[PATCH] arc: perf: Enable generic "cache-references" and "cache-misses" events
Peter Zijlstra
peterz at infradead.org
Thu Sep 1 01:33:24 PDT 2016
On Wed, Aug 31, 2016 at 12:05:14PM -0700, Vineet Gupta wrote:
> On 08/26/2016 10:31 AM, Vineet Gupta wrote:
> > On 08/25/2016 04:49 AM, Alexey Brodkin wrote:
> >> ...
> >> [PERF_COUNT_ARC_EDTLB] = "edtlb", /* D-TLB Miss */
> >> [PERF_COUNT_ARC_EITLB] = "eitlb", /* I-TLB Miss */
> >> +
> >> + [PERF_COUNT_HW_CACHE_REFERENCES] = "imemrdc", /* Instr: mem read cached */
> >> + [PERF_COUNT_HW_CACHE_MISSES] = "dclm", /* D-cache Load Miss */
> > I think this is duplicating a mistake we already have. I vaguely remember when
> > doing some hackbench profiling last year with range based profiling confined to
> > memset routine and saw that L1-dcache-misses was counting zero. This is because it
> > only counts LD misses while memset only does ST.
> >
> > Performance counter stats for '/sbin/hackbench':
> >
> > 0 L1-dcache-misses
> > 0 L1-dcache-load-misses
> > 1846082 L1-dcache-store-misses
> >
> >
> > @PeterZ do you concur that is wrong and we ought to setup 2 counters to do this
> > correctly ?
>
> Hi Peter / Will,
>
> Can you provide some guidance here. So I looked at what others do -
> ARMV7_PERFCTR_L1_DCACHE_REFILL counts both load and store misses, while ARC has 2
> separate conditions for load or stores. Is there an existing mechanism to "group"
> / "add" them to give a cumulative PERF_COUNT_HW_CACHE_MISSES
Nope. So I would not try and use these generic events. In other news, it
seems like there's finally some progress on the JSON patches:
https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20160831114254.GA9001@krava
Which would make using non-standard events easier.
> - is that what perf event grouping is ?
Again, nope. Perf event groups are single counter (so no implicit
addition) that are co-scheduled on the PMU.
> Quoting from perf wiki @ https://perf.wiki.kernel.org/index.php/Tutorial
>
> "It can be interesting to try and pack events in a way that guarantees that event
> A and B are always measured together. Although the perf_events kernel interface
> provides support for event grouping, the current perf tool does *not*."
That seems out-dated, Jiri added grouping support to perf-tool quite a
while back.
You can do it like:
perf stat -e '{cycles,instructions}'
Which will place the cycles event and the instructions event in a group
and thereby guarantee they're co-scheduled.
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