1 // SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-or-later 2 /* 3 * Performance event support - powerpc architecture code 4 * 5 * Copyright 2008-2009 Paul Mackerras, IBM Corporation. 6 */ 7 #include <linux/kernel.h> 8 #include <linux/sched.h> 9 #include <linux/sched/clock.h> 10 #include <linux/perf_event.h> 11 #include <linux/percpu.h> 12 #include <linux/hardirq.h> 13 #include <linux/sysfs.h> 14 #include <linux/uaccess.h> 15 #include <asm/reg.h> 16 #include <asm/pmc.h> 17 #include <asm/machdep.h> 18 #include <asm/firmware.h> 19 #include <asm/ptrace.h> 20 #include <asm/text-patching.h> 21 #include <asm/hw_irq.h> 22 #include <asm/interrupt.h> 23 24 #ifdef CONFIG_PPC64 25 #include "internal.h" 26 #endif 27 28 #define BHRB_MAX_ENTRIES 32 29 #define BHRB_TARGET 0x0000000000000002 30 #define BHRB_PREDICTION 0x0000000000000001 31 #define BHRB_EA 0xFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFCUL 32 33 struct cpu_hw_events { 34 int n_events; 35 int n_percpu; 36 int disabled; 37 int n_added; 38 int n_limited; 39 u8 pmcs_enabled; 40 struct perf_event *event[MAX_HWEVENTS]; 41 u64 events[MAX_HWEVENTS]; 42 unsigned int flags[MAX_HWEVENTS]; 43 struct mmcr_regs mmcr; 44 struct perf_event *limited_counter[MAX_LIMITED_HWCOUNTERS]; 45 u8 limited_hwidx[MAX_LIMITED_HWCOUNTERS]; 46 u64 alternatives[MAX_HWEVENTS][MAX_EVENT_ALTERNATIVES]; 47 unsigned long amasks[MAX_HWEVENTS][MAX_EVENT_ALTERNATIVES]; 48 unsigned long avalues[MAX_HWEVENTS][MAX_EVENT_ALTERNATIVES]; 49 50 unsigned int txn_flags; 51 int n_txn_start; 52 53 /* BHRB bits */ 54 u64 bhrb_filter; /* BHRB HW branch filter */ 55 unsigned int bhrb_users; 56 void *bhrb_context; 57 struct perf_branch_stack bhrb_stack; 58 struct perf_branch_entry bhrb_entries[BHRB_MAX_ENTRIES]; 59 u64 ic_init; 60 61 /* Store the PMC values */ 62 unsigned long pmcs[MAX_HWEVENTS]; 63 }; 64 65 static DEFINE_PER_CPU(struct cpu_hw_events, cpu_hw_events); 66 67 static struct power_pmu *ppmu; 68 69 /* 70 * Normally, to ignore kernel events we set the FCS (freeze counters 71 * in supervisor mode) bit in MMCR0, but if the kernel runs with the 72 * hypervisor bit set in the MSR, or if we are running on a processor 73 * where the hypervisor bit is forced to 1 (as on Apple G5 processors), 74 * then we need to use the FCHV bit to ignore kernel events. 75 */ 76 static unsigned int freeze_events_kernel = MMCR0_FCS; 77 78 /* 79 * 32-bit doesn't have MMCRA but does have an MMCR2, 80 * and a few other names are different. 81 * Also 32-bit doesn't have MMCR3, SIER2 and SIER3. 82 * Define them as zero knowing that any code path accessing 83 * these registers (via mtspr/mfspr) are done under ppmu flag 84 * check for PPMU_ARCH_31 and we will not enter that code path 85 * for 32-bit. 86 */ 87 #ifdef CONFIG_PPC32 88 89 #define MMCR0_FCHV 0 90 #define MMCR0_PMCjCE MMCR0_PMCnCE 91 #define MMCR0_FC56 0 92 #define MMCR0_PMAO 0 93 #define MMCR0_EBE 0 94 #define MMCR0_BHRBA 0 95 #define MMCR0_PMCC 0 96 #define MMCR0_PMCC_U6 0 97 98 #define SPRN_MMCRA SPRN_MMCR2 99 #define SPRN_MMCR3 0 100 #define SPRN_SIER2 0 101 #define SPRN_SIER3 0 102 #define MMCRA_SAMPLE_ENABLE 0 103 #define MMCRA_BHRB_DISABLE 0 104 #define MMCR0_PMCCEXT 0 105 106 static inline unsigned long perf_ip_adjust(struct pt_regs *regs) 107 { 108 return 0; 109 } 110 static inline void perf_get_data_addr(struct perf_event *event, struct pt_regs *regs, u64 *addrp) { } 111 static inline u32 perf_get_misc_flags(struct pt_regs *regs) 112 { 113 return 0; 114 } 115 static inline void perf_read_regs(struct pt_regs *regs) 116 { 117 regs->result = 0; 118 } 119 120 