WSL2-Linux-Kernel/kernel/trace/trace_hwlat.c

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// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
/*
* trace_hwlat.c - A simple Hardware Latency detector.
*
* Use this tracer to detect large system latencies induced by the behavior of
* certain underlying system hardware or firmware, independent of Linux itself.
* The code was developed originally to detect the presence of SMIs on Intel
* and AMD systems, although there is no dependency upon x86 herein.
*
* The classical example usage of this tracer is in detecting the presence of
* SMIs or System Management Interrupts on Intel and AMD systems. An SMI is a
* somewhat special form of hardware interrupt spawned from earlier CPU debug
* modes in which the (BIOS/EFI/etc.) firmware arranges for the South Bridge
* LPC (or other device) to generate a special interrupt under certain
* circumstances, for example, upon expiration of a special SMI timer device,
* due to certain external thermal readings, on certain I/O address accesses,
* and other situations. An SMI hits a special CPU pin, triggers a special
* SMI mode (complete with special memory map), and the OS is unaware.
*
* Although certain hardware-inducing latencies are necessary (for example,
* a modern system often requires an SMI handler for correct thermal control
* and remote management) they can wreak havoc upon any OS-level performance
* guarantees toward low-latency, especially when the OS is not even made
* aware of the presence of these interrupts. For this reason, we need a
* somewhat brute force mechanism to detect these interrupts. In this case,
* we do it by hogging all of the CPU(s) for configurable timer intervals,
* sampling the built-in CPU timer, looking for discontiguous readings.
*
* WARNING: This implementation necessarily introduces latencies. Therefore,
* you should NEVER use this tracer while running in a production
* environment requiring any kind of low-latency performance
* guarantee(s).
*
* Copyright (C) 2008-2009 Jon Masters, Red Hat, Inc. <jcm@redhat.com>
* Copyright (C) 2013-2016 Steven Rostedt, Red Hat, Inc. <srostedt@redhat.com>
*
* Includes useful feedback from Clark Williams <williams@redhat.com>
*
*/
#include <linux/kthread.h>
#include <linux/tracefs.h>
#include <linux/uaccess.h>
#include <linux/cpumask.h>
#include <linux/delay.h>
#include <linux/sched/clock.h>
#include "trace.h"
static struct trace_array *hwlat_trace;
#define U64STR_SIZE 22 /* 20 digits max */
#define BANNER "hwlat_detector: "
#define DEFAULT_SAMPLE_WINDOW 1000000 /* 1s */
#define DEFAULT_SAMPLE_WIDTH 500000 /* 0.5s */
#define DEFAULT_LAT_THRESHOLD 10 /* 10us */
static struct dentry *hwlat_sample_width; /* sample width us */
static struct dentry *hwlat_sample_window; /* sample window us */
static struct dentry *hwlat_thread_mode; /* hwlat thread mode */
enum {
MODE_NONE = 0,
MODE_ROUND_ROBIN,
MODE_PER_CPU,
MODE_MAX
};
static char *thread_mode_str[] = { "none", "round-robin", "per-cpu" };
/* Save the previous tracing_thresh value */
static unsigned long save_tracing_thresh;
/* runtime kthread data */
struct hwlat_kthread_data {
struct task_struct *kthread;
/* NMI timestamp counters */
u64 nmi_ts_start;
u64 nmi_total_ts;
int nmi_count;
int nmi_cpu;
};
struct hwlat_kthread_data hwlat_single_cpu_data;
DEFINE_PER_CPU(struct hwlat_kthread_data, hwlat_per_cpu_data);
/* Tells NMIs to call back to the hwlat tracer to record timestamps */
bool trace_hwlat_callback_enabled;
/* If the user changed threshold, remember it */
static u64 last_tracing_thresh = DEFAULT_LAT_THRESHOLD * NSEC_PER_USEC;
/* Individual latency samples are stored here when detected. */
struct hwlat_sample {
u64 seqnum; /* unique sequence */
u64 duration; /* delta */
u64 outer_duration; /* delta (outer loop) */
u64 nmi_total_ts; /* Total time spent in NMIs */
struct timespec64 timestamp; /* wall time */
int nmi_count; /* # NMIs during this sample */
int count; /* # of iterations over thresh */
};
/* keep the global state somewhere. */
static struct hwlat_data {
struct mutex lock; /* protect changes */
u64 count; /* total since reset */
