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author | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-04-07 18:49:45 +0000 |
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committer | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-04-07 18:49:45 +0000 |
commit | 2c3c1048746a4622d8c89a29670120dc8fab93c4 (patch) | |
tree | 848558de17fb3008cdf4d861b01ac7781903ce39 /tools/perf/Documentation/perf-arm-spe.txt | |
parent | Initial commit. (diff) | |
download | linux-2c3c1048746a4622d8c89a29670120dc8fab93c4.tar.xz linux-2c3c1048746a4622d8c89a29670120dc8fab93c4.zip |
Adding upstream version 6.1.76.upstream/6.1.76upstream
Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
Diffstat (limited to '')
-rw-r--r-- | tools/perf/Documentation/perf-arm-spe.txt | 218 |
1 files changed, 218 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/tools/perf/Documentation/perf-arm-spe.txt b/tools/perf/Documentation/perf-arm-spe.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000..bf03222e9 --- /dev/null +++ b/tools/perf/Documentation/perf-arm-spe.txt @@ -0,0 +1,218 @@ +perf-arm-spe(1) +================ + +NAME +---- +perf-arm-spe - Support for Arm Statistical Profiling Extension within Perf tools + +SYNOPSIS +-------- +[verse] +'perf record' -e arm_spe// + +DESCRIPTION +----------- + +The SPE (Statistical Profiling Extension) feature provides accurate attribution of latencies and + events down to individual instructions. Rather than being interrupt-driven, it picks an +instruction to sample and then captures data for it during execution. Data includes execution time +in cycles. For loads and stores it also includes data address, cache miss events, and data origin. + +The sampling has 5 stages: + + 1. Choose an operation + 2. Collect data about the operation + 3. Optionally discard the record based on a filter + 4. Write the record to memory + 5. Interrupt when the buffer is full + +Choose an operation +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +This is chosen from a sample population, for SPE this is an IMPLEMENTATION DEFINED choice of all +architectural instructions or all micro-ops. Sampling happens at a programmable interval. The +architecture provides a mechanism for the SPE driver to infer the minimum interval at which it should +sample. This minimum interval is used by the driver if no interval is specified. A pseudo-random +perturbation is also added to the sampling interval by default. + +Collect data about the operation +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Program counter, PMU events, timings and data addresses related to the operation are recorded. +Sampling ensures there is only one sampled operation is in flight. + +Optionally discard the record based on a filter +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Based on programmable criteria, choose whether to keep the record or discard it. If the record is +discarded then the flow stops here for this sample. + +Write the record to memory +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +The record is appended to a memory buffer + +Interrupt when the buffer is full +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +When the buffer fills, an interrupt is sent and the driver signals Perf to collect the records. +Perf saves the raw data in the perf.data file. + +Opening the file +---------------- + +Up until this point no decoding of the SPE data was done by either the kernel or Perf. Only when the +recorded file is opened with 'perf report' or 'perf script' does the decoding happen. When decoding +the data, Perf generates "synthetic samples" as if these were generated at the time of the +recording. These samples are the same as if normal sampling was done by Perf without using SPE, +although they may have more attributes associated with them. For example a normal sample may have +just the instruction pointer, but an SPE sample can have data addresses and latency attributes. + +Why Sampling? +------------- + + - Sampling, rather than tracing, cuts down the profiling problem to something more manageable for + hardware. Only one sampled operation is in flight at a time. + + - Allows precise attribution data, including: Full PC of instruction, data virtual and physical + addresses. + + - Allows correlation between an instruction and events, such as TLB and cache miss. (Data source + indicates which particular cache was hit, but the meaning is implementation defined because + different implementations can have different cache configurations.) + +However, SPE does not provide any call-graph information, and relies on statistical methods. + +Collisions +---------- + +When an operation is sampled while a previous sampled operation has not finished, a collision +occurs. The new sample is dropped. Collisions affect the integrity of the