static inline int siar_valid(struct pt_regs *regs) 121 { 122 return 1; 123 } 124 125 static bool is_ebb_event(struct perf_event *event) { return false; } 126 static int ebb_event_check(struct perf_event *event) { return 0; } 127 static void ebb_event_add(struct perf_event *event) { } 128 static void ebb_switch_out(unsigned long mmcr0) { } 129 static unsigned long ebb_switch_in(bool ebb, struct cpu_hw_events *cpuhw) 130 { 131 return cpuhw->mmcr.mmcr0; 132 } 133 134 static inline void power_pmu_bhrb_enable(struct perf_event *event) {} 135 static inline void power_pmu_bhrb_disable(struct perf_event *event) {} 136 static void power_pmu_sched_task(struct perf_event_pmu_context *pmu_ctx, 137 struct task_struct *task, bool sched_in) 138 { 139 } 140 static inline void power_pmu_bhrb_read(struct perf_event *event, struct cpu_hw_events *cpuhw) {} 141 static void pmao_restore_workaround(bool ebb) { } 142 #endif /* CONFIG_PPC32 */ 143 144 bool is_sier_available(void) 145 { 146 if (!ppmu) 147 return false; 148 149 if (ppmu->flags & PPMU_HAS_SIER) 150 return true; 151 152 return false; 153 } 154 155 /* 156 * Return PMC value corresponding to the 157 * index passed. 158 */ 159 unsigned long get_pmcs_ext_regs(int idx) 160 { 161 struct cpu_hw_events *cpuhw = this_cpu_ptr(&cpu_hw_events); 162 163 return cpuhw->pmcs[idx]; 164 } 165 166 static bool regs_use_siar(struct pt_regs *regs) 167 { 168 /* 169 * When we take a performance monitor exception the regs are setup 170 * using perf_read_regs() which overloads some fields, in particular 171 * regs->result to tell us whether to use SIAR. 172 * 173 * However if the regs are from another exception, eg. a syscall, then 174 * they have not been setup using perf_read_regs() and so regs->result 175 * is something random. 176 */ 177 return ((TRAP(regs) == INTERRUPT_PERFMON) && regs->result); 178 } 179 180 /* 181 * Things that are specific to 64-bit implementations. 182 */ 183 #ifdef CONFIG_PPC64 184 185 static inline unsigned long perf_ip_adjust(struct pt_regs *regs) 186 { 187 unsigned long mmcra = regs->dsisr; 188 189 if ((ppmu->flags & PPMU_HAS_SSLOT) && (mmcra & MMCRA_SAMPLE_ENABLE)) { 190 unsigned long slot = (mmcra & MMCRA_SLOT) >> MMCRA_SLOT_SHIFT; 191 if (slot > 1) 192 return 4 * (slot - 1); 193 } 194 195 return 0; 196 } 197 198 /* 199 * The user wants a data address recorded. 200 * If we're not doing instruction sampling, give them the SDAR 201 * (sampled data address). If we are doing instruction sampling, then 202 * only give them the SDAR if it corresponds to the instruction 203 * pointed to by SIAR; this is indicated by the [POWER6_]MMCRA_SDSYNC, the 204 * [POWER7P_]MMCRA_SDAR_VALID bit in MMCRA, or the SDAR_VALID bit in SIER. 205 */ 206 static inline void perf_get_data_addr(struct perf_event *event, struct pt_regs *regs, u64 *addrp) 207 { 208 unsigned long mmcra = regs->dsisr; 209 bool sdar_valid; 210 211 if (ppmu->flags & PPMU_HAS_SIER) 212 sdar_valid = regs->dar & SIER_SDAR_VALID; 213 else { 214 unsigned long sdsync; 215 216 if (ppmu->flags & PPMU_SIAR_VALID) 217 sdsync = POWER7P_MMCRA_SDAR_VALID; 218 else if (ppmu->flags & PPMU_ALT_SIPR) 219 sdsync = POWER6_MMCRA_SDSYNC; 220 else if (ppmu->flags & PPMU_NO_SIAR) 221 sdsync = MMCRA_SAMPLE_ENABLE; 222 else 223 sdsync = MMCRA_SDSYNC; 224 225 sdar_valid = mmcra & sdsync; 226 } 227 228 if (!(mmcra & MMCRA_SAMPLE_ENABLE) || sdar_valid) 229 *addrp = mfspr(SPRN_SDAR); 230 231 if (is_kernel_addr(mfspr(SPRN_SDAR)) && event->attr.exclude_kernel) 232 *addrp = 0; 233 } 234 235 static bool regs_sihv(struct pt_regs *regs) 236 { 237 unsigned long sihv = MMCRA_SIHV; 238 239 if (ppmu->flags & PPMU_HAS_SIER) 240 return !!