[PATCH v1 4/6] perf auxtrace: Iterate all AUX events when finish reading

Leo Yan leo.yan at arm.com
Mon Jul 22 13:52:34 PDT 2024


On 7/22/2024 4:59 PM, Adrian Hunter wrote:

[...]

>>>> @@ -670,18 +670,25 @@ static int evlist__enable_event_idx(struct evlist *evlist, struct evsel *evsel,
>>>>   int auxtrace_record__read_finish(struct auxtrace_record *itr, int idx)
>>>>   {
>>>>        struct evsel *evsel;
>>>> +     int ret = -EINVAL;
>>>>
>>>>        if (!itr->evlist || !itr->pmu)
>>>>                return -EINVAL;
>>>>
>>>>        evlist__for_each_entry(itr->evlist, evsel) {
>>>> -             if (evsel->core.attr.type == itr->pmu->type) {
>>>> +             if (evsel__is_aux_event(evsel)) {
>>>
>>> If the type is the same, then there is no need to
>>> change the logic here?
>>
>> No, the type is not same for AUX events. Every event has its own type
>> value, this is likely related to recent refactoring.
>>
>> As a result, 'itr->pmu' only maintains the first registered AUX event,
>> comparing to it the tool will find _only_ one AUX event. This is why here
>> changes to use the evsel__is_aux_event() to detect AUX event.
>>
>>> Otherwise, maybe that should be a separate patch
>>
>> Could you explain what is a separate patch for?
> 
> No need.
> 
>>
>> After this change, the field 'itr->pmu' will be redundant (at least this
>> is the case for Arm SPE). I am preparing a refactoring patches for cleaning up
>> and see if can totally remove the field 'itr->pmu' (if all AUX events
>> have no issue.
> 
> For this function, 'itr->pmu' could be removed in this patch
> since it is not used anymore.

Thanks for confirmation. I will use a separate patch for removing 'itr-pmu'
after it is not used anymore.

>>>>                        if (evsel->disabled)
>>>> -                             return 0;
>>>> -                     return evlist__enable_event_idx(itr->evlist, evsel, idx);
>>>> +                             continue;
>>>> +                     ret = evlist__enable_event_idx(itr->evlist, evsel, idx);
>>>> +                     if (ret >= 0)
>>>
>>> Should this be:
>>>
>>>                          if (ret < 0)
>>
>> Here the logic is to iterate all AUX events, even if an AUX event fails to
>> find the buffer index, it will continue to next AUX event.
>>
>> So it directly bails out for success (as we have found the matched AUX
>> event and enabled it). For the failure cause, it will continue for checking
>> next event - until all events have been checked and no event is matched
>> for buffer index, the failure will be handled at the end of the function.
> 
> Thanks for the explanation. Could probably use a small comment.

Will do.

Thanks,
Leo



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