u64 sample_window; /* total sampling window (on+off) */
u64 sample_width; /* active sampling portion of window */
int thread_mode; /* thread mode */
} hwlat_data = {
.sample_window = DEFAULT_SAMPLE_WINDOW,
.sample_width = DEFAULT_SAMPLE_WIDTH,
.thread_mode = MODE_ROUND_ROBIN
};
static struct hwlat_kthread_data *get_cpu_data(void)
{
if (hwlat_data.thread_mode == MODE_PER_CPU)
return this_cpu_ptr(&hwlat_per_cpu_data);
else
return &hwlat_single_cpu_data;
}
static bool hwlat_busy;
static void trace_hwlat_sample(struct hwlat_sample *sample)
{
struct trace_array *tr = hwlat_trace;
struct trace_event_call *call = &event_hwlat;
struct trace_buffer *buffer = tr->array_buffer.buffer;
struct ring_buffer_event *event;
struct hwlat_entry *entry;
event = trace_buffer_lock_reserve(buffer, TRACE_HWLAT, sizeof(*entry),
tracing: Merge irqflags + preempt counter. The state of the interrupts (irqflags) and the preemption counter are both passed down to tracing_generic_entry_update(). Only one bit of irqflags is actually required: The on/off state. The complete 32bit of the preemption counter isn't needed. Just whether of the upper bits (softirq, hardirq and NMI) are set and the preemption depth is needed. The irqflags and the preemption counter could be evaluated early and the information stored in an integer `trace_ctx'. tracing_generic_entry_update() would use the upper bits as the TRACE_FLAG_* and the lower 8bit as the disabled-preemption depth (considering that one must be substracted from the counter in one special cases). The actual preemption value is not used except for the tracing record. The `irqflags' variable is mostly used only for the tracing record. An exception here is for instance wakeup_tracer_call() or probe_wakeup_sched_switch() which explicilty disable interrupts and use that `irqflags' to save (and restore) the IRQ state and to record the state. Struct trace_event_buffer has also the `pc' and flags' members which can be replaced with `trace_ctx' since their actual value is not used outside of trace recording. This will reduce tracing_generic_entry_update() to simply assign values to struct trace_entry. The evaluation of the TRACE_FLAG_* bits is moved to _tracing_gen_ctx_flags() which replaces preempt_count() and local_save_flags() invocations. As an example, ftrace_syscall_enter() may invoke: - trace_buffer_lock_reserve() -> … -> tracing_generic_entry_update() - event_trigger_unlock_commit() -> ftrace_trace_stack() -> … -> tracing_generic_entry_update() -> ftrace_trace_userstack() -> … -> tracing_generic_entry_update() In this case the TRACE_FLAG_* bits were evaluated three times. By using the `trace_ctx' they are evaluated once and assigned three times. A build with all tracers enabled on x86-64 with and without the patch: text data bss dec hex filename 21970669 17084168 7639260 46694097 2c87ed1 vmlinux.old 21970293 17084168 7639260 46693721 2c87d59 vmlinux.new text shrank by 379 bytes, data remained constant. Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20210125194511.3924915-2-bigeasy@linutronix.de Signed-off-by: Sebastian Andrzej Siewior <bigeasy@linutronix.de> Signed-off-by: Steven Rostedt (VMware) <rostedt@goodmis.org>
2021-01-25 22:45:08 +03:00
tracing_gen_ctx());
if (!event)
return;
entry = ring_buffer_event_data(event);
entry->seqnum = sample->seqnum;
entry->duration = sample->duration;
entry->outer_duration = sample->outer_duration;
entry->timestamp = sample->timestamp;
entry->nmi_total_ts = sample->nmi_total_ts;
entry->nmi_count = sample->nmi_count;
entry->count = sample->count;
if (!call_filter_check_discard(call, entry, buffer, event))
trace_buffer_unlock_commit_nostack(buffer, event);
}
/* Macros to encapsulate the time capturing infrastructure */
#define time_type u64
#define time_get() trace_clock_local()
#define time_to_us(x) div_u64(x, 1000)
#define time_sub(a, b) ((a) - (b))
#define init_time(a, b) (a = b)
#define time_u64(a) a
void trace_hwlat_callback(bool enter)
{
struct hwlat_kthread_data *kdata = get_cpu_data();
if (!kdata->kthread)
return;
/*
* Currently trace_clock_local() calls sched_clock() and the
* generic version is not NMI safe.
