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linux-next/arch/s390/kernel/perf_cpum_cf_diag.c

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// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
/*
* Performance event support for s390x - CPU-measurement Counter Sets
*
s390/cpumf: Add support for complete counter set extraction Add support to the CPU Measurement counter facility device driver to extract complete counter sets per CPU and per counter set from user space. This includes a new device named /dev/hwctr and support for the device driver functions open, close and ioctl. Other functions are not supported. The ioctl command supports 3 subcommands: S390_HWCTR_START: enables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_STOP: disables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_READ: reads counter sets on a list of CPUs. The ioctl(..., S390_HWCTR_READ, ...) is the only subcommand which returns data. It requires member data_bytes to be positive and indicates the maximum amount of data available to store counter set data. The other ioctl() subcommands do not use this member and it should be set to zero. The S390_HWCTR_READ subcommand returns the following data: The cpuset data is flattened using the following scheme, stored in member data: 0x0 0x8 0xc 0x10 0x10 0x18 0x20 0x28 0xU-1 +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | no_cpus | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xU 0xU+4 0xU+8 0xU+10 0xV-1 +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xV 0xV+4 0xV+8 0xV+c +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ U and V denote arbitrary hexadezimal addresses. The first integer represents the number of CPUs data was extracted from. This is followed by CPU number and number of counter sets extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the set identifer and number of counters extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the counter values, each element is eight bytes in size. The S390_HWCTR_READ ioctl subcommand is also limited to one call per minute. This ensures that an application does not read out the counter sets too often and reduces the overall CPU performance. The complete counter set extraction is an expensive operation. Reviewed-by: Sumanth Korikkar <sumanthk@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Thomas Richter <tmricht@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Heiko Carstens <hca@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Vasily Gorbik <gor@linux.ibm.com>
2021-02-23 01:01:54 +08:00
* Copyright IBM Corp. 2019, 2021
* Author(s): Hendrik Brueckner <brueckner@linux.ibm.com>
* Thomas Richer <tmricht@linux.ibm.com>
*/
#define KMSG_COMPONENT "cpum_cf_diag"
#define pr_fmt(fmt) KMSG_COMPONENT ": " fmt
#include <linux/kernel.h>
#include <linux/kernel_stat.h>
#include <linux/percpu.h>
#include <linux/notifier.h>
#include <linux/init.h>
#include <linux/export.h>
#include <linux/slab.h>
#include <linux/processor.h>
s390/cpumf: Add support for complete counter set extraction Add support to the CPU Measurement counter facility device driver to extract complete counter sets per CPU and per counter set from user space. This includes a new device named /dev/hwctr and support for the device driver functions open, close and ioctl. Other functions are not supported. The ioctl command supports 3 subcommands: S390_HWCTR_START: enables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_STOP: disables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_READ: reads counter sets on a list of CPUs. The ioctl(..., S390_HWCTR_READ, ...) is the only subcommand which returns data. It requires member data_bytes to be positive and indicates the maximum amount of data available to store counter set data. The other ioctl() subcommands do not use this member and it should be set to zero. The S390_HWCTR_READ subcommand returns the following data: The cpuset data is flattened using the following scheme, stored in member data: 0x0 0x8 0xc 0x10 0x10 0x18 0x20 0x28 0xU-1 +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | no_cpus | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xU 0xU+4 0xU+8 0xU+10 0xV-1 +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xV 0xV+4 0xV+8 0xV+c +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ U and V denote arbitrary hexadezimal addresses. The first integer represents the number of CPUs data was extracted from. This is followed by CPU number and number of counter sets extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the set identifer and number of counters extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the counter values, each element is eight bytes in size. The S390_HWCTR_READ ioctl subcommand is also limited to one call per minute. This ensures that an application does not read out the counter sets too often and reduces the overall CPU performance. The complete counter set extraction is an expensive operation. Reviewed-by: Sumanth Korikkar <sumanthk@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Thomas Richter <tmricht@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Heiko Carstens <hca@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Vasily Gorbik <gor@linux.ibm.com>
2021-02-23 01:01:54 +08:00
#include <linux/miscdevice.h>
#include <linux/mutex.h>
#include <asm/ctl_reg.h>
#include <asm/irq.h>
#include <asm/cpu_mcf.h>
#include <asm/timex.h>
#include <asm/debug.h>
#include <asm/hwctrset.h>
s390/cpumf: Add support for complete counter set extraction Add support to the CPU Measurement counter facility device driver to extract complete counter sets per CPU and per counter set from user space. This includes a new device named /dev/hwctr and support for the device driver functions open, close and ioctl. Other functions are not supported. The ioctl command supports 3 subcommands: S390_HWCTR_START: enables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_STOP: disables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_READ: reads counter sets on a list of CPUs. The ioctl(..., S390_HWCTR_READ, ...) is the only subcommand which returns data. It requires member data_bytes to be positive and indicates the maximum amount of data available to store counter set data. The other ioctl() subcommands do not use this member and it should be set to zero. The S390_HWCTR_READ subcommand returns the following data: The cpuset data is flattened using the following scheme, stored in member data: 0x0 0x8 0xc 0x10 0x10 0x18 0x20 0x28 0xU-1 +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | no_cpus | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xU 0xU+4 0xU+8 0xU+10 0xV-1 +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xV 0xV+4 0xV+8 0xV+c +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ U and V denote arbitrary hexadezimal addresses. The first integer represents the number of CPUs data was extracted from. This is followed by CPU number and number of counter sets extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the set identifer and number of counters extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the counter values, each element is eight bytes in size. The S390_HWCTR_READ ioctl subcommand is also limited to one call per minute. This ensures that an application does not read out the counter sets too often and reduces the overall CPU performance. The complete counter set extraction is an expensive operation. Reviewed-by: Sumanth Korikkar <sumanthk@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Thomas Richter <tmricht@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Heiko Carstens <hca@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Vasily Gorbik <gor@linux.ibm.com>
2021-02-23 01:01:54 +08:00
#define CF_DIAG_CTRSET_DEF 0xfeef /* Counter set header mark */
/* interval in seconds */
static unsigned int cf_diag_cpu_speed;
static debug_info_t *cf_diag_dbg;
s390/cpumf: Add support for complete counter set extraction Add support to the CPU Measurement counter facility device driver to extract complete counter sets per CPU and per counter set from user space. This includes a new device named /dev/hwctr and support for the device driver functions open, close and ioctl. Other functions are not supported. The ioctl command supports 3 subcommands: S390_HWCTR_START: enables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_STOP: disables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_READ: reads counter sets on a list of CPUs. The ioctl(..., S390_HWCTR_READ, ...) is the only subcommand which returns data. It requires member data_bytes to be positive and indicates the maximum amount of data available to store counter set data. The other ioctl() subcommands do not use this member and it should be set to zero. The S390_HWCTR_READ subcommand returns the following data: The cpuset data is flattened using the following scheme, stored in member data: 0x0 0x8 0xc 0x10 0x10 0x18 0x20 0x28 0xU-1 +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | no_cpus | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xU 0xU+4 0xU+8 0xU+10 0xV-1 +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xV 0xV+4 0xV+8 0xV+c +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ U and V denote arbitrary hexadezimal addresses. The first integer represents the number of CPUs data was extracted from. This is followed by CPU number and number of counter sets extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the set identifer and number of counters extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the counter values, each element is eight bytes in size. The S390_HWCTR_READ ioctl subcommand is also limited to one call per minute. This ensures that an application does not read out the counter sets too often and reduces the overall CPU performance. The complete counter set extraction is an expensive operation. Reviewed-by: Sumanth Korikkar <sumanthk@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Thomas Richter <tmricht@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Heiko Carstens <hca@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Vasily Gorbik <gor@linux.ibm.com>
2021-02-23 01:01:54 +08:00
struct cf_diag_csd { /* Counter set data per CPU */
size_t used; /* Bytes used in data/start */
unsigned char start[PAGE_SIZE]; /* Counter set at event start */
unsigned char data[PAGE_SIZE]; /* Counter set at event delete */
s390/cpumf: Add support for complete counter set extraction Add support to the CPU Measurement counter facility device driver to extract complete counter sets per CPU and per counter set from user space. This includes a new device named /dev/hwctr and support for the device driver functions open, close and ioctl. Other functions are not supported. The ioctl command supports 3 subcommands: S390_HWCTR_START: enables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_STOP: disables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_READ: reads counter sets on a list of CPUs. The ioctl(..., S390_HWCTR_READ, ...) is the only subcommand which returns data. It requires member data_bytes to be positive and indicates the maximum amount of data available to store counter set data. The other ioctl() subcommands do not use this member and it should be set to zero. The S390_HWCTR_READ subcommand returns the following data: The cpuset data is flattened using the following scheme, stored in member data: 0x0 0x8 0xc 0x10 0x10 0x18 0x20 0x28 0xU-1 +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | no_cpus | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xU 0xU+4 0xU+8 0xU+10 0xV-1 +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xV 0xV+4 0xV+8 0xV+c +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ U and V denote arbitrary hexadezimal addresses. The first integer represents the number of CPUs data was extracted from. This is followed by CPU number and number of counter sets extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the set identifer and number of counters extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the counter values, each element is eight bytes in size. The S390_HWCTR_READ ioctl subcommand is also limited to one call per minute. This ensures that an application does not read out the counter sets too often and reduces the overall CPU performance. The complete counter set extraction is an expensive operation. Reviewed-by: Sumanth Korikkar <sumanthk@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Thomas Richter <tmricht@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Heiko Carstens <hca@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Vasily Gorbik <gor@linux.ibm.com>
2021-02-23 01:01:54 +08:00
unsigned int sets; /* # Counter set saved in data */
};
static DEFINE_PER_CPU(struct cf_diag_csd, cf_diag_csd);
/* Counter sets are stored as data stream in a page sized memory buffer and
* exported to user space via raw data attached to the event sample data.
* Each counter set starts with an eight byte header consisting of:
* - a two byte eye catcher (0xfeef)
* - a one byte counter set number
* - a two byte counter set size (indicates the number of counters in this set)
* - a three byte reserved value (must be zero) to make the header the same
* size as a counter value.
* All counter values are eight byte in size.
*
* All counter sets are followed by a 64 byte trailer.
