[PATCH 1/2] drivers/perf: hisi: Add driver for HiSilicon PCIe PMU
Will Deacon
will at kernel.org
Thu Apr 8 14:28:05 BST 2021
Hi John,
On Thu, Apr 08, 2021 at 01:55:02PM +0100, John Garry wrote:
> On 08/04/2021 10:01, Jonathan Cameron wrote:
> > On Wed, 7 Apr 2021 21:40:05 +0100
> > Will Deacon <will at kernel.org> wrote:
> >
> > > On Wed, Apr 07, 2021 at 05:49:02PM +0800, Qi Liu wrote:
> > > > PCIe PMU Root Complex Integrated End Point(RCiEP) device is supported
> > > > to sample bandwidth, latency, buffer occupation etc.
> > > >
> > > > Each PMU RCiEP device monitors multiple root ports, and each RCiEP is
> > > > registered as a pmu in /sys/bus/event_source/devices, so users can
> > > > select target PMU, and use filter to do further sets.
> > > >
> > > > Filtering options contains:
> > > > event - select the event.
> > > > subevent - select the subevent.
> > > > port - select target root ports. Information of root ports
> > > > are shown under sysfs.
> > > > bdf - select requester_id of target EP device.
> > > > trig_len - set trigger condition for starting event statistics.
> > > > trigger_mode - set trigger mode. 0 means starting to statistic when
> > > > bigger than trigger condition, and 1 means smaller.
> > > > thr_len - set threshold for statistics.
> > > > thr_mode - set threshold mode. 0 means count when bigger than
> > > > threshold, and 1 means smaller.
> > > >
> > > > Reviewed-by: Jonathan Cameron <Jonathan.Cameron at huawei.com>
> > >
> > > Do you have a link to this review, please?
> >
> > Internal review, so drop the tag.
> >
> > Jonathan
>
> Hi Will,
>
> Are you implying that you would rather that any review for these drivers is
> done in public on the lists?
Absolutely! If I can see that you and/or Jonathan have given the thing a
good going through, then it's a lot easier to merge the patches. But just
having the tag doesn't help much, as I don't know whether it was a concerted
review effort or a "yeah, this function is about what I thought, cheers"
type of review.
That's not to say internal patch review isn't a useful tool in some
circumstances (e.g. somebody new to the kernel, confidential stuff,
prototyping), but the vast majority of the time I'd say having the review
on the public lists is the best bet.
Will
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