linux-stable/tools/perf/pmu-events
Thomas Richter 6ee4ad5dfb perf stat: Do not fail on metrics on s390 z/VM systems
[ Upstream commit c2f3d7dfc7 ]

On s390 z/VM virtual machines command 'perf list' also displays metrics:

  # perf list | grep -A 20 'Metric Groups:'
  Metric Groups:

  No_group:
   cpi
        [Cycles per Instruction]
   est_cpi
        [Estimated Instruction Complexity CPI infinite Level 1]
   finite_cpi
        [Cycles per Instructions from Finite cache/memory]
   l1mp
        [Level One Miss per 100 Instructions]
   l2p
        [Percentage sourced from Level 2 cache]
   l3p
        [Percentage sourced from Level 3 on same chip cache]
   l4lp
        [Percentage sourced from Level 4 Local cache on same book]
   l4rp
        [Percentage sourced from Level 4 Remote cache on different book]
   memp
        [Percentage sourced from memory]
   ....
  #

The command

  # perf stat -M cpi -- true
  event syntax error: '{CPU_CYCLES/metric-id=CPU_CYCLES/.....'
                        \___ Bad event or PMU

  Unable to find PMU or event on a PMU of 'CPU_CYCLES'

   event syntax error: '{CPU_CYCLES/metric-id=CPU_CYCLES/...'
                        \___ Cannot find PMU `CPU_CYCLES'.
                             Missing kernel support?
 #

fails. 'perf stat' should not fail on metrics when the referenced CPU
Counter Measurement PMU is not available.

Output after:

  # perf stat -M est_cpi -- sleep 1

  Performance counter stats for 'sleep 1':

     1,000,887,494 ns   duration_time   #     0.00 est_cpi

       1.000887494 seconds time elapsed

       0.000143000 seconds user
       0.000662000 seconds sys

 #

Fixes: 7f76b31130 ("perf list: Add IBM z16 event description for s390")
Suggested-by: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Richter <tmricht@linux.ibm.com>
Cc: Heiko Carstens <hca@linux.ibm.com>
Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org>
Cc: Sumanth Korikkar <sumanthk@linux.ibm.com>
Cc: Sven Schnelle <svens@linux.ibm.com>
Cc: Vasily Gorbik <gor@linux.ibm.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240404064806.1362876-2-tmricht@linux.ibm.com
Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin <sashal@kernel.org>
2024-06-12 11:12:15 +02:00
..
arch perf stat: Do not fail on metrics on s390 z/VM systems 2024-06-12 11:12:15 +02:00
Build perf build: Update build rule for generated files 2023-08-03 17:01:24 -03:00
empty-pmu-events.c perf pmu: Lazily add JSON events 2023-08-24 11:08:47 -03:00
jevents.py perf jevent: fix core dump on software events on s390 2023-09-17 15:51:57 -07:00
metric.py perf jevents metric: Fix type of strcmp_cpuid_str 2023-09-17 15:51:35 -07:00
metric_test.py perf jevents: Don't rewrite metrics across PMUs 2023-05-15 09:12:14 -03:00
pmu-events.h perf pmu: Lazily add JSON events 2023-08-24 11:08:47 -03:00
README perf vendor events: Minor fixes to the README 2019-09-25 09:51:42 -03:00

The contents of this directory allow users to specify PMU events in their
CPUs by their symbolic names rather than raw event codes (see example below).

The main program in this directory, is the 'jevents', which is built and
executed _BEFORE_ the perf binary itself is built.

The 'jevents' program tries to locate and process JSON files in the directory
tree tools/perf/pmu-events/arch/foo.

	- Regular files with '.json' extension in the name are assumed to be
	  JSON files, each of which describes a set of PMU events.

	- The CSV file that maps a specific CPU to its set of PMU events is to
	  be named 'mapfile.csv' (see below for mapfile format).

	- Directories are traversed, but all other files are ignored.

