kernel_optimize_test/drivers/oprofile/cpu_buffer.c

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/**
* @file cpu_buffer.c
*
* @remark Copyright 2002-2009 OProfile authors
* @remark Read the file COPYING
*
* @author John Levon <levon@movementarian.org>
* @author Barry Kasindorf <barry.kasindorf@amd.com>
* @author Robert Richter <robert.richter@amd.com>
*
* Each CPU has a local buffer that stores PC value/event
* pairs. We also log context switches when we notice them.
* Eventually each CPU's buffer is processed into the global
* event buffer by sync_buffer().
*
* We use a local buffer for two reasons: an NMI or similar
* interrupt cannot synchronise, and high sampling rates
* would lead to catastrophic global synchronisation if
* a global buffer was used.
*/
#include <linux/sched.h>
#include <linux/oprofile.h>
#include <linux/errno.h>
#include "event_buffer.h"
#include "cpu_buffer.h"
#include "buffer_sync.h"
#include "oprof.h"
oprofile: port to the new ring_buffer This patch replaces the current oprofile cpu buffer implementation with the ring buffer provided by the tracing framework. The motivation here is to leave the pain of implementing ring buffers to others. Oh, no, there are more advantages. Main reason is the support of different sample sizes that could be stored in the buffer. Use cases for this are IBS and Cell spu profiling. Using the new ring buffer ensures valid and complete samples and allows copying the cpu buffer stateless without knowing its content. Second it will use generic kernel API and also reduce code size. And hopefully, there are less bugs. Since the new tracing ring buffer implementation uses spin locks to protect the buffer during read/write access, it is difficult to use the buffer in an NMI handler. In this case, writing to the buffer by the NMI handler (x86) could occur also during critical sections when reading the buffer. To avoid this, there are 2 buffers for independent read and write access. Read access is in process context only, write access only in the NMI handler. If the read buffer runs empty, both buffers are swapped atomically. There is potentially a small window during swapping where the buffers are disabled and samples could be lost. Using 2 buffers is a little bit overhead, but the solution is clear and does not require changes in the ring buffer implementation. It can be changed to a single buffer solution when the ring buffer access is implemented as non-locking atomic code. The new buffer requires more size to store the same amount of samples because each sample includes an u32 header. Also, there is more code to execute for buffer access. Nonetheless, the buffer implementation is proven in the ftrace environment and worth to use also in oprofile. Patches that changes the internal IBS buffer usage will follow. Cc: Steven Rostedt <rostedt@goodmis.org> Signed-off-by: Robert Richter <robert.richter@amd.com>
2008-12-09 08:21:32 +08:00
#define OP_BUFFER_FLAGS 0
static struct ring_buffer *op_ring_buffer;
DEFINE_PER_CPU(struct oprofile_cpu_buffer, op_cpu_buffer);
static void wq_sync_buffer(struct work_struct *work);
#define DEFAULT_TIMER_EXPIRE (HZ / 10)
static int work_enabled;
unsigned long oprofile_get_cpu_buffer_size(void)
{
return oprofile_cpu_buffer_size;
}
void oprofile_cpu_buffer_inc_smpl_lost(void)
{
struct oprofile_cpu_buffer *cpu_buf = &__get_cpu_var(op_cpu_buffer);
cpu_buf->sample_lost_overflow++;
}
void free_cpu_buffers(void)
{
if (op_ring_buffer)
ring_buffer_free(op_ring_buffer);
op_ring_buffer = NULL;
}
#define RB_EVENT_HDR_SIZE 4
int alloc_cpu_buffers(void)
{
int i;
unsigned long buffer_size = oprofile_cpu_buffer_size;
unsigned long byte_size = buffer_size * (sizeof(struct op_sample) +
RB_EVENT_HDR_SIZE);
op_ring_buffer = ring_buffer_alloc(byte_size, OP_BUFFER_FLAGS);
if (!op_ring_buffer)
oprofile: port to the new ring_buffer This patch replaces the current oprofile cpu buffer implementation with the ring buffer provided by the tracing framework. The motivation here is to leave the pain of implementing ring buffers to others. Oh, no, there are more advantages. Main reason is the support of different sample sizes that could be stored in the buffer. Use cases for this are IBS and Cell spu profiling. Using the new ring buffer ensures valid and complete samples and allows copying the cpu buffer stateless without knowing its content. Second it will use generic kernel API and also reduce code size. And hopefully, there are less bugs. Since the new tracing ring buffer implementation uses spin locks to protect the buffer during read/write access, it is difficult to use the buffer in an NMI handler. In this case, writing to the buffer by the NMI handler (x86) could occur also during critical sections when reading the buffer. To avoid this, there are 2 buffers for independent read and write access. Read access is in process