Re: [PATCH V2 03/11] cxl/mem: Implement Clear Event Records command

From: Dan Williams
Date: Fri Dec 02 2022 - 14:27:20 EST


Steven Rostedt wrote:
> On Thu, 1 Dec 2022 18:29:20 -0800
> Dan Williams <dan.j.williams@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> > > static void cxl_mem_get_records_log(struct cxl_dev_state *cxlds,
> > > enum cxl_event_log_type type)
> > > {
> > > @@ -732,13 +769,22 @@ static void cxl_mem_get_records_log(struct cxl_dev_state *cxlds,
> > > }
> > >
> > > nr_rec = le16_to_cpu(payload->record_count);
> > > - if (trace_cxl_generic_event_enabled()) {
> > > + if (nr_rec > 0) {
> > > int i;
> > >
> > > - for (i = 0; i < nr_rec; i++)
> > > - trace_cxl_generic_event(dev_name(cxlds->dev),
> > > - type,
> > > - &payload->records[i]);
> > > + if (trace_cxl_generic_event_enabled()) {
> >
> > Again, trace_cxl_generic_event_enabled() injects some awkward
> > formatting here to micro-optimize looping. Any performance benefit this
> > code might offer is likely offset by the extra human effort to read it.
>
> This is commonly used throughout the kernel, and highly suggested for use to
> encapsulate any work being done only for tracing, when tracing is disabled.
> It uses static_braches/jump_labels which makes the loop into a 'nop' when
> tracing is off. That is, there is zero overhead for the for loop below (and
> there's not even a branch to skip it!)
>
> But sure, if you really don't care as it's not a fast path, then keep it
> out. I like people to keep the habit of doing this, because otherwise it
> tends to creep into the fast paths.

Duly noted. It makes a lot of sense when you are tracing in a fast path
to skip any and all preamble code. In this case we are doing it after
doing a whole series of uncached PCI mmio reads with all the stalling
and serialization that implies.

Speaking of which, this probably wants a cond_resched() after each loop
iteration.

I'll note it is also a tracepoint that is likely to be enabled most of
the time in production.