*/
if (!IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_GENERIC_SCHED_CLOCK)) {
if (enter)
kdata->nmi_ts_start = time_get();
else
kdata->nmi_total_ts += time_get() - kdata->nmi_ts_start;
}
if (enter)
kdata->nmi_count++;
}
/*
* hwlat_err - report a hwlat error.
*/
#define hwlat_err(msg) ({ \
struct trace_array *tr = hwlat_trace; \
\
trace_array_printk_buf(tr->array_buffer.buffer, _THIS_IP_, msg); \
})
/**
* get_sample - sample the CPU TSC and look for likely hardware latencies
*
* Used to repeatedly capture the CPU TSC (or similar), looking for potential
* hardware-induced latency. Called with interrupts disabled and with
* hwlat_data.lock held.
*/
static int get_sample(void)
{
struct hwlat_kthread_data *kdata = get_cpu_data();
struct trace_array *tr = hwlat_trace;
struct hwlat_sample s;
time_type start, t1, t2, last_t2;
s64 diff, outer_diff, total, last_total = 0;
u64 sample = 0;
u64 thresh = tracing_thresh;
u64 outer_sample = 0;
int ret = -1;
unsigned int count = 0;
do_div(thresh, NSEC_PER_USEC); /* modifies interval value */
kdata->nmi_total_ts = 0;
kdata->nmi_count = 0;
/* Make sure NMIs see this first */
barrier();
trace_hwlat_callback_enabled = true;
init_time(last_t2, 0);
start = time_get(); /* start timestamp */
outer_diff = 0;
do {
t1 = time_get(); /* we'll look for a discontinuity */
t2 = time_get();
if (time_u64(last_t2)) {
/* Check the delta from outer loop (t2 to next t1) */
outer_diff = time_to_us(time_sub(t1, last_t2));
/* This shouldn't happen */
if (outer_diff < 0) {
hwlat_err(BANNER "time running backwards\n");
goto out;
}
if (outer_diff > outer_sample)
outer_sample = outer_diff;
}
last_t2 = t2;
total = time_to_us(time_sub(t2, start)); /* sample width */
/* Check for possible overflows */
if (total < last_total) {
hwlat_err("Time total overflowed\n");
break;
}
last_total = total;
/* This checks the inner loop (t1 to t2) */
diff = time_to_us(time_sub(t2, t1)); /* current diff */
if (diff > thresh || outer_diff > thresh) {
if (!count)
ktime_get_real_ts64(&s.timestamp);
count++;
}
/* This shouldn't happen */
if (diff < 0) {
hwlat_err(BANNER "time running backwards\n");
goto out;
}
if (diff > sample)
sample = diff; /* only want highest value */
} while (total <= hwlat_data.sample_width);
barrier(); /* finish the above in the view for NMIs */
trace_hwlat_callback_enabled = false;
barrier(); /* Make sure nmi_total_ts is no longer updated */
ret = 0;
/* If we exceed the threshold value, we have found a hardware latency */
if (sample > thresh || outer_sample > thresh) {
ftrace: Implement fs notification for tracing_max_latency This patch implements the feature that the tracing_max_latency file, e.g. /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/tracing_max_latency will receive notifications through the fsnotify framework when a new latency is available. One particularly interesting use of this facility is when enabling threshold tracing, through /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/tracing_thresh, together with the preempt/irqsoff tracers. This makes it possible to implement a user space program that can, with equal probability, obtain traces of latencies that occur immediately after each other in spite of the fact that the preempt/irqsoff tracers operate in overwrite mode. This facility works with the hwlat, preempt/irqsoff, and wakeup tracers. The tracers may call the latency_fsnotify() from places such as __schedule() or do_idle(); this makes it impossible to call queue_work() directly without risking a deadlock. The same would happen with a softirq, kernel thread or tasklet. For this reason we use the irq_work mechanism to call queue_work(). This patch creates a new workqueue. The reason for doing this is that I wanted to use the WQ_UNBOUND and WQ_HIGHPRI flags. My thinking was that WQ_UNBOUND might help with the latency in some important cases. If we use: queue_work(system_highpri_wq, &tr->fsnotify_work); then the work will (almost) always execute on the same CPU but if we are unlucky that CPU could be too busy while there could be another CPU in the system that would be able to process the work soon enough. queue_work_on() could be used to queue the work on another CPU but it seems difficult to select the right CPU. Link: http://lkml.kernel.org/r/20191008220824.7911-2-viktor.rosendahl@gmail.com Reviewed-by: Joel Fernandes (Google) <joel@joelfernandes.org> Signed-off-by: Viktor Rosendahl (BMW) <viktor.rosendahl@gmail.com> [ Added max() to have one compare for max latency ] Signed-off-by: Steven Rostedt (VMware) <rostedt@goodmis.org>
