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author | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-04-28 09:13:47 +0000 |
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committer | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-04-28 09:13:47 +0000 |
commit | 102b0d2daa97dae68d3eed54d8fe37a9cc38a892 (patch) | |
tree | bcf648efac40ca6139842707f0eba5a4496a6dd2 /docs/perf | |
parent | Initial commit. (diff) | |
download | arm-trusted-firmware-102b0d2daa97dae68d3eed54d8fe37a9cc38a892.tar.xz arm-trusted-firmware-102b0d2daa97dae68d3eed54d8fe37a9cc38a892.zip |
Adding upstream version 2.8.0+dfsg.upstream/2.8.0+dfsgupstream
Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/perf')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/perf/index.rst | 14 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/perf/performance-monitoring-unit.rst | 158 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/perf/psci-performance-juno.rst | 292 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/perf/tsp.rst | 27 |
4 files changed, 491 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/docs/perf/index.rst b/docs/perf/index.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000..bccad00 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/perf/index.rst @@ -0,0 +1,14 @@ +Performance & Testing +===================== + +.. toctree:: + :maxdepth: 1 + :caption: Contents + + psci-performance-juno + tsp + performance-monitoring-unit + +-------------- + +*Copyright (c) 2019-2020, Arm Limited. All rights reserved.* diff --git a/docs/perf/performance-monitoring-unit.rst b/docs/perf/performance-monitoring-unit.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000..5dd1af5 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/perf/performance-monitoring-unit.rst @@ -0,0 +1,158 @@ +Performance Monitoring Unit +=========================== + +The Performance Monitoring Unit (PMU) allows recording of architectural and +microarchitectural events for profiling purposes. + +This document gives an overview of the PMU counter configuration to assist with +implementation and to complement the PMU security guidelines given in the +:ref:`Secure Development Guidelines` document. + +.. note:: + This section applies to Armv8-A implementations which have version 3 + of the Performance Monitors Extension (PMUv3). + +PMU Counters +------------ + +The PMU makes 32 counters available at all privilege levels: + +- 31 programmable event counters: ``PMEVCNTR<n>``, where ``n`` is ``0`` to + ``30``. +- A dedicated cycle counter: ``PMCCNTR``. + +Architectural mappings +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + ++--------------+---------+----------------------------+ +| Counters | State | System Register Name | ++==============+=========+============================+ +| | AArch64 | ``PMEVCNTR<n>_EL0[63*:0]`` | +| Programmable +---------+----------------------------+ +| | AArch32 | ``PMEVCNTR<n>[31:0]`` | ++--------------+---------+----------------------------+ +| | AArch64 | ``PMCCNTR_EL0[63:0]`` | +| Cycle +---------+----------------------------+ +| | AArch32 | ``PMCCNTR[63:0]`` | ++--------------+---------+----------------------------+ + +.. note:: + Bits [63:32] are only available if ARMv8.5-PMU is implemented. Refer to the + `Arm ARM`_ for a detailed description of ARMv8.5-PMU features. + +Configuring the PMU for counting events +--------------------------------------- + +Each programmable counter has an associated register, ``PMEVTYPER<n>`` which +configures it. The cycle counter has the ``PMCCFILTR_EL0`` register, which has +an identical function and bit field layout as ``PMEVTYPER<n>``. In addition, +the counters are enabled (permitted to increment) via the ``PMCNTENSET`` and +``PMCR`` registers. These can be accessed at all privilege levels. + +Architectural mappings +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + ++-----------------------------+------------------------+ +| AArch64 | AArch32 | ++=============================+========================+ +| ``PMEVTYPER<n>_EL0[63*:0]`` | ``PMEVTYPER<n>[31:0]`` | ++-----------------------------+------------------------+ +| ``PMCCFILTR_EL0[63*:0]`` | ``PMCCFILTR[31:0]`` | ++-----------------------------+------------------------+ +| ``PMCNTENSET_EL0[63*:0]`` | ``PMCNTENSET[31:0]`` | ++-----------------------------+------------------------+ +| ``PMCR_EL0[63*:0]`` | ``PMCR[31:0]`` | ++-----------------------------+------------------------+ + +.. note:: + Bits [63:32] are reserved. + +Relevant register fields +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +For ``PMEVTYPER<n>_EL0``/``PMEVTYPER<n>`` and ``PMCCFILTR_EL0/PMCCFILTR``, the +most important fields are: + +- ``P``: + + - Bit 31. + - If set to ``0``, will increment the associated ``PMEVCNTR<n>`` at EL1. + +- ``NSK``: + + - Bit 29. + - If equal to the ``P`` bit it enables the associated ``PMEVCNTR<n>`` at + Non-secure EL1. + - Reserved if EL3 not implemented. + +- ``NSH``: + + - Bit 27. + - If set to ``1``, will increment the associated ``PMEVCNTR<n>`` at EL2. + - Reserved if EL2 not implemented. + +- ``SH``: + + - Bit 24. + - If different to the ``NSH`` bit it enables the associated ``PMEVCNTR<n>`` + at Secure EL2. + - Reserved if Secure EL2 not implemented. + +- ``M``: + + - Bit 26. + - If equal to the ``P`` bit it enables the associated ``PMEVCNTR<n>`` at + EL3. + +- ``evtCount[15:10]``: + + - Extension to ``evtCount[9:0]``. Reserved unless ARMv8.1-PMU implemented. + +- ``evtCount[9:0]``: + + - The event number that the associated ``PMEVCNTR<n>`` will count. + +For ``PMCNTENSET_EL0``/``PMCNTENSET``, the most important fields are: + +- ``P[30:0]``: + + - Setting bit ``P[n]`` to ``1`` enables counter ``PMEVCNTR<n>``. + - The effects of ``PMEVTYPER<n>`` are applied on top of this. + In other words, the counter will not increment at any privilege level or + security state unless it is enabled here. + +- ``C``: + + - Bit 31. + - If set to ``1`` enables the cycle counter ``PMCCNTR``. + +For ``PMCR``/``PMCR_EL0``, the most important fields are: + +- ``DP``: + + - Bit 5. + - If set to ``1`` it disables the cycle counter ``PMCCNTR`` where event + counting (by ``PMEVCNTR<n>``) is prohibited (e.g. EL2 and the Secure + world). + - If set to ``0``, ``PMCCNTR`` will not be affected by this bit and + therefore will be able to count where the programmable counters are + prohibited. + +- ``E``: + + - Bit 0. + - Enables/disables counting altogether. + - The effects of ``PMCNTENSET`` and ``PMCR.DP`` are applied on top of this. + In other words, if this bit is ``0`` then no counters will increment + regardless of how the other PMU system registers or bit fields are + configured. + +.. rubric:: References + +- `Arm ARM`_ + +-------------- + +*Copyright (c) 2019-2020, Arm Limited and Contributors. All rights reserved.* + +.. _Arm ARM: https://developer.arm.com/docs/ddi0487/latest diff --git a/docs/perf/psci-performance-juno.rst b/docs/perf/psci-performance-juno.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000..eab3e4d --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/perf/psci-performance-juno.rst @@ -0,0 +1,292 @@ +PSCI Performance Measurements on Arm Juno Development Platform +============================================================== + +This document summarises the findings of performance measurements of key +operations in the Trusted Firmware-A Power State Coordination Interface (PSCI) +implementation, using the in-built Performance Measurement Framework (PMF) and +runtime instrumentation timestamps. + +Method +------ + +We used the `Juno R1 platform`_ for these tests, which has 4 x Cortex-A53 and 2 +x Cortex-A57 clusters running at the following frequencies: + ++-----------------+--------------------+ +| Domain | Frequency (MHz) | ++=================+====================+ +| Cortex-A57 | 900 (nominal) | ++-----------------+--------------------+ +| Cortex-A53 | 650 (underdrive) | ++-----------------+--------------------+ +| AXI subsystem | 533 | ++-----------------+--------------------+ + +Juno supports CPU, cluster and system power down states, corresponding to power +levels 0, 1 and 2 respectively. It does not support any retention states. + +We used the upstream `TF master as of 31/01/2017`_, building the platform using +the ``ENABLE_RUNTIME_INSTRUMENTATION`` option: + +.. code:: shell + + make PLAT=juno ENABLE_RUNTIME_INSTRUMENTATION=1 \ + SCP_BL2=<path/to/scp-fw.bin> \ + BL33=<path/to/test-fw.bin> \ + all fip + +When using the debug build of TF, there was no noticeable difference in the +results. + +The tests are based on an ARM-internal test framework. The release build of this +framework was used because the results in the debug build became skewed; the +console output prevented some of the tests