* The trailer consists of a:
* - flag field indicating valid fields when corresponding bit set
* - the counter facility first and second version number
* - the CPU speed if nonzero
* - the time stamp the counter sets have been collected
* - the time of day (TOD) base value
* - the machine type.
*
* The counter sets are saved when the process is prepared to be executed on a
* CPU and saved again when the process is going to be removed from a CPU.
* The difference of both counter sets are calculated and stored in the event
* sample data area.
*/
struct cf_ctrset_entry { /* CPU-M CF counter set entry (8 byte) */
unsigned int def:16; /* 0-15 Data Entry Format */
unsigned int set:16; /* 16-31 Counter set identifier */
unsigned int ctr:16; /* 32-47 Number of stored counters */
unsigned int res1:16; /* 48-63 Reserved */
};
struct cf_trailer_entry { /* CPU-M CF_DIAG trailer (64 byte) */
/* 0 - 7 */
union {
struct {
unsigned int clock_base:1; /* TOD clock base set */
unsigned int speed:1; /* CPU speed set */
/* Measurement alerts */
unsigned int mtda:1; /* Loss of MT ctr. data alert */
unsigned int caca:1; /* Counter auth. change alert */
unsigned int lcda:1; /* Loss of counter data alert */
};
unsigned long flags; /* 0-63 All indicators */
};
/* 8 - 15 */
unsigned int cfvn:16; /* 64-79 Ctr First Version */
unsigned int csvn:16; /* 80-95 Ctr Second Version */
unsigned int cpu_speed:32; /* 96-127 CPU speed */
/* 16 - 23 */
unsigned long timestamp; /* 128-191 Timestamp (TOD) */
/* 24 - 55 */
union {
struct {
unsigned long progusage1;
unsigned long progusage2;
unsigned long progusage3;
unsigned long tod_base;
};
unsigned long progusage[4];
};
/* 56 - 63 */
unsigned int mach_type:16; /* Machine type */
unsigned int res1:16; /* Reserved */
unsigned int res2:32; /* Reserved */
};
/* Create the trailer data at the end of a page. */
static void cf_diag_trailer(struct cf_trailer_entry *te)
{
struct cpu_cf_events *cpuhw = this_cpu_ptr(&cpu_cf_events);
struct cpuid cpuid;
te->cfvn = cpuhw->info.cfvn; /* Counter version numbers */
te->csvn = cpuhw->info.csvn;
get_cpu_id(&cpuid); /* Machine type */
te->mach_type = cpuid.machine;
te->cpu_speed = cf_diag_cpu_speed;
if (te->cpu_speed)
te->speed = 1;
te->clock_base = 1; /* Save clock base */
te->tod_base = tod_clock_base.tod;
te->timestamp = get_tod_clock_fast();
}
/*
* Change the CPUMF state to active.
* Enable and activate the CPU-counter sets according
* to the per-cpu control state.
*/
static void cf_diag_enable(struct pmu *pmu)
{
struct cpu_cf_events *cpuhw = this_cpu_ptr(&cpu_cf_events);
int err;
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 5,
"%s pmu %p cpu %d flags %#x state %#llx\n",
__func__, pmu, smp_processor_id(), cpuhw->flags,
cpuhw->state);
if (cpuhw->flags & PMU_F_ENABLED)
return;
err = lcctl(cpuhw->state);
if (err) {
pr_err("Enabling the performance measuring unit "
"failed with rc=%x\n", err);
return;
}
cpuhw->flags |= PMU_F_ENABLED;
}
/*
* Change the CPUMF state to inactive.
* Disable and enable (inactive) the CPU-counter sets according
* to the per-cpu control state.
*/
static void cf_diag_disable(struct pmu *pmu)
{
struct cpu_cf_events *cpuhw = this_cpu_ptr(&cpu_cf_events);
u64 inactive;
int err;
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 5,
"%s pmu %p cpu %d flags %#x state %#llx\n",
__func__, pmu, smp_processor_id(), cpuhw->flags,
cpuhw->state);
if (!(cpuhw->flags & PMU_F_ENABLED))
return;
inactive = cpuhw->state & ~((1 << CPUMF_LCCTL_ENABLE_SHIFT) - 1);
err = lcctl(inactive);
if (err) {
pr_err("Disabling the performance measuring unit "
"failed with rc=%x\n", err);
return;
}
cpuhw->flags &= ~PMU_F_ENABLED;
}
/* Number of perf events counting hardware events */
static atomic_t cf_diag_events = ATOMIC_INIT(0);
s390/cpumf: Add support for complete counter set extraction Add support to the CPU Measurement counter facility device driver to extract complete counter sets per CPU and per counter set from user space. This includes a new device named /dev/hwctr and support for the device driver functions open, close and ioctl. Other functions are not supported. The ioctl command supports 3 subcommands: S390_HWCTR_START: enables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_STOP: disables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_READ: reads counter sets on a list of CPUs. The ioctl(..., S390_HWCTR_READ, ...) is the only subcommand which returns data. It requires member data_bytes to be positive and indicates the maximum amount of data available to store counter set data. The other ioctl() subcommands do not use this member and it should be set to zero. The S390_HWCTR_READ subcommand returns the following data: The cpuset data is flattened using the following scheme, stored in member data: 0x0 0x8 0xc 0x10 0x10 0x18 0x20 0x28 0xU-1 +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | no_cpus | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xU 0xU+4 0xU+8 0xU+10 0xV-1 +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xV 0xV+4 0xV+8 0xV+c +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ U and V denote arbitrary hexadezimal addresses. The first integer represents the number of CPUs data was extracted from. This is followed by CPU number and number of counter sets extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the set identifer and number of counters extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the counter values, each element is eight bytes in size. The S390_HWCTR_READ ioctl subcommand is also limited to one call per minute. This ensures that an application does not read out the counter sets too often and reduces the overall CPU performance. The complete counter set extraction is an expensive operation. Reviewed-by: Sumanth Korikkar <sumanthk@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Thomas Richter <tmricht@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Heiko Carstens <hca@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Vasily Gorbik <gor@linux.ibm.com>
2021-02-23 01:01:54 +08:00
/* Used to avoid races in calling reserve/release_cpumf_hardware */
static DEFINE_MUTEX(cf_diag_reserve_mutex);
/* Release the PMU if event is the last perf event */
static void cf_diag_perf_event_destroy(struct perf_event *event)
{
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 5,
"%s event %p cpu %d cf_diag_events %d\n",
s390/cpumf: Add support for complete counter set extraction Add support to the CPU Measurement counter facility device driver to extract complete counter sets per CPU and per counter set from user space. This includes a new device named /dev/hwctr and support for the device driver functions open, close and ioctl. Other functions are not supported. The ioctl command supports 3 subcommands: S390_HWCTR_START: enables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_STOP: disables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_READ: reads counter sets on a list of CPUs. The ioctl(..., S390_HWCTR_READ, ...) is the only subcommand which returns data. It requires member data_bytes to be positive and indicates the maximum amount of data available to store counter set data. The other ioctl() subcommands do not use this member and it should be set to zero. The S390_HWCTR_READ subcommand returns the following data: The cpuset data is flattened using the following scheme, stored in member data: 0x0 0x8 0xc 0x10 0x10 0x18 0x20 0x28 0xU-1 +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | no_cpus | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xU 0xU+4 0xU+8 0xU+10 0xV-1 +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xV 0xV+4 0xV+8 0xV+c +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ U and V denote arbitrary hexadezimal addresses. The first integer represents the number of CPUs data was extracted from. This is followed by CPU number and number of counter sets extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the set identifer and number of counters extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the counter values, each element is eight bytes in size. The S390_HWCTR_READ ioctl subcommand is also limited to one call per minute. This ensures that an application does not read out the counter sets too often and reduces the overall CPU performance. The complete counter set extraction is an expensive operation. Reviewed-by: Sumanth Korikkar <sumanthk@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Thomas Richter <tmricht@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Heiko Carstens <hca@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Vasily Gorbik <gor@linux.ibm.com>
2021-02-23 01:01:54 +08:00
__func__, event, smp_processor_id(),
atomic_read(&cf_diag_events));
if (atomic_dec_return(&cf_diag_events) == 0)
__kernel_cpumcf_end();
}
s390/cpumf: Add support for complete counter set extraction Add support to the CPU Measurement counter facility device driver to extract complete counter sets per CPU and per counter set from user space. This includes a new device named /dev/hwctr and support for the device driver functions open, close and ioctl. Other functions are not supported. The ioctl command supports 3 subcommands: S390_HWCTR_START: enables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_STOP: disables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_READ: reads counter sets on a list of CPUs. The ioctl(..., S390_HWCTR_READ, ...) is the only subcommand which returns data. It requires member data_bytes to be positive and indicates the maximum amount of data available to store counter set data. The other ioctl() subcommands do not use this member and it should be set to zero. The S390_HWCTR_READ subcommand returns the following data: The cpuset data is flattened using the following scheme, stored in member data: 0x0 0x8 0xc 0x10 0x10 0x18 0x20 0x28 0xU-1 +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | no_cpus | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xU 0xU+4 0xU+8 0xU+10 0xV-1 +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xV 0xV+4 0xV+8 0xV+c +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ U and V denote arbitrary hexadezimal addresses. The first integer represents the number of CPUs data was extracted from. This is followed by CPU number and number of counter sets extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the set identifer and number of counters extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the counter values, each element is eight bytes in size. The S390_HWCTR_READ ioctl subcommand is also limited to one call per minute. This ensures that an application does not read out the counter sets too often and reduces the overall CPU performance. The complete counter set extraction is an expensive operation. Reviewed-by: Sumanth Korikkar <sumanthk@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Thomas Richter <tmricht@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Heiko Carstens <hca@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Vasily Gorbik <gor@linux.ibm.com>
2021-02-23 01:01:54 +08:00
static int get_authctrsets(void)
{
struct cpu_cf_events *cpuhw;
unsigned long auth = 0;
enum cpumf_ctr_set i;
cpuhw = &get_cpu_var(cpu_cf_events);
for (i = CPUMF_CTR_SET_BASIC; i < CPUMF_CTR_SET_MAX; ++i) {
if (cpuhw->info.auth_ctl & cpumf_ctr_ctl[i])
auth |= cpumf_ctr_ctl[i];
}
put_cpu_var(cpu_cf_events);
return auth;
}
/* Setup the event. Test for authorized counter sets and only include counter
* sets which are authorized at the time of the setup. Including unauthorized
* counter sets result in specification exception (and panic).
