, this includes x86, powerpc, mips, arm and arm64.
122Support is enabled using
123.Cd options SMP .
124It is permissible to use the SMP kernel configuration on non-SMP hardware.
125.Sh I386 NOTES
126For i386 systems, the
127.Nm
128kernel supports motherboards that follow the Intel MP specification,
129version 1.4.
130In addition to
131.Cd options SMP ,
132i386 also requires
133.Cd device apic .
134The
135.Xr mptable 1
136command may be used to view the status of multi-processor support.
137.Sh SEE ALSO
138.Xr cpuset 1 ,
139.Xr mptable 1 ,
140.Xr sched_4bsd 4 ,
141.Xr sched_ule 4 ,
142.Xr loader 8 ,
143.Xr sysctl 8 ,
144.Xr condvar 9 ,
145.Xr msleep 9 ,
146.Xr mtx_pool 9 ,
147.Xr mutex 9 ,
148.Xr rwlock 9 ,
149.Xr sema 9 ,
150.Xr sx 9
151.Sh HISTORY
152The
153.Nm
154kernel's early history is not (properly) recorded.
155It was developed
156in a separate CVS branch until April 26, 1997, at which point it was
157merged into 3.0-current.
158By this date 3.0-current had already been
159merged with Lite2 kernel code.
160.Pp
161.Fx 5.0
162introduced support for a host of new synchronization primitives, and
163a move towards fine-grained kernel locking rather than reliance on
164a Giant kernel lock.
165The SMPng Project relied heavily on the support of BSDi, who provided
166reference source code from the fine-grained SMP implementation found
167in
168.Bsx .
169.Pp
170.Fx 5.0
171also introduced support for SMP on the sparc64 architecture.
172.Sh AUTHORS
173.An Steve Passe Aq Mt fsmp@FreeBSD.org
174.Sh CAVEATS
175The
176.Va kern.smp.threads_per_core
177and
178.Va kern.smp.cores
179sysctl variables are provided as a best-effort guess.
180If an architecture or platform adds SMT and
181.Fx
182has not yet implemented detection, the reported values may be inaccurate.
183In this case,
184.Va kern.smp.threads_per_core
185will report
186.Dv 1
187and
188.Va kern.smp.cores
189will report the same value as
190.Va hw.ncpu .
191