Re: [PATCH] ARM: dts: exynos: add CCI-400 PMU nodes support to Exynos542x SoCs

From: Willy Wolff
Date: Sat Apr 20 2019 - 02:51:09 EST


Indeed, many thanks Robin.

Using this, values sound better.
export OMP_NUM_THREADS=2
sudo --preserve-env ./perf stat -a \
-e armv7_cortex_a7/config=0x11,name=a7_cycles/ \
-e armv7_cortex_a15/config=0x11,name=a15_cycles/ \
-e armv7_cortex_a7/config=0x19,name=a7_bus/ \
-e armv7_cortex_a15/config=0x19,name=a15_bus/ \
-e CCI_400/config=0xff,name=cci400_cycles/ \
-e CCI_400/config=0x0,source=4,name=cci400_si_rrq_hs_any_s4/ \
-e CCI_400/config=0xc,source=4,name=cci400_si_wrq_hs_any_s4/ \
-e CCI_400/config=0x0,source=3,name=cci400_si_rrq_hs_any_s3/ \
-e CCI_400/config=0xc,source=3,name=cci400_si_wrq_hs_any_s3/ \
taskset -c 0,4 /home/user/EnergyManager/temperature_bench_install/bin/cg.x.A 1

[..]
Performance counter stats for 'system wide':

6,201,513,834 a7_cycles
2,781,009,706 a15_cycles
64,200,721 a7_bus
60,237,019 a15_bus
1,158,303,323 cci400_cycles
11,390,649 cci400_si_rrq_hs_any_s4
1,253,383 cci400_si_wrq_hs_any_s4
13,379,256 cci400_si_rrq_hs_any_s3
13,200,717 cci400_si_wrq_hs_any_s3

3.685087167 seconds time elapsed


Do you think that I should write a v2 with a better cover letter that shows
how to access this? By the way, I see that you contribute to that driver. I
haven't seen anything about this source=, do you think that it should be
documented somewhere?

Also, 0 and 4 on the interrupts represent GIC_SPI and IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH,
I will do a v2 for this. Don't you think that the doc at
Documentation/devicetree/bindings/arm/cci.txt should use this too?

Willy

On Fri, Apr 19, 2019 at 10:18:02PM +0100, Robin Murphy wrote:
> On 2019-04-19 6:53 pm, Willy Wolff wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > This patch can be dropped, as it needs more work.
> >
> > In fact, the interrupts seems to be wrong. The interrupts suggested by
> > Anand Moon gave the same following results.
> >
> > export CCI_DEV=CCI_400
> > export OMP_NUM_THREADS=2
> > sudo --preserve-env ./perf stat -a \
> > -e armv7_cortex_a7/config=0x11,name=a7_cycles/ \
> > -e armv7_cortex_a15/config=0x11,name=a15_cycles/ \
> > -e armv7_cortex_a7/config=0x19,name=a7_bus/ \
> > -e armv7_cortex_a15/config=0x19,name=a15_bus/ \
> > -e ${CCI_DEV}/config=0xff,name=cci400_cycles/ \
> > -e ${CCI_DEV}/config=0x0,name=cci400_si_rrq_hs_any/ \
> > -e ${CCI_DEV}/config=0xc,name=cci400_si_wrq_hs_any/ \
>
> From the look of those configs, you'll be counting events on slave interface
> 0, which may not even have anything connected anyway. The CPU clusters on a
> CCI-400 will be on slave interfaces 3 and 4, so try something like '-e
> CCI_400/cci400_si_rrq_hs_any,source=4/'.
>
> The interrupts only matter for counter overflow, so confirming those could
> be done by picking a sufficiently frequent event, counting for long enough
> to capture slightly more than 2^32 of those, then seeing whether the
> overflow accumulates correctly or the count appears to go backwards (and/or
> checking what fired in /proc/interrupts). I believe the cycle counter is
> also 32-bit on CCI, so that should be relatively easy; for the other
> counters beyond the first one it should be feasible to schedule additional
> dummy events before the event of interest in order to trick
> pmu_get_event_idx() into allocating the desired counter for it.
>
> Robin.