*/
static int __hw_perf_event_init(struct perf_event *event)
{
struct perf_event_attr *attr = &event->attr;
int err = 0;
s390/cpumf: Fix warning from check_processor_id Function __hw_perf_event_init() used a CPU variable without ensuring CPU preemption has been disabled. This caused the following warning in the kernel log: [ 7.277085] BUG: using smp_processor_id() in preemptible [00000000] code: cf-csdiag/1892 [ 7.277111] caller is cf_diag_event_init+0x13a/0x338 [ 7.277122] CPU: 10 PID: 1892 Comm: cf-csdiag Not tainted 5.0.0-20190318.rc0.git0.9e1a11e0f602.300.fc29.s390x+debug #1 [ 7.277131] Hardware name: IBM 2964 NC9 712 (LPAR) [ 7.277139] Call Trace: [ 7.277150] ([<000000000011385a>] show_stack+0x82/0xd0) [ 7.277161] [<0000000000b7a71a>] dump_stack+0x92/0xd0 [ 7.277174] [<00000000007b7e9c>] check_preemption_disabled+0xe4/0x100 [ 7.277183] [<00000000001228aa>] cf_diag_event_init+0x13a/0x338 [ 7.277195] [<00000000002cf3aa>] perf_try_init_event+0x72/0xf0 [ 7.277204] [<00000000002d0bba>] perf_event_alloc+0x6fa/0xce0 [ 7.277214] [<00000000002dc4a8>] __s390x_sys_perf_event_open+0x398/0xd50 [ 7.277224] [<0000000000b9e8f0>] system_call+0xdc/0x2d8 [ 7.277233] 2 locks held by cf-csdiag/1892: [ 7.277241] #0: 00000000976f5510 (&sig->cred_guard_mutex){+.+.}, at: __s390x_sys_perf_event_open+0xd2e/0xd50 [ 7.277257] #1: 00000000363b11bd (&pmus_srcu){....}, at: perf_event_alloc+0x52e/0xce0 The variable is now accessed in proper context. Use get_cpu_var()/put_cpu_var() pair to disable preemption during access. As the hardware authorization settings apply to all CPUs, it does not matter which CPU is used to check the authorization setting. Remove the event->count assignment. It is not needed as function perf_event_alloc() allocates memory for the event with kzalloc() and thus count is already set to zero. Fixes: fe5908bccc56 ("s390/cpum_cf_diag: Add support for s390 counter facility diagnostic trace") Signed-off-by: Thomas Richter <tmricht@linux.ibm.com> Reviewed-by: Hendrik Brueckner <brueckner@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Martin Schwidefsky <schwidefsky@de.ibm.com>
2019-03-18 22:50:27 +08:00
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 5, "%s event %p cpu %d\n", __func__,
event, event->cpu);
event->hw.config = attr->config;
s390/cpumf: Fix warning from check_processor_id Function __hw_perf_event_init() used a CPU variable without ensuring CPU preemption has been disabled. This caused the following warning in the kernel log: [ 7.277085] BUG: using smp_processor_id() in preemptible [00000000] code: cf-csdiag/1892 [ 7.277111] caller is cf_diag_event_init+0x13a/0x338 [ 7.277122] CPU: 10 PID: 1892 Comm: cf-csdiag Not tainted 5.0.0-20190318.rc0.git0.9e1a11e0f602.300.fc29.s390x+debug #1 [ 7.277131] Hardware name: IBM 2964 NC9 712 (LPAR) [ 7.277139] Call Trace: [ 7.277150] ([<000000000011385a>] show_stack+0x82/0xd0) [ 7.277161] [<0000000000b7a71a>] dump_stack+0x92/0xd0 [ 7.277174] [<00000000007b7e9c>] check_preemption_disabled+0xe4/0x100 [ 7.277183] [<00000000001228aa>] cf_diag_event_init+0x13a/0x338 [ 7.277195] [<00000000002cf3aa>] perf_try_init_event+0x72/0xf0 [ 7.277204] [<00000000002d0bba>] perf_event_alloc+0x6fa/0xce0 [ 7.277214] [<00000000002dc4a8>] __s390x_sys_perf_event_open+0x398/0xd50 [ 7.277224] [<0000000000b9e8f0>] system_call+0xdc/0x2d8 [ 7.277233] 2 locks held by cf-csdiag/1892: [ 7.277241] #0: 00000000976f5510 (&sig->cred_guard_mutex){+.+.}, at: __s390x_sys_perf_event_open+0xd2e/0xd50 [ 7.277257] #1: 00000000363b11bd (&pmus_srcu){....}, at: perf_event_alloc+0x52e/0xce0 The variable is now accessed in proper context. Use get_cpu_var()/put_cpu_var() pair to disable preemption during access. As the hardware authorization settings apply to all CPUs, it does not matter which CPU is used to check the authorization setting. Remove the event->count assignment. It is not needed as function perf_event_alloc() allocates memory for the event with kzalloc() and thus count is already set to zero. Fixes: fe5908bccc56 ("s390/cpum_cf_diag: Add support for s390 counter facility diagnostic trace") Signed-off-by: Thomas Richter <tmricht@linux.ibm.com> Reviewed-by: Hendrik Brueckner <brueckner@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Martin Schwidefsky <schwidefsky@de.ibm.com>
2019-03-18 22:50:27 +08:00
/* Add all authorized counter sets to config_base. The
* the hardware init function is either called per-cpu or just once
* for all CPUS (event->cpu == -1). This depends on the whether
* counting is started for all CPUs or on a per workload base where
* the perf event moves from one CPU to another CPU.
* Checking the authorization on any CPU is fine as the hardware
* applies the same authorization settings to all CPUs.
*/
s390/cpumf: Add support for complete counter set extraction Add support to the CPU Measurement counter facility device driver to extract complete counter sets per CPU and per counter set from user space. This includes a new device named /dev/hwctr and support for the device driver functions open, close and ioctl. Other functions are not supported. The ioctl command supports 3 subcommands: S390_HWCTR_START: enables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_STOP: disables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_READ: reads counter sets on a list of CPUs. The ioctl(..., S390_HWCTR_READ, ...) is the only subcommand which returns data. It requires member data_bytes to be positive and indicates the maximum amount of data available to store counter set data. The other ioctl() subcommands do not use this member and it should be set to zero. The S390_HWCTR_READ subcommand returns the following data: The cpuset data is flattened using the following scheme, stored in member data: 0x0 0x8 0xc 0x10 0x10 0x18 0x20 0x28 0xU-1 +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | no_cpus | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xU 0xU+4 0xU+8 0xU+10 0xV-1 +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xV 0xV+4 0xV+8 0xV+c +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ U and V denote arbitrary hexadezimal addresses. The first integer represents the number of CPUs data was extracted from. This is followed by CPU number and number of counter sets extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the set identifer and number of counters extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the counter values, each element is eight bytes in size. The S390_HWCTR_READ ioctl subcommand is also limited to one call per minute. This ensures that an application does not read out the counter sets too often and reduces the overall CPU performance. The complete counter set extraction is an expensive operation. Reviewed-by: Sumanth Korikkar <sumanthk@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Thomas Richter <tmricht@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Heiko Carstens <hca@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Vasily Gorbik <gor@linux.ibm.com>
2021-02-23 01:01:54 +08:00
event->hw.config_base = get_authctrsets();
/* No authorized counter sets, nothing to count/sample */
if (!event->hw.config_base) {
err = -EINVAL;
goto out;
}
/* Set sample_period to indicate sampling */
event->hw.sample_period = attr->sample_period;
local64_set(&event->hw.period_left, event->hw.sample_period);
event->hw.last_period = event->hw.sample_period;
out:
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 5, "%s err %d config_base %#lx\n",
__func__, err, event->hw.config_base);
return err;
}
s390/cpumf: Add support for complete counter set extraction Add support to the CPU Measurement counter facility device driver to extract complete counter sets per CPU and per counter set from user space. This includes a new device named /dev/hwctr and support for the device driver functions open, close and ioctl. Other functions are not supported. The ioctl command supports 3 subcommands: S390_HWCTR_START: enables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_STOP: disables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_READ: reads counter sets on a list of CPUs. The ioctl(..., S390_HWCTR_READ, ...) is the only subcommand which returns data. It requires member data_bytes to be positive and indicates the maximum amount of data available to store counter set data. The other ioctl() subcommands do not use this member and it should be set to zero. The S390_HWCTR_READ subcommand returns the following data: The cpuset data is flattened using the following scheme, stored in member data: 0x0 0x8 0xc 0x10 0x10 0x18 0x20 0x28 0xU-1 +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | no_cpus | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xU 0xU+4 0xU+8 0xU+10 0xV-1 +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xV 0xV+4 0xV+8 0xV+c +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ U and V denote arbitrary hexadezimal addresses. The first integer represents the number of CPUs data was extracted from. This is followed by CPU number and number of counter sets extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the set identifer and number of counters extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the counter values, each element is eight bytes in size. The S390_HWCTR_READ ioctl subcommand is also limited to one call per minute. This ensures that an application does not read out the counter sets too often and reduces the overall CPU performance. The complete counter set extraction is an expensive operation. Reviewed-by: Sumanth Korikkar <sumanthk@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Thomas Richter <tmricht@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Heiko Carstens <hca@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Vasily Gorbik <gor@linux.ibm.com>
2021-02-23 01:01:54 +08:00
/* Return 0 if the CPU-measurement counter facility is currently free
* and an error otherwise.
*/
static int cf_diag_perf_event_inuse(void)
{
int err = 0;
if (!atomic_inc_not_zero(&cf_diag_events)) {
mutex_lock(&cf_diag_reserve_mutex);
if (atomic_read(&cf_diag_events) == 0 &&
__kernel_cpumcf_begin())
err = -EBUSY;
else
err = atomic_inc_return(&cf_diag_events);
mutex_unlock(&cf_diag_reserve_mutex);
}
return err;
}
static int cf_diag_event_init(struct perf_event *event)
{
struct perf_event_attr *attr = &event->attr;
int err = -ENOENT;
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 5,
"%s event %p cpu %d config %#llx type:%u "
"sample_type %#llx cf_diag_events %d\n", __func__,
event, event->cpu, attr->config, event->pmu->type,
attr->sample_type, atomic_read(&cf_diag_events));
if (event->attr.config != PERF_EVENT_CPUM_CF_DIAG ||
event->attr.type != event->pmu->type)
goto out;
/* Raw events are used to access counters directly,
* hence do not permit excludes.