(regs->dar & SIER_SIHV); 241 242 if (ppmu->flags & PPMU_ALT_SIPR) 243 sihv = POWER6_MMCRA_SIHV; 244 245 return !!(regs->dsisr & sihv); 246 } 247 248 static bool regs_sipr(struct pt_regs *regs) 249 { 250 unsigned long sipr = MMCRA_SIPR; 251 252 if (ppmu->flags & PPMU_HAS_SIER) 253 return !!(regs->dar & SIER_SIPR); 254 255 if (ppmu->flags & PPMU_ALT_SIPR) 256 sipr = POWER6_MMCRA_SIPR; 257 258 return !!(regs->dsisr & sipr); 259 } 260 261 static inline u32 perf_flags_from_msr(struct pt_regs *regs) 262 { 263 if (user_mode(regs)) 264 return PERF_RECORD_MISC_USER; 265 if ((regs->msr & MSR_HV) && freeze_events_kernel != MMCR0_FCHV) 266 return PERF_RECORD_MISC_HYPERVISOR; 267 return PERF_RECORD_MISC_KERNEL; 268 } 269 270 static inline u32 perf_get_misc_flags(struct pt_regs *regs) 271 { 272 bool use_siar = regs_use_siar(regs); 273 unsigned long siar; 274 unsigned long addr; 275 276 if (!use_siar) 277 return perf_flags_from_msr(regs); 278 279 /* 280 * If we don't have flags in MMCRA, rather than using 281 * the MSR, we intuit the flags from the address in 282 * SIAR which should give slightly more reliable 283 * results 284 */ 285 if (ppmu->flags & PPMU_NO_SIPR) { 286 siar = mfspr(SPRN_SIAR); 287 if (is_kernel_addr(siar)) 288 return PERF_RECORD_MISC_KERNEL; 289 return PERF_RECORD_MISC_USER; 290 } 291 292 /* PR has priority over HV, so order below is important */ 293 if (regs_sipr(regs)) { 294 if (!(ppmu->flags & PPMU_P10)) 295 return PERF_RECORD_MISC_USER; 296 } else if (regs_sihv(regs) && (freeze_events_kernel != MMCR0_FCHV)) 297 return PERF_RECORD_MISC_HYPERVISOR; 298 299 /* 300 * Check the address in SIAR to identify the 301 * privilege levels since the SIER[MSR_HV, MSR_PR] 302 * bits are not set correctly in power10 sometimes 303 */ 304 if (ppmu->flags & PPMU_P10) { 305 siar = mfspr(SPRN_SIAR); 306 addr = siar ? siar : regs->nip; 307 if (!is_kernel_addr(addr)) 308 return PERF_RECORD_MISC_USER; 309 } 310 311 return PERF_RECORD_MISC_KERNEL; 312 } 313 314 /* 315 * Overload regs->dsisr to store MMCRA so we only need to read it once 316 * on each interrupt. 317 * Overload regs->dar to store SIER if we have it. 318 * Overload regs->result to specify whether we should use the MSR (result 319 * is zero) or the SIAR (result is non zero). 320 */ 321 static inline void perf_read_regs(struct pt_regs *regs) 322 { 323 unsigned long mmcra = mfspr(SPRN_MMCRA); 324 int marked = mmcra & MMCRA_SAMPLE_ENABLE; 325 int use_siar; 326 327 regs->dsisr = mmcra; 328 329 if (ppmu->flags & PPMU_HAS_SIER) 330 regs->dar = mfspr(SPRN_SIER); 331 332 /* 333 * If this isn't a PMU exception (eg a software event) the SIAR is 334 * not valid. Use pt_regs. 335 * 336 * If it is a marked event use the SIAR. 337 * 338 * If the PMU doesn't update the SIAR for non marked events use 339 * pt_regs. 340 * 341 * If regs is a kernel interrupt, always use SIAR. Some PMUs have an 342 * issue with regs_sipr not being in synch with SIAR in interrupt entry 343 * and return sequences, which can result in regs_sipr being true for 344 * kernel interrupts and SIAR, which has the effect of causing samples 345 * to pile up at mtmsrd MSR[EE] 0->1 or pending irq replay around 346 * interrupt entry/exit. 347 * 348 * If the PMU has HV/PR flags then check to see if they 349 * place the exception in userspace. If so, use pt_regs. In 350 * continuous sampling mode the SIAR and the PMU exception are 351 * not synchronised, so they may be many instructions apart. 