context only, write access only in the NMI handler. If the read buffer runs empty, both buffers are swapped atomically. There is potentially a small window during swapping where the buffers are disabled and samples could be lost. Using 2 buffers is a little bit overhead, but the solution is clear and does not require changes in the ring buffer implementation. It can be changed to a single buffer solution when the ring buffer access is implemented as non-locking atomic code. The new buffer requires more size to store the same amount of samples because each sample includes an u32 header. Also, there is more code to execute for buffer access. Nonetheless, the buffer implementation is proven in the ftrace environment and worth to use also in oprofile. Patches that changes the internal IBS buffer usage will follow. Cc: Steven Rostedt <rostedt@goodmis.org> Signed-off-by: Robert Richter <robert.richter@amd.com>
2008-12-09 08:21:32 +08:00
goto fail;
for_each_possible_cpu(i) {
struct oprofile_cpu_buffer *b = &per_cpu(op_cpu_buffer, i);
b->last_task = NULL;
b->last_is_kernel = -1;
b->tracing = 0;
b->buffer_size = buffer_size;
b->sample_received = 0;
b->sample_lost_overflow = 0;
b->backtrace_aborted = 0;
b->sample_invalid_eip = 0;
b->cpu = i;
INIT_DELAYED_WORK(&b->work, wq_sync_buffer);
}
return 0;
fail:
free_cpu_buffers();
return -ENOMEM;
}
void start_cpu_work(void)
{
int i;
work_enabled = 1;
for_each_online_cpu(i) {
struct oprofile_cpu_buffer *b = &per_cpu(op_cpu_buffer, i);
/*
* Spread the work by 1 jiffy per cpu so they dont all
* fire at once.
*/
schedule_delayed_work_on(i, &b->work, DEFAULT_TIMER_EXPIRE + i);
}
}
void end_cpu_work(void)
{
work_enabled = 0;
}
void flush_cpu_work(void)
{
int i;
for_each_online_cpu(i) {
struct oprofile_cpu_buffer *b = &per_cpu(op_cpu_buffer, i);
/* these works are per-cpu, no need for flush_sync */
flush_delayed_work(&b->work);
}
}
/*
* This function prepares the cpu buffer to write a sample.
*
* Struct op_entry is used during operations on the ring buffer while
* struct op_sample contains the data that is stored in the ring
* buffer. Struct entry can be uninitialized. The function reserves a
* data array that is specified by size. Use
* op_cpu_buffer_write_commit() after preparing the sample. In case of
* errors a null pointer is returned, otherwise the pointer to the
* sample.
*
*/
struct op_sample
*op_cpu_buffer_write_reserve(struct op_entry *entry, unsigned long size)
{
entry->event = ring_buffer_lock_reserve
(op_ring_buffer, sizeof(struct op_sample) +
size * sizeof(entry->sample->data[0]));
if (!entry->event)
return NULL;
entry->sample = ring_buffer_event_data(entry->event);
entry->size = size;
entry->data = entry->sample->data;
return entry->sample;
}
int op_cpu_buffer_write_commit(struct op_entry *entry)
{
return ring_buffer_unlock_commit(op_ring_buffer, entry->event);
}
struct op_sample *op_cpu_buffer_read_entry(struct op_entry *entry, int cpu)
{
struct ring_buffer_event *e;
e = ring_buffer_consume(op_ring_buffer, cpu, NULL, NULL);
if (!e)
return NULL;
entry->event = e;
entry->sample = ring_buffer_event_data(e);
entry->size = (ring_buffer_event_length(e) - sizeof(struct op_sample))
/ sizeof(entry->sample->data[0]);
entry->data = entry->sample->data;
return entry->sample;
}
unsigned long op_cpu_buffer_entries(int cpu)
{
return ring_buffer_entries_cpu(op_ring_buffer, cpu);
}
static int
op_add_code(struct oprofile_cpu_buffer *cpu_buf, unsigned long backtrace,
int is_kernel, struct task_struct *task)
{
struct op_entry entry;
struct op_sample *sample;
unsigned long flags;
int size;
flags = 0;
if (backtrace)
flags |= TRACE_BEGIN;
/* notice a switch from user->kernel or vice versa */
is_kernel = !!is_kernel;
if (cpu_buf->last_is_kernel != is_kernel) {
cpu_buf->last_is_kernel = is_kernel;
flags |= KERNEL_CTX_SWITCH;
if (is_kernel)
flags |= IS_KERNEL;
}
/* notice a task switch */
if (cpu_buf->last_task != task) {
cpu_buf->last_task = task;
flags |= USER_CTX_SWITCH;
}
if (!flags)
/* nothing to do */
return 0;
if (flags & USER_CTX_SWITCH)
size = 1;
else
size = 0;
sample = op_cpu_buffer_write_reserve(&entry, size);
if (!sample)
return -ENOMEM;
sample->eip = ESCAPE_CODE;
sample->event = flags;
if (size)
op_cpu_buffer_add_data(&entry, (unsigned long)task);
op_cpu_buffer_write_commit(&entry);
return 0;
}
static inline int
op_add_sample(struct oprofile_cpu_buffer *cpu_buf,
unsigned long pc, unsigned long event)
{