* This event is usesless without PERF_SAMPLE_RAW to return counter set
* values as raw data.
*/
if (attr->exclude_kernel || attr->exclude_user || attr->exclude_hv ||
!(attr->sample_type & (PERF_SAMPLE_CPU | PERF_SAMPLE_RAW))) {
err = -EOPNOTSUPP;
goto out;
}
/* Initialize for using the CPU-measurement counter facility */
s390/cpumf: Add support for complete counter set extraction Add support to the CPU Measurement counter facility device driver to extract complete counter sets per CPU and per counter set from user space. This includes a new device named /dev/hwctr and support for the device driver functions open, close and ioctl. Other functions are not supported. The ioctl command supports 3 subcommands: S390_HWCTR_START: enables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_STOP: disables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_READ: reads counter sets on a list of CPUs. The ioctl(..., S390_HWCTR_READ, ...) is the only subcommand which returns data. It requires member data_bytes to be positive and indicates the maximum amount of data available to store counter set data. The other ioctl() subcommands do not use this member and it should be set to zero. The S390_HWCTR_READ subcommand returns the following data: The cpuset data is flattened using the following scheme, stored in member data: 0x0 0x8 0xc 0x10 0x10 0x18 0x20 0x28 0xU-1 +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | no_cpus | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xU 0xU+4 0xU+8 0xU+10 0xV-1 +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xV 0xV+4 0xV+8 0xV+c +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ U and V denote arbitrary hexadezimal addresses. The first integer represents the number of CPUs data was extracted from. This is followed by CPU number and number of counter sets extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the set identifer and number of counters extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the counter values, each element is eight bytes in size. The S390_HWCTR_READ ioctl subcommand is also limited to one call per minute. This ensures that an application does not read out the counter sets too often and reduces the overall CPU performance. The complete counter set extraction is an expensive operation. Reviewed-by: Sumanth Korikkar <sumanthk@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Thomas Richter <tmricht@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Heiko Carstens <hca@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Vasily Gorbik <gor@linux.ibm.com>
2021-02-23 01:01:54 +08:00
err = cf_diag_perf_event_inuse();
if (err < 0)
goto out;
event->destroy = cf_diag_perf_event_destroy;
err = __hw_perf_event_init(event);
if (unlikely(err))
event->destroy(event);
out:
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 5, "%s err %d\n", __func__, err);
return err;
}
static void cf_diag_read(struct perf_event *event)
{
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 5, "%s event %p\n", __func__, event);
}
/* Return the maximum possible counter set size (in number of 8 byte counters)
* depending on type and model number.
*/
static size_t cf_diag_ctrset_size(enum cpumf_ctr_set ctrset,
struct cpumf_ctr_info *info)
{
size_t ctrset_size = 0;
switch (ctrset) {
case CPUMF_CTR_SET_BASIC:
if (info->cfvn >= 1)
ctrset_size = 6;
break;
case CPUMF_CTR_SET_USER:
if (info->cfvn == 1)
ctrset_size = 6;
else if (info->cfvn >= 3)
ctrset_size = 2;
break;
case CPUMF_CTR_SET_CRYPTO:
if (info->csvn >= 1 && info->csvn <= 5)
ctrset_size = 16;
else if (info->csvn == 6)
ctrset_size = 20;
break;
case CPUMF_CTR_SET_EXT:
if (info->csvn == 1)
ctrset_size = 32;
else if (info->csvn == 2)
ctrset_size = 48;
else if (info->csvn >= 3 && info->csvn <= 5)
ctrset_size = 128;
else if (info->csvn == 6)
ctrset_size = 160;
break;
case CPUMF_CTR_SET_MT_DIAG:
if (info->csvn > 3)
ctrset_size = 48;
break;
case CPUMF_CTR_SET_MAX:
break;
}
return ctrset_size;
}
/* Calculate memory needed to store all counter sets together with header and
* trailer data. This is independend of the counter set authorization which
* can vary depending on the configuration.
*/
static size_t cf_diag_ctrset_maxsize(struct cpumf_ctr_info *info)
{
size_t max_size = sizeof(struct cf_trailer_entry);
enum cpumf_ctr_set i;
for (i = CPUMF_CTR_SET_BASIC; i < CPUMF_CTR_SET_MAX; ++i) {
size_t size = cf_diag_ctrset_size(i, info);
if (size)
max_size += size * sizeof(u64) +
sizeof(struct cf_ctrset_entry);
}
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 5, "%s max_size %zu\n", __func__,
max_size);
return max_size;
}
/* Read a counter set. The counter set number determines which counter set and
* the CPUM-CF first and second version number determine the number of
* available counters in this counter set.
* Each counter set starts with header containing the counter set number and
* the number of 8 byte counters.
*
* The functions returns the number of bytes occupied by this counter set
* including the header.
* If there is no counter in the counter set, this counter set is useless and
* zero is returned on this case.
*/
static size_t cf_diag_getctrset(struct cf_ctrset_entry *ctrdata, int ctrset,
size_t room)
{
struct cpu_cf_events *cpuhw = this_cpu_ptr(&cpu_cf_events);
size_t ctrset_size, need = 0;
int rc = 3; /* Assume write failure */
ctrdata->def = CF_DIAG_CTRSET_DEF;
ctrdata->set = ctrset;
ctrdata->res1 = 0;
ctrset_size = cf_diag_ctrset_size(ctrset, &cpuhw->info);
if (ctrset_size) { /* Save data */
need = ctrset_size * sizeof(u64) + sizeof(*ctrdata);
if (need <= room)
rc = ctr_stcctm(ctrset, ctrset_size,
(u64 *)(ctrdata + 1));
if (rc != 3)
ctrdata->ctr = ctrset_size;
else
need = 0;
}
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 6,
"%s ctrset %d ctrset_size %zu cfvn %d csvn %d"
" need %zd rc %d\n",
__func__, ctrset, ctrset_size, cpuhw->info.cfvn,
cpuhw->info.csvn, need, rc);
return need;
}
/* Read out all counter sets and save them in the provided data buffer.
* The last 64 byte host an artificial trailer entry.
*/
static size_t cf_diag_getctr(void *data, size_t sz, unsigned long auth)
{
struct cf_trailer_entry *trailer;
size_t offset = 0, done;
int i;
memset(data, 0, sz);
sz -= sizeof(*trailer); /* Always room for trailer */
for (i = CPUMF_CTR_SET_BASIC; i < CPUMF_CTR_SET_MAX; ++i) {
struct cf_ctrset_entry *ctrdata = data + offset;
if (!(auth & cpumf_ctr_ctl[i]))
continue; /* Counter set not authorized */
done = cf_diag_getctrset(ctrdata, i, sz - offset);
offset += done;
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 6,
"%s ctrset %d offset %zu done %zu\n",
__func__, i, offset, done);
}
trailer = data + offset;
cf_diag_trailer(trailer);
return offset + sizeof(*trailer);
}
/* Calculate the difference for each counter in a counter set. */
static void cf_diag_diffctrset(u64 *pstart, u64 *pstop, int counters)
{
for (; --counters >= 0; ++pstart, ++pstop)
if (*pstop >= *pstart)
*pstop -= *pstart;
else
*pstop = *pstart - *pstop;
}
/* Scan the counter sets and calculate the difference of each counter
* in each set. The result is the increment of each counter during the
* period the counter set has been activated.
*
* Return true on success.
*/
static int cf_diag_diffctr(struct cf_diag_csd *csd, unsigned long auth)
{
struct cf_trailer_entry *trailer_start, *trailer_stop;
struct cf_ctrset_entry *ctrstart, *ctrstop;
size_t offset = 0;
auth &= (1 << CPUMF_LCCTL_ENABLE_SHIFT) - 1;
do {
ctrstart = (struct cf_ctrset_entry *)(csd->start + offset);
ctrstop = (struct cf_ctrset_entry *)(csd->data + offset);
if (memcmp(ctrstop, ctrstart, sizeof(*ctrstop))) {
pr_err("cpum_cf_diag counter set compare error "
"in set %i\n", ctrstart->set);
return 0;
}
auth &= ~cpumf_ctr_ctl[ctrstart->set];
if (ctrstart->def == CF_DIAG_CTRSET_DEF) {
cf_diag_diffctrset((u64 *)(ctrstart + 1),
(u64 *)(ctrstop + 1), ctrstart->ctr);
offset += ctrstart->ctr * sizeof(u64) +
sizeof(*ctrstart);
}
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 6,
"%s set %d ctr %d offset %zu auth %lx\n",
__func__, ctrstart->set, ctrstart->ctr,
offset, auth);
} while (ctrstart->def && auth);
/* Save time_stamp from start of event in stop's trailer */
trailer_start = (struct cf_trailer_entry *)(csd->start + offset);
trailer_stop = (struct cf_trailer_entry *)(csd->data + offset);
trailer_stop->progusage[0] = trailer_start->timestamp;
return 1;
}
/* Create perf event sample with the counter sets as raw data. The sample
* is then pushed to the event subsystem and the function checks for
* possible event overflows. If an event overflow occurs, the PMU is
* stopped.
*
* Return non-zero if an event overflow occurred.