352 * This can result in confusing backtraces. We still want 353 * hypervisor samples as well as samples in the kernel with 354 * interrupts off hence the userspace check. 355 */ 356 if (TRAP(regs) != INTERRUPT_PERFMON) 357 use_siar = 0; 358 else if ((ppmu->flags & PPMU_NO_SIAR)) 359 use_siar = 0; 360 else if (marked) 361 use_siar = 1; 362 else if ((ppmu->flags & PPMU_NO_CONT_SAMPLING)) 363 use_siar = 0; 364 else if (!user_mode(regs)) 365 use_siar = 1; 366 else if (!(ppmu->flags & PPMU_NO_SIPR) && regs_sipr(regs)) 367 use_siar = 0; 368 else 369 use_siar = 1; 370 371 regs->result = use_siar; 372 } 373 374 /* 375 * On processors like P7+ that have the SIAR-Valid bit, marked instructions 376 * must be sampled only if the SIAR-valid bit is set. 377 * 378 * For unmarked instructions and for processors that don't have the SIAR-Valid 379 * bit, assume that SIAR is valid. 380 */ 381 static inline int siar_valid(struct pt_regs *regs) 382 { 383 unsigned long mmcra = regs->dsisr; 384 int marked = mmcra & MMCRA_SAMPLE_ENABLE; 385 386 if (marked) { 387 /* 388 * SIER[SIAR_VALID] is not set for some 389 * marked events on power10 DD1, so drop 390 * the check for SIER[SIAR_VALID] and return true. 391 */ 392 if (ppmu->flags & PPMU_P10_DD1) 393 return 0x1; 394 else if (ppmu->flags & PPMU_HAS_SIER) 395 return regs->dar & SIER_SIAR_VALID; 396 397 if (ppmu->flags & PPMU_SIAR_VALID) 398 return mmcra & POWER7P_MMCRA_SIAR_VALID; 399 } 400 401 return 1; 402 } 403 404 405 /* Reset all possible BHRB entries */ 406 static void power_pmu_bhrb_reset(void) 407 { 408 asm volatile(PPC_CLRBHRB); 409 } 410 411 static void power_pmu_bhrb_enable(struct perf_event *event) 412 { 413 struct cpu_hw_events *cpuhw = this_cpu_ptr(&cpu_hw_events); 414 415 if (!ppmu->bhrb_nr) 416 return; 417 418 /* Clear BHRB if we changed task context to avoid data leaks */ 419 if (event->ctx->task && cpuhw->bhrb_context != event->ctx) { 420 power_pmu_bhrb_reset(); 421 cpuhw->bhrb_context = event->ctx; 422 } 423 cpuhw->bhrb_users++; 424 perf_sched_cb_inc(event->pmu); 425 } 426 427 static void power_pmu_bhrb_disable(struct perf_event *event) 428 { 429 struct cpu_hw_events *cpuhw = this_cpu_ptr(&cpu_hw_events); 430 431 if (!ppmu->bhrb_nr) 432 return; 433 434 WARN_ON_ONCE(!cpuhw->bhrb_users); 435 cpuhw->bhrb_users--; 436 perf_sched_cb_dec(event->pmu); 437 438 if (!cpuhw->disabled && !cpuhw->bhrb_users) { 439 /* BHRB cannot be turned off when other 440 * events are active on the PMU. 441 */ 442 443 /* avoid stale pointer */ 444 cpuhw->bhrb_context = NULL; 445 } 446 } 447 448 /* Called from ctxsw to prevent one process's branch entries to 449 * mingle with the other process's entries during context switch. 450 */ 451 static void power_pmu_sched_task(struct perf_event_pmu_context *pmu_ctx, 452 struct task_struct *task, bool sched_in) 453 { 454 if (!ppmu->bhrb_nr) 455 return; 456 457 if (sched_in) 458 power_pmu_bhrb_reset(); 459 } 460 /* Calculate the to address for a branch */ 461 static __u64 power_pmu_bhrb_to(u64 addr) 462 { 463 unsigned int instr; 464 __u64 target; 465 466 if (is_kernel_addr(addr)) { 467 if (copy_from_kernel_nofault(&instr, (void *)addr, 468 sizeof(instr))) 469 return 0; 470 471 return branch_target(&instr); 472 } 473 474 /* Userspace: need copy instruction here then translate it */ 475 if (copy_from_user_nofault(&instr, (unsigned int __user *)addr, 476 sizeof(instr))) 477 return 0; 478 479 target = branch_target(&instr); 480 if ((!target) || (instr & BRANCH_ABSOLUTE)) 481 return target; 482 483 /* Translate relative branch target from kernel to user address */ 484 return target - (unsigned long)&instr + addr; 485 } 486 487 /* Processing