from executing in parallel. + +The tests consist of both parallel and sequential tests, which are broadly +described as follows: + +- **Parallel Tests** This type of test powers on all the non-lead CPUs and + brings them and the lead CPU to a common synchronization point. The lead CPU + then initiates the test on all CPUs in parallel. + +- **Sequential Tests** This type of test powers on each non-lead CPU in + sequence. The lead CPU initiates the test on a non-lead CPU then waits for the + test to complete before proceeding to the next non-lead CPU. The lead CPU then + executes the test on itself. + +In the results below, CPUs 0-3 refer to CPUs in the little cluster (A53) and +CPUs 4-5 refer to CPUs in the big cluster (A57). In all cases CPU 4 is the lead +CPU. + +``PSCI_ENTRY`` refers to the time taken from entering the TF PSCI implementation +to the point the hardware enters the low power state (WFI). Referring to the TF +runtime instrumentation points, this corresponds to: +``(RT_INSTR_ENTER_HW_LOW_PWR - RT_INSTR_ENTER_PSCI)``. + +``PSCI_EXIT`` refers to the time taken from the point the hardware exits the low +power state to exiting the TF PSCI implementation. This corresponds to: +``(RT_INSTR_EXIT_PSCI - RT_INSTR_EXIT_HW_LOW_PWR)``. + +``CFLUSH_OVERHEAD`` refers to the part of ``PSCI_ENTRY`` taken to flush the +caches. This corresponds to: ``(RT_INSTR_EXIT_CFLUSH - RT_INSTR_ENTER_CFLUSH)``. + +Note there is very little variance observed in the values given (~1us), although +the values for each CPU are sometimes interchanged, depending on the order in +which locks are acquired. Also, there is very little variance observed between +executing the tests sequentially in a single boot or rebooting between tests. + +Given that runtime instrumentation using PMF is invasive, there is a small +(unquantified) overhead on the results. PMF uses the generic counter for +timestamps, which runs at 50MHz on Juno. + +Results and Commentary +---------------------- + +``CPU_SUSPEND`` to deepest power level on all CPUs in parallel +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + ++-------+---------------------+--------------------+--------------------------+ +| CPU | ``PSCI_ENTRY`` (us) | ``PSCI_EXIT`` (us) | ``CFLUSH_OVERHEAD`` (us) | ++=======+=====================+====================+==========================+ +| 0 | 27 | 20 | 5 | ++-------+---------------------+--------------------+--------------------------+ +| 1 | 114 | 86 | 5 | ++-------+---------------------+--------------------+--------------------------+ +| 2 | 202 | 58 | 5 | ++-------+---------------------+--------------------+--------------------------+ +| 3 | 375 | 29 | 94 | ++-------+---------------------+--------------------+--------------------------+ +| 4 | 20 | 22 | 6 | ++-------+---------------------+--------------------+--------------------------+ +| 5 | 290 | 18 | 206 | ++-------+---------------------+--------------------+--------------------------+ + +A large variance in ``PSCI_ENTRY`` and ``PSCI_EXIT`` times across CPUs is +observed due to TF PSCI lock contention. In the worst case, CPU 3 has to wait +for the 3 other CPUs in the cluster (0-2) to complete ``PSCI_ENTRY`` and release +the lock before proceeding. + +The ``CFLUSH_OVERHEAD`` times for CPUs 3 and 5 are higher because they are the +last CPUs in their respective clusters to power down, therefore both the L1 and +L2 caches are flushed. + +The ``CFLUSH_OVERHEAD`` time for CPU 5 is a lot larger than that for CPU 3 +because the L2 cache size for the big cluster is lot larger (2MB) compared to +the little cluster (1MB). + +``CPU_SUSPEND`` to power level 0 on all CPUs in parallel +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + ++-------+---------------------+--------------------+--------------------------+ +| CPU | ``PSCI_ENTRY`` (us) | ``PSCI_EXIT`` (us) | ``CFLUSH_OVERHEAD`` (us) | ++=======+=====================+====================+==========================+ +| 0 | 116 | 14 | 8 | ++-------+---------------------+--------------------+--------------------------+ +| 1 | 204 | 14 | 8 | ++-------+---------------------+--------------------+--------------------------+ +| 2 | 287 | 13 | 8 | ++-------+---------------------+--------------------+--------------------------+ +| 3 | 376 | 13 | 9 | ++-------+---------------------+--------------------+--------------------------+ +| 4 | 29 | 15 | 