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Chapter 56. Kernel
Cache information is missing in sysfs
if firmware does not support ACPI PPTT
The kernel-alt package has been updated to use the Advanced Configuration and Power Interface Processor Properties Topology Table (ACPI PPTT) to populate CPU topology including the CPU's cache information. Consequently, on systems whose firmware does not support ACPI PPTT, the
/sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cache
file does not contain the cache information. To work around this problem, check for updated firmware that includes ACPI PPTT support with your hardware vendor. (BZ#1615370)
PCI-passthrough of devices connected to PCIe slots is not possible with default settings of HPE ProLiant Gen8 and Gen9
Default settings of HPE ProLiant Gen8 and Gen9 systems disallow use of PCI-passthrough for devices connected to PCIe slots. Consequently, any attempt to pass through such devices fails with the following message in the kernel log:
Device is ineligible for IOMMU domain attach due to platform RMRR requirement. Contact your platform vendor.
To work around this problem:
- In case of HPE ProLiant Gen8, reconfigure mentioned system settings with the
conrep
tool provided by HPE. - In case of HPE ProLiant Gen9, update system firmware or NICs firmware depending on type of used NICs.
For more details about the workaround, see https://support.hpe.com/hpsc/doc/public/display?docId=emr_na-c04781229. (BZ#1615210)
Attaching a non-RoCE device to RXE driver no longer causes a kernel to panic
When a user created a Soft RDMA Over Converged Ethernet (Soft RoCE) interface and attached a non-RoCE device, certain issues were observed in the RXE driver. As a consequence, a kernel panicked when rebooting or shutting down a host. With this update, disabling the Soft RoCE interface before rebooting or shutting down a host fixes the issue. As a result, the host no longer panics in the described scenario. (BZ#1520302)
Enabling the BCC
packages for the 64-bit AMD and Intel architectures only
The BPF Compiler Collection (BCC) library and the
pcp-pmda-bcc
plugins use the bpf()
system call, which is enabled only on the 64-bit AMD and Intel CPU architectures. As a result, Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 only supports BCC
and pcp-pmda-bcc
for the 64-bit AMD and Intel CPU architectures. (BZ#1633185)
Branch prediction of ternary operators no longer causes a system panic
Previously, the branch prediction of ternary operators caused that the compiler incorrectly called the
blk_queue_nonrot()
function before checking the mddev->queue
structure. As a consequence, the system panicked. With this update, checking mddev->queue
and then calling blk_queue_nonrot()
prevents the bug from appearing. As a result, the system no longer panics in the described scenario. (BZ#1627563)
RAID1 write-behind
causes a kernel panic
Write-behind mode in the Redundant Array of Independent Disks Mode 1 (RAID1) virtualization technology uses the upper layer bio structures, which are freed immediately after the bio structures written to bottom layer disks come back. As a consequence, a kernel panic is triggered and the
write-behind
function cannot be used. (BZ#1632575)
The i40iw
module does not load automatically on boot
Some i40e NICs do not support iWarp and the
i40iw
module does not fully support suspend and resume operations. Consequently, the i40iw
module is not automatically loaded by default to ensure suspend and resume operations work properly. To work around this problem, edit the /lib/udev/rules.d/90-rdma-hw-modules.rules
file to enable automated load of i40iw
.
Also note that if there is another RDMA device installed with an i40e device on the same machine, the non-i40e RDMA device triggers the
rdma
service, which loads all enabled RDMA stack modules, including the i40iw
module. (BZ#1622413)