	- To reduce JSON event duplication per architecture, platform JSONs may
	  use "ArchStdEvent" keyword to dereference an "Architecture standard
	  events", defined in architecture standard JSONs.
	  Architecture standard JSONs must be located in the architecture root
	  folder. Matching is based on the "EventName" field.

The PMU events supported by a CPU model are expected to grouped into topics
such as Pipelining, Cache, Memory, Floating-point etc. All events for a topic
should be placed in a separate JSON file - where the file name identifies
the topic. Eg: "Floating-point.json".

All the topic JSON files for a CPU model/family should be in a separate
sub directory. Thus for the Silvermont X86 CPU:

	$ ls tools/perf/pmu-events/arch/x86/silvermont
	cache.json     memory.json    virtual-memory.json
	frontend.json  pipeline.json

The JSONs folder for a CPU model/family may be placed in the root arch
folder, or may be placed in a vendor sub-folder under the arch folder
for instances where the arch and vendor are not the same.

Using the JSON files and the mapfile, 'jevents' generates the C source file,
'pmu-events.c', which encodes the two sets of tables:

	- Set of 'PMU events tables' for all known CPUs in the architecture,
	  (one table like the following, per JSON file; table name 'pme_power8'
	  is derived from JSON file name, 'power8.json').

		struct pmu_event pme_power8[] = {

			...

			{
				.name = "pm_1plus_ppc_cmpl",
				.event = "event=0x100f2",
				.desc = "1 or more ppc insts finished,",
			},

			...
		}

	- A 'mapping table' that maps each CPU of the architecture, to its
	  'PMU events table'

		struct pmu_events_map pmu_events_map[] = {
		{
			.cpuid = "004b0000",
			.version = "1",
			.type = "core",
			.table = pme_power8
		},
			...

		};

After the 'pmu-events.c' is generated, it is compiled and the resulting
'pmu-events.o' is added to 'libperf.a' which is then used to build perf.

NOTES:
	1. Several CPUs can support same set of events and hence use a common
	   JSON file. Hence several entries in the pmu_events_map[] could map
	   to a single 'PMU events table'.

	2. The 'pmu-events.h' has an extern declaration for the mapping table
	   and the generated 'pmu-events.c' defines this table.

	3. _All_ known CPU tables for architecture are included in the perf
	   binary.

At run time, perf determines the actual CPU it is running on, finds the
matching events table and builds aliases for those events. This allows
users to specify events by their name:

	$ perf stat -e pm_1plus_ppc_cmpl sleep 1

where 'pm_1plus_ppc_cmpl' is a Power8 PMU event.

However some errors in processing may cause the alias build to fail.

Mapfile format
===============

The mapfile enables multiple CPU models to share a single set of PMU events.
It is required even if such mapping is 1:1.

The mapfile.csv format is expected to be:

	Header line
	CPUID,Version,Dir/path/name,Type

where:

	Comma:
		is the required field delimiter (i.e other fields cannot
		have commas within them).

	Comments:
		Lines in which the first character is either '\n' or '#'
		are ignored.

	Header line
		The header line is the first line in the file, which is
		always _IGNORED_. It can be empty.

	CPUID:
		CPUID is an arch-specific char string, that can be used
		to identify CPU (and associate it with a set of PMU events
		it supports). Multiple CPUIDS can point to the same
		File/path/name.json.

		Example:
			CPUID == 'GenuineIntel-6-2E' (on x86).
			CPUID == '004b0100' (PVR value in Powerpc)
	Version:
		is the Version of the mapfile.

	Dir/path/name:
		is the pathname to the directory containing the CPU's JSON
		files, relative to the directory containing the mapfile.csv

	Type:
		indicates whether the events are "core" or "uncore" events.


	Eg:

	$ grep silvermont tools/perf/pmu-events/arch/x86/mapfile.csv
	GenuineIntel-6-37,v13,silvermont,core
	GenuineIntel-6-4D,v13,silvermont,core
	GenuineIntel-6-4C,v13,silvermont,core

	i.e the three CPU models use the JSON files (i.e PMU events) listed
	in the directory 'tools/perf/pmu-events/arch/x86/silvermont'.