*/
static int cf_diag_push_sample(struct perf_event *event,
struct cf_diag_csd *csd)
{
struct perf_sample_data data;
struct perf_raw_record raw;
struct pt_regs regs;
int overflow;
/* Setup perf sample */
perf_sample_data_init(&data, 0, event->hw.last_period);
memset(&regs, 0, sizeof(regs));
memset(&raw, 0, sizeof(raw));
if (event->attr.sample_type & PERF_SAMPLE_CPU)
data.cpu_entry.cpu = event->cpu;
if (event->attr.sample_type & PERF_SAMPLE_RAW) {
raw.frag.size = csd->used;
raw.frag.data = csd->data;
raw.size = csd->used;
data.raw = &raw;
}
overflow = perf_event_overflow(event, &data, &regs);
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 6,
"%s event %p cpu %d sample_type %#llx raw %d "
"ov %d\n", __func__, event, event->cpu,
event->attr.sample_type, raw.size, overflow);
if (overflow)
event->pmu->stop(event, 0);
perf_event_update_userpage(event);
return overflow;
}
static void cf_diag_start(struct perf_event *event, int flags)
{
struct cpu_cf_events *cpuhw = this_cpu_ptr(&cpu_cf_events);
struct cf_diag_csd *csd = this_cpu_ptr(&cf_diag_csd);
struct hw_perf_event *hwc = &event->hw;
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 5,
"%s event %p cpu %d flags %#x hwc-state %#x\n",
__func__, event, event->cpu, flags, hwc->state);
if (WARN_ON_ONCE(!(hwc->state & PERF_HES_STOPPED)))
return;
/* (Re-)enable and activate all counter sets */
lcctl(0); /* Reset counter sets */
hwc->state = 0;
ctr_set_multiple_enable(&cpuhw->state, hwc->config_base);
lcctl(cpuhw->state); /* Enable counter sets */
csd->used = cf_diag_getctr(csd->start, sizeof(csd->start),
event->hw.config_base);
ctr_set_multiple_start(&cpuhw->state, hwc->config_base);
/* Function cf_diag_enable() starts the counter sets. */
}
static void cf_diag_stop(struct perf_event *event, int flags)
{
struct cpu_cf_events *cpuhw = this_cpu_ptr(&cpu_cf_events);
struct cf_diag_csd *csd = this_cpu_ptr(&cf_diag_csd);
struct hw_perf_event *hwc = &event->hw;
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 5,
"%s event %p cpu %d flags %#x hwc-state %#x\n",
__func__, event, event->cpu, flags, hwc->state);
/* Deactivate all counter sets */
ctr_set_multiple_stop(&cpuhw->state, hwc->config_base);
local64_inc(&event->count);
csd->used = cf_diag_getctr(csd->data, sizeof(csd->data),
event->hw.config_base);
if (cf_diag_diffctr(csd, event->hw.config_base))
cf_diag_push_sample(event, csd);
hwc->state |= PERF_HES_STOPPED;
}
static int cf_diag_add(struct perf_event *event, int flags)
{
struct cpu_cf_events *cpuhw = this_cpu_ptr(&cpu_cf_events);
int err = 0;
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 5,
"%s event %p cpu %d flags %#x cpuhw %p\n",
__func__, event, event->cpu, flags, cpuhw);
if (cpuhw->flags & PMU_F_IN_USE) {
err = -EAGAIN;
goto out;
}
event->hw.state = PERF_HES_UPTODATE | PERF_HES_STOPPED;
cpuhw->flags |= PMU_F_IN_USE;
if (flags & PERF_EF_START)
cf_diag_start(event, PERF_EF_RELOAD);
out:
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 5, "%s err %d\n", __func__, err);
return err;
}
static void cf_diag_del(struct perf_event *event, int flags)
{
struct cpu_cf_events *cpuhw = this_cpu_ptr(&cpu_cf_events);
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 5,
"%s event %p cpu %d flags %#x\n",
__func__, event, event->cpu, flags);
cf_diag_stop(event, PERF_EF_UPDATE);
ctr_set_multiple_stop(&cpuhw->state, event->hw.config_base);
ctr_set_multiple_disable(&cpuhw->state, event->hw.config_base);
cpuhw->flags &= ~PMU_F_IN_USE;
}
s390/cpumf: Add support for complete counter set extraction Add support to the CPU Measurement counter facility device driver to extract complete counter sets per CPU and per counter set from user space. This includes a new device named /dev/hwctr and support for the device driver functions open, close and ioctl. Other functions are not supported. The ioctl command supports 3 subcommands: S390_HWCTR_START: enables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_STOP: disables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_READ: reads counter sets on a list of CPUs. The ioctl(..., S390_HWCTR_READ, ...) is the only subcommand which returns data. It requires member data_bytes to be positive and indicates the maximum amount of data available to store counter set data. The other ioctl() subcommands do not use this member and it should be set to zero. The S390_HWCTR_READ subcommand returns the following data: The cpuset data is flattened using the following scheme, stored in member data: 0x0 0x8 0xc 0x10 0x10 0x18 0x20 0x28 0xU-1 +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | no_cpus | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xU 0xU+4 0xU+8 0xU+10 0xV-1 +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xV 0xV+4 0xV+8 0xV+c +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ U and V denote arbitrary hexadezimal addresses. The first integer represents the number of CPUs data was extracted from. This is followed by CPU number and number of counter sets extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the set identifer and number of counters extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the counter values, each element is eight bytes in size. The S390_HWCTR_READ ioctl subcommand is also limited to one call per minute. This ensures that an application does not read out the counter sets too often and reduces the overall CPU performance. The complete counter set extraction is an expensive operation. Reviewed-by: Sumanth Korikkar <sumanthk@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Thomas Richter <tmricht@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Heiko Carstens <hca@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Vasily Gorbik <gor@linux.ibm.com>
2021-02-23 01:01:54 +08:00
/* Default counter set events and format attribute groups */
CPUMF_EVENT_ATTR(CF_DIAG, CF_DIAG, PERF_EVENT_CPUM_CF_DIAG);
static struct attribute *cf_diag_events_attr[] = {
CPUMF_EVENT_PTR(CF_DIAG, CF_DIAG),
NULL,
};
PMU_FORMAT_ATTR(event, "config:0-63");
static struct attribute *cf_diag_format_attr[] = {
&format_attr_event.attr,
NULL,
};
static struct attribute_group cf_diag_events_group = {
.name = "events",
.attrs = cf_diag_events_attr,
};
static struct attribute_group cf_diag_format_group = {
.name = "format",
.attrs = cf_diag_format_attr,
};
static const struct attribute_group *cf_diag_attr_groups[] = {
&cf_diag_events_group,
&cf_diag_format_group,
NULL,
};
/* Performance monitoring unit for s390x */
static struct pmu cf_diag = {
.task_ctx_nr = perf_sw_context,
.pmu_enable = cf_diag_enable,
.pmu_disable = cf_diag_disable,
.event_init = cf_diag_event_init,
.add = cf_diag_add,
.del = cf_diag_del,
.start = cf_diag_start,
.stop = cf_diag_stop,
.read = cf_diag_read,
.attr_groups = cf_diag_attr_groups
};
/* Get the CPU speed, try sampling facility first and CPU attributes second. */
static void cf_diag_get_cpu_speed(void)
{
if (cpum_sf_avail()) { /* Sampling facility first */
struct hws_qsi_info_block si;
memset(&si, 0, sizeof(si));
if (!qsi(&si)) {
cf_diag_cpu_speed = si.cpu_speed;
return;
}
}
if (test_facility(34)) { /* CPU speed extract static part */
unsigned long mhz = __ecag(ECAG_CPU_ATTRIBUTE, 0);
if (mhz != -1UL)
cf_diag_cpu_speed = mhz & 0xffffffff;
}
}
s390/cpumf: Add support for complete counter set extraction Add support to the CPU Measurement counter facility device driver to extract complete counter sets per CPU and per counter set from user space. This includes a new device named /dev/hwctr and support for the device driver functions open, close and ioctl. Other functions are not supported. The ioctl command supports 3 subcommands: S390_HWCTR_START: enables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_STOP: disables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_READ: reads counter sets on a list of CPUs. The ioctl(..., S390_HWCTR_READ, ...) is the only subcommand which returns data. It requires member data_bytes to be positive and indicates the maximum amount of data available to store counter set data. The other ioctl() subcommands do not use this member and it should be set to zero. The S390_HWCTR_READ subcommand returns the following data: The cpuset data is flattened using the following scheme, stored in member data: 0x0 0x8 0xc 0x10 0x10 0x18 0x20 0x28 0xU-1 +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | no_cpus | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xU 0xU+4 0xU+8 0xU+10 0xV-1 +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xV 0xV+4 0xV+8 0xV+c +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ U and V denote arbitrary hexadezimal addresses. The first integer represents the number of CPUs data was extracted from. This is followed by CPU number and number of counter sets extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the set identifer and number of counters extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the counter values, each element is eight bytes in size. The S390_HWCTR_READ ioctl subcommand is also limited to one call per minute. This ensures that an application does not read out the counter sets too often and reduces the overall CPU performance. The complete counter set extraction is an expensive operation. Reviewed-by: Sumanth Korikkar <sumanthk@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Thomas Richter <tmricht@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Heiko Carstens <hca@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Vasily Gorbik <gor@linux.ibm.com>
2021-02-23 01:01:54 +08:00
/* Code to create device and file I/O operations */
static atomic_t ctrset_opencnt = ATOMIC_INIT(0); /* Excl. access */
static int cf_diag_open(struct inode *inode, struct file *file)
{
int err = 0;
if (!capable(CAP_SYS_ADMIN))
return -EPERM;
if (atomic_xchg(&ctrset_opencnt, 1))
return -EBUSY;
/* Avoid concurrent access with perf_event_open() system call */
mutex_lock(&cf_diag_reserve_mutex);
if (atomic_read(&cf_diag_events) || __kernel_cpumcf_begin())
err = -EBUSY;
mutex_unlock(&cf_diag_reserve_mutex);
if (err) {
atomic_set(&ctrset_opencnt, 0);
return err;
}
file->private_data = NULL;
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 2, "%s\n", __func__);
/* nonseekable_open() never fails */
return nonseekable_open(inode, file);
}
/* Variables for ioctl() interface support */
static DEFINE_MUTEX(cf_diag_ctrset_mutex);
static struct cf_diag_ctrset {
unsigned long ctrset; /* Bit mask of counter set to read */
cpumask_t mask; /* CPU mask to read from */
} cf_diag_ctrset;
static void cf_diag_ctrset_clear(void)
{
cpumask_clear(&cf_diag_ctrset.mask);
cf_diag_ctrset.ctrset = 0;
}
static void cf_diag_release_cpu(void *p)
{
struct cpu_cf_events *cpuhw = this_cpu_ptr(&cpu_cf_events);
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 3, "%s cpu %d\n", __func__,
smp_processor_id());
lcctl(0); /* Reset counter sets */
cpuhw->state = 0; /* Save state in CPU hardware state */
}
/* Release function is also called when application gets terminated without
* doing a proper ioctl(..., S390_HWCTR_STOP, ...) command.
