1======================================================
2HiSilicon SoC uncore Performance Monitoring Unit (PMU)
3======================================================
4
5The HiSilicon SoC chip includes various independent system device PMUs
6such as L3 cache (L3C), Hydra Home Agent (HHA) and DDRC. These PMUs are
7independent and have hardware logic to gather statistics and performance
8information.
9
10The HiSilicon SoC encapsulates multiple CPU and IO dies. Each CPU cluster
11(CCL) is made up of 4 cpu cores sharing one L3 cache; each CPU die is
12called Super CPU cluster (SCCL) and is made up of 6 CCLs. Each SCCL has
13two HHAs (0 - 1) and four DDRCs (0 - 3), respectively.
14
15HiSilicon SoC uncore PMU driver
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17
18Each device PMU has separate registers for event counting, control and
19interrupt, and the PMU driver shall register perf PMU drivers like L3C,
20HHA and DDRC etc. The available events and configuration options shall
21be described in the sysfs, see:
22
23/sys/bus/event_source/devices/hisi_sccl{X}_<l3c{Y}/hha{Y}/ddrc{Y}>.
24The "perf list" command shall list the available events from sysfs.
25
26Each L3C, HHA and DDRC is registered as a separate PMU with perf. The PMU
27name will appear in event listing as hisi_sccl<sccl-id>_module<index-id>.
28where "sccl-id" is the identifier of the SCCL and "index-id" is the index of
29module.
30
31e.g. hisi_sccl3_l3c0/rd_hit_cpipe is READ_HIT_CPIPE event of L3C index #0 in
32SCCL ID #3.
33
34e.g. hisi_sccl1_hha0/rx_operations is RX_OPERATIONS event of HHA index #0 in
35SCCL ID #1.
36
37The driver also provides a "cpumask" sysfs attribute, which shows the CPU core
38ID used to count the uncore PMU event.
39
40Example usage of perf::
41
42  $# perf list
43  hisi_sccl3_l3c0/rd_hit_cpipe/ [kernel PMU event]
44  ------------------------------------------
45  hisi_sccl3_l3c0/wr_hit_cpipe/ [kernel PMU event]
46  ------------------------------------------
47  hisi_sccl1_l3c0/rd_hit_cpipe/ [kernel PMU event]
48  ------------------------------------------
49  hisi_sccl1_l3c0/wr_hit_cpipe/ [kernel PMU event]
50  ------------------------------------------
51
52  $# perf stat -a -e hisi_sccl3_l3c0/rd_hit_cpipe/ sleep 5
53  $# perf stat -a -e hisi_sccl3_l3c0/config=0x02/ sleep 5
54
55For HiSilicon uncore PMU v2 whose identifier is 0x30, the topology is the same
56as PMU v1, but some new functions are added to the hardware.
57
581. L3C PMU supports filtering by core/thread within the cluster which can be
59specified as a bitmap::
60
61  $# perf stat -a -e hisi_sccl3_l3c0/config=0x02,tt_core=0x3/ sleep 5
62
63This will only count the operations from core/thread 0 and 1 in this cluster.
64
652. Tracetag allow the user to chose to count only read, write or atomic
66operations via the tt_req parameeter in perf. The default value counts all
67operations. tt_req is 3bits, 3'b100 represents read operations, 3'b101
68represents write operations, 3'b110 represents atomic store operations and
693'b111 represents atomic non-store operations, other values are reserved::
70
71  $# perf stat -a -e hisi_sccl3_l3c0/config=0x02,tt_req=0x4/ sleep 5
72
73This will only count the read operations in this cluster.
74
753. Datasrc allows the user to check where the data comes from. It is 5 bits.
76Some important codes are as follows:
77
78- 5'b00001: comes from L3C in this die;
79- 5'b01000: comes from L3C in the cross-die;
80- 5'b01001: comes from L3C which is in another socket;
81- 5'b01110: comes from the local DDR;
82- 5'b01111: comes from the cross-die DDR;
83- 5'b10000: comes from cross-socket DDR;
84
85etc, it is mainly helpful to find that the data source is nearest from the CPU
86cores. If datasrc_cfg is used in the multi-chips, the datasrc_skt shall be
87configured in perf command::
88
89  $# perf stat -a -e hisi_sccl3_l3c0/config=0xb9,datasrc_cfg=0xE/,
90  hisi_sccl3_l3c0/config=0xb9,datasrc_cfg=0xF/ sleep 5
91
924. Some HiSilicon SoCs encapsulate multiple CPU and IO dies. Each CPU die
93contains several Compute Clusters (CCLs). The I/O dies are called Super I/O
94clusters (SICL) containing multiple I/O clusters (ICLs). Each CCL/ICL in the
95SoC has a unique ID. Each ID is 11bits, include a 6-bit SCCL-ID and 5-bit
96CCL/ICL-ID. For I/O die, the ICL-ID is followed by:
97
98- 5'b00000: I/O_MGMT_ICL;
99- 5'b00001: Network_ICL;
100- 5'b00011: HAC_ICL;
101- 5'b10000: PCIe_ICL;
102
1035. uring_channel: UC PMU events 0x47~0x59 supports filtering by tx request
104uring channel. It is 2 bits. Some important codes are as follows:
105
106- 2'b11: count the events which sent to the uring_ext (MATA) channel;
107- 2'b01: is the same as 2'b11;
108- 2'b10: count the events which sent to the uring (non-MATA) channel;
109- 2'b00: default value, count the events which sent to the both uring and
110  uring_ext channel;
111
112Users could configure IDs to count data come from specific CCL/ICL, by setting
113srcid_cmd & srcid_msk, and data desitined for specific CCL/ICL by setting
114tgtid_cmd & tgtid_msk. A set bit in srcid_msk/tgtid_msk means the PMU will not
115check the bit when matching against the srcid_cmd/tgtid_cmd.
116
117If all of these options are disabled, it can works by the default value that
118doesn't distinguish the filter condition and ID information and will return
119the total counter values in the PMU counters.
120
121The current driver does not support sampling. So "perf record" is unsupported.
122Also attach to a task is unsupported as the events are all uncore.
123
124Note: Please contact the maintainer for a complete list of events supported for
125the PMU devices in the SoC and its information if needed.
126