diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation/trace')
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/trace/coresight/coresight-cpu-debug.rst | 3 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/trace/coresight/coresight-etm4x-reference.rst | 14 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/trace/coresight/coresight-perf.rst | 158 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/trace/hisi-ptt.rst | 298 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/trace/index.rst | 1 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/trace/user_events.rst | 86 |
6 files changed, 531 insertions, 29 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/trace/coresight/coresight-cpu-debug.rst b/Documentation/trace/coresight/coresight-cpu-debug.rst index 993dd294b81b..836b35532667 100644 --- a/Documentation/trace/coresight/coresight-cpu-debug.rst +++ b/Documentation/trace/coresight/coresight-cpu-debug.rst @@ -117,7 +117,8 @@ divide into below cases: Device Tree Bindings -------------------- -See Documentation/devicetree/bindings/arm/coresight-cpu-debug.txt for details. +See Documentation/devicetree/bindings/arm/arm,coresight-cpu-debug.yaml for +details. How to use the module diff --git a/Documentation/trace/coresight/coresight-etm4x-reference.rst b/Documentation/trace/coresight/coresight-etm4x-reference.rst index fb7578fd9372..70e34b8c81c1 100644 --- a/Documentation/trace/coresight/coresight-etm4x-reference.rst +++ b/Documentation/trace/coresight/coresight-etm4x-reference.rst @@ -71,6 +71,20 @@ the ‘TRC’ prefix. ---- +:File: ``ts_source`` (ro) +:Trace Registers: None. +:Notes: + When FEAT_TRF is implemented, value of TRFCR_ELx.TS used for trace session. Otherwise -1 + indicates an unknown time source. Check trcidr0.tssize to see if a global timestamp is + available. + +:Example: + ``$> cat ts_source`` + + ``$> 1`` + +---- + :File: ``addr_idx`` (rw) :Trace Registers: None. :Notes: diff --git a/Documentation/trace/coresight/coresight-perf.rst b/Documentation/trace/coresight/coresight-perf.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..d087aae7d492 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/trace/coresight/coresight-perf.rst @@ -0,0 +1,158 @@ +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 + +================ +CoreSight - Perf +================ + + :Author: Carsten Haitzler <carsten.haitzler@arm.com> + :Date: June 29th, 2022 + +Perf is able to locally access CoreSight trace data and store it to the +output perf data files. This data can then be later decoded to give the +instructions that were traced for debugging or profiling purposes. You +can log such data with a perf record command like:: + + perf record -e cs_etm//u testbinary + +This would run some test binary (testbinary) until it exits and record +a perf.data trace file. That file would have AUX sections if CoreSight +is working correctly. You can dump the content of this file as +readable text with a command like:: + + perf report --stdio --dump -i perf.data + +You should find some sections of this file have AUX data blocks like:: + + 0x1e78 [0x30]: PERF_RECORD_AUXTRACE size: 0x11dd0 offset: 0 ref: 0x1b614fc1061b0ad1 idx: 0 tid: 531230 cpu: -1 + + . ... CoreSight ETM Trace data: size 73168 bytes + Idx:0; ID:10; I_ASYNC : Alignment Synchronisation. + Idx:12; ID:10; I_TRACE_INFO : Trace Info.; INFO=0x0 { CC.0 } + Idx:17; ID:10; I_ADDR_L_64IS0 : Address, Long, 64 bit, IS0.; Addr=0x0000000000000000; + Idx:26; ID:10; I_TRACE_ON : Trace On. + Idx:27; ID:10; I_ADDR_CTXT_L_64IS0 : Address & Context, Long, 64 bit, IS0.; Addr=0x0000FFFFB6069140; Ctxt: AArch64,EL0, NS; + Idx:38; ID:10; I_ATOM_F6 : Atom format 6.; EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE + Idx:39; ID:10; I_ATOM_F6 : Atom format 6.; EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE + Idx:40; ID:10; I_ATOM_F6 : Atom format 6.; EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE + Idx:41; ID:10; I_ATOM_F6 : Atom format 6.; EEEEEEEEEEEN + ... + +If you see these above, then your system is tracing CoreSight data +correctly. + +To compile perf with CoreSight support in the tools/perf directory do:: + + make CORESIGHT=1 + +This requires OpenCSD to build. You may install distribution packages +for the support such as libopencsd and libopencsd-dev or