[PATCH] arm64: pmuv3: Support v8.1 PMUv3 extension

Jayachandran C jnair at caviumnetworks.com
Mon Apr 24 12:40:09 EDT 2017


On Mon, Apr 24, 2017 at 03:03:48PM +0100, Mark Rutland wrote:
> On Mon, Apr 24, 2017 at 01:39:30PM +0000, Jayachandran C wrote:
> > The v8.1 supplement is quite clear on the field definition:
> >
> > PMUVer, bits [11:8]
> > ....
> > Defined values are:
> >       0000 Performance Monitors extension System registers not implemented.
> >       0001 Performance Monitors extension System registers implemented, PMUv3.
> >       0100 Performance Monitors extension System registers implemented, PMUv3, with a 16-bit
> >            evtCount field, and if EL2 is implemented, the addition of the MDCR_EL2.HPMD bit.
> >       1111 IMPLEMENTATION DEFINED form of performance monitors supported, PMUv3 not
> >            supported.
> >         All other values are reserved.
> >         In ARMv8-A the permitted values are 0b0000, 0b0001 and 0b1111.
> >         In ARMv8.1 the permitted values are 0b0000, 0b0100 and 0b1111.
> >
> > I changed the code to strictly do this. We have to exclude 0xf, since that is not PMUv3.
> > And we cannot predict what the reserved values will represent, so it is best to skip them
> > until they are defined to be PMUv3 compatible.
> 
> My understanding is that ID_AA64DFR0.PMUVer is intended to be covered by
> the usual ID register principles, and thus at least 0x2-0x7 are reserved
> for architected backwards compatible extensions to PMUv3.
> 
> See ARM DDI 0487B.a, D7.1.4, "Principles of the ID scheme for fields in
> ID registers". It is explicitly stated that the scheme applies to
> ID_AA64DFR0.
> 
> Per those rules, we should check >= the minimum PMUv3 implemented value,
> i.e. val >= 1. Due to both 0x0 and 0xF meaning PMUv3 isn't implemented,
> it's not clear if the fields should be treated as if it were signed or
> unsigned, and I'm awaiting clarification on this.

Thanks for the reference. Since 0xf means that there is a PMU (but it is
not PMUv3), this looks like an unsigned ID with a special case.

> Either way, I believe that 0x1-0x7 must all be compatible with baseline
> PMUv3 per the ID scheme principles.

In case you don't get authoritative information on this, can you please
merge a version which does either 'if (pmuver < 1 || pmuver == 0xf)' or
'if (pmuver < 1 || pmuver > 7)' to the patchset?

Thanks,
JC.



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