[RFC PATCH v9 5/7] perf: cavium: Support memory controller PMU counters
Jan Glauber
jan.glauber at caviumnetworks.com
Thu Aug 31 04:35:08 PDT 2017
On Wed, Aug 30, 2017 at 11:03:00AM +0100, Suzuki K Poulose wrote:
> On 29/08/17 14:12, Jan Glauber wrote:
> >Add support for the PMU counters on Cavium SOC memory controllers.
> >
> >This patch also adds generic functions to allow supporting more
> >devices with PMU counters.
> >
> >Properties of the LMC PMU counters:
> >- not stoppable
> >- fixed purpose
> >- read-only
> >- one PCI device per memory controller
> >
> >Signed-off-by: Jan Glauber <jglauber at cavium.com>
>
> Jan,
>
> Some minor comments below.
>
> >+static void cvm_pmu_del(struct perf_event *event, int flags)
> >+{
> >+ struct cvm_pmu_dev *pmu_dev = to_pmu_dev(event->pmu);
> >+ struct hw_perf_event *hwc = &event->hw;
> >+ int i;
> >+
> >+ event->pmu->stop(event, PERF_EF_UPDATE);
> >+
> >+ /*
> >+ * For programmable counters we need to check where we installed it.
> >+ * To keep this function generic always test the more complicated
> >+ * case (free running counters won't need the loop).
> >+ */
> >+ for (i = 0; i < pmu_dev->num_counters; i++)
> >+ if (cmpxchg(&pmu_dev->events[i], event, NULL) == event)
> >+ break;
>
> Does this mean, it is the only way to map any given event (for programmable counters)
> to a hardware counter ? What do we store in hwc->idx ? We have 2 additional
> struct hw_perf_event_extra fields. We should be able to use one field to map it
> back to the counter, isn't it ?
Hmm, I might be able to use hwc-idx directly instead of the loop, will
check that.
> >+
> >+ perf_event_update_userpage(event);
> >+ hwc->idx = -1;
> >+}
> >+
>
> ...
>
> >+/* LMC events */
> >+#define LMC_EVENT_IFB_CNT 0x1d0
> >+#define LMC_EVENT_OPS_CNT 0x1d8
> >+#define LMC_EVENT_DCLK_CNT 0x1e0
> >+#define LMC_EVENT_BANK_CONFLICT1 0x360
> >+#define LMC_EVENT_BANK_CONFLICT2 0x368
> >+
> >+#define CVM_PMU_LMC_EVENT_ATTR(_name, _id) \
> >+ &((struct perf_pmu_events_attr[]) { \
> >+ { \
> >+ __ATTR(_name, S_IRUGO, cvm_pmu_event_sysfs_show, NULL), \
> >+ _id, \
> >+ "lmc_event=" __stringify(_id), \
> >+ } \
> >+ })[0].attr.attr
> >+
> >+/* map counter numbers to register offsets */
> >+static int lmc_events[] = {
> >+ LMC_EVENT_IFB_CNT,
> >+ LMC_EVENT_OPS_CNT,
> >+ LMC_EVENT_DCLK_CNT,
> >+ LMC_EVENT_BANK_CONFLICT1,
> >+ LMC_EVENT_BANK_CONFLICT2,
> >+};
> >+
> >+static int cvm_pmu_lmc_add(struct perf_event *event, int flags)
> >+{
> >+ struct hw_perf_event *hwc = &event->hw;
> >+
> >+ return cvm_pmu_add(event, flags, LMC_CONFIG_OFFSET,
> >+ lmc_events[hwc->config]);
> >+}
> >+
>
> Is there any reason why we can't use the LMC event code directly
> here, avoiding the mapping altogether ?
I wanted to avoid exposing the raw numbers (0x1d0 - 0x368) here.
thanks,
Jan
> >+PMU_FORMAT_ATTR(lmc_event, "config:0-2");
> >+
> >+static struct attribute *cvm_pmu_lmc_format_attr[] = {
> >+ &format_attr_lmc_event.attr,
> >+ NULL,
> >+};
> >+
> >+static struct attribute_group cvm_pmu_lmc_format_group = {
> >+ .name = "format",
> >+ .attrs = cvm_pmu_lmc_format_attr,
> >+};
> >+
> >+static struct attribute *cvm_pmu_lmc_events_attr[] = {
> >+ CVM_PMU_LMC_EVENT_ATTR(ifb_cnt, 0),
> >+ CVM_PMU_LMC_EVENT_ATTR(ops_cnt, 1),
> >+ CVM_PMU_LMC_EVENT_ATTR(dclk_cnt, 2),
> >+ CVM_PMU_LMC_EVENT_ATTR(bank_conflict1, 3),
> >+ CVM_PMU_LMC_EVENT_ATTR(bank_conflict2, 4),
> >+ NULL,
> >+};
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