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[RFC,v2,7/7] Documentation: riscv: Remove the old documentation

Message ID 20210528184405.1793783-8-atish.patra@wdc.com (mailing list archive)
State New, archived
Headers show
Series Improve RISC-V Perf support using SBI PMU extension | expand

Commit Message

Atish Patra May 28, 2021, 6:44 p.m. UTC
The existing pmu documentation describes the limitation of perf infrastructure
in RISC-V ISA and limited feature set of perf in RISC-V.

However, SBI PMU extension and sscofpmf extension(ISA extension) allows to
implement most of the required features of perf. Remove the old documentation
which is not accurate anymore.

Signed-off-by: Atish Patra <atish.patra@wdc.com>
---
 Documentation/riscv/pmu.rst | 255 ------------------------------------
 1 file changed, 255 deletions(-)
 delete mode 100644 Documentation/riscv/pmu.rst
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diff --git a/Documentation/riscv/pmu.rst b/Documentation/riscv/pmu.rst
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--- a/Documentation/riscv/pmu.rst
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@@ -1,255 +0,0 @@ 
-===================================
-Supporting PMUs on RISC-V platforms
-===================================
-
-Alan Kao <alankao@andestech.com>, Mar 2018
-
-Introduction
-------------
-
-As of this writing, perf_event-related features mentioned in The RISC-V ISA
-Privileged Version 1.10 are as follows:
-(please check the manual for more details)
-
-* [m|s]counteren
-* mcycle[h], cycle[h]
-* minstret[h], instret[h]
-* mhpeventx, mhpcounterx[h]
-
-With such function set only, porting perf would require a lot of work, due to
-the lack of the following general architectural performance monitoring features:
-
-* Enabling/Disabling counters
-  Counters are just free-running all the time in our case.
-* Interrupt caused by counter overflow
-  No such feature in the spec.
-* Interrupt indicator
-  It is not possible to have many interrupt ports for all counters, so an
-  interrupt indicator is required for software to tell which counter has
-  just overflowed.
-* Writing to counters
-  There will be an SBI to support this since the kernel cannot modify the
-  counters [1].  Alternatively, some vendor considers to implement
-  hardware-extension for M-S-U model machines to write counters directly.
-
-This document aims to provide developers a quick guide on supporting their
-PMUs in the kernel.  The following sections briefly explain perf' mechanism
-and todos.
-
-You may check previous discussions here [1][2].  Also, it might be helpful
-to check the appendix for related kernel structures.
-
-
-1. Initialization
------------------
-
-*riscv_pmu* is a global pointer of type *struct riscv_pmu*, which contains
-various methods according to perf's internal convention and PMU-specific
-parameters.  One should declare such instance to represent the PMU.  By default,
-*riscv_pmu* points to a constant structure *riscv_base_pmu*, which has very
-basic support to a baseline QEMU model.
-
-Then he/she can either assign the instance's pointer to *riscv_pmu* so that
-the minimal and already-implemented logic can be leveraged, or invent his/her
-own *riscv_init_platform_pmu* implementation.
-
-In other words, existing sources of *riscv_base_pmu* merely provide a
-reference implementation.  Developers can flexibly decide how many parts they
-can leverage, and in the most extreme case, they can customize every function
-according to their needs.
-
-
-2. Event Initialization
------------------------
-
-When a user launches a perf command to monitor some events, it is first
-interpreted by the userspace perf tool into multiple *perf_event_open*
-system calls, and then each of them calls to the body of *event_init*
-member function that was assigned in the previous step.  In *riscv_base_pmu*'s
-case, it is *riscv_event_init*.
-
-The main purpose of this function is to translate the event provided by user
-into bitmap, so that HW-related control registers or counters can directly be
-manipulated.  The translation is based on the mappings and methods provided in
-*riscv_pmu*.
-
-Note that some features can be done in this stage as well:
-
-(1) interrupt setting, which is stated in the next section;
-(2) privilege level setting (user space only, kernel space only, both);
-(3) destructor setting.  Normally it is sufficient to apply *riscv_destroy_event*;
-(4) tweaks for non-sampling events, which will be utilized by functions such as
-    *perf_adjust_period*, usually something like the follows::
-
-      if (!is_sampling_event(event)) {
-              hwc->sample_period = x86_pmu.max_period;
-              hwc->last_period = hwc->sample_period;
-              local64_set(&hwc->period_left, hwc->sample_period);
-      }
-
-In the case of *riscv_base_pmu*, only (3) is provided for now.
-
-
-3. Interrupt
-------------
-
-3.1. Interrupt Initialization
-
-This often occurs at the beginning of the *event_init* method. In common
-practice, this should be a code segment like::
-
-  int x86_reserve_hardware(void)
-  {
-        int err = 0;
-
-        if (!atomic_inc_not_zero(&pmc_refcount)) {
-                mutex_lock(&pmc_reserve_mutex);
-                if (atomic_read(&pmc_refcount) == 0) {
-                        if (!reserve_pmc_hardware())
-                                err = -EBUSY;
-                        else
-                                reserve_ds_buffers();
-                }
-                if (!err)
-                        atomic_inc(&pmc_refcount);
-                mutex_unlock(&pmc_reserve_mutex);
-        }
-