oprofile: port to the new ring_buffer This patch replaces the current oprofile cpu buffer implementation with the ring buffer provided by the tracing framework. The motivation here is to leave the pain of implementing ring buffers to others. Oh, no, there are more advantages. Main reason is the support of different sample sizes that could be stored in the buffer. Use cases for this are IBS and Cell spu profiling. Using the new ring buffer ensures valid and complete samples and allows copying the cpu buffer stateless without knowing its content. Second it will use generic kernel API and also reduce code size. And hopefully, there are less bugs. Since the new tracing ring buffer implementation uses spin locks to protect the buffer during read/write access, it is difficult to use the buffer in an NMI handler. In this case, writing to the buffer by the NMI handler (x86) could occur also during critical sections when reading the buffer. To avoid this, there are 2 buffers for independent read and write access. Read access is in process context only, write access only in the NMI handler. If the read buffer runs empty, both buffers are swapped atomically. There is potentially a small window during swapping where the buffers are disabled and samples could be lost. Using 2 buffers is a little bit overhead, but the solution is clear and does not require changes in the ring buffer implementation. It can be changed to a single buffer solution when the ring buffer access is implemented as non-locking atomic code. The new buffer requires more size to store the same amount of samples because each sample includes an u32 header. Also, there is more code to execute for buffer access. Nonetheless, the buffer implementation is proven in the ftrace environment and worth to use also in oprofile. Patches that changes the internal IBS buffer usage will follow. Cc: Steven Rostedt <rostedt@goodmis.org> Signed-off-by: Robert Richter <robert.richter@amd.com>
2008-12-09 08:21:32 +08:00
struct op_entry entry;
struct op_sample *sample;
oprofile: port to the new ring_buffer This patch replaces the current oprofile cpu buffer implementation with the ring buffer provided by the tracing framework. The motivation here is to leave the pain of implementing ring buffers to others. Oh, no, there are more advantages. Main reason is the support of different sample sizes that could be stored in the buffer. Use cases for this are IBS and Cell spu profiling. Using the new ring buffer ensures valid and complete samples and allows copying the cpu buffer stateless without knowing its content. Second it will use generic kernel API and also reduce code size. And hopefully, there are less bugs. Since the new tracing ring buffer implementation uses spin locks to protect the buffer during read/write access, it is difficult to use the buffer in an NMI handler. In this case, writing to the buffer by the NMI handler (x86) could occur also during critical sections when reading the buffer. To avoid this, there are 2 buffers for independent read and write access. Read access is in process context only, write access only in the NMI handler. If the read buffer runs empty, both buffers are swapped atomically. There is potentially a small window during swapping where the buffers are disabled and samples could be lost. Using 2 buffers is a little bit overhead, but the solution is clear and does not require changes in the ring buffer implementation. It can be changed to a single buffer solution when the ring buffer access is implemented as non-locking atomic code. The new buffer requires more size to store the same amount of samples because each sample includes an u32 header. Also, there is more code to execute for buffer access. Nonetheless, the buffer implementation is proven in the ftrace environment and worth to use also in oprofile. Patches that changes the internal IBS buffer usage will follow. Cc: Steven Rostedt <rostedt@goodmis.org> Signed-off-by: Robert Richter <robert.richter@amd.com>
2008-12-09 08:21:32 +08:00
sample = op_cpu_buffer_write_reserve(&entry, 0);
if (!sample)
return -ENOMEM;
oprofile: port to the new ring_buffer This patch replaces the current oprofile cpu buffer implementation with the ring buffer provided by the tracing framework. The motivation here is to leave the pain of implementing ring buffers to others. Oh, no, there are more advantages. Main reason is the support of different sample sizes that could be stored in the buffer. Use cases for this are IBS and Cell spu profiling. Using the new ring buffer ensures valid and complete samples and allows copying the cpu buffer stateless without knowing its content. Second it will use generic kernel API and also reduce code size. And hopefully, there are less bugs. Since the new tracing ring buffer implementation uses spin locks to protect the buffer during read/write access, it is difficult to use the buffer in an NMI handler. In this case, writing to the buffer by the NMI handler (x86) could occur also during critical sections when reading the buffer. To avoid this, there are 2 buffers for independent read and write access. Read access is in process context only, write access only in the NMI handler. If the read buffer runs empty, both buffers are swapped atomically. There is potentially a small window during