2019-10-09 01:08:21 +03:00
u64 latency;
ret = 1;
/* We read in microseconds */
if (kdata->nmi_total_ts)
do_div(kdata->nmi_total_ts, NSEC_PER_USEC);
hwlat_data.count++;
s.seqnum = hwlat_data.count;
s.duration = sample;
s.outer_duration = outer_sample;
s.nmi_total_ts = kdata->nmi_total_ts;
s.nmi_count = kdata->nmi_count;
s.count = count;
trace_hwlat_sample(&s);
ftrace: Implement fs notification for tracing_max_latency This patch implements the feature that the tracing_max_latency file, e.g. /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/tracing_max_latency will receive notifications through the fsnotify framework when a new latency is available. One particularly interesting use of this facility is when enabling threshold tracing, through /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/tracing_thresh, together with the preempt/irqsoff tracers. This makes it possible to implement a user space program that can, with equal probability, obtain traces of latencies that occur immediately after each other in spite of the fact that the preempt/irqsoff tracers operate in overwrite mode. This facility works with the hwlat, preempt/irqsoff, and wakeup tracers. The tracers may call the latency_fsnotify() from places such as __schedule() or do_idle(); this makes it impossible to call queue_work() directly without risking a deadlock. The same would happen with a softirq, kernel thread or tasklet. For this reason we use the irq_work mechanism to call queue_work(). This patch creates a new workqueue. The reason for doing this is that I wanted to use the WQ_UNBOUND and WQ_HIGHPRI flags. My thinking was that WQ_UNBOUND might help with the latency in some important cases. If we use: queue_work(system_highpri_wq, &tr->fsnotify_work); then the work will (almost) always execute on the same CPU but if we are unlucky that CPU could be too busy while there could be another CPU in the system that would be able to process the work soon enough. queue_work_on() could be used to queue the work on another CPU but it seems difficult to select the right CPU. Link: http://lkml.kernel.org/r/20191008220824.7911-2-viktor.rosendahl@gmail.com Reviewed-by: Joel Fernandes (Google) <joel@joelfernandes.org> Signed-off-by: Viktor Rosendahl (BMW) <viktor.rosendahl@gmail.com> [ Added max() to have one compare for max latency ] Signed-off-by: Steven Rostedt (VMware) <rostedt@goodmis.org>
2019-10-09 01:08:21 +03:00
latency = max(sample, outer_sample);
/* Keep a running maximum ever recorded hardware latency */
ftrace: Implement fs notification for tracing_max_latency This patch implements the feature that the tracing_max_latency file, e.g. /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/tracing_max_latency will receive notifications through the fsnotify framework when a new latency is available. One particularly interesting use of this facility is when enabling threshold tracing, through /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/tracing_thresh, together with the preempt/irqsoff tracers. This makes it possible to implement a user space program that can, with equal probability, obtain traces of latencies that occur immediately after each other in spite of the fact that the preempt/irqsoff tracers operate in overwrite mode. This facility works with the hwlat, preempt/irqsoff, and wakeup tracers. The tracers may call the