7 | ++-------+---------------------+--------------------+--------------------------+ +| 5 | 21 | 15 | 8 | ++-------+---------------------+--------------------+--------------------------+ + +There is no lock contention in TF generic code at power level 0 but the large +variance in ``PSCI_ENTRY`` times across CPUs is due to lock contention in Juno +platform code. The platform lock is used to mediate access to a single SCP +communication channel. This is compounded by the SCP firmware waiting for each +AP CPU to enter WFI before making the channel available to other CPUs, which +effectively serializes the SCP power down commands from all CPUs. + +On platforms with a more efficient CPU power down mechanism, it should be +possible to make the ``PSCI_ENTRY`` times smaller and consistent. + +The ``PSCI_EXIT`` times are consistent across all CPUs because TF does not +require locks at power level 0. + +The ``CFLUSH_OVERHEAD`` times for all CPUs are small and consistent since only +the cache associated with power level 0 is flushed (L1). + +``CPU_SUSPEND`` to deepest power level on all CPUs in sequence +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + ++-------+---------------------+--------------------+--------------------------+ +| CPU | ``PSCI_ENTRY`` (us) | ``PSCI_EXIT`` (us) | ``CFLUSH_OVERHEAD`` (us) | ++=======+=====================+====================+==========================+ +| 0 | 114 | 20 | 94 | ++-------+---------------------+--------------------+--------------------------+ +| 1 | 114 | 20 | 94 | ++-------+---------------------+--------------------+--------------------------+ +| 2 | 114 | 20 | 94 | ++-------+---------------------+--------------------+--------------------------+ +| 3 | 114 | 20 | 94 | ++-------+---------------------+--------------------+--------------------------+ +| 4 | 195 | 22 | 180 | ++-------+---------------------+--------------------+--------------------------+ +| 5 | 21 | 17 | 6 | ++-------+---------------------+--------------------+--------------------------+ + +The ``CFLUSH_OVERHEAD`` times for lead CPU 4 and all CPUs in the non-lead cluster +are large because all other CPUs in the cluster are powered down during the +test. The ``CPU_SUSPEND`` call powers down to the cluster level, requiring a +flush of both L1 and L2 caches. + +The ``CFLUSH_OVERHEAD`` time for CPU 4 is a lot larger than those for the little +CPUs because the L2 cache size for the big cluster is lot larger (2MB) compared +to the little cluster (1MB). + +The ``PSCI_ENTRY`` and ``CFLUSH_OVERHEAD`` times for CPU 5 are low because lead +CPU 4 continues to run while CPU 5 is suspended. Hence CPU 5 only powers down to +level 0, which only requires L1 cache flush. + +``CPU_SUSPEND`` to power level 0 on all CPUs in sequence +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + ++-------+---------------------+--------------------+--------------------------+ +| CPU | ``PSCI_ENTRY`` (us) | ``PSCI_EXIT`` (us) | ``CFLUSH_OVERHEAD`` (us) | ++=======+=====================+====================+==========================+ +| 0 | 22 | 14 | 5 | ++-------+---------------------+--------------------+--------------------------+ +| 1 | 22 | 14 | 5 | ++-------+---------------------+--------------------+--------------------------+ +| 2 | 21 | 14 | 5 | ++-------+---------------------+--------------------+--------------------------+ +| 3 | 22 | 14 | 5 | ++-------+---------------------+--------------------+--------------------------+ +| 4 | 17 | 14 | 6 | ++-------+---------------------+--------------------+--------------------------+ +| 5 | 18 | 15 | 6 | ++-------+---------------------+--------------------+--------------------------+ + +Here the times are small and consistent since there is no contention and it is +only necessary to flush the cache to power level 0 (L1). This is the best case +scenario. + +The ``PSCI_ENTRY`` times for CPUs in the big cluster are slightly smaller than +for the CPUs in little cluster due to greater CPU performance. + +The ``PSCI_EXIT`` times are generally lower than in the last test because the +cluster remains powered on throughout the test and there is less code to execute +on power on (for example, no need to enter CCI coherency) + +``CPU_OFF`` on all non-lead CPUs in sequence then ``CPU_SUSPEND`` on lead CPU to deepest power level +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +The test sequence