Re: [PATCH v11 8/8] perf: ARM DynamIQ Shared Unit PMU support

From: Saravana Kannan
Date: Thu Feb 22 2018 - 15:38:48 EST


On 02/22/2018 03:33 AM, Mark Rutland wrote:
On Wed, Feb 21, 2018 at 06:32:46PM -0800, Saravana Kannan wrote:
On 01/02/2018 03:25 AM, Suzuki K Poulose wrote:
+static int dsu_pmu_event_init(struct perf_event *event)
+{
+ struct dsu_pmu *dsu_pmu = to_dsu_pmu(event->pmu);
+
+ if (event->attr.type != event->pmu->type)
+ return -ENOENT;

You are checking if the caller set the attr.type "correctly".

This is necessary for the case where perf_init_event() falls back to
iterating over the list of PMUs, if event->attr.type wasn't found in the
idr.

Without this, we'd erroneously check events intended for other PMUs.
So this is correct, and necessary.

Right, I'm aware of this. Which is why I also mentioned below that we can't just blindly delete this.

+static int dsu_pmu_device_probe(struct platform_device *pdev)

+ rc = perf_pmu_register(&dsu_pmu->pmu, name, -1);

You are passing in -1 here. Which means the event type is assigned by the
perf framework. perf framework uses idr_alloc(&pmu_idr, ...) to get the id.
So the id assigned is going to depend on the probe order among the different
PMU drivers in the board/platform. So, this seems pretty random.

The dynamic IDs are supposed to by looked up by name.

Each PMU has a folder: /sys/bus/event_source/devices/$PMU

... with /sys/bus/event_source/devices/$PMU/type giving the type.

How is the caller supposed to know what to set the "type" to?

The perf tools understand this already. If you do:

perf stat -e $PMU/config=0xf00/

... they will look up the type for that PMU and use it automatically.


Ah, thanks! This finally explains how this is supposed to work from userspace.

You also can't just delete the check in dsu_pmu_event_init() because the
event numbers you expose overlap with the per-CPU event numbers.

The type check is necessary and cannot be deleted. It provides a
namespace for the event IDs.

Right. Which is my point too.

I'm not exactly sure if we can add entries to perf_type_id. If that's
allowed maybe we need to add something line PERF_TYPE_DSU and use that?

Or if that's not allowed then would it be better to offset the DSU PMU
events by some number (say 0x1000) and then delete the event type check or
pass PERF_TYPE_RAW to perf_pmu_register()?

As above, neither of these should be necessary.


For the userspace interface. How about the kernel interface though?
perf_event_create_kernel_counter() takes attr.type as an input. But there's no way to look up the DSU PMU's "type".

Thanks,
Saravana

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