latency_fsnotify() from places such as __schedule() or do_idle(); this makes it impossible to call queue_work() directly without risking a deadlock. The same would happen with a softirq, kernel thread or tasklet. For this reason we use the irq_work mechanism to call queue_work(). This patch creates a new workqueue. The reason for doing this is that I wanted to use the WQ_UNBOUND and WQ_HIGHPRI flags. My thinking was that WQ_UNBOUND might help with the latency in some important cases. If we use: queue_work(system_highpri_wq, &tr->fsnotify_work); then the work will (almost) always execute on the same CPU but if we are unlucky that CPU could be too busy while there could be another CPU in the system that would be able to process the work soon enough. queue_work_on() could be used to queue the work on another CPU but it seems difficult to select the right CPU. Link: http://lkml.kernel.org/r/20191008220824.7911-2-viktor.rosendahl@gmail.com Reviewed-by: Joel Fernandes (Google) <joel@joelfernandes.org> Signed-off-by: Viktor Rosendahl (BMW) <viktor.rosendahl@gmail.com> [ Added max() to have one compare for max latency ] Signed-off-by: Steven Rostedt (VMware) <rostedt@goodmis.org>
2019-10-09 01:08:21 +03:00
if (latency > tr->max_latency) {
tr->max_latency = latency;
latency_fsnotify(tr);
}
}
out:
return ret;
}
static struct cpumask save_cpumask;
static void move_to_next_cpu(void)
{
struct cpumask *current_mask = &save_cpumask;
struct trace_array *tr = hwlat_trace;
int next_cpu;
/*
* If for some reason the user modifies the CPU affinity
* of this thread, then stop migrating for the duration
* of the current test.
*/
if (!cpumask_equal(current_mask, current->cpus_ptr))
goto change_mode;
get_online_cpus();
cpumask_and(current_mask, cpu_online_mask, tr->tracing_cpumask);
next_cpu = cpumask_next(raw_smp_processor_id(), current_mask);
put_online_cpus();
if (next_cpu >= nr_cpu_ids)
next_cpu = cpumask_first(current_mask);
if (next_cpu >= nr_cpu_ids) /* Shouldn't happen! */
goto change_mode;
cpumask_clear(current_mask);
cpumask_set_cpu(next_cpu, current_mask);
sched_setaffinity(0, current_mask);
return;
change_mode:
hwlat_data.thread_mode = MODE_NONE;
pr_info(BANNER "cpumask changed while in round-robin mode, switching to mode none\n");
}
/*
* kthread_fn - The CPU time sampling/hardware latency detection kernel thread
*
* Used to periodically sample the CPU TSC via a call to get_sample. We
* disable interrupts, which does (intentionally) introduce latency since we
* need to ensure nothing else might be running (and thus preempting).
* Obviously this should never be used in production environments.
*
* Executes one loop interaction on each CPU in tracing_cpumask sysfs file.
*/
static int kthread_fn(void *data)
{
u64 interval;
while (!kthread_should_stop()) {
if (hwlat_data.thread_mode == MODE_ROUND_ROBIN)
move_to_next_cpu();
local_irq_disable();
get_sample();
local_irq_enable();
mutex_lock(&hwlat_data.lock);
interval = hwlat_data.sample_window - hwlat_data.sample_width;
mutex_unlock(&hwlat_data.lock);
do_div(interval, USEC_PER_MSEC); /* modifies interval value */
/* Always sleep for at least 1ms */
if (interval < 1)
interval = 1;
if (msleep_interruptible(interval))
break;
}
return 0;
}
/*
* stop_stop_kthread - Inform the hardware latency sampling/detector kthread to stop
*
* This kicks the running hardware latency sampling/detector kernel thread and
* tells it to stop sampling now. Use this on unload and at system shutdown.
*/
static void stop_single_kthread(void)
{
struct hwlat_kthread_data *kdata = get_cpu_data();
struct task_struct *kthread;
get_online_cpus();
kthread = kdata->kthread;
if (!kthread)
goto out_put_cpus;
kthread_stop(kthread);
kdata->kthread = NULL;
out_put_cpus:
put_online_cpus();
}
/*
* start_single_kthread - Kick off the hardware latency sampling/detector kthread
*
* This starts the kernel thread that will sit and sample the CPU timestamp
* counter (TSC or similar) and look for potential hardware latencies.