BHRB entries */ 488 static void power_pmu_bhrb_read(struct perf_event *event, struct cpu_hw_events *cpuhw) 489 { 490 u64 val; 491 u64 addr; 492 int r_index, u_index, pred; 493 494 r_index = 0; 495 u_index = 0; 496 while (r_index < ppmu->bhrb_nr) { 497 /* Assembly read function */ 498 val = read_bhrb(r_index++); 499 if (!val) 500 /* Terminal marker: End of valid BHRB entries */ 501 break; 502 else { 503 addr = val & BHRB_EA; 504 pred = val & BHRB_PREDICTION; 505 506 if (!addr) 507 /* invalid entry */ 508 continue; 509 510 /* 511 * BHRB rolling buffer could very much contain the kernel 512 * addresses at this point. Check the privileges before 513 * exporting it to userspace (avoid exposure of regions 514 * where we could have speculative execution) 515 * Incase of ISA v3.1, BHRB will capture only user-space 516 * addresses, hence include a check before filtering code 517 */ 518 if (!(ppmu->flags & PPMU_ARCH_31) && 519 is_kernel_addr(addr) && event->attr.exclude_kernel) 520 continue; 521 522 /* Branches are read most recent first (ie. mfbhrb 0 is 523 * the most recent branch). 524 * There are two types of valid entries: 525 * 1) a target entry which is the to address of a 526 * computed goto like a blr,bctr,btar. The next 527 * entry read from the bhrb will be branch 528 * corresponding to this target (ie. the actual 529 * blr/bctr/btar instruction). 530 * 2) a from address which is an actual branch. If a 531 * target entry proceeds this, then this is the 532 * matching branch for that target. If this is not 533 * following a target entry, then this is a branch 534 * where the target is given as an immediate field 535 * in the instruction (ie. an i or b form branch). 536 * In this case we need to read the instruction from 537 * memory to determine the target/to address. 538 */ 539 540 if (val & BHRB_TARGET) { 541 /* Target branches use two entries 542 * (ie. computed gotos/XL form) 543 */ 544 cpuhw->bhrb_entries[u_index].to = addr; 545 cpuhw->bhrb_entries[u_index].mispred = pred; 546 cpuhw->bhrb_entries[u_index].predicted = ~pred; 547 548 /* Get from address in next entry */ 549 val = read_bhrb(r_index++); 550 addr = val & BHRB_EA; 551 if (val & BHRB_TARGET) { 552 /* Shouldn't have two targets in a 553 row.. Reset index and try again */ 554 r_index--; 555 addr = 0; 556 } 557 cpuhw->bhrb_entries[u_index].from = addr; 558 } else { 559 /* Branches to immediate field 560 (ie I or B form) */ 561 cpuhw->bhrb_entries[u_index].from = addr; 562 cpuhw->bhrb_entries[u_index].to = 563 power_pmu_bhrb_to(addr); 564 cpuhw->bhrb_entries[u_index].mispred = pred; 565 cpuhw->bhrb_entries[u_index].predicted = ~pred; 566 } 567 u_index++; 568 569 } 570 } 571 cpuhw->bhrb_stack.nr = u_index; 572 cpuhw->bhrb_stack.hw_idx = -1ULL; 573 return; 574 } 575 576 static bool is_ebb_event(struct perf_event *event) 577 { 578 /* 579 * This could be a per-PMU callback, but we'd rather avoid the cost. We 580 * check that the PMU supports EBB, meaning those that don't can still 581 * use bit 63 of the event code for something else if they wish. 582 */ 583 return (ppmu->flags & PPMU_ARCH_207S) && 584 ((event->attr.config >> PERF_EVENT_CONFIG_EBB_SHIFT) & 1); 585 } 586 587 static int ebb_event_check(struct perf_event *event) 588 { 589 struct perf_event *leader = event->group_leader; 590 591 /* Event and group leader must agree on EBB */ 592 if (is_ebb_event(leader) != is_ebb_event(event)) 593 return -EINVAL; 594 595 if (is_ebb_event(event)) { 596 if (!