download it +and build yourself. Upstream OpenCSD is located at: + + https://github.com/Linaro/OpenCSD + +For complete information on building perf with CoreSight support and +more extensive usage look at: + + https://github.com/Linaro/OpenCSD/blob/master/HOWTO.md + + +Kernel CoreSight Support +------------------------ + +You will also want CoreSight support enabled in your kernel config. +Ensure it is enabled with:: + + CONFIG_CORESIGHT=y + +There are various other CoreSight options you probably also want +enabled like:: + + CONFIG_CORESIGHT_LINKS_AND_SINKS=y + CONFIG_CORESIGHT_LINK_AND_SINK_TMC=y + CONFIG_CORESIGHT_CATU=y + CONFIG_CORESIGHT_SINK_TPIU=y + CONFIG_CORESIGHT_SINK_ETBV10=y + CONFIG_CORESIGHT_SOURCE_ETM4X=y + CONFIG_CORESIGHT_CTI=y + CONFIG_CORESIGHT_CTI_INTEGRATION_REGS=y + +Please refer to the kernel configuration help for more information. + +Perf test - Verify kernel and userspace perf CoreSight work +----------------------------------------------------------- + +When you run perf test, it will do a lot of self tests. Some of those +tests will cover CoreSight (only if enabled and on ARM64). You +generally would run perf test from the tools/perf directory in the +kernel tree. Some tests will check some internal perf support like: + + Check Arm CoreSight trace data recording and synthesized samples + Check Arm SPE trace data recording and synthesized samples + +Some others will actually use perf record and some test binaries that +are in tests/shell/coresight and will collect traces to ensure a +minimum level of functionality is met. The scripts that launch these +tests are in the same directory. These will all look like: + + CoreSight / ASM Pure Loop + CoreSight / Memcpy 16k 10 Threads + CoreSight / Thread Loop 10 Threads - Check TID + etc. + +These perf record tests will not run if the tool binaries do not exist +in tests/shell/coresight/\*/ and will be skipped. If you do not have +CoreSight support in hardware then either do not build perf with +CoreSight support or remove these binaries in order to not have these +tests fail and have them skip instead. + +These tests will log historical results in the current working +directory (e.g. tools/perf) and will be named stats-\*.csv like: + + stats-asm_pure_loop-out.csv + stats-memcpy_thread-16k_10.csv + ... + +These statistic files log some aspects of the AUX data sections in +the perf data output counting some numbers of certain encodings (a +good way to know that it's working in a very simple way). One problem +with CoreSight is that given a large enough amount of data needing to +be logged, some of it can be lost due to the processor not waking up +in time to read out all the data from buffers etc.. You will notice +that the amount of data collected can vary a lot per run of perf test. +If you wish to see how this changes over time, simply run perf test +multiple times and all these csv files will have more and more data +appended to it that you can later examine, graph and otherwise use to +figure out if things have become worse or better. + +This means sometimes these tests fail as they don't capture all the +data needed. This is about tracking quality and amount of data +produced over time and to see when changes to the Linux kernel improve +quality of traces. + +Be aware that some of these tests take quite a while to run, specifically +in processing the perf data file and dumping contents to then examine what +is inside. + +You can change where these csv logs are stored by setting the +PERF_TEST_CORESIGHT_STATDIR environment variable before running perf +test like:: + + export PERF_TEST_CORESIGHT_STATDIR=/var/tmp + perf test + +They will also store resulting perf output data in the current +directory for later inspection like:: + + perf-asm_pure_loop-out.data + perf-memcpy_thread-16k_10.data + ... + +You can alter where the perf data files are stored by setting the +PERF_TEST_CORESIGHT_DATADIR environment variable such as:: + + PERF_TEST_CORESIGHT_DATADIR=/var/tmp + perf test + +You may wish to set these above environment variables if you wish to +keep the output of tests outside of the current working directory for +longer term storage and examination. diff --git a/Documentation/trace/hisi-ptt.rst b/Documentation/trace/hisi-ptt.