| |
| The contents of this directory allow users to specify PMU events in their |
| CPUs by their symbolic names rather than raw event codes (see example below). |
| |
| The main program in this directory, is the 'jevents', which is built and |
| executed _BEFORE_ the perf binary itself is built. |
| |
| The 'jevents' program tries to locate and process JSON files in the directory |
| tree tools/perf/pmu-events/arch/foo. |
| |
| - Regular files with '.json' extension in the name are assumed to be |
| JSON files, each of which describes a set of PMU events. |
| |
| - The CSV file that maps a specific CPU to its set of PMU events is to |
| be named 'mapfile.csv' (see below for mapfile format). |
| |
| - Directories are traversed, but all other files are ignored. |
| |
| - To reduce JSON event duplication per architecture, platform JSONs may |
| use "ArchStdEvent" keyword to dereference an "Architecture standard |
| events", defined in architecture standard JSONs. |
| Architecture standard JSONs must be located in the architecture root |
| folder. Matching is based on the "EventName" field. |
| |
| The PMU events supported by a CPU model are expected to grouped into topics |
| such as Pipelining, Cache, Memory, Floating-point etc. All events for a topic |
| should be placed in a separate JSON file - where the file name identifies |
| the topic. Eg: "Floating-point.json". |
| |
| All the topic JSON files for a CPU model/family should be in a separate |
| sub directory. Thus for the Silvermont X86 CPU: |
| |
| $ ls tools/perf/pmu-events/arch/x86/silvermont |
| cache.json memory.json virtual-memory.json |
| frontend.json pipeline.json |
| |
| The JSONs folder for a CPU model/family may be placed in the root arch |
| folder, or may be placed in a vendor sub-folder under the arch folder |
| for instances where the arch and vendor are not the same. |
| |
| Using the JSON files and the mapfile, 'jevents' generates the C source file, |
| 'pmu-events.c', which encodes the two sets of tables: |
| |
| - Set of 'PMU events tables' for all known CPUs in the architecture, |
| (one table like the following, per JSON file; table name 'pme_power8' |
| is derived from JSON file name, 'power8.json'). |
| |
| struct pmu_event pme_power8[] = { |
| |
| ... |
| |
| { |
| .name = "pm_1plus_ppc_cmpl", |
| .event = "event=0x100f2", |
| .desc = "1 or more ppc insts finished,", |
| }, |
| |
| ... |
| } |
| |
| - A 'mapping table' that maps each CPU of the architecture, to its |
| 'PMU events table' |
| |
| struct pmu_events_map pmu_events_map[] = { |
| { |
| .cpuid = "004b0000", |
| .version = "1", |
| .type = "core", |
| .table = pme_power8 |
| }, |
| ... |
| |
| }; |
| |
| After the 'pmu-events.c' is generated, it is compiled and the resulting |
| 'pmu-events.o' is added to 'libperf.a' which is then used to build perf. |
| |
| NOTES: |
| 1. Several CPUs can support same set of events and hence use a common |
| JSON file. Hence several entries in the pmu_events_map[] could map |
| to a single 'PMU events table'. |
| |
| 2. The 'pmu-events.h' has an extern declaration for the mapping table |
| and the generated 'pmu-events.c' defines this table. |
| |
| 3. _All_ known CPU tables for architecture are included in the perf |
| binary. |
| |
| At run time, perf determines the actual CPU it is running on, finds the |
| matching events table and builds aliases for those events. This allows |
| users to specify events by their name: |
| |
| $ perf stat -e pm_1plus_ppc_cmpl sleep 1 |
| |
| where 'pm_1plus_ppc_cmpl' is a Power8 PMU event. |
| |
| However some errors in processing may cause the alias build to fail. |
| |
| Mapfile format |
| =============== |
| |
| The mapfile enables multiple CPU models to share a single set of PMU events. |
| It is required even if such mapping is 1:1. |
| |
| The mapfile.csv format is expected to be: |
| |
| Header line |
| CPUID,Version,Dir/path/name,Type |
| |
| where: |
| |
| Comma: |
| is the required field delimiter (i.e other fields cannot |
| have commas within them). |
| |
| Comments: |
| Lines in which the first character is either '\n' or '#' |
| are ignored. |
| |
| Header line |
| The header line is the first line in the file, which is |
| always _IGNORED_. It can be empty. |
| |
| CPUID: |
| CPUID is an arch-specific char string, that can be used |
| to identify CPU (and associate it with a set of PMU events |
| it supports). Multiple CPUIDS can point to the same |
| File/path/name.json. |
| |
| Example: |
| CPUID == 'GenuineIntel-6-2E' (on x86). |
| CPUID == '004b0100' (PVR value in Powerpc) |
| Version: |
| is the Version of the mapfile. |
| |
| Dir/path/name: |
| is the pathname to the directory containing the CPU's JSON |
| files, relative to the directory containing the mapfile.csv |
| |
| Type: |
| indicates whether the events are "core" or "uncore" events. |
| |
| |
| Eg: |
| |
| $ grep silvermont tools/perf/pmu-events/arch/x86/mapfile.csv |
| GenuineIntel-6-37,v13,silvermont,core |
| GenuineIntel-6-4D,v13,silvermont,core |
| GenuineIntel-6-4C,v13,silvermont,core |
| |
| i.e the three CPU models use the JSON files (i.e PMU events) listed |
| in the directory 'tools/perf/pmu-events/arch/x86/silvermont'. |