* Since only one application is allowed to open the device, simple stop all
* CPU counter sets.
*/
static int cf_diag_release(struct inode *inode, struct file *file)
{
on_each_cpu(cf_diag_release_cpu, NULL, 1);
cf_diag_ctrset_clear();
atomic_set(&ctrset_opencnt, 0);
__kernel_cpumcf_end();
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 2, "%s\n", __func__);
return 0;
}
struct cf_diag_call_on_cpu_parm { /* Parm struct for smp_call_on_cpu */
unsigned int sets; /* Counter set bit mask */
atomic_t cpus_ack; /* # CPUs successfully executed func */
};
static int cf_diag_all_copy(unsigned long arg, cpumask_t *mask)
{
struct s390_ctrset_read __user *ctrset_read;
unsigned int cpu, cpus, rc;
void __user *uptr;
ctrset_read = (struct s390_ctrset_read __user *)arg;
uptr = ctrset_read->data;
for_each_cpu(cpu, mask) {
struct cf_diag_csd *csd = per_cpu_ptr(&cf_diag_csd, cpu);
struct s390_ctrset_cpudata __user *ctrset_cpudata;
ctrset_cpudata = uptr;
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 5, "%s cpu %d used %zd\n",
__func__, cpu, csd->used);
rc = put_user(cpu, &ctrset_cpudata->cpu_nr);
rc |= put_user(csd->sets, &ctrset_cpudata->no_sets);
rc |= copy_to_user(ctrset_cpudata->data, csd->data, csd->used);
if (rc)
return -EFAULT;
uptr += sizeof(struct s390_ctrset_cpudata) + csd->used;
cond_resched();
}
cpus = cpumask_weight(mask);
if (put_user(cpus, &ctrset_read->no_cpus))
return -EFAULT;
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 5, "%s copied %ld\n",
__func__, uptr - (void __user *)ctrset_read->data);
return 0;
}
static size_t cf_diag_cpuset_read(struct s390_ctrset_setdata *p, int ctrset,
int ctrset_size, size_t room)
{
size_t need = 0;
int rc = -1;
need = sizeof(*p) + sizeof(u64) * ctrset_size;
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 5,
"%s room %zd need %zd set %#x set_size %d\n",
__func__, room, need, ctrset, ctrset_size);
if (need <= room) {
p->set = cpumf_ctr_ctl[ctrset];
p->no_cnts = ctrset_size;
rc = ctr_stcctm(ctrset, ctrset_size, (u64 *)p->cv);
if (rc == 3) /* Nothing stored */
need = 0;
}
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 5, "%s need %zd rc %d\n", __func__,
need, rc);
return need;
}
/* Read all counter sets. Since the perf_event_open() system call with
* event cpum_cf_diag/.../ is blocked when this interface is active, reuse
* the perf_event_open() data buffer to store the counter sets.
*/
static void cf_diag_cpu_read(void *parm)
{
struct cpu_cf_events *cpuhw = this_cpu_ptr(&cpu_cf_events);
struct cf_diag_csd *csd = this_cpu_ptr(&cf_diag_csd);
struct cf_diag_call_on_cpu_parm *p = parm;
int set, set_size;
size_t space;
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 5,
"%s new %#x flags %#x state %#llx\n",
__func__, p->sets, cpuhw->flags,
cpuhw->state);
/* No data saved yet */
csd->used = 0;
csd->sets = 0;
memset(csd->data, 0, sizeof(csd->data));
/* Scan the counter sets */
for (set = CPUMF_CTR_SET_BASIC; set < CPUMF_CTR_SET_MAX; ++set) {
struct s390_ctrset_setdata *sp = (void *)csd->data + csd->used;
if (!(p->sets & cpumf_ctr_ctl[set]))
continue; /* Counter set not in list */
set_size = cf_diag_ctrset_size(set, &cpuhw->info);
space = sizeof(csd->data) - csd->used;
space = cf_diag_cpuset_read(sp, set, set_size, space);
if (space) {
csd->used += space;
csd->sets += 1;
}
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 5, "%s sp %px space %zd\n",
__func__, sp, space);
}
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 5, "%s sets %d used %zd\n", __func__,
csd->sets, csd->used);
}
static int cf_diag_all_read(unsigned long arg)
{
struct cf_diag_call_on_cpu_parm p;
cpumask_var_t mask;
int rc;
s390/cpumf: Add support for complete counter set extraction Add support to the CPU Measurement counter facility device driver to extract complete counter sets per CPU and per counter set from user space. This includes a new device named /dev/hwctr and support for the device driver functions open, close and ioctl. Other functions are not supported. The ioctl command supports 3 subcommands: S390_HWCTR_START: enables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_STOP: disables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_READ: reads counter sets on a list of CPUs. The ioctl(..., S390_HWCTR_READ, ...) is the only subcommand which returns data. It requires member data_bytes to be positive and indicates the maximum amount of data available to store counter set data. The other ioctl() subcommands do not use this member and it should be set to zero. The S390_HWCTR_READ subcommand returns the following data: The cpuset data is flattened using the following scheme, stored in member data: 0x0 0x8 0xc 0x10 0x10 0x18 0x20 0x28 0xU-1 +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | no_cpus | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xU 0xU+4 0xU+8 0xU+10 0xV-1 +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xV 0xV+4 0xV+8 0xV+c +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ U and V denote arbitrary hexadezimal addresses. The first integer represents the number of CPUs data was extracted from. This is followed by CPU number and number of counter sets extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the set identifer and number of counters extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the counter values, each element is eight bytes in size. The S390_HWCTR_READ ioctl subcommand is also limited to one call per minute. This ensures that an application does not read out the counter sets too often and reduces the overall CPU performance. The complete counter set extraction is an expensive operation. Reviewed-by: Sumanth Korikkar <sumanthk@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Thomas Richter <tmricht@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Heiko Carstens <hca@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Vasily Gorbik <gor@linux.ibm.com>
2021-02-23 01:01:54 +08:00
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 5, "%s\n", __func__);
if (!alloc_cpumask_var(&mask, GFP_KERNEL))
return -ENOMEM;
s390/cpumf: Add support for complete counter set extraction Add support to the CPU Measurement counter facility device driver to extract complete counter sets per CPU and per counter set from user space. This includes a new device named /dev/hwctr and support for the device driver functions open, close and ioctl. Other functions are not supported. The ioctl command supports 3 subcommands: S390_HWCTR_START: enables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_STOP: disables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_READ: reads counter sets on a list of CPUs. The ioctl(..., S390_HWCTR_READ, ...) is the only subcommand which returns data. It requires member data_bytes to be positive and indicates the maximum amount of data available to store counter set data. The other ioctl() subcommands do not use this member and it should be set to zero. The S390_HWCTR_READ subcommand returns the following data: The cpuset data is flattened using the following scheme, stored in member data: 0x0 0x8 0xc 0x10 0x10 0x18 0x20 0x28 0xU-1 +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | no_cpus | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xU 0xU+4 0xU+8 0xU+10 0xV-1 +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xV 0xV+4 0xV+8 0xV+c +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ U and V denote arbitrary hexadezimal addresses. The first integer represents the number of CPUs data was extracted from. This is followed by CPU number and number of counter sets extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the set identifer and number of counters extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the counter values, each element is eight bytes in size. The S390_HWCTR_READ ioctl subcommand is also limited to one call per minute. This ensures that an application does not read out the counter sets too often and reduces the overall CPU performance. The complete counter set extraction is an expensive operation. Reviewed-by: Sumanth Korikkar <sumanthk@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Thomas Richter <tmricht@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Heiko Carstens <hca@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Vasily Gorbik <gor@linux.ibm.com>
2021-02-23 01:01:54 +08:00
p.sets = cf_diag_ctrset.ctrset;
cpumask_and(mask, &cf_diag_ctrset.mask, cpu_online_mask);
on_each_cpu_mask(mask, cf_diag_cpu_read, &p, 1);
rc = cf_diag_all_copy(arg, mask);
free_cpumask_var(mask);
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 5, "%s rc %d\n", __func__, rc);
return rc;
}
/* Stop all counter sets via ioctl interface */
static void cf_diag_ioctl_off(void *parm)
{
struct cpu_cf_events *cpuhw = this_cpu_ptr(&cpu_cf_events);
struct cf_diag_call_on_cpu_parm *p = parm;
int rc;
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 5,
"%s new %#x flags %#x state %#llx\n",
__func__, p->sets, cpuhw->flags,
cpuhw->state);
ctr_set_multiple_disable(&cpuhw->state, p->sets);
ctr_set_multiple_stop(&cpuhw->state, p->sets);
rc = lcctl(cpuhw->state); /* Stop counter sets */
if (!cpuhw->state)
cpuhw->flags &= ~PMU_F_IN_USE;
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 5,
"%s rc %d flags %#x state %#llx\n", __func__,
rc, cpuhw->flags, cpuhw->state);
}
/* Start counter sets on particular CPU */
static void cf_diag_ioctl_on(void *parm)
{
struct cpu_cf_events *cpuhw = this_cpu_ptr(&cpu_cf_events);
struct cf_diag_call_on_cpu_parm *p = parm;
int rc;
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 5,
"%s new %#x flags %#x state %#llx\n",
__func__, p->sets, cpuhw->flags,
cpuhw->state);
if (!(cpuhw->flags & PMU_F_IN_USE))
cpuhw->state = 0;
cpuhw->flags |= PMU_F_IN_USE;
rc = lcctl(cpuhw->state); /* Reset unused counter sets */
ctr_set_multiple_enable(&cpuhw->state, p->sets);
ctr_set_multiple_start(&cpuhw->state, p->sets);
rc |= lcctl(cpuhw->state); /* Start counter sets */
if (!rc)
atomic_inc(&p->cpus_ack);
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 5, "%s rc %d state %#llx\n",
__func__, rc, cpuhw->state);
}
static int cf_diag_all_stop(void)
{
struct cf_diag_call_on_cpu_parm p = {
.sets = cf_diag_ctrset.ctrset,
};
cpumask_var_t mask;
if (!alloc_cpumask_var(&mask, GFP_KERNEL))
return -ENOMEM;
cpumask_and(mask, &cf_diag_ctrset.mask, cpu_online_mask);
on_each_cpu_mask(mask, cf_diag_ioctl_off, &p, 1);
free_cpumask_var(mask);
return 0;
}
static int cf_diag_all_start(void)
{
struct cf_diag_call_on_cpu_parm p = {
.sets = cf_diag_ctrset.ctrset,
.cpus_ack = ATOMIC_INIT(0),
};
cpumask_var_t mask;
int rc = 0;
if (!alloc_cpumask_var(&mask, GFP_KERNEL))
return -ENOMEM;
cpumask_and(mask, &cf_diag_ctrset.mask, cpu_online_mask);
on_each_cpu_mask(mask, cf_diag_ioctl_on, &p, 1);
if (atomic_read(&p.cpus_ack) != cpumask_weight(mask)) {
on_each_cpu_mask(mask, cf_diag_ioctl_off, &p, 1);
rc = -EIO;
}
free_cpumask_var(mask);
return rc;
}
/* Return the maximum required space for all possible CPUs in case one
* CPU will be onlined during the START, READ, STOP cycles.