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..4f87d8e21065 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/trace/hisi-ptt.rst @@ -0,0 +1,298 @@ +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 + +====================================== +HiSilicon PCIe Tune and Trace device +====================================== + +Introduction +============ + +HiSilicon PCIe tune and trace device (PTT) is a PCIe Root Complex +integrated Endpoint (RCiEP) device, providing the capability +to dynamically monitor and tune the PCIe link's events (tune), +and trace the TLP headers (trace). The two functions are independent, +but is recommended to use them together to analyze and enhance the +PCIe link's performance. + +On Kunpeng 930 SoC, the PCIe Root Complex is composed of several +PCIe cores. Each PCIe core includes several Root Ports and a PTT +RCiEP, like below. The PTT device is capable of tuning and +tracing the links of the PCIe core. +:: + + +--------------Core 0-------+ + | | [ PTT ] | + | | [Root Port]---[Endpoint] + | | [Root Port]---[Endpoint] + | | [Root Port]---[Endpoint] + Root Complex |------Core 1-------+ + | | [ PTT ] | + | | [Root Port]---[ Switch ]---[Endpoint] + | | [Root Port]---[Endpoint] `-[Endpoint] + | | [Root Port]---[Endpoint] + +---------------------------+ + +The PTT device driver registers one PMU device for each PTT device. +The name of each PTT device is composed of 'hisi_ptt' prefix with +the id of the SICL and the Core where it locates. The Kunpeng 930 +SoC encapsulates multiple CPU dies (SCCL, Super CPU Cluster) and +IO dies (SICL, Super I/O Cluster), where there's one PCIe Root +Complex for each SICL. +:: + + /sys/devices/hisi_ptt<sicl_id>_<core_id> + +Tune +==== + +PTT tune is designed for monitoring and adjusting PCIe link parameters (events). +Currently we support events in 2 classes. The scope of the events +covers the PCIe core to which the PTT device belongs. + +Each event is presented as a file under $(PTT PMU dir)/tune, and +a simple open/read/write/close cycle will be used to tune the event. +:: + + $ cd /sys/devices/hisi_ptt<sicl_id>_<core_id>/tune + $ ls + qos_tx_cpl qos_tx_np qos_tx_p + tx_path_rx_req_alloc_buf_level + tx_path_tx_req_alloc_buf_level + $ cat qos_tx_dp + 1 + $ echo 2 > qos_tx_dp + $ cat qos_tx_dp + 2 + +Current value (numerical value) of the event can be simply read +from the file, and the desired value written to the file to tune. + +1. Tx Path QoS Control +------------------------ + +The following files are provided to tune the QoS of the tx path of +the PCIe core. + +- qos_tx_cpl: weight of Tx completion TLPs +- qos_tx_np: weight of Tx non-posted TLPs +- qos_tx_p: weight of Tx posted TLPs + +The weight influences the proportion of certain packets on the PCIe link. +For example, for the storage scenario, increase the proportion +of the completion packets on the link to enhance the performance as +more completions are consumed. + +The available tune data of these events is [0, 1, 2]. +Writing a negative value will return an error, and out of range +values will be converted to 2. Note that the event value just +indicates a probable level, but is not precise. + +2. Tx Path Buffer Control +------------------------- + +Following files are provided to tune the buffer of tx path of the PCIe core. + +- rx_alloc_buf_level: watermark of Rx requested +- tx_alloc_buf_level: watermark of Tx requested + +These events influence the watermark of the buffer allocated for each +type. Rx means the inbound while Tx means outbound. The packets will +be stored in the buffer first and then transmitted either when the +watermark reached or when timed out. For a busy direction, you should +increase the related buffer watermark to avoid frequently posting and +thus enhance the performance. In most cases just keep the default value. + +The available tune data of above events is [0, 1, 2]. +Writing a negative value will return an error, and out of range +values will be converted to 2. Note that the event value just +indicates a probable level, but is not precise. + +Trace +===== + +PTT trace is designed for dumping the TLP headers to the memory, which +can be used to analyze the transactions and usage condition of the PCIe +Link. You can choose to filter the traced headers by either Requester ID, +or those downstream of a set of Root