-        return err;
-  }
-
-And the magic is in *reserve_pmc_hardware*, which usually does atomic
-operations to make implemented IRQ accessible from some global function pointer.
-*release_pmc_hardware* serves the opposite purpose, and it is used in event
-destructors mentioned in previous section.
-
-(Note: From the implementations in all the architectures, the *reserve/release*
-pair are always IRQ settings, so the *pmc_hardware* seems somehow misleading.
-It does NOT deal with the binding between an event and a physical counter,
-which will be introduced in the next section.)
-
-3.2. IRQ Structure
-
-Basically, a IRQ runs the following pseudo code::
-
-  for each hardware counter that triggered this overflow
-
-      get the event of this counter
-
-      // following two steps are defined as *read()*,
-      // check the section Reading/Writing Counters for details.
-      count the delta value since previous interrupt
-      update the event->count (# event occurs) by adding delta, and
-                 event->hw.period_left by subtracting delta
-
-      if the event overflows
-          sample data
-          set the counter appropriately for the next overflow
-
-          if the event overflows again
-              too frequently, throttle this event
-          fi
-      fi
-
-  end for
-
-However as of this writing, none of the RISC-V implementations have designed an
-interrupt for perf, so the details are to be completed in the future.
-
-4. Reading/Writing Counters
----------------------------
-
-They seem symmetric but perf treats them quite differently.  For reading, there
-is a *read* interface in *struct pmu*, but it serves more than just reading.
-According to the context, the *read* function not only reads the content of the
-counter (event->count), but also updates the left period to the next interrupt
-(event->hw.period_left).
-
-But the core of perf does not need direct write to counters.  Writing counters
-is hidden behind the abstraction of 1) *pmu->start*, literally start counting so one
-has to set the counter to a good value for the next interrupt; 2) inside the IRQ
-it should set the counter to the same resonable value.
-
-Reading is not a problem in RISC-V but writing would need some effort, since
-counters are not allowed to be written by S-mode.
-
-
-5. add()/del()/start()/stop()
------------------------------
-
-Basic idea: add()/del() adds/deletes events to/from a PMU, and start()/stop()
-starts/stop the counter of some event in the PMU.  All of them take the same
-arguments: *struct perf_event *event* and *int flag*.
-
-Consider perf as a state machine, then you will find that these functions serve
-as the state transition process between those states.
-Three states (event->hw.state) are defined:
-
-* PERF_HES_STOPPED:	the counter is stopped
-* PERF_HES_UPTODATE:	the event->count is up-to-date
-* PERF_HES_ARCH:	arch-dependent usage ... we don't need this for now
-
-A normal flow of these state transitions are as follows:
-
-* A user launches a perf event, resulting in calling to *event_init*.
-* When being context-switched in, *add* is called by the perf core, with a flag
-  PERF_EF_START, which means that the event should be started after it is added.
-  At this stage, a general event is bound to a physical counter, if any.
-  The state changes to PERF_HES_STOPPED and PERF_HES_UPTODATE, because it is now
-  stopped, and the (software) event count does not need updating.
-
-  - *start* is then called, and the counter is enabled.
-    With flag PERF_EF_RELOAD, it writes an appropriate value to the counter (check
-    previous section for detail).
-    Nothing is written if the flag does not contain PERF_EF_RELOAD.
-    The state now is reset to none, because it is neither stopped nor updated
-    (the counting already started)
-
-* When being context-switched out, *del* is called.  It then checks out all the
-  events in the PMU and calls *stop* to update their counts.
-
-  - *stop* is called by *del*
-    and the perf core with flag PERF_EF_UPDATE, and it often shares the same
-    subroutine as *read* with the same logic.
-    The state changes to PERF_HES_STOPPED and PERF_HES_UPTODATE, again.
-
-  - Life cycle of these two pairs: *add* and *del* are called repeatedly as
-    tasks switch in-and-out; *start* and *stop* is also called when the perf core
-    needs a quick stop-and-start, for instance, when the interrupt period is being
-    adjusted.
-
-Current implementation is sufficient for now and can be easily extended to
-features in the future.
-
-A. Related Structures
----------------------
-
-* struct pmu: include/linux/perf_event.h
-* struct riscv_pmu: arch/riscv/include/asm/perf_event.h
-
-  Both structures are designed to be read-only.
-
-  *struct pmu* defines some function pointer interfaces, and most of them take
-  *struct perf_event* as a main argument, dealing with perf events according to
-  perf's internal state machine (check kernel/events/core.c for details).
-
-  *struct riscv_pmu* defines PMU-specific parameters.  The naming follows the
-  convention of all other architectures.
-
-* struct perf_event: include/linux/perf_event.h
-* struct hw_perf_event
-
-  The generic structure that represents perf events, and the hardware-related
-  details.
-
-* struct riscv_hw_events: arch/riscv/include/asm/perf_event.h
-
-  The structure that holds the status of events, has two fixed members:
-  the number of events and the array of the events.
-
-References
-----------
-
-[1] https://github.com/riscv/riscv-linux/pull/124
-
-[2] https://groups.google.com/a/groups.riscv.org/forum/#!topic/sw-dev/f19TmCNP6yA