swapping where the buffers are disabled and samples could be lost. Using 2 buffers is a little bit overhead, but the solution is clear and does not require changes in the ring buffer implementation. It can be changed to a single buffer solution when the ring buffer access is implemented as non-locking atomic code. The new buffer requires more size to store the same amount of samples because each sample includes an u32 header. Also, there is more code to execute for buffer access. Nonetheless, the buffer implementation is proven in the ftrace environment and worth to use also in oprofile. Patches that changes the internal IBS buffer usage will follow. Cc: Steven Rostedt <rostedt@goodmis.org> Signed-off-by: Robert Richter <robert.richter@amd.com>
2008-12-09 08:21:32 +08:00
sample->eip = pc;
sample->event = event;
oprofile: port to the new ring_buffer This patch replaces the current oprofile cpu buffer implementation with the ring buffer provided by the tracing framework. The motivation here is to leave the pain of implementing ring buffers to others. Oh, no, there are more advantages. Main reason is the support of different sample sizes that could be stored in the buffer. Use cases for this are IBS and Cell spu profiling. Using the new ring buffer ensures valid and complete samples and allows copying the cpu buffer stateless without knowing its content. Second it will use generic kernel API and also reduce code size. And hopefully, there are less bugs. Since the new tracing ring buffer implementation uses spin locks to protect the buffer during read/write access, it is difficult to use the buffer in an NMI handler. In this case, writing to the buffer by the NMI handler (x86) could occur also during critical sections when reading the buffer. To avoid this, there are 2 buffers for independent read and write access. Read access is in process context only, write access only in the NMI handler. If the read buffer runs empty, both buffers are swapped atomically. There is potentially a small window during swapping where the buffers are disabled and samples could be lost. Using 2 buffers is a little bit overhead, but the solution is clear and does not require changes in the ring buffer implementation. It can be changed to a single buffer solution when the ring buffer access is implemented as non-locking atomic code. The new buffer requires more size to store the same amount of samples because each sample includes an u32 header. Also, there is more code to execute for buffer access. Nonetheless, the buffer implementation is proven in the ftrace environment and worth to use also in oprofile. Patches that changes the internal IBS buffer usage will follow. Cc: Steven Rostedt <rostedt@goodmis.org> Signed-off-by: Robert Richter <robert.richter@amd.com>
2008-12-09 08:21:32 +08:00
return op_cpu_buffer_write_commit(&entry);
}
/*
* This must be safe from any context.
*
* is_kernel is needed because on some architectures you cannot
* tell if you are in kernel or user space simply by looking at
* pc. We tag this in the buffer by generating kernel enter/exit
* events whenever is_kernel changes
*/
static int
log_sample(struct oprofile_cpu_buffer *cpu_buf, unsigned long pc,
unsigned long backtrace, int is_kernel, unsigned long event)
{
cpu_buf->sample_received++;
if (pc == ESCAPE_CODE) {
cpu_buf->sample_invalid_eip++;
return 0;
}
if (op_add_code(cpu_buf, backtrace, is_kernel, current))
goto fail;
if (op_add_sample(cpu_buf, pc, event))
goto fail;
return 1;
fail:
cpu_buf->sample_lost_overflow++;
return 0;
}
static inline void oprofile_begin_trace(struct oprofile_cpu_buffer *cpu_buf)
{
cpu_buf->tracing = 1;
}
static inline void oprofile_end_trace(struct oprofile_cpu_buffer *cpu_buf)
{
cpu_buf->tracing = 0;
}
static inline void
__oprofile_add_ext_sample(unsigned long pc, struct pt_regs * const regs,
unsigned long event, int is_kernel)
{
struct oprofile_cpu_buffer *cpu_buf = &__get_cpu_var(op_cpu_buffer);
unsigned long backtrace = oprofile_backtrace_depth;
/*
* if log_sample() fail we can't backtrace since we lost the
* source of this event
*/
if (!log_sample(cpu_buf, pc, backtrace, is_kernel, event))
/* failed */
return;
if (!backtrace)
return;
oprofile_begin_trace(cpu_buf);
oprofile_ops.backtrace(regs, backtrace);
oprofile_end_trace(cpu_buf);
}
void oprofile_add_ext_sample(unsigned long pc, struct pt_regs * const regs,
unsigned long event, int is_kernel)
{
__oprofile_add_ext_sample(pc, regs, event, is_kernel);
}
void oprofile_add_sample(struct pt_regs * const regs, unsigned long event)
{
int is_kernel;
unsigned long pc;
if (likely(regs)) {
is_kernel = !user_mode(regs);
pc = profile_pc(regs);
} else {
is_kernel = 0; /* This value will not be used */
pc = ESCAPE_CODE; /* as this causes an early return. */
}
__oprofile_add_ext_sample(pc, regs, event, is_kernel);
}
/*
* Add samples with data to the ring buffer.