Ports on the same core of the PTT +device. It's also supported to trace the headers of certain type and of +certain direction. + +You can use the perf command `perf record` to set the parameters, start +trace and get the data. It's also supported to decode the trace +data with `perf report`. The control parameters for trace is inputted +as event code for each events, which will be further illustrated later. +An example usage is like +:: + + $ perf record -e hisi_ptt0_2/filter=0x80001,type=1,direction=1, + format=1/ -- sleep 5 + +This will trace the TLP headers downstream root port 0000:00:10.1 (event +code for event 'filter' is 0x80001) with type of posted TLP requests, +direction of inbound and traced data format of 8DW. + +1. Filter +--------- + +The TLP headers to trace can be filtered by the Root Ports or the Requester ID +of the Endpoint, which are located on the same core of the PTT device. You can +set the filter by specifying the `filter` parameter which is required to start +the trace. The parameter value is 20 bit. Bit 19 indicates the filter type. +1 for Root Port filter and 0 for Requester filter. Bit[15:0] indicates the +filter value. The value for a Root Port is a mask of the core port id which is +calculated from its PCI Slot ID as (slotid & 7) * 2. The value for a Requester +is the Requester ID (Device ID of the PCIe function). Bit[18:16] is currently +reserved for extension. + +For example, if the desired filter is Endpoint function 0000:01:00.1 the filter +value will be 0x00101. If the desired filter is Root Port 0000:00:10.0 then +then filter value is calculated as 0x80001. + +Note that multiple Root Ports can be specified at one time, but only one +Endpoint function can be specified in one trace. Specifying both Root Port +and function at the same time is not supported. Driver maintains a list of +available filters and will check the invalid inputs. + +Currently the available filters are detected in driver's probe. If the supported +devices are removed/added after probe, you may need to reload the driver to update +the filters. + +2. Type +------- + +You can trace the TLP headers of certain types by specifying the `type` +parameter, which is required to start the trace. The parameter value is +8 bit. Current supported types and related values are shown below: + +- 8'b00000001: posted requests (P) +- 8'b00000010: non-posted requests (NP) +- 8'b00000100: completions (CPL) + +You can specify multiple types when tracing inbound TLP headers, but can only +specify one when tracing outbound TLP headers. + +3. Direction +------------ + +You can trace the TLP headers from certain direction, which is relative +to the Root Port or the PCIe core, by specifying the `direction` parameter. +This is optional and the default parameter is inbound. The parameter value +is 4 bit. When the desired format is 4DW, directions and related values +supported are shown below: + +- 4'b0000: inbound TLPs (P, NP, CPL) +- 4'b0001: outbound TLPs (P, NP, CPL) +- 4'b0010: outbound TLPs (P, NP, CPL) and inbound TLPs (P, NP, CPL B) +- 4'b0011: outbound TLPs (P, NP, CPL) and inbound TLPs (CPL A) + +When the desired format is 8DW, directions and related values supported are +shown below: + +- 4'b0000: reserved +- 4'b0001: outbound TLPs (P, NP, CPL) +- 4'b0010: inbound TLPs (P, NP, CPL B) +- 4'b0011: inbound TLPs (CPL A) + +Inbound completions are classified into two types: + +- completion A (CPL A): completion of CHI/DMA/Native non-posted requests, except for CPL B +- completion B (CPL B): completion of DMA remote2local and P2P non-posted requests + +4. Format +-------------- + +You can change the format of the traced TLP headers by specifying the +`format` parameter. The default format is 4DW. The parameter value is 4 bit. +Current supported formats and related values are shown below: + +- 4'b0000: 4DW length per TLP header +- 4'b0001: 8DW length per TLP header + +The traced TLP header format is different from the PCIe standard. + +When using the 8DW data format, the entire TLP header is logged +(Header DW0-3 shown below). For example, the TLP header for Memory +Reads with 64-bit addresses is shown in PCIe r5.0, Figure 2-17; +the header for Configuration Requests is shown in Figure 2.20, etc. + +In addition, 8DW trace buffer entries contain a timestamp and +possibly a prefix for a PASID TLP prefix (see Figure 6-20, PCIe r5.0). +Otherwise this field will be all 0. + +The bit[31:11] of DW0 is always 0x1fffff, which can be +used to distinguish the data format. 