[PATCH v1 0/4] Prefer sysfs/JSON events also when no PMU is provided

Atish Kumar Patra atishp at rivosinc.com
Fri Nov 8 10:37:54 PST 2024


On Fri, Nov 8, 2024 at 4:16 AM James Clark <james.clark at linaro.org> wrote:
>
>
>
> On 07/11/2024 18:51, Ian Rogers wrote:
> > On Sat, Oct 26, 2024 at 5:18 AM Ian Rogers <irogers at google.com> wrote:
> >>
> >> At the RISC-V summit the topic of avoiding event data being in the
> >> RISC-V PMU kernel driver came up. There is a preference for sysfs/JSON
> >> events being the priority when no PMU is provided so that legacy
> >> events maybe supported via json. Originally Mark Rutland also
> >> expressed at LPC 2023 that doing this would resolve bugs on ARM Apple
> >> M? processors, but James Clark more recently tested this and believes
> >> the driver issues there may not have existed or have been resolved. In
> >> any case, it is inconsistent that with a PMU event names avoid legacy
> >> encodings, but when wildcarding PMUs (ie without a PMU with the event
> >> name) the legacy encodings have priority.
> >>
> >> The patch doing this work was reverted in a v6.10 release candidate
> >> as, even though the patch was posted for weeks and had been on
> >> linux-next for weeks without issue, Linus was in the habit of using
> >> explicit legacy events with unsupported precision options on his
> >> Neoverse-N1. This machine has SLC PMU events for bus and CPU cycles
> >> where ARM decided to call the events bus_cycles and cycles, the latter
> >> being also a legacy event name. ARM haven't renamed the cycles event
> >> to a more consistent cpu_cycles and avoided the problem. With these
> >> changes the problematic event will now be skipped, a large warning
> >> produced, and perf record will continue for the other PMU events. This
> >> solution was proposed by Arnaldo.
> >>
> >> Two minor changes have been added to help with the error message and
> >> to work around issues occurring with "perf stat metrics (shadow stat)
> >> test".
> >>
> >> The patches have only been tested on my x86 non-hybrid laptop.
> >
> > Hi Atish and James,
> >
> > Could I get your tags for this series?
> >

Hi Ian,
Thanks for your patches. It definitely helps to have a clean slate
implementation
for the perf tool. However, I have some open questions about other use cases
that we discussed during the RVI Summit.

> > The patches were originally motivated by wanting to make the behavior
> > of events parsed like "cycles" match that of "cpu/cycles/", the PMU is
> > wildcarded to "cpu" in the first case. This was divergent because of
> > ARM we switched from preferring legacy (type = PERF_TYPE_HARDWARE,
> > config = PERF_COUNT_HW_CPU_CYCLES) to sysfs/json (type=<core PMU's
> > type>, config=<encoding from event>) when a PMU name was given. This
> > aligns with RISC-V wanting to use json encodings to avoid complexity
> > in the PMU driver.
> >
>
> I couldn't find the thread, but I remember fairly recently it was
> mentioned that RISC-V would be supporting the legacy events after all,
> maybe it was a comment from Atish? I'm not sure if that changes the
> requirements for this or not?
>
> I still can't really imagine how tooling would work if every tool has to
> maintain the mappings of basic events like instructions and branches.
> For example all the perf_event_open tests in ltp use the legacy events.
>

No it has not changed. While this series helps to avoid clunky vendor
specific encodings
in the driver for perf tool, I am still unsure how we will manage
other applications
(directly passing legacy events through perf_event_open or
perf_evlist__open) will work.

I have only anecdotal data about folks relying perf legacy events
directly to profile
their application. All of them use mostly cycle/instruction events though.
Are there any users who use other legacy events directly without perf tool ?

If not, we may have only cycle/instruction mapping in the driver and
rely on json for everything else.
The other use case is virtualization. I have been playing with these
patches to find a clean solution to
enable all the use cases. If you have any other ideas, please let me know.

> And wouldn't porting existing software to RISC-V would be an issue if it
> doesn't behave in a similar way to what's there already?
>
> > James, could you show the neoverse with the cmn PMU behavior for perf
> > record of "cycles:pp" due to sensitivities there.
> >
>
> Yep I can check this on Monday.
>
> > Thanks,
> > Ian
> >
>
>
> >
> >
> >
> >> Ian Rogers (4):
> >>    perf evsel: Add pmu_name helper
> >>    perf stat: Fix find_stat for mixed legacy/non-legacy events
> >>    perf record: Skip don't fail for events that don't open
> >>    perf parse-events: Reapply "Prefer sysfs/JSON hardware events over
> >>      legacy"
> >>
> >>   tools/perf/builtin-record.c    | 22 +++++++---
> >>   tools/perf/util/evsel.c        | 10 +++++
> >>   tools/perf/util/evsel.h        |  1 +
> >>   tools/perf/util/parse-events.c | 26 +++++++++---
> >>   tools/perf/util/parse-events.l | 76 +++++++++++++++++-----------------
> >>   tools/perf/util/parse-events.y | 60 ++++++++++++++++++---------
> >>   tools/perf/util/pmus.c         | 20 +++++++--
> >>   tools/perf/util/stat-shadow.c  |  3 +-
> >>   8 files changed, 145 insertions(+), 73 deletions(-)
> >>
> >> --
> >> 2.47.0.163.g1226f6d8fa-goog
> >>



More information about the linux-riscv mailing list