[PATCH RFC 2/3] perf/x86/intel/pt: Add support for pause_resume()

Peter Zijlstra peterz at infradead.org
Wed Nov 29 02:58:36 PST 2023


On Wed, Nov 29, 2023 at 09:53:39AM +0000, James Clark wrote:
> On 23/11/2023 12:18, Adrian Hunter wrote:

> > +static void pt_event_pause_resume(struct perf_event *event)
> > +{
> > +	if (event->aux_paused)
> > +		pt_config_stop(event);
> > +	else if (!event->hw.state)
> > +		pt_config_start(event);
> > +}
> 
> It seems like having a single pause/resume callback rather than separate
> pause and resume ones pushes some of the event state management into the
> individual drivers and would be prone to code duplication and divergent
> behavior.
> 
> Would it be possible to move the conditions from here into the core code
> and call separate functions instead?
> 
> > +
> >  static void pt_event_start(struct perf_event *event, int mode)
> >  {
> >  	struct hw_perf_event *hwc = &event->hw;
> > @@ -1798,6 +1809,7 @@ static __init int pt_init(void)
> >  	pt_pmu.pmu.del			 = pt_event_del;
> >  	pt_pmu.pmu.start		 = pt_event_start;
> >  	pt_pmu.pmu.stop			 = pt_event_stop;
> > +	pt_pmu.pmu.pause_resume		 = pt_event_pause_resume;
> 
> The general idea seems ok to me. Is there a reason to not use the
> existing start() stop() callbacks, rather than adding a new one?
> 
> I assume it's intended to be something like an optimisation where you
> can turn it on and off without having to do the full setup, teardown and
> emit an AUX record because you know the process being traced never gets
> switched out?

So the actual scheduling uses ->add() / ->del(), the ->start() /
->stop() methods are something that can be used after ->add() and before
->del() to 'temporarily' pause things.

Pretty much exactly what is required here I think. We currently use this
for PMI throttling and adaptive frequency stuff, but there is no reason
it could not also be used for this.

As is, we don't track the paused state across ->del() / ->add(), but
perhaps that can be fixed. We can easily add more PERF_EF_ / PERF_HES_
bits to manage things.





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