8DW format is like +:: + + bits [ 31:11 ][ 10:0 ] + |---------------------------------------|-------------------| + DW0 [ 0x1fffff ][ Reserved (0x7ff) ] + DW1 [ Prefix ] + DW2 [ Header DW0 ] + DW3 [ Header DW1 ] + DW4 [ Header DW2 ] + DW5 [ Header DW3 ] + DW6 [ Reserved (0x0) ] + DW7 [ Time ] + +When using the 4DW data format, DW0 of the trace buffer entry +contains selected fields of DW0 of the TLP, together with a +timestamp. DW1-DW3 of the trace buffer entry contain DW1-DW3 +directly from the TLP header. + +4DW format is like +:: + + bits [31:30] [ 29:25 ][24][23][22][21][ 20:11 ][ 10:0 ] + |-----|---------|---|---|---|---|-------------|-------------| + DW0 [ Fmt ][ Type ][T9][T8][TH][SO][ Length ][ Time ] + DW1 [ Header DW1 ] + DW2 [ Header DW2 ] + DW3 [ Header DW3 ] + +5. Memory Management +-------------------- + +The traced TLP headers will be written to the memory allocated +by the driver. The hardware accepts 4 DMA address with same size, +and writes the buffer sequentially like below. If DMA addr 3 is +finished and the trace is still on, it will return to addr 0. +:: + + +->[DMA addr 0]->[DMA addr 1]->[DMA addr 2]->[DMA addr 3]-+ + +---------------------------------------------------------+ + +Driver will allocate each DMA buffer of 4MiB. The finished buffer +will be copied to the perf AUX buffer allocated by the perf core. +Once the AUX buffer is full while the trace is still on, driver +will commit the AUX buffer first and then apply for a new one with +the same size. The size of AUX buffer is default to 16MiB. User can +adjust the size by specifying the `-m` parameter of the perf command. + +6. Decoding +----------- + +You can decode the traced data with `perf report -D` command (currently +only support to dump the raw trace data). The traced data will be decoded +according to the format described previously (take 8DW as an example): +:: + + [...perf headers and other information] + . ... HISI PTT data: size 4194304 bytes + . 00000000: 00 00 00 00 Prefix + . 00000004: 01 00 00 60 Header DW0 + . 00000008: 0f 1e 00 01 Header DW1 + . 0000000c: 04 00 00 00 Header DW2 + . 00000010: 40 00 81 02 Header DW3 + . 00000014: 33 c0 04 00 Time + . 00000020: 00 00 00 00 Prefix + . 00000024: 01 00 00 60 Header DW0 + . 00000028: 0f 1e 00 01 Header DW1 + . 0000002c: 04 00 00 00 Header DW2 + . 00000030: 40 00 81 02 Header DW3 + . 00000034: 02 00 00 00 Time + . 00000040: 00 00 00 00 Prefix + . 00000044: 01 00 00 60 Header DW0 + . 00000048: 0f 1e 00 01 Header DW1 + . 0000004c: 04 00 00 00 Header DW2 + . 00000050: 40 00 81 02 Header DW3 + [...] diff --git a/Documentation/trace/index.rst b/Documentation/trace/index.rst index 2d73e8697523..ea25a9220f92 100644 --- a/Documentation/trace/index.rst +++ b/Documentation/trace/index.rst @@ -33,3 +33,4 @@ Linux Tracing Technologies coresight/index user_events rv/index + hisi-ptt diff --git a/Documentation/trace/user_events.rst b/Documentation/trace/user_events.rst index c180936f49fc..9f181f342a70 100644 --- a/Documentation/trace/user_events.rst +++ b/Documentation/trace/user_events.rst @@ -20,14 +20,14 @@ dynamic_events is the same as the ioctl with the u: prefix applied. Typically programs will register a set of events that they wish to expose to tools that can read trace_events (such as ftrace and perf). The registration -process gives back two ints to the program for each event. The first int is the -status index. This index describes which byte in the +process gives back two ints to the program for each event. The first int is +the status bit. This describes which bit in little-endian format in the /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/user_events_status file represents this event. The -second int is the write index. This index describes the data when a write() or +second int is the write index which describes the data when a write() or writev() is called on the /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/user_events_data file. -The structures referenced in this document are contained with the -/include/uap/linux/user_events.h file in the source tree. +The structures referenced in this document are contained within the +/include/uapi/linux/user_events.h file in the source tree. **NOTE:** *Both user_events_status and user_events_data are under the tracefs filesystem and may be mounted at different paths than above.