*/
static int start_single_kthread(struct trace_array *tr)
{
struct hwlat_kthread_data *kdata = get_cpu_data();
struct cpumask *current_mask = &save_cpumask;
struct task_struct *kthread;
int next_cpu;
get_online_cpus();
if (kdata->kthread)
goto out_put_cpus;
kthread = kthread_create(kthread_fn, NULL, "hwlatd");
if (IS_ERR(kthread)) {
pr_err(BANNER "could not start sampling thread\n");
put_online_cpus();
return -ENOMEM;
}
/* Just pick the first CPU on first iteration */
cpumask_and(current_mask, cpu_online_mask, tr->tracing_cpumask);
if (hwlat_data.thread_mode == MODE_ROUND_ROBIN) {
next_cpu = cpumask_first(current_mask);
cpumask_clear(current_mask);
cpumask_set_cpu(next_cpu, current_mask);
}
sched_setaffinity(kthread->pid, current_mask);
kdata->kthread = kthread;
wake_up_process(kthread);
out_put_cpus:
put_online_cpus();
return 0;
}
/*
* stop_cpu_kthread - Stop a hwlat cpu kthread
*/
static void stop_cpu_kthread(unsigned int cpu)
{
struct task_struct *kthread;
kthread = per_cpu(hwlat_per_cpu_data, cpu).kthread;
if (kthread)
kthread_stop(kthread);
per_cpu(hwlat_per_cpu_data, cpu).kthread = NULL;
}
/*
* stop_per_cpu_kthreads - Inform the hardware latency sampling/detector kthread to stop
*
* This kicks the running hardware latency sampling/detector kernel threads and
* tells it to stop sampling now. Use this on unload and at system shutdown.
*/
static void stop_per_cpu_kthreads(void)
{
unsigned int cpu;
get_online_cpus();
for_each_online_cpu(cpu)
stop_cpu_kthread(cpu);
put_online_cpus();
}
/*
* start_cpu_kthread - Start a hwlat cpu kthread
*/
static int start_cpu_kthread(unsigned int cpu)
{
struct task_struct *kthread;
char comm[24];
snprintf(comm, 24, "hwlatd/%d", cpu);
kthread = kthread_create_on_cpu(kthread_fn, NULL, cpu, comm);
if (IS_ERR(kthread)) {
pr_err(BANNER "could not start sampling thread\n");
return -ENOMEM;
}
per_cpu(hwlat_per_cpu_data, cpu).kthread = kthread;
wake_up_process(kthread);
return 0;
}
#ifdef CONFIG_HOTPLUG_CPU
static void hwlat_hotplug_workfn(struct work_struct *dummy)
{
struct trace_array *tr = hwlat_trace;
unsigned int cpu = smp_processor_id();
mutex_lock(&trace_types_lock);
mutex_lock(&hwlat_data.lock);
get_online_cpus();
if (!hwlat_busy || hwlat_data.thread_mode != MODE_PER_CPU)
goto out_unlock;
if (!cpumask_test_cpu(cpu, tr->tracing_cpumask))
goto out_unlock;
start_cpu_kthread(cpu);
out_unlock:
put_online_cpus();
mutex_unlock(&hwlat_data.lock);
mutex_unlock(&trace_types_lock);
}
static DECLARE_WORK(hwlat_hotplug_work, hwlat_hotplug_workfn);
/*
* hwlat_cpu_init - CPU hotplug online callback function
*/
static int hwlat_cpu_init(unsigned int cpu)
{
schedule_work_on(cpu, &hwlat_hotplug_work);
return 0;
}
/*
* hwlat_cpu_die - CPU hotplug offline callback function
*/
static int hwlat_cpu_die(unsigned int cpu)
{
stop_cpu_kthread(cpu);
return 0;
}
static void hwlat_init_hotplug_support(void)
{
int ret;
ret = cpuhp_setup_state(CPUHP_AP_ONLINE_DYN, "trace/hwlat:online",
hwlat_cpu_init, hwlat_cpu_die);
if (ret < 0)
pr_warn(BANNER "Error to init cpu hotplug support\n");
return;
}
#else /* CONFIG_HOTPLUG_CPU */
static void hwlat_init_hotplug_support(void)
{
return;
}
#endif /* CONFIG_HOTPLUG_CPU */
/*
* start_per_cpu_kthreads - Kick off the hardware latency sampling/detector kthreads
*
* This starts the kernel threads that will sit on potentially all cpus and
* sample the CPU timestamp counter (TSC or similar) and look for potential
* hardware latencies.