(event->attach_state & PERF_ATTACH_TASK)) 597 return -EINVAL; 598 599 if (!leader->attr.pinned || !leader->attr.exclusive) 600 return -EINVAL; 601 602 if (event->attr.freq || 603 event->attr.inherit || 604 event->attr.sample_type || 605 event->attr.sample_period || 606 event->attr.enable_on_exec) 607 return -EINVAL; 608 } 609 610 return 0; 611 } 612 613 static void ebb_event_add(struct perf_event *event) 614 { 615 if (!is_ebb_event(event) || current->thread.used_ebb) 616 return; 617 618 /* 619 * IFF this is the first time we've added an EBB event, set 620 * PMXE in the user MMCR0 so we can detect when it's cleared by 621 * userspace. We need this so that we can context switch while 622 * userspace is in the EBB handler (where PMXE is 0). 623 */ 624 current->thread.used_ebb = 1; 625 current->thread.mmcr0 |= MMCR0_PMXE; 626 } 627 628 static void ebb_switch_out(unsigned long mmcr0) 629 { 630 if (!(mmcr0 & MMCR0_EBE)) 631 return; 632 633 current->thread.siar = mfspr(SPRN_SIAR); 634 current->thread.sier = mfspr(SPRN_SIER); 635 current->thread.sdar = mfspr(SPRN_SDAR); 636 current->thread.mmcr0 = mmcr0 & MMCR0_USER_MASK; 637 current->thread.mmcr2 = mfspr(SPRN_MMCR2) & MMCR2_USER_MASK; 638 if (ppmu->flags & PPMU_ARCH_31) { 639 current->thread.mmcr3 = mfspr(SPRN_MMCR3); 640 current->thread.sier2 = mfspr(SPRN_SIER2); 641 current->thread.sier3 = mfspr(SPRN_SIER3); 642 } 643 } 644 645 static unsigned long ebb_switch_in(bool ebb, struct cpu_hw_events *cpuhw) 646 { 647 unsigned long mmcr0 = cpuhw->mmcr.mmcr0; 648 649 if (!ebb) 650 goto out; 651 652 /* Enable EBB and read/write to all 6 PMCs and BHRB for userspace */ 653 mmcr0 |= MMCR0_EBE | MMCR0_BHRBA | MMCR0_PMCC_U6; 654 655 /* 656 * Add any bits from the user MMCR0, FC or PMAO. This is compatible 657 * with pmao_restore_workaround() because we may add PMAO but we never 658 * clear it here. 659 */ 660 mmcr0 |= current->thread.mmcr0; 661 662 /* 663 * Be careful not to set PMXE if userspace had it cleared. This is also 664 * compatible with pmao_restore_workaround() because it has already 665 * cleared PMXE and we leave PMAO alone. 666 */ 667 if (!(current->thread.mmcr0 & MMCR0_PMXE)) 668 mmcr0 &= ~MMCR0_PMXE; 669 670 mtspr(SPRN_SIAR, current->thread.siar); 671 mtspr(SPRN_SIER, current->thread.sier); 672 mtspr(SPRN_SDAR, current->thread.sdar); 673 674 /* 675 * Merge the kernel & user values of MMCR2. The semantics we implement 676 * are that the user MMCR2 can set bits, ie. cause counters to freeze, 677 * but not clear bits. If a task wants to be able to clear bits, ie. 678 * unfreeze counters, it should not set exclude_xxx in its events and 679 * instead manage the MMCR2 entirely by itself. 680 */ 681 mtspr(SPRN_MMCR2, cpuhw->mmcr.mmcr2 | current->thread.mmcr2); 682 683 if (ppmu->flags & PPMU_ARCH_31) { 684 mtspr(SPRN_MMCR3, current->thread.mmcr3); 685 mtspr(SPRN_SIER2, current->thread.sier2); 686 mtspr(SPRN_SIER3, current->thread.sier3); 687 } 688 out: 689 return mmcr0; 690 } 691 692 static void pmao_restore_workaround(bool ebb) 693 { 694 unsigned pmcs[6]; 695 696 if (!cpu_has_feature(CPU_FTR_PMAO_BUG)) 697 return; 698 699 /* 700 * On POWER8E there is a hardware defect which affects the PMU context 701 * switch logic, ie. power_pmu_disable/enable(). 702 * 703 * When a counter overflows PMXE is cleared and FC/PMAO is set in MMCR0 704 * by the hardware. Sometime later the actual PMU exception is 705 * delivered. 706 * 707 * If we context switch, or simply disable/enable, the PMU prior to the 708 * exception arriving, the exception will be lost when we clear PMAO. 709 * 710 * When we reenable the PMU, we will write the saved MMCR0 with PMAO 711 * set, and this _should_ generate an exception. However because of the 712 * defect no exception is generated when we write PMAO, and we get 713 * stuck with no counters counting but no exception delivered. 