• Tom Zanussi's avatar
    dmaengine: idxd: Add IDXD performance monitor support · 81dd4d4d
    Tom Zanussi authored
    Implement the IDXD performance monitor capability (named 'perfmon' in
    the DSA (Data Streaming Accelerator) spec [1]), which supports the
    collection of information about key events occurring during DSA and
    IAX (Intel Analytics Accelerator) device execution, to assist in
    performance tuning and debugging.
    
    The idxd perfmon support is implemented as part of the IDXD driver and
    interfaces with the Linux perf framework.  It has several features in
    common with the existing uncore pmu support:
    
      - it does not support sampling
      - does not support per-thread counting
    
    However it also has some unique features not present in the core and
    uncore support:
    
      - all general-purpose counters are identical, thus no event constraints
      - operation is always system-wide
    
    While the core perf subsystem assumes that all counters are by default
    per-cpu, the uncore pmus are socket-scoped and use a cpu mask to
    restrict counting to one cpu from each socket.  IDXD counters use a
    similar strategy but expand the scope even further; since IDXD
    counters are system-wide and can be read from any cpu, the IDXD perf
    driver picks a single cpu to do the work (with cpu hotplug notifiers
    to choose a different cpu if the chosen one is taken off-line).
    
    More specifically, the perf userspace tool by default opens a counter
    for each cpu for an event.  However, if it finds a cpumask file
    associated with the pmu under sysfs, as is the case with the uncore
    pmus, it will open counters only on the cpus specified by the cpumask.
    Since perfmon only needs to open a single counter per event for a
    given IDXD device, the perfmon driver will create a sysfs cpumask file
    for the device and insert the first cpu of the system into it.  When a
    user uses perf to open an event, perf will open a single counter on
    the cpu specified by the cpu mask.  This amounts to the default
    system-wide rather than per-cpu counting mentioned previously for
    perfmon pmu events.  In order to keep the cpu mask up-to-date, the
    driver implements cpu hotplug support for multiple devices, as IDXD
    usually enumerates and registers more than one idxd device.
    
    The perfmon driver implements basic perfmon hardware capability
    discovery and configuration, and is initialized by the IDXD driver's
    probe function.  During initialization, the driver retrieves the total
    number of supported performance counters, the pmu ID, and the device
    type from idxd device, and registers itself under the Linux perf
    framework.
    
    The perf userspace tool can be used to monitor single or multiple
    events depending on the given configuration, as well as event groups,
    which are also supported by the perfmon driver.  The user configures
    events using the perf tool command-line interface by specifying the
    event and corresponding event category, along with an optional set of
    filters that can be used to restrict counting to specific work queues,
    traffic classes, page and transfer sizes, and engines (See [1] for
    specifics).
    
    With the configuration specified by the user, the perf tool issues a
    system call passing that information to the kernel, which uses it to
    initialize the specified event(s).  The event(s) are opened and
    started, and following termination of the perf command, they're
    stopped.  At that point, the perfmon driver will read the latest count
    for the event(s), calculate the difference between the latest counter
    values and previously tracked counter values, and display the final
    incremental count as the event count for the cycle.  An overflow
    handler registered on the IDXD irq path is used to account for counter
    overflows, which are signaled by an overflow interrupt.
    
    Below are a couple of examples of perf usage for monitoring DSA events.
    
    The following monitors all events in the 'engine' category.  Becuuse
    no filters are specified, this captures all engine events for the
    workload, which in this case is 19 iterations of the work generated by
    the kernel dmatest module.
    
    Details describing the events can be found in Appendix D of [1],
    Performance Monitoring Events, but briefly they are:
    
      event 0x1:  total input data processed, in 32-byte units
      event 0x2:  total data written, in 32-byte units
      event 0x4:  number of work descriptors that read the source
      event 0x8:  number of work descriptors that write the destination
      event 0x10: number of work descriptors dispatched from batch descriptors
      event 0x20: number of work descriptors dispatched from work queues
    
     # perf stat -e dsa0/event=0x1,event_category=0x1/,
                    dsa0/event=0x2,event_category=0x1/,
    		dsa0/event=0x4,event_category=0x1/,
    		dsa0/event=0x8,event_category=0x1/,
    		dsa0/event=0x10,event_category=0x1/,
    		dsa0/event=0x20,event_category=0x1/
    		  modprobe dmatest channel=dma0chan0 timeout=2000
    		  iterations=19 run=1 wait=1
    
         Performance counter stats for 'system wide':
    
                     5,332      dsa0/event=0x1,event_category=0x1/
                     5,327      dsa0/event=0x2,event_category=0x1/
                        19      dsa0/event=0x4,event_category=0x1/
                        19      dsa0/event=0x8,event_category=0x1/
                         0      dsa0/event=0x10,event_category=0x1/
                        19      dsa0/event=0x20,event_category=0x1/
    
              21.977436186 seconds time elapsed
    
    The command below illustrates filter usage with a simple example.  It
    specifies that MEM_MOVE operations should be counted for the DSA
    device dsa0 (event 0x8 corresponds to the EV_MEM_MOVE event - Number
    of Memory Move Descriptors, which is part of event category 0x3 -
    Operations. The detailed category and event IDs are available in
    Appendix D, Performance Monitoring Events, of [1]).  In addition to
    the event and event category, a number of filters are also specified
    (the detailed filter values are available in Chapter 6.4 (Filter
    Support) of [1]), which will restrict counting to only those events
    that meet all of the filter criteria.  In this case, the filters
    specify that only MEM_MOVE operations that are serviced by work queue
    wq0 and specifically engine number engine0 and traffic class tc0
    having sizes between 0 and 4k and page size of between 0 and 1G result
    in a counter hit; anything else will be filtered out and not appear in
    the final count.  Note that filters are optional - any filter not
    specified is assumed to be all ones and will pass anything.
    
     # perf stat -e dsa0/filter_wq=0x1,filter_tc=0x1,filter_sz=0x7,
                    filter_eng=0x1,event=0x8,event_category=0x3/
    		  modprobe dmatest channel=dma0chan0 timeout=2000
    		  iterations=19 run=1 wait=1
    
         Performance counter stats for 'system wide':
    
           19      dsa0/filter_wq=0x1,filter_tc=0x1,filter_sz=0x7,
                   filter_eng=0x1,event=0x8,event_category=0x3/
    
              21.865914091 seconds time elapsed
    
    The output above reflects that the unspecified workload resulted in
    the counting of 19 MEM_MOVE operation events that met the filter
    criteria.
    
    [1]: https://software.intel.com/content/www/us/en/develop/download/intel-data-streaming-accelerator-preliminary-architecture-specification.html
    
    [ Based on work originally by Jing Lin. ]
    Reviewed-by: default avatarDave Jiang <dave.jiang@intel.com>
    Reviewed-by: default avatarKan Liang <kan.liang@linux.intel.com>
    Signed-off-by: default avatarTom Zanussi <tom.zanussi@linux.intel.com>
    Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/0c5080a7d541904c4ad42b848c76a1ce056ddac7.1619276133.git.zanussi@kernel.orgSigned-off-by: default avatarVinod Koul <vkoul@kernel.org>
    81dd4d4d
perfmon.c 16.4 KB