* To find out the size of the counter sets, any one CPU will do. They
* all have the same counter sets.
*/
static size_t cf_diag_needspace(unsigned int sets)
{
struct cpu_cf_events *cpuhw = get_cpu_ptr(&cpu_cf_events);
s390/cpumf: Add support for complete counter set extraction Add support to the CPU Measurement counter facility device driver to extract complete counter sets per CPU and per counter set from user space. This includes a new device named /dev/hwctr and support for the device driver functions open, close and ioctl. Other functions are not supported. The ioctl command supports 3 subcommands: S390_HWCTR_START: enables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_STOP: disables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_READ: reads counter sets on a list of CPUs. The ioctl(..., S390_HWCTR_READ, ...) is the only subcommand which returns data. It requires member data_bytes to be positive and indicates the maximum amount of data available to store counter set data. The other ioctl() subcommands do not use this member and it should be set to zero. The S390_HWCTR_READ subcommand returns the following data: The cpuset data is flattened using the following scheme, stored in member data: 0x0 0x8 0xc 0x10 0x10 0x18 0x20 0x28 0xU-1 +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | no_cpus | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xU 0xU+4 0xU+8 0xU+10 0xV-1 +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xV 0xV+4 0xV+8 0xV+c +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ U and V denote arbitrary hexadezimal addresses. The first integer represents the number of CPUs data was extracted from. This is followed by CPU number and number of counter sets extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the set identifer and number of counters extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the counter values, each element is eight bytes in size. The S390_HWCTR_READ ioctl subcommand is also limited to one call per minute. This ensures that an application does not read out the counter sets too often and reduces the overall CPU performance. The complete counter set extraction is an expensive operation. Reviewed-by: Sumanth Korikkar <sumanthk@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Thomas Richter <tmricht@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Heiko Carstens <hca@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Vasily Gorbik <gor@linux.ibm.com>
2021-02-23 01:01:54 +08:00
size_t bytes = 0;
int i;
for (i = CPUMF_CTR_SET_BASIC; i < CPUMF_CTR_SET_MAX; ++i) {
if (!(sets & cpumf_ctr_ctl[i]))
continue;
bytes += cf_diag_ctrset_size(i, &cpuhw->info) * sizeof(u64) +
sizeof(((struct s390_ctrset_setdata *)0)->set) +
sizeof(((struct s390_ctrset_setdata *)0)->no_cnts);
}
bytes = sizeof(((struct s390_ctrset_read *)0)->no_cpus) + nr_cpu_ids *
(bytes + sizeof(((struct s390_ctrset_cpudata *)0)->cpu_nr) +
sizeof(((struct s390_ctrset_cpudata *)0)->no_sets));
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 5, "%s bytes %ld\n", __func__,
bytes);
put_cpu_ptr(&cpu_cf_events);
s390/cpumf: Add support for complete counter set extraction Add support to the CPU Measurement counter facility device driver to extract complete counter sets per CPU and per counter set from user space. This includes a new device named /dev/hwctr and support for the device driver functions open, close and ioctl. Other functions are not supported. The ioctl command supports 3 subcommands: S390_HWCTR_START: enables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_STOP: disables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_READ: reads counter sets on a list of CPUs. The ioctl(..., S390_HWCTR_READ, ...) is the only subcommand which returns data. It requires member data_bytes to be positive and indicates the maximum amount of data available to store counter set data. The other ioctl() subcommands do not use this member and it should be set to zero. The S390_HWCTR_READ subcommand returns the following data: The cpuset data is flattened using the following scheme, stored in member data: 0x0 0x8 0xc 0x10 0x10 0x18 0x20 0x28 0xU-1 +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | no_cpus | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xU 0xU+4 0xU+8 0xU+10 0xV-1 +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xV 0xV+4 0xV+8 0xV+c +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ U and V denote arbitrary hexadezimal addresses. The first integer represents the number of CPUs data was extracted from. This is followed by CPU number and number of counter sets extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the set identifer and number of counters extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the counter values, each element is eight bytes in size. The S390_HWCTR_READ ioctl subcommand is also limited to one call per minute. This ensures that an application does not read out the counter sets too often and reduces the overall CPU performance. The complete counter set extraction is an expensive operation. Reviewed-by: Sumanth Korikkar <sumanthk@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Thomas Richter <tmricht@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Heiko Carstens <hca@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Vasily Gorbik <gor@linux.ibm.com>
2021-02-23 01:01:54 +08:00
return bytes;
}
static long cf_diag_ioctl_read(unsigned long arg)
{
struct s390_ctrset_read read;
int ret = 0;
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 5, "%s\n", __func__);
if (copy_from_user(&read, (char __user *)arg, sizeof(read)))
return -EFAULT;
ret = cf_diag_all_read(arg);
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 5, "%s ret %d\n", __func__, ret);
return ret;
}
static long cf_diag_ioctl_stop(void)
{
int ret;
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 5, "%s\n", __func__);
ret = cf_diag_all_stop();
cf_diag_ctrset_clear();
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 5, "%s ret %d\n", __func__, ret);
return ret;
}
static long cf_diag_ioctl_start(unsigned long arg)
{
struct s390_ctrset_start __user *ustart;
struct s390_ctrset_start start;
void __user *umask;
unsigned int len;
int ret = 0;
size_t need;
if (cf_diag_ctrset.ctrset)
return -EBUSY;
ustart = (struct s390_ctrset_start __user *)arg;
if (copy_from_user(&start, ustart, sizeof(start)))
return -EFAULT;
if (start.version != S390_HWCTR_START_VERSION)
return -EINVAL;
if (start.counter_sets & ~(cpumf_ctr_ctl[CPUMF_CTR_SET_BASIC] |
cpumf_ctr_ctl[CPUMF_CTR_SET_USER] |
cpumf_ctr_ctl[CPUMF_CTR_SET_CRYPTO] |
cpumf_ctr_ctl[CPUMF_CTR_SET_EXT] |
cpumf_ctr_ctl[CPUMF_CTR_SET_MT_DIAG]))
return -EINVAL; /* Invalid counter set */
if (!start.counter_sets)
return -EINVAL; /* No counter set at all? */
cpumask_clear(&cf_diag_ctrset.mask);
len = min_t(u64, start.cpumask_len, cpumask_size());
umask = (void __user *)start.cpumask;
if (copy_from_user(&cf_diag_ctrset.mask, umask, len))
return -EFAULT;
if (cpumask_empty(&cf_diag_ctrset.mask))
return -EINVAL;
need = cf_diag_needspace(start.counter_sets);
if (put_user(need, &ustart->data_bytes))
ret = -EFAULT;
if (ret)
goto out;
cf_diag_ctrset.ctrset = start.counter_sets;
ret = cf_diag_all_start();
out:
if (ret)
cf_diag_ctrset_clear();
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 2, "%s sets %#lx need %ld ret %d\n",
__func__, cf_diag_ctrset.ctrset, need, ret);
return ret;
}
static long cf_diag_ioctl(struct file *file, unsigned int cmd,
unsigned long arg)
{
int ret;
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 2, "%s cmd %#x arg %lx\n", __func__,
cmd, arg);
get_online_cpus();
mutex_lock(&cf_diag_ctrset_mutex);
switch (cmd) {
case S390_HWCTR_START:
ret = cf_diag_ioctl_start(arg);
break;
case S390_HWCTR_STOP:
ret = cf_diag_ioctl_stop();
break;
case S390_HWCTR_READ:
ret = cf_diag_ioctl_read(arg);
break;
default:
ret = -ENOTTY;
break;
}
mutex_unlock(&cf_diag_ctrset_mutex);
put_online_cpus();
debug_sprintf_event(cf_diag_dbg, 2, "%s ret %d\n", __func__, ret);
return ret;
}
static const struct file_operations cf_diag_fops = {
.owner = THIS_MODULE,
.open = cf_diag_open,
.release = cf_diag_release,
.unlocked_ioctl = cf_diag_ioctl,
.compat_ioctl = cf_diag_ioctl,
.llseek = no_llseek
};
static struct miscdevice cf_diag_dev = {
.name = S390_HWCTR_DEVICE,
.minor = MISC_DYNAMIC_MINOR,
.fops = &cf_diag_fops,
};
static int cf_diag_online_cpu(unsigned int cpu)
{
struct cf_diag_call_on_cpu_parm p;
mutex_lock(&cf_diag_ctrset_mutex);
if (!cf_diag_ctrset.ctrset)
goto out;
p.sets = cf_diag_ctrset.ctrset;
cf_diag_ioctl_on(&p);
out:
mutex_unlock(&cf_diag_ctrset_mutex);
return 0;
}
static int cf_diag_offline_cpu(unsigned int cpu)
{
struct cf_diag_call_on_cpu_parm p;
mutex_lock(&cf_diag_ctrset_mutex);
if (!cf_diag_ctrset.ctrset)
goto out;
p.sets = cf_diag_ctrset.ctrset;
cf_diag_ioctl_off(&p);
out:
mutex_unlock(&cf_diag_ctrset_mutex);
return 0;
}
/* Initialize the counter set PMU to generate complete counter set data as
* event raw data. This relies on the CPU Measurement Counter Facility device
* already being loaded and initialized.