* @@ -38,18 +38,18 @@ Registering within a user process is done via ioctl() out to the /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/user_events_data file. The command to issue is DIAG_IOCSREG. -This command takes a struct user_reg as an argument:: +This command takes a packed struct user_reg as an argument:: struct user_reg { u32 size; u64 name_args; - u32 status_index; + u32 status_bit; u32 write_index; }; The struct user_reg requires two inputs, the first is the size of the structure to ensure forward and backward compatibility. The second is the command string -to issue for registering. Upon success two outputs are set, the status index +to issue for registering. Upon success two outputs are set, the status bit and the write index. User based events show up under tracefs like any other event under the @@ -111,15 +111,56 @@ in realtime. This allows user programs to only incur the cost of the write() or writev() calls when something is actively attached to the event. User programs call mmap() on /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/user_events_status to -check the status for each event that is registered. The byte to check in the -file is given back after the register ioctl() via user_reg.status_index. +check the status for each event that is registered. The bit to check in the +file is given back after the register ioctl() via user_reg.status_bit. The bit +is always in little-endian format. Programs can check if the bit is set either +using a byte-wise index with a mask or a long-wise index with a little-endian +mask. + Currently the size of user_events_status is a single page, however, custom kernel configurations can change this size to allow more user based events. In all cases the size of the file is a multiple of a page size. -For example, if the register ioctl() gives back a status_index of 3 you would -check byte 3 of the returned mmap data to see if anything is attached to that -event. +For example, if the register ioctl() gives back a status_bit of 3 you would +check byte 0 (3 / 8) of the returned mmap data and then AND the result with 8 +(1 << (3 % 8)) to see if anything is attached to that event. + +A byte-wise index check is performed as follows:: + + int index, mask; + char *status_page; + + index = status_bit / 8; + mask = 1 << (status_bit % 8); + + ... + + if (status_page[index] & mask) { + /* Enabled */ + } + +A long-wise index check is performed as follows:: + + #include <asm/bitsperlong.h> + #include <endian.h> + + #if __BITS_PER_LONG == 64 + #define endian_swap(x) htole64(x) + #else + #define endian_swap(x) htole32(x) + #endif + + long index, mask, *status_page; + + index = status_bit / __BITS_PER_LONG; + mask = 1L << (status_bit % __BITS_PER_LONG); + mask = endian_swap(mask); + + ... + + if (status_page[index] & mask) { + /* Enabled */ + } Administrators can easily check the status of all registered events by reading the user_events_status file directly via a terminal. The output is as follows:: @@ -137,7 +178,7 @@ For example, on a system that has a single event the output looks like this:: Active: 1 Busy: 0 - Max: 4096 + Max: 32768 If a user enables the user event via ftrace, the output would change to this:: @@ -145,21 +186,10 @@ If a user enables the user event via ftrace, the output would change to this:: Active: 1 Busy: 1 - Max: 4096 - -**NOTE:** *A status index of 0 will never be returned. This allows user -programs to have an index that can be used on error cases.* - -Status Bits -^^^^^^^^^^^ -The byte being checked will be non-zero if anything is attached. Programs can -check specific bits in the byte to see what mechanism has been attached. - -The following values are defined to aid in checking what has been attached: - -**EVENT_STATUS_FTRACE** - Bit set if ftrace has been attached (Bit 0). + Max: 32768 -**EVENT_STATUS_PERF** - Bit set if perf has been attached (Bit 1). +**NOTE:** *A status bit of 0 will never be returned. This allows user programs +to have a bit that can be used on error cases.* Writing Data ------------ |