Re: [PATCH v3 3/5] coresight: add support for debug module

From: Suzuki K Poulose
Date: Wed Mar 22 2017 - 13:20:57 EST


On 22/03/17 16:17, Sudeep Holla wrote:


On 22/03/17 15:45, Mike Leach wrote:
On 22 March 2017 at 14:07, Sudeep Holla <sudeep.holla@xxxxxxx> wrote:


On 22/03/17 12:54, Mike Leach wrote:


On 21 March 2017 at 15:39, Sudeep Holla <sudeep.holla@xxxxxxx
<mailto:sudeep.holla@xxxxxxx>> wrote:

[...]

I disagree with this approach. One of the main usefulness of such
self hosted debug feature is to debug issues around features like
cpuidle. Adding constraints like "cpuidle needs to be disabled" is
not good IMO. There are ways to make it work with cpuidle enabled.
Please explore them. In particular refer H9.2.39 EDPRCR, External
Debug Power/Reset Control Register.

So, "nohlt" option is not an option. I prefer some sysfs option like
Suzuki suggested to enable this feature on demand if power saving in
normal usecase is the concern. Using "nohlt" just disables idle and
doesn't ensure the debug power domain is ON. Using the flag directly
in this driver to enable debug power domain also sounds misuse of
that flag for me.

I think the key issue to remember here is that experience with
external debug shows that CPU Idle means different things to
different SoC designs / power management schemes. (and we are using
external debug in a self hosted way here).


Yes agreed on the point that meaning of "cpuidle" differs on each SoC.

Some designs will power down an entire cluster if all CPUs on the
cluster are powered down - including the parts of the debug
registers that should remain powered in the debug power domain.

Interesting, at-least ETMv4 or some other coresight specification
clearly classify the power domains and the register access. The actual
power domain itself may vary depending on implementation.

Yes - the ETMv4 spec defines what should be in the core / debug power
domains, but there is no architectural requirement for these to be
separate.
Most of power management is "implementation defined", & hw designers
seem to have different criteria than sw engineers wanting to debug
stuff.


Yes I agree, no argument there.

The bits in EDPRCR are not respected in these cases - these designs
do not really support debug over power down in the way that the
CoreSight / Debug designers anticipated. This means that even
checking EDPRSR has the potential to cause a bus hang if the target
register is unpowered. (and if the debug power domain is unpowered
then the PC data is also lost).


Agreed, but can we start supporting the sane designs in sane way first.
We can always add compatible and handle deviations. I agree we may need
to support such deviations but starting with that seems setting a bad
example.


From a pragmatic point of view, we have to support the designs that we
have and are currently using.
Sadly this might include some that do not behave in an ideal way.


We will have to support them. But I don't want that to be defacto
standard. They should be treated as deviations. Though specification
says the behavior is IMPDEF, it does provide standard interface(EDPRCR)
to use and we should have that in the driver IMO.

I'm not saying disabling CPUIdle is right for all cases, or perhaps
many, but it has in the past been useful in specific instances - not
just for external debug,

Yes I know but that's either issue with the firmware or the debugger
and we can work them around in user-space too instead of baking the
solution to kernel.

but to use CoreSight trace etc, were powering
down the a CPU / cluster takes out ETM accesses and breaks stuff.


FYI, I added support in ETMv4 to emulate power-down during active trace
session and so far I have not seen any report on things breaking because
of that register access(may be no one has tested it on other platforms
yet :()

The key is that to use this driver, the user has to be aware of the PM
implications on their specific system - the kernel may not take care
of it all for them - as SCP type power controllers are often external
and may have unique firmware and capabilites.


Sure

Historically CPUIdle disable has been used as a blunt instrument to
handle power management problems in real debug use cases - but it is
one that has been successful. Where there are better methods then I am
all for using these.


Cool, thanks. Lets try out that and see if it helps first before bluntly
advertising CPUIdle disabling and that too in misleading ways like "nohlt"

In these cases, accessing to the debug registers while they are not
powered is a recipe for disaster - so preventing CPUIdle and the
subsequent cluster power down allows investigation on this class of
system - and allowing the CPUs of interest be interrogated without
hanging the crash log process.


Agreed. But my point is that many issues are around cpuidle and some
usecase and just eliminating that use-case sounds bad. For me,
core-sight was most useful to debug issues around cpu power management
and lockups where we can't stop cores but examine these registers.
There are other alternatives for other use-cases IMO.

For your case, removing what you are interested in debugging is
evidently counter productive, so other techniques need to be used to
ensure the CS regs remain alive.
But equally there could be use cases where this might be just fine or
even the only way.


Again not arguing on that. Just saying we can try out if that solves the
issue. As I said there are other ways to disable idle and we can
advertise those instead of such misuse. Also those alternative methods
are runtime and can be used when you need them.


On systems that do behave correctly with respect to debug power
domains, then disabling CPUIdle is unnecessary - these can be
controlled by EDPRCR - perhaps; per the specification it is
"implementation defined" if writing bits to this register have an
effect on the system anyway even if the debug domain is correctly
powered.


We can always do that unconditionally. If implementations don't honor
those bits, it's different. If they hang on accessing something which is
on debug power domain and not on core power domain, then you have much
bigger issue to solve. How can you even trust and make any other
register accesses that are in debug power domain then ?


It is difficult and highly platform dependent. For external debug we
might have per-platform rules built into the debugger on what can and
cannot be done and when, plus on occasion some power management
scripts. Those platforms that get closest to the "standard" CoreSight
power management are easiest to debug.


Absolutely, so just mandating might just solve issue *accidentally*
not *intentionally*. So I don't want it to be advertised in that way
and that becomes defacto.

[...]

I'm not advocating /nohlt above anything else - it's just what is
being discussed here. Furthermore, no one debug technique is ever
going to be appropriate in all circumstances - debug and trace are
always a compromise.


True.

I initially raised the issue of clusters powering down, and
possibility that no CPUIdle might prevent this, to ensure that
awareness is built in to driver / config / help text /documentation
that these are real issues seen in the external debug world.


Point taken. So we could just specify that all necessary power domains
need to be on for proper functionality for this feature and that it's
highly platform specific instead of mixing cpu/cluster idle details here.

The key point is that the caveat in using this driver is that the
power management has to be considered on a platform specific basis
before it is configured; and appropriate actions may be needed for it
to work correctly. Without this then the driver could cause more
issues than it debugs. A user selecting this _must_ be told about
these issues


So given all the possible caveats, I think we :

1) Shouldn't enable the driver by default at runtime even if it is built-in.
2) Should provide mechanisms to turn it on at boot (via kernel commandline)
or anytime later (via sysfs), which kind of puts the responsibility back on
the user : "You know what you are doing".
3) Shouldn't turn the driver on based on "nohlt" which the user could use it for
some other purposes, without explicit intention of turning this driver on).
4) Should document the fact that, on some platforms, the user may have to disable
CPUidle explicitly to get the driver working. But let us not make it the default.
The user with a not so ideal platform could add "nohlt" and get it working.

Suzuki