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diff --git a/Documentation/trace/intel_th.rst b/Documentation/trace/intel_th.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000..b31818d5f --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/trace/intel_th.rst @@ -0,0 +1,150 @@ +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 + +======================= +Intel(R) Trace Hub (TH) +======================= + +Overview +-------- + +Intel(R) Trace Hub (TH) is a set of hardware blocks that produce, +switch and output trace data from multiple hardware and software +sources over several types of trace output ports encoded in System +Trace Protocol (MIPI STPv2) and is intended to perform full system +debugging. For more information on the hardware, see Intel(R) Trace +Hub developer's manual [1]. + +It consists of trace sources, trace destinations (outputs) and a +switch (Global Trace Hub, GTH). These devices are placed on a bus of +their own ("intel_th"), where they can be discovered and configured +via sysfs attributes. + +Currently, the following Intel TH subdevices (blocks) are supported: + - Software Trace Hub (STH), trace source, which is a System Trace + Module (STM) device, + - Memory Storage Unit (MSU), trace output, which allows storing + trace hub output in system memory, + - Parallel Trace Interface output (PTI), trace output to an external + debug host via a PTI port, + - Global Trace Hub (GTH), which is a switch and a central component + of Intel(R) Trace Hub architecture. + +Common attributes for output devices are described in +Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-bus-intel_th-output-devices, the most +notable of them is "active", which enables or disables trace output +into that particular output device. + +GTH allows directing different STP masters into different output ports +via its "masters" attribute group. More detailed GTH interface +description is at Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-bus-intel_th-devices-gth. + +STH registers an stm class device, through which it provides interface +to userspace and kernelspace software trace sources. See +Documentation/trace/stm.rst for more information on that. + +MSU can be configured to collect trace data into a system memory +buffer, which can later on be read from its device nodes via read() or +mmap() interface and directed to a "software sink" driver that will +consume the data and/or relay it further. + +On the whole, Intel(R) Trace Hub does not require any special +userspace software to function; everything can be configured, started +and collected via sysfs attributes, and device nodes. + +[1] https://software.intel.com/sites/default/files/managed/d3/3c/intel-th-developer-manual.pdf + +Bus and Subdevices +------------------ + +For each Intel TH device in the system a bus of its own is +created and assigned an id number that reflects the order in which TH +devices were enumerated. All TH subdevices (devices on intel_th bus) +begin with this id: 0-gth, 0-msc0, 0-msc1, 0-pti, 0-sth, which is +followed by device's name and an optional index. + +Output devices also get a device node in /dev/intel_thN, where N is +the Intel TH device id. For example, MSU's memory buffers, when +allocated, are accessible via /dev/intel_th0/msc{0,1}. + +Quick example +------------- + +# figure out which GTH port is the first memory controller:: + + $ cat /sys/bus/intel_th/devices/0-msc0/port + 0 + +# looks like it's port 0, configure master 33 to send data to port 0:: + + $ echo 0 > /sys/bus/intel_th/devices/0-gth/masters/33 + +# allocate a 2-windowed multiblock buffer on the first memory +# controller, each with 64 pages:: + + $ echo multi > /sys/bus/intel_th/devices/0-msc0/mode + $ echo 64,64 > /sys/bus/intel_th/devices/0-msc0/nr_pages + +# enable wrapping for this controller, too:: + + $ echo 1 > /sys/bus/intel_th/devices/0-msc0/wrap + +# and enable tracing into this port:: + + $ echo 1 > /sys/bus/intel_th/devices/0-msc0/active + +# .. send data to master 33, see stm.txt for more details .. +# .. wait for traces to pile up .. +# .. and stop the trace:: + + $ echo 0 > /sys/bus/intel_th/devices/0-msc0/active + +# and now you can collect the trace from the device node:: + + $ cat /dev/intel_th0/msc0 > my_stp_trace + +Host Debugger Mode +------------------ + +It is possible to configure the Trace Hub and control its trace +capture from a remote debug host, which should be connected via one of +the hardware debugging interfaces, which will then be used to both +control Intel Trace Hub and transfer its trace data to the debug host. + +The driver needs to be told that such an arrangement is taking place +so that it does not touch any capture/port configuration and avoids +conflicting with the debug host's configuration accesses. The only +activity that the driver will perform in this mode is collecting +software traces to the Software Trace Hub (an stm class device). The +user is still responsible for setting up adequate master/channel +mappings that the decoder on the receiving end would recognize. + +In order to enable the host mode, set the 'host_mode' parameter of the +'intel_th' kernel module to 'y'. None of the virtual output devices +will show up on the intel_th bus. Also, trace configuration and +capture controlling attribute groups of the 'gth' device will not be +exposed. The 'sth' device will operate as usual. + +Software Sinks +-------------- + +The Memory Storage Unit (MSU) driver provides an in-kernel API for +drivers to register themselves as software sinks for the trace data. +Such drivers can further export the data via other devices, such as +USB device controllers or network cards. + +The API has two main parts:: + - notifying the software sink that a particular window is full, and + "locking" that window, that is, making it unavailable for the trace + collection; when this happens, the MSU driver will automatically + switch to the next window in the buffer if it is unlocked, or stop + the trace capture if it's not; + - tracking the "locked" state of windows and providing a way for the + software sink driver to notify the MSU driver when a window is + unlocked and can be used again to collect trace data. + +An example sink driver, msu-sink illustrates the implementation of a +software sink. Functionally, it simply unlocks windows as soon as they +are full, keeping the MSU running in a circular buffer mode. Unlike the +"multi" mode, it will fill out all the windows in the buffer as opposed +to just the first one. It can be enabled by writing "sink" to the "mode" +file (assuming msu-sink.ko is loaded). |