*/
static int start_per_cpu_kthreads(struct trace_array *tr)
{
struct cpumask *current_mask = &save_cpumask;
unsigned int cpu;
int retval;
get_online_cpus();
/*
* Run only on CPUs in which hwlat is allowed to run.
*/
cpumask_and(current_mask, cpu_online_mask, tr->tracing_cpumask);
for_each_online_cpu(cpu)
per_cpu(hwlat_per_cpu_data, cpu).kthread = NULL;
for_each_cpu(cpu, current_mask) {
retval = start_cpu_kthread(cpu);
if (retval)
goto out_error;
}
put_online_cpus();
return 0;
out_error:
put_online_cpus();
stop_per_cpu_kthreads();
return retval;
}
static void *s_mode_start(struct seq_file *s, loff_t *pos)
{
int mode = *pos;
mutex_lock(&hwlat_data.lock);
if (mode >= MODE_MAX)
return NULL;
return pos;
}
static void *s_mode_next(struct seq_file *s, void *v, loff_t *pos)
{
int mode = ++(*pos);
if (mode >= MODE_MAX)
return NULL;
return pos;
}
static int s_mode_show(struct seq_file *s, void *v)
{
loff_t *pos = v;
int mode = *pos;
if (mode == hwlat_data.thread_mode)
seq_printf(s, "[%s]", thread_mode_str[mode]);
else
seq_printf(s, "%s", thread_mode_str[mode]);
if (mode != MODE_MAX)
seq_puts(s, " ");
return 0;
}
static void s_mode_stop(struct seq_file *s, void *v)
{
seq_puts(s, "\n");
mutex_unlock(&hwlat_data.lock);
}
static const struct seq_operations thread_mode_seq_ops = {
.start = s_mode_start,
.next = s_mode_next,
.show = s_mode_show,
.stop = s_mode_stop
};
static int hwlat_mode_open(struct inode *inode, struct file *file)
{
return seq_open(file, &thread_mode_seq_ops);
};
static void hwlat_tracer_start(struct trace_array *tr);
static void hwlat_tracer_stop(struct trace_array *tr);
/**
* hwlat_mode_write - Write function for "mode" entry
* @filp: The active open file structure
* @ubuf: The user buffer that contains the value to write
* @cnt: The maximum number of bytes to write to "file"
* @ppos: The current position in @file
*
* This function provides a write implementation for the "mode" interface
* to the hardware latency detector. hwlatd has different operation modes.
* The "none" sets the allowed cpumask for a single hwlatd thread at the
* startup and lets the scheduler handle the migration. The default mode is
* the "round-robin" one, in which a single hwlatd thread runs, migrating
* among the allowed CPUs in a round-robin fashion. The "per-cpu" mode
* creates one hwlatd thread per allowed CPU.
*/
static ssize_t hwlat_mode_write(struct file *filp, const char __user *ubuf,
size_t cnt, loff_t *ppos)
{
struct trace_array *tr = hwlat_trace;
const char *mode;
char buf[64];
int ret, i;
if (cnt >= sizeof(buf))
return -EINVAL;
if (copy_from_user(buf, ubuf, cnt))
return -EFAULT;
buf[cnt] = 0;
mode = strstrip(buf);
ret = -EINVAL;
/*
* trace_types_lock is taken to avoid concurrency on start/stop
* and hwlat_busy.
*/
mutex_lock(&trace_types_lock);
if (hwlat_busy)
hwlat_tracer_stop(tr);
mutex_lock(&hwlat_data.lock);
for (i = 0; i < MODE_MAX; i++) {
if (strcmp(mode, thread_mode_str[i]) == 0) {
hwlat_data.thread_mode = i;
ret = cnt;
}
}
mutex_unlock(&hwlat_data.lock);
if (hwlat_busy)
hwlat_tracer_start(tr);
mutex_unlock(&trace_types_lock);
*ppos += cnt;
return ret;
}
/*
* The width parameter is read/write using the generic trace_min_max_param
* method. The *val is protected by the hwlat_data lock and is upper
* bounded by the window parameter.
