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authorEduardo Habkost <ehabkost@redhat.com>2017-06-05 12:19:27 -0300
committerEduardo Habkost <ehabkost@redhat.com>2017-06-05 14:59:08 -0300
commit1f43571604da85c62f25f3ba6d275b1b5ea76ca2 (patch)
treefb580aa4c2a840f090b6be9857e1b60d401bda13 /tests
parentcb8b8ef4578dc17c350fd4b27700a9f178e2dad0 (diff)
pc: Use "min-[x]level" on compat_props
Since the automatic cpuid-level code was introduced in commit c39c0edf9bb3b968ba95484465a50c7b19f4aa3a ("target-i386: Automatically set level/xlevel/xlevel2 when needed"), the CPU model tables just define the default CPUID level code (set using "min-level"). Setting "[x]level" forces CPUID level to a specific value and disable the automatic-level logic. But the PC compat code was not updated and the existing "[x]level" compat properties broke compatibility for people using features that triggered the auto-level code. To keep previous behavior, we should set "min-[x]level" instead of "[x]level" on compat_props. This was not a problem for most cases, because old machine-types don't have full-cpuid-auto-level enabled. The only common use case it broke was the CPUID[7] auto-level code, that was already enabled since the first CPUID[7] feature was introduced (in QEMU 1.4.0). This causes the regression reported at: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1454641 Change the PC compat code to use "min-[x]level" instead of "[x]level" on compat_props, and add new test cases to ensure we don't break this again. Reported-by: "Guo, Zhiyi" <zhguo@redhat.com> Fixes: c39c0edf9bb ("target-i386: Automatically set level/xlevel/xlevel2 when needed") Cc: qemu-stable@nongnu.org Acked-by: Michael S. Tsirkin <mst@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Eduardo Habkost <ehabkost@redhat.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'tests')
-rw-r--r--tests/test-x86-cpuid-compat.c38
1 files changed, 38 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/tests/test-x86-cpuid-compat.c b/tests/test-x86-cpuid-compat.c
index 6c71e46391..4166ce54b7 100644
--- a/tests/test-x86-cpuid-compat.c
+++ b/tests/test-x86-cpuid-compat.c
@@ -313,6 +313,44 @@ int main(int argc, char **argv)
add_cpuid_test("x86/cpuid/auto-xlevel2/pc-2.7",
"-machine pc-i440fx-2.7 -cpu 486,+xstore",
"xlevel2", 0);
+ /*
+ * QEMU 1.4.0 had auto-level enabled for CPUID[7], already,
+ * and the compat code that sets default level shouldn't
+ * disable the auto-level=7 code:
+ */
+ add_cpuid_test("x86/cpuid/auto-level7/pc-i440fx-1.4/off",
+ "-machine pc-i440fx-1.4 -cpu Nehalem",
+ "level", 2);
+ add_cpuid_test("x86/cpuid/auto-level7/pc-i440fx-1.5/on",
+ "-machine pc-i440fx-1.4 -cpu Nehalem,+smap",
+ "level", 7);
+ add_cpuid_test("x86/cpuid/auto-level7/pc-i440fx-2.3/off",
+ "-machine pc-i440fx-2.3 -cpu Penryn",
+ "level", 4);
+ add_cpuid_test("x86/cpuid/auto-level7/pc-i440fx-2.3/on",
+ "-machine pc-i440fx-2.3 -cpu Penryn,+erms",
+ "level", 7);
+ add_cpuid_test("x86/cpuid/auto-level7/pc-i440fx-2.9/off",
+ "-machine pc-i440fx-2.9 -cpu Conroe",
+ "level", 10);
+ add_cpuid_test("x86/cpuid/auto-level7/pc-i440fx-2.9/on",
+ "-machine pc-i440fx-2.9 -cpu Conroe,+erms",
+ "level", 10);
+
+ /*
+ * xlevel doesn't have any feature that triggers auto-level
+ * code on old machine-types. Just check that the compat code
+ * is working correctly:
+ */
+ add_cpuid_test("x86/cpuid/xlevel-compat/pc-i440fx-2.3",
+ "-machine pc-i440fx-2.3 -cpu SandyBridge",
+ "xlevel", 0x8000000a);
+ add_cpuid_test("x86/cpuid/xlevel-compat/pc-i440fx-2.4/npt-off",
+ "-machine pc-i440fx-2.4 -cpu SandyBridge,",
+ "xlevel", 0x80000008);
+ add_cpuid_test("x86/cpuid/xlevel-compat/pc-i440fx-2.4/npt-on",
+ "-machine pc-i440fx-2.4 -cpu SandyBridge,+npt",
+ "xlevel", 0x80000008);
/* Test feature parsing */
add_feature_test("x86/cpuid/features/plus",