[PATCH v4 4/9] libperf: Add libperf_evsel__mmap()

Jiri Olsa jolsa at redhat.com
Wed Oct 21 07:24:30 EDT 2020


On Tue, Oct 20, 2020 at 12:11:47PM -0500, Rob Herring wrote:

SNIP

> > > > >
> > > > > The mmapped read will actually fail and then we fallback here. My main
> > > > > concern though is adding more overhead on a feature that's meant to be
> > > > > low overhead (granted, it's not much). Maybe we could add checks on
> > > > > the mmap that we've opened the event with pid == 0 and cpu == -1 (so
> > > > > only 1 FD)?
> > > >
> > > > but then you limit this just for single fd.. having mmap as xyarray
> > > > would not be that bad and perf_evsel__mmap will call perf_mmap__mmap
> > > > for each defined cpu/thread .. so it depends on user how fast this
> > > > will be - how many maps needs to be created/mmaped
> > >
> > > Given userspace access fails for anything other than the calling
> > > thread and all cpus, how would more than 1 mmap be useful here?
> >
> > I'm not sure what you mean by fail in here.. you need mmap for each
> > event fd you want to read from
> 
> Yes, but that's one mmap per event (evsel) which is different than per
> cpu/thread.

right, and you need mmap per fd IIUC

> 
> > in the example below we read stats from all cpus via perf_evsel__read,
> > if we insert this call after perf_evsel__open:
> >
> >   perf_evsel__mmap(cpus, NULL);
> >
> > that maps page for each event, then perf_evsel__read
> > could go through the fast code, no?
> 
> No, because we're not self-monitoring (pid == 0 and cpu == -1). With
> the following change:
> 
> diff --git a/tools/lib/perf/tests/test-evsel.c
> b/tools/lib/perf/tests/test-evsel.c
> index eeca8203d73d..1fca9c121f7c 100644
> --- a/tools/lib/perf/tests/test-evsel.c
> +++ b/tools/lib/perf/tests/test-evsel.c
> @@ -17,6 +17,7 @@ static int test_stat_cpu(void)
>  {
>         struct perf_cpu_map *cpus;
>         struct perf_evsel *evsel;
> +       struct perf_event_mmap_page *pc;
>         struct perf_event_attr attr = {
>                 .type   = PERF_TYPE_SOFTWARE,
>                 .config = PERF_COUNT_SW_CPU_CLOCK,
> @@ -32,6 +33,15 @@ static int test_stat_cpu(void)
>         err = perf_evsel__open(evsel, cpus, NULL);
>         __T("failed to open evsel", err == 0);
> 
> +       pc = perf_evsel__mmap(evsel, 0);
> +       __T("failed to mmap evsel", pc);
> +
> +#if defined(__i386__) || defined(__x86_64__) || defined(__aarch64__)
> +       __T("userspace counter access not supported", pc->cap_user_rdpmc);
> +       __T("userspace counter access not enabled", pc->index);
> +       __T("userspace counter width not set", pc->pmc_width >= 32);
> +#endif

I'll need to check, I'm surprised this would depend on the way
you open the event

jirka

> +
>         perf_cpu_map__for_each_cpu(cpu, tmp, cpus) {
>                 struct perf_counts_values counts = { .val = 0 };
> 
> I get:
> 
> - running test-evsel.c...FAILED test-evsel.c:40 userspace counter
> access not supported
> 
> If I set it to pid==0, userspace counter access is also disabled.
> 
> Maybe there is some use for mmap beyond fast path read for
> self-monitoring or what evlist mmap does, but I don't know what that
> would be.
> 
> Note that we could get rid of the mmap API and just do the mmap behind
> the scenes whenever we get the magic setup that works. The main
> downside with that is you can't check if the fast path is enabled or
> not (though we could have a perf_evsel__is_fast_read(evsel, cpu,
> thread) instead).
> 
> Rob
> 




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