*/
static struct trace_min_max_param hwlat_width = {
.lock = &hwlat_data.lock,
.val = &hwlat_data.sample_width,
.max = &hwlat_data.sample_window,
.min = NULL,
};
/*
* The window parameter is read/write using the generic trace_min_max_param
* method. The *val is protected by the hwlat_data lock and is lower
* bounded by the width parameter.
*/
static struct trace_min_max_param hwlat_window = {
.lock = &hwlat_data.lock,
.val = &hwlat_data.sample_window,
.max = NULL,
.min = &hwlat_data.sample_width,
};
static const struct file_operations thread_mode_fops = {
.open = hwlat_mode_open,
.read = seq_read,
.llseek = seq_lseek,
.release = seq_release,
.write = hwlat_mode_write
};
/**
* init_tracefs - A function to initialize the tracefs interface files
*
* This function creates entries in tracefs for "hwlat_detector".
* It creates the hwlat_detector directory in the tracing directory,
* and within that directory is the count, width and window files to
* change and view those values.
*/
static int init_tracefs(void)
{
int ret;
struct dentry *top_dir;
ret = tracing_init_dentry();
if (ret)
return -ENOMEM;
top_dir = tracefs_create_dir("hwlat_detector", NULL);
if (!top_dir)
return -ENOMEM;
hwlat_sample_window = tracefs_create_file("window", 0640,
top_dir,
&hwlat_window,
&trace_min_max_fops);
if (!hwlat_sample_window)
goto err;
hwlat_sample_width = tracefs_create_file("width", 0644,
top_dir,
&hwlat_width,
&trace_min_max_fops);
if (!hwlat_sample_width)
goto err;
hwlat_thread_mode = trace_create_file("mode", 0644,
top_dir,
NULL,
&thread_mode_fops);
if (!hwlat_thread_mode)
goto err;
return 0;
err:
tracefs_remove(top_dir);
return -ENOMEM;
}
static void hwlat_tracer_start(struct trace_array *tr)
{
int err;
if (hwlat_data.thread_mode == MODE_PER_CPU)
err = start_per_cpu_kthreads(tr);
else
err = start_single_kthread(tr);
if (err)
pr_err(BANNER "Cannot start hwlat kthread\n");
}
static void hwlat_tracer_stop(struct trace_array *tr)
{
if (hwlat_data.thread_mode == MODE_PER_CPU)
stop_per_cpu_kthreads();
else
stop_single_kthread();
}
static int hwlat_tracer_init(struct trace_array *tr)
{
/* Only allow one instance to enable this */
if (hwlat_busy)
return -EBUSY;
hwlat_trace = tr;
hwlat_data.count = 0;
tr->max_latency = 0;
save_tracing_thresh = tracing_thresh;
/* tracing_thresh is in nsecs, we speak in usecs */
if (!tracing_thresh)
tracing_thresh = last_tracing_thresh;
if (tracer_tracing_is_on(tr))
hwlat_tracer_start(tr);
hwlat_busy = true;
return 0;
}
static void hwlat_tracer_reset(struct trace_array *tr)
{
hwlat_tracer_stop(tr);
/* the tracing threshold is static between runs */
last_tracing_thresh = tracing_thresh;
tracing_thresh = save_tracing_thresh;
hwlat_busy = false;
}
static struct tracer hwlat_tracer __read_mostly =
{
.name = "hwlat",
.init = hwlat_tracer_init,
.reset = hwlat_tracer_reset,
.start = hwlat_tracer_start,
.stop = hwlat_tracer_stop,
.allow_instances = true,
};
__init static int init_hwlat_tracer(void)
{
int ret;
mutex_init(&hwlat_data.lock);
ret = register_tracer(&hwlat_tracer);
if (ret)
return ret;
hwlat_init_hotplug_support();
init_tracefs();
return 0;
}
late_initcall(init_hwlat_tracer);