here is as follows: + +1. Call ``CPU_ON`` and ``CPU_OFF`` on each non-lead CPU in sequence. + +2. Program wake up timer and suspend the lead CPU to the deepest power level. + +3. Call ``CPU_ON`` on non-lead CPU to get the timestamps from each CPU. + ++-------+---------------------+--------------------+--------------------------+ +| CPU | ``PSCI_ENTRY`` (us) | ``PSCI_EXIT`` (us) | ``CFLUSH_OVERHEAD`` (us) | ++=======+=====================+====================+==========================+ +| 0 | 110 | 28 | 93 | ++-------+---------------------+--------------------+--------------------------+ +| 1 | 110 | 28 | 93 | ++-------+---------------------+--------------------+--------------------------+ +| 2 | 110 | 28 | 93 | ++-------+---------------------+--------------------+--------------------------+ +| 3 | 111 | 28 | 93 | ++-------+---------------------+--------------------+--------------------------+ +| 4 | 195 | 22 | 181 | ++-------+---------------------+--------------------+--------------------------+ +| 5 | 20 | 23 | 6 | ++-------+---------------------+--------------------+--------------------------+ + +The ``CFLUSH_OVERHEAD`` times for all little CPUs are large because all other +CPUs in that cluster are powerered down during the test. The ``CPU_OFF`` call +powers down to the cluster level, requiring a flush of both L1 and L2 caches. + +The ``PSCI_ENTRY`` and ``CFLUSH_OVERHEAD`` times for CPU 5 are small because +lead CPU 4 is running and CPU 5 only powers down to level 0, which only requires +an L1 cache flush. + +The ``CFLUSH_OVERHEAD`` time for CPU 4 is a lot larger than those for the little +CPUs because the L2 cache size for the big cluster is lot larger (2MB) compared +to the little cluster (1MB). + +The ``PSCI_EXIT`` times for CPUs in the big cluster are slightly smaller than +for CPUs in the little cluster due to greater CPU performance. These times +generally are greater than the ``PSCI_EXIT`` times in the ``CPU_SUSPEND`` tests +because there is more code to execute in the "on finisher" compared to the +"suspend finisher" (for example, GIC redistributor register programming). + +``PSCI_VERSION`` on all CPUs in parallel +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Since very little code is associated with ``PSCI_VERSION``, this test +approximates the round trip latency for handling a fast SMC at EL3 in TF. + ++-------+-------------------+ +| CPU | TOTAL TIME (ns) | ++=======+===================+ +| 0 | 3020 | ++-------+-------------------+ +| 1 | 2940 | ++-------+-------------------+ +| 2 | 2980 | ++-------+-------------------+ +| 3 | 3060 | ++-------+-------------------+ +| 4 | 520 | ++-------+-------------------+ +| 5 | 720 | ++-------+-------------------+ + +The times for the big CPUs are less than the little CPUs due to greater CPU +performance. + +We suspect the time for lead CPU 4 is shorter than CPU 5 due to subtle cache +effects, given that these measurements are at the nano-second level. + +-------------- + +*Copyright (c) 2019-2020, Arm Limited and Contributors. All rights reserved.* + +.. _Juno R1 platform: https://static.docs.arm.com/100122/0100/arm_versatile_express_juno_r1_development_platform_(v2m_juno_r1)_technical_reference_manual_100122_0100_05_en.pdf +.. _TF master as of 31/01/2017: https://git.trustedfirmware.org/TF-A/trusted-firmware-a.git/tree/?id=c38b36d diff --git a/docs/perf/tsp.rst b/docs/perf/tsp.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000..f8b0048 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/perf/tsp.rst @@ -0,0 +1,27 @@ +Test Secure Payload (TSP) and Dispatcher (TSPD) +=============================================== + +Building the Test Secure Payload +-------------------------------- + +The TSP is coupled with a companion runtime service in the BL31 firmware, +called the TSPD. Therefore, if you intend to use the TSP, the BL31 image +must be recompiled as well. For more information on SPs and SPDs, see the +:ref:`firmware_design_sel1_spd` section in the :ref:`Firmware Design`. + +First clean the TF-A build directory to get rid of any previous BL31 binary. +Then to build the TSP image use: + +.. code:: shell + + make PLAT=<platform> SPD=tspd all + +An additional boot loader binary file is created in the ``build`` directory: + +:: + + build/<platform>/<build-type>/bl32.bin + +-------------- + +*Copyright (c) 2019, Arm Limited. All rights reserved.* |