* not only saved the restores along the way, but we also have the
* FPU ready to be used for the original task.
*
- * 'eager' switching is used on modern CPUs, there we switch the FPU
+ * 'lazy' is deprecated because it's almost never a performance win
+ * and it's much more complicated than 'eager'.
+ *
+ * 'eager' switching is by default on all CPUs, there we switch the FPU
* state during every context switch, regardless of whether the task
* has used FPU instructions in that time slice or not. This is done
* because modern FPU context saving instructions are able to optimize
* to use 'eager' restores, if we detect that a task is using the FPU
* frequently. See the fpu->counter logic in fpu/internal.h for that. ]
*/
-static enum { AUTO, ENABLE, DISABLE } eagerfpu = AUTO;
+static enum { ENABLE, DISABLE } eagerfpu = ENABLE;
/*
* Find supported xfeatures based on cpu features and command-line input.
*/
static void __init fpu__init_parse_early_param(void)
{
- /*
- * No need to check "eagerfpu=auto" again, since it is the
- * initial default.
- */
if (cmdline_find_option_bool(boot_command_line, "eagerfpu=off")) {
eagerfpu = DISABLE;
fpu__clear_eager_fpu_features();
- } else if (cmdline_find_option_bool(boot_command_line, "eagerfpu=on")) {
- eagerfpu = ENABLE;
}
if (cmdline_find_option_bool(boot_command_line, "no387"))