*
* Use oprofile_add_data(&entry, val) to add data and
* oprofile_write_commit(&entry) to commit the sample.
*/
void
oprofile_write_reserve(struct op_entry *entry, struct pt_regs * const regs,
unsigned long pc, int code, int size)
{
struct op_sample *sample;
int is_kernel = !user_mode(regs);
struct oprofile_cpu_buffer *cpu_buf = &__get_cpu_var(op_cpu_buffer);
cpu_buf->sample_received++;
/* no backtraces for samples with data */
if (op_add_code(cpu_buf, 0, is_kernel, current))
goto fail;
sample = op_cpu_buffer_write_reserve(entry, size + 2);
if (!sample)
goto fail;
sample->eip = ESCAPE_CODE;
sample->event = 0; /* no flags */
op_cpu_buffer_add_data(entry, code);
op_cpu_buffer_add_data(entry, pc);
return;
fail:
entry->event = NULL;
cpu_buf->sample_lost_overflow++;
}
int oprofile_add_data(struct op_entry *entry, unsigned long val)
{
if (!entry->event)
return 0;
return op_cpu_buffer_add_data(entry, val);
}
int oprofile_add_data64(struct op_entry *entry, u64 val)
{
if (!entry->event)
return 0;
if (op_cpu_buffer_get_size(entry) < 2)
/*
* the function returns 0 to indicate a too small
* buffer, even if there is some space left
*/
return 0;
if (!op_cpu_buffer_add_data(entry, (u32)val))
return 0;
return op_cpu_buffer_add_data(entry, (u32)(val >> 32));
}
int oprofile_write_commit(struct op_entry *entry)
{
if (!entry->event)
return -EINVAL;
return op_cpu_buffer_write_commit(entry);
}
void oprofile_add_pc(unsigned long pc, int is_kernel, unsigned long event)
{
struct oprofile_cpu_buffer *cpu_buf = &__get_cpu_var(op_cpu_buffer);
log_sample(cpu_buf, pc, 0, is_kernel, event);
}
void oprofile_add_trace(unsigned long pc)
{
struct oprofile_cpu_buffer *cpu_buf = &__get_cpu_var(op_cpu_buffer);
if (!cpu_buf->tracing)
return;
/*
* broken frame can give an eip with the same value as an
* escape code, abort the trace if we get it
*/
if (pc == ESCAPE_CODE)
goto fail;
if (op_add_sample(cpu_buf, pc, 0))
goto fail;
return;
fail:
cpu_buf->tracing = 0;
cpu_buf->backtrace_aborted++;
return;
}
/*
* This serves to avoid cpu buffer overflow, and makes sure
* the task mortuary progresses
*
* By using schedule_delayed_work_on and then schedule_delayed_work
* we guarantee this will stay on the correct cpu
*/
static void wq_sync_buffer(struct work_struct *work)
{
struct oprofile_cpu_buffer *b =
container_of(work, struct oprofile_cpu_buffer, work.work);
if (b->cpu != smp_processor_id()) {
printk(KERN_DEBUG "WQ on CPU%d, prefer CPU%d\n",
smp_processor_id(), b->cpu);
if (!cpu_online(b->cpu)) {
cancel_delayed_work(&b->work);
return;
}
}
sync_buffer(b->cpu);
/* don't re-add the work if we're shutting down */
if (work_enabled)
schedule_delayed_work(&b->work, DEFAULT_TIMER_EXPIRE);
}