714 * 715 * The workaround is to detect this case and tweak the hardware to 716 * create another pending PMU exception. 717 * 718 * We do that by setting up PMC6 (cycles) for an imminent overflow and 719 * enabling the PMU. That causes a new exception to be generated in the 720 * chip, but we don't take it yet because we have interrupts hard 721 * disabled. We then write back the PMU state as we want it to be seen 722 * by the exception handler. When we reenable interrupts the exception 723 * handler will be called and see the correct state. 724 * 725 * The logic is the same for EBB, except that the exception is gated by 726 * us having interrupts hard disabled as well as the fact that we are 727 * not in userspace. The exception is finally delivered when we return 728 * to userspace. 729 */ 730 731 /* Only if PMAO is set and PMAO_SYNC is clear */ 732 if ((current->thread.mmcr0 & (MMCR0_PMAO | MMCR0_PMAO_SYNC)) != MMCR0_PMAO) 733 return; 734 735 /* If we're doing EBB, only if BESCR[GE] is set */ 736 if (ebb && !(current->thread.bescr & BESCR_GE)) 737 return; 738 739 /* 740 * We are already soft-disabled in power_pmu_enable(). We need to hard 741 * disable to actually prevent the PMU exception from firing. 742 */ 743 hard_irq_disable(); 744 745 /* 746 * This is a bit gross, but we know we're on POWER8E and have 6 PMCs. 747 * Using read/write_pmc() in a for loop adds 12 function calls and 748 * almost doubles our code size. 749 */ 750 pmcs[0] = mfspr(SPRN_PMC1); 751 pmcs[1] = mfspr(SPRN_PMC2); 752 pmcs[2] = mfspr(SPRN_PMC3); 753 pmcs[3] = mfspr(SPRN_PMC4); 754 pmcs[4] = mfspr(SPRN_PMC5); 755 pmcs[5] = mfspr(SPRN_PMC6); 756 757 /* Ensure all freeze bits are unset */ 758 mtspr(SPRN_MMCR2, 0); 759 760 /* Set up PMC6 to overflow in one cycle */ 761 mtspr(SPRN_PMC6, 0x7FFFFFFE); 762 763 /* Enable exceptions and unfreeze PMC6 */ 764 mtspr(SPRN_MMCR0, MMCR0_PMXE | MMCR0_PMCjCE | MMCR0_PMAO); 765 766 /* Now we need to refreeze and restore the PMCs */ 767 mtspr(SPRN_MMCR0, MMCR0_FC | MMCR0_PMAO); 768 769 mtspr(SPRN_PMC1, pmcs[0]); 770 mtspr(SPRN_PMC2, pmcs[1]); 771 mtspr(SPRN_PMC3, pmcs[2]); 772 mtspr(SPRN_PMC4, pmcs[3]); 773 mtspr(SPRN_PMC5, pmcs[4]); 774 mtspr(SPRN_PMC6, pmcs[5]); 775 } 776 777 /* 778 * If the perf subsystem wants performance monitor interrupts as soon as 779 * possible (e.g., to sample the instruction address and stack chain), 780 * this should return true. The IRQ masking code can then enable MSR[EE] 781 * in some places (e.g., interrupt handlers) that allows PMI interrupts 782 * through to improve accuracy of profiles, at the cost of some performance. 783 * 784 * The PMU counters can be enabled by other means (e.g., sysfs raw SPR 785 * access), but in that case there is no need for prompt PMI handling. 786 * 787 * This currently returns true if any perf counter is being used. It 788 * could possibly return false if only events are being counted rather than 789 * samples being taken, but for now this is good enough. 790 */ 791 bool power_pmu_wants_prompt_pmi(void) 792 { 793 struct cpu_hw_events *cpuhw; 794 795 /* 796 * This could simply test local_paca->pmcregs_in_use if that were not 797 * under ifdef KVM. 798 */ 799 if (!ppmu) 800 return false; 801 802 cpuhw = this_cpu_ptr(&cpu_hw_events); 803 return cpuhw->n_events; 804 } 805 #endif /* CONFIG_PPC64 */ 806 807 static void perf_event_interrupt(struct pt_regs *regs); 808 809 /* 810 * Read one performance monitor counter (PMC). 