*/
static int __init cf_diag_init(void)
{
struct cpumf_ctr_info info;
size_t need;
int rc;
if (!kernel_cpumcf_avail() || !stccm_avail() || qctri(&info))
return -ENODEV;
cf_diag_get_cpu_speed();
/* Make sure the counter set data fits into predefined buffer. */
need = cf_diag_ctrset_maxsize(&info);
if (need > sizeof(((struct cf_diag_csd *)0)->start)) {
pr_err("Insufficient memory for PMU(cpum_cf_diag) need=%zu\n",
need);
return -ENOMEM;
}
s390/cpumf: Add support for complete counter set extraction Add support to the CPU Measurement counter facility device driver to extract complete counter sets per CPU and per counter set from user space. This includes a new device named /dev/hwctr and support for the device driver functions open, close and ioctl. Other functions are not supported. The ioctl command supports 3 subcommands: S390_HWCTR_START: enables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_STOP: disables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_READ: reads counter sets on a list of CPUs. The ioctl(..., S390_HWCTR_READ, ...) is the only subcommand which returns data. It requires member data_bytes to be positive and indicates the maximum amount of data available to store counter set data. The other ioctl() subcommands do not use this member and it should be set to zero. The S390_HWCTR_READ subcommand returns the following data: The cpuset data is flattened using the following scheme, stored in member data: 0x0 0x8 0xc 0x10 0x10 0x18 0x20 0x28 0xU-1 +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | no_cpus | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xU 0xU+4 0xU+8 0xU+10 0xV-1 +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xV 0xV+4 0xV+8 0xV+c +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ U and V denote arbitrary hexadezimal addresses. The first integer represents the number of CPUs data was extracted from. This is followed by CPU number and number of counter sets extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the set identifer and number of counters extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the counter values, each element is eight bytes in size. The S390_HWCTR_READ ioctl subcommand is also limited to one call per minute. This ensures that an application does not read out the counter sets too often and reduces the overall CPU performance. The complete counter set extraction is an expensive operation. Reviewed-by: Sumanth Korikkar <sumanthk@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Thomas Richter <tmricht@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Heiko Carstens <hca@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Vasily Gorbik <gor@linux.ibm.com>
2021-02-23 01:01:54 +08:00
rc = misc_register(&cf_diag_dev);
if (rc) {
pr_err("Registration of /dev/" S390_HWCTR_DEVICE
"failed rc=%d\n", rc);
goto out;
}
/* Setup s390dbf facility */
cf_diag_dbg = debug_register(KMSG_COMPONENT, 2, 1, 128);
if (!cf_diag_dbg) {
pr_err("Registration of s390dbf(cpum_cf_diag) failed\n");
s390/cpumf: Add support for complete counter set extraction Add support to the CPU Measurement counter facility device driver to extract complete counter sets per CPU and per counter set from user space. This includes a new device named /dev/hwctr and support for the device driver functions open, close and ioctl. Other functions are not supported. The ioctl command supports 3 subcommands: S390_HWCTR_START: enables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_STOP: disables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_READ: reads counter sets on a list of CPUs. The ioctl(..., S390_HWCTR_READ, ...) is the only subcommand which returns data. It requires member data_bytes to be positive and indicates the maximum amount of data available to store counter set data. The other ioctl() subcommands do not use this member and it should be set to zero. The S390_HWCTR_READ subcommand returns the following data: The cpuset data is flattened using the following scheme, stored in member data: 0x0 0x8 0xc 0x10 0x10 0x18 0x20 0x28 0xU-1 +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | no_cpus | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xU 0xU+4 0xU+8 0xU+10 0xV-1 +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xV 0xV+4 0xV+8 0xV+c +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ U and V denote arbitrary hexadezimal addresses. The first integer represents the number of CPUs data was extracted from. This is followed by CPU number and number of counter sets extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the set identifer and number of counters extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the counter values, each element is eight bytes in size. The S390_HWCTR_READ ioctl subcommand is also limited to one call per minute. This ensures that an application does not read out the counter sets too often and reduces the overall CPU performance. The complete counter set extraction is an expensive operation. Reviewed-by: Sumanth Korikkar <sumanthk@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Thomas Richter <tmricht@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Heiko Carstens <hca@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Vasily Gorbik <gor@linux.ibm.com>
2021-02-23 01:01:54 +08:00
rc = -ENOMEM;
goto out_dbf;
}
debug_register_view(cf_diag_dbg, &debug_sprintf_view);
rc = perf_pmu_register(&cf_diag, "cpum_cf_diag", -1);
if (rc) {
pr_err("Registration of PMU(cpum_cf_diag) failed with rc=%i\n",
rc);
s390/cpumf: Add support for complete counter set extraction Add support to the CPU Measurement counter facility device driver to extract complete counter sets per CPU and per counter set from user space. This includes a new device named /dev/hwctr and support for the device driver functions open, close and ioctl. Other functions are not supported. The ioctl command supports 3 subcommands: S390_HWCTR_START: enables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_STOP: disables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_READ: reads counter sets on a list of CPUs. The ioctl(..., S390_HWCTR_READ, ...) is the only subcommand which returns data. It requires member data_bytes to be positive and indicates the maximum amount of data available to store counter set data. The other ioctl() subcommands do not use this member and it should be set to zero. The S390_HWCTR_READ subcommand returns the following data: The cpuset data is flattened using the following scheme, stored in member data: 0x0 0x8 0xc 0x10 0x10 0x18 0x20 0x28 0xU-1 +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | no_cpus | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xU 0xU+4 0xU+8 0xU+10 0xV-1 +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xV 0xV+4 0xV+8 0xV+c +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ U and V denote arbitrary hexadezimal addresses. The first integer represents the number of CPUs data was extracted from. This is followed by CPU number and number of counter sets extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the set identifer and number of counters extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the counter values, each element is eight bytes in size. The S390_HWCTR_READ ioctl subcommand is also limited to one call per minute. This ensures that an application does not read out the counter sets too often and reduces the overall CPU performance. The complete counter set extraction is an expensive operation. Reviewed-by: Sumanth Korikkar <sumanthk@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Thomas Richter <tmricht@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Heiko Carstens <hca@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Vasily Gorbik <gor@linux.ibm.com>
2021-02-23 01:01:54 +08:00
goto out_perf;
}
s390/cpumf: Add support for complete counter set extraction Add support to the CPU Measurement counter facility device driver to extract complete counter sets per CPU and per counter set from user space. This includes a new device named /dev/hwctr and support for the device driver functions open, close and ioctl. Other functions are not supported. The ioctl command supports 3 subcommands: S390_HWCTR_START: enables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_STOP: disables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_READ: reads counter sets on a list of CPUs. The ioctl(..., S390_HWCTR_READ, ...) is the only subcommand which returns data. It requires member data_bytes to be positive and indicates the maximum amount of data available to store counter set data. The other ioctl() subcommands do not use this member and it should be set to zero. The S390_HWCTR_READ subcommand returns the following data: The cpuset data is flattened using the following scheme, stored in member data: 0x0 0x8 0xc 0x10 0x10 0x18 0x20 0x28 0xU-1 +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | no_cpus | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xU 0xU+4 0xU+8 0xU+10 0xV-1 +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xV 0xV+4 0xV+8 0xV+c +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ U and V denote arbitrary hexadezimal addresses. The first integer represents the number of CPUs data was extracted from. This is followed by CPU number and number of counter sets extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the set identifer and number of counters extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the counter values, each element is eight bytes in size. The S390_HWCTR_READ ioctl subcommand is also limited to one call per minute. This ensures that an application does not read out the counter sets too often and reduces the overall CPU performance. The complete counter set extraction is an expensive operation. Reviewed-by: Sumanth Korikkar <sumanthk@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Thomas Richter <tmricht@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Heiko Carstens <hca@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Vasily Gorbik <gor@linux.ibm.com>
2021-02-23 01:01:54 +08:00
rc = cpuhp_setup_state_nocalls(CPUHP_AP_PERF_S390_CFD_ONLINE,
"perf/s390/cfd:online",
cf_diag_online_cpu, cf_diag_offline_cpu);
if (!rc)
goto out;
pr_err("Registration of CPUHP_AP_PERF_S390_CFD_ONLINE failed rc=%i\n",
rc);
perf_pmu_unregister(&cf_diag);
out_perf:
debug_unregister_view(cf_diag_dbg, &debug_sprintf_view);
debug_unregister(cf_diag_dbg);
out_dbf:
misc_deregister(&cf_diag_dev);
out:
return rc;
}
s390/cpumf: Add support for complete counter set extraction Add support to the CPU Measurement counter facility device driver to extract complete counter sets per CPU and per counter set from user space. This includes a new device named /dev/hwctr and support for the device driver functions open, close and ioctl. Other functions are not supported. The ioctl command supports 3 subcommands: S390_HWCTR_START: enables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_STOP: disables counter sets on a list of CPUs. S390_HWCTR_READ: reads counter sets on a list of CPUs. The ioctl(..., S390_HWCTR_READ, ...) is the only subcommand which returns data. It requires member data_bytes to be positive and indicates the maximum amount of data available to store counter set data. The other ioctl() subcommands do not use this member and it should be set to zero. The S390_HWCTR_READ subcommand returns the following data: The cpuset data is flattened using the following scheme, stored in member data: 0x0 0x8 0xc 0x10 0x10 0x18 0x20 0x28 0xU-1 +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | no_cpus | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +---------+-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xU 0xU+4 0xU+8 0xU+10 0xV-1 +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ 0xV 0xV+4 0xV+8 0xV+c +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ | cpu | no_sets | set | no_cnts | cv1 | cv2 | .... | cv_n | +-----+---------+-----+---------+-----+-----+------+------+ U and V denote arbitrary hexadezimal addresses. The first integer represents the number of CPUs data was extracted from. This is followed by CPU number and number of counter sets extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the set identifer and number of counters extracted. Both are two integer values. This is followed by the counter values, each element is eight bytes in size. The S390_HWCTR_READ ioctl subcommand is also limited to one call per minute. This ensures that an application does not read out the counter sets too often and reduces the overall CPU performance. The complete counter set extraction is an expensive operation. Reviewed-by: Sumanth Korikkar <sumanthk@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Thomas Richter <tmricht@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Heiko Carstens <hca@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Vasily Gorbik <gor@linux.ibm.com>
2021-02-23 01:01:54 +08:00
device_initcall(cf_diag_init);