data, so the sample rate +should be set to avoid collisions. + +The 'sample_collision' PMU event can be used to determine the number of lost samples. Although this +count is based on collisions _before_ filtering occurs. Therefore this can not be used as an exact +number for samples dropped that would have made it through the filter, but can be a rough +guide. + +The effect of microarchitectural sampling +----------------------------------------- + +If an implementation samples micro-operations instead of instructions, the results of sampling must +be weighted accordingly. + +For example, if a given instruction A is always converted into two micro-operations, A0 and A1, it +becomes twice as likely to appear in the sample population. + +The coarse effect of conversions, and, if applicable, sampling of speculative operations, can be +estimated from the 'sample_pop' and 'inst_retired' PMU events. + +Kernel Requirements +------------------- + +The ARM_SPE_PMU config must be set to build as either a module or statically. + +Depending on CPU model, the kernel may need to be booted with page table isolation disabled +(kpti=off). If KPTI needs to be disabled, this will fail with a console message "profiling buffer +inaccessible. Try passing 'kpti=off' on the kernel command line". + +Capturing SPE with perf command-line tools +------------------------------------------ + +You can record a session with SPE samples: + + perf record -e arm_spe// -- ./mybench + +The sample period is set from the -c option, and because the minimum interval is used by default +it's recommended to set this to a higher value. The value is written to PMSIRR.INTERVAL. + +Config parameters +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +These are placed between the // in the event and comma separated. For example '-e +arm_spe/load_filter=1,min_latency=10/' + + branch_filter=1 - collect branches only (PMSFCR.B) + event_filter=<mask> - filter on specific events (PMSEVFR) - see bitfield description below + jitter=1 - use jitter to avoid resonance when sampling (PMSIRR.RND) + load_filter=1 - collect loads only (PMSFCR.LD) + min_latency=<n> - collect only samples with this latency or higher* (PMSLATFR) + pa_enable=1 - collect physical address (as well as VA) of loads/stores (PMSCR.PA) - requires privilege + pct_enable=1 - collect physical timestamp instead of virtual timestamp (PMSCR.PCT) - requires privilege + store_filter=1 - collect stores only (PMSFCR.ST) + ts_enable=1 - enable timestamping with value of generic timer (PMSCR.TS) + ++++*+++ Latency is the total latency from the point at which sampling started on that instruction, rather +than only the execution latency. + +Only some events can be filtered on; these include: + + bit 1 - instruction retired (i.e. omit speculative instructions) + bit 3 - L1D refill + bit 5 - TLB refill + bit 7 - mispredict + bit 11 - misaligned access + +So to sample just retired instructions: + + perf record -e arm_spe/event_filter=2/ -- ./mybench + +or just mispredicted branches: + + perf record -e arm_spe/event_filter=0x80/ -- ./mybench + +Viewing the data +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +By default perf report and perf script will assign samples to separate groups depending on the +attributes/events of the SPE record. Because instructions can have multiple events associated with +them, the samples in these groups are not necessarily unique. For example perf report shows these +groups: + + Available samples + 0 arm_spe// + 0 dummy:u + 21 l1d-miss + 897 l1d-access + 5 llc-miss + 7 llc-access + 2 tlb-miss + 1K tlb-access + 36 branch-miss + 0 remote-access + 900 memory + +The arm_spe// and dummy:u events are implementation details and are expected to be empty. + +To get a full list of unique samples that are not sorted into groups, set the itrace option to +generate 'instruction' samples. The period option is also taken into account, so set it to 1 +instruction unless you want to further downsample the already sampled SPE data: + + perf report --itrace=i1i + +Memory access details are also stored on the samples and this can be viewed with: + + perf report --mem-mode + +Common errors +~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + + - "Cannot find PMU `arm_spe'. Missing kernel support?" + + Module not built or loaded, KPTI not disabled (see above), or running on a VM + + - "Arm SPE CONTEXT packets not found in the traces." + + Root privilege is required to collect context packets. But these only increase the accuracy of + assigning PIDs to kernel samples. For userspace sampling this can be ignored. + + - Excessively large perf.data file size + + Increase sampling interval (see above) + + +SEE ALSO +-------- + +linkperf:perf-record[1], linkperf:perf-script[1], linkperf:perf-report[1], +linkperf:perf-inject[1] |