811 */ 812 static unsigned long read_pmc(int idx) 813 { 814 unsigned long val; 815 816 switch (idx) { 817 case 1: 818 val = mfspr(SPRN_PMC1); 819 break; 820 case 2: 821 val = mfspr(SPRN_PMC2); 822 break; 823 case 3: 824 val = mfspr(SPRN_PMC3); 825 break; 826 case 4: 827 val = mfspr(SPRN_PMC4); 828 break; 829 case 5: 830 val = mfspr(SPRN_PMC5); 831 break; 832 case 6: 833 val = mfspr(SPRN_PMC6); 834 break; 835 #ifdef CONFIG_PPC64 836 case 7: 837 val = mfspr(SPRN_PMC7); 838 break; 839 case 8: 840 val = mfspr(SPRN_PMC8); 841 break; 842 #endif /* CONFIG_PPC64 */ 843 default: 844 printk(KERN_ERR "oops trying to read PMC%d\n", idx); 845 val = 0; 846 } 847 return val; 848 } 849 850 /* 851 * Write one PMC. 852 */ 853 static void write_pmc(int idx, unsigned long val) 854 { 855 switch (idx) { 856 case 1: 857 mtspr(SPRN_PMC1, val); 858 break; 859 case 2: 860 mtspr(SPRN_PMC2, val); 861 break; 862 case 3: 863 mtspr(SPRN_PMC3, val); 864 break; 865 case 4: 866 mtspr(SPRN_PMC4, val); 867 break; 868 case 5: 869 mtspr(SPRN_PMC5, val); 870 break; 871 case 6: 872 mtspr(SPRN_PMC6, val); 873 break; 874 #ifdef CONFIG_PPC64 875 case 7: 876 mtspr(SPRN_PMC7, val); 877 break; 878 case 8: 879 mtspr(SPRN_PMC8, val); 880 break; 881 #endif /* CONFIG_PPC64 */ 882 default: 883 printk(KERN_ERR "oops trying to write PMC%d\n", idx); 884 } 885 } 886 887 static int any_pmc_overflown(struct cpu_hw_events *cpuhw) 888 { 889 int i, idx; 890 891 for (i = 0; i < cpuhw->n_events; i++) { 892 idx = cpuhw->event[i]->hw.idx; 893 if ((idx) && ((int)read_pmc(idx) < 0)) 894 return idx; 895 } 896 897 return 0; 898 } 899 900 /* Called from sysrq_handle_showregs() */ 901 void perf_event_print_debug(void) 902 { 903 unsigned long sdar, sier, flags; 904 u32 pmcs[MAX_HWEVENTS]; 905 int i; 906 907 if (!ppmu) { 908 pr_info("Performance monitor hardware not registered.\n"); 909 return; 910 } 911 912 if (!ppmu->n_counter) 913 return; 914 915 local_irq_save(flags); 916 917 pr_info("CPU: %d PMU registers, ppmu = %s n_counters = %d", 918 smp_processor_id(), ppmu->name, ppmu->n_counter); 919 920 for (i = 0; i < ppmu->n_counter; i++) 921 pmcs[i] = read_pmc(i + 1); 922 923 for (; i < MAX_HWEVENTS; i++) 924 pmcs[i] = 0xdeadbeef; 925 926 pr_info("PMC1: %08x PMC2: %08x PMC3: %08x PMC4: %08x\n", 927 pmcs[0], pmcs[1], pmcs[2], pmcs[3]); 928 929 if (ppmu->n_counter > 4) 930 pr_info("PMC5: %08x PMC6: %08x PMC7: %08x PMC8: %08x\n", 931 pmcs[4], pmcs[5], pmcs[6], pmcs[7]); 932 933 pr_info("MMCR0: %016lx MMCR1: %016lx MMCRA: %016lx\n", 934 mfspr(SPRN_MMCR0), mfspr(SPRN_MMCR1), mfspr(SPRN_MMCRA)); 935 936 sdar = sier = 0; 937 #ifdef CONFIG_PPC64 938 sdar = mfspr(SPRN_SDAR); 939 940 if (ppmu->flags & PPMU_HAS_SIER) 941 sier = mfspr(SPRN_SIER); 942 943 if (ppmu->flags & PPMU_ARCH_207S) { 944 pr_info("MMCR2: %016lx EBBHR: %016lx\n", 945 mfspr(SPRN_MMCR2), mfspr(SPRN_EBBHR)); 946 pr_info("EBBRR: %016lx BESCR: %016lx\n", 947 mfspr(SPRN_EBBRR), mfspr(SPRN_BESCR)); 948 } 949 950 if (ppmu->flags & PPMU_ARCH_31) { 951 pr_info("MMCR3: %016lx SIER2: %016lx SIER3: %016lx\n", 952 mfspr(SPRN_MMCR3), mfspr(SPRN_SIER2), mfspr(SPRN_SIER3)); 953 } 954 #endif 955 pr_info("SIAR: %016lx SDAR: %016lx SIER: %016lx\n", 956 mfspr(SPRN_SIAR), sdar, sier); 957 958 local_irq_restore(flags); 959 } 960 961 /* 962 * Check if a set of events can all go on the PMU at once. 963 * If they can't, this will look at alternative codes for the events 964 * and see if any combination of alternative codes is feasible. 965 * The feasible set is returned in event_id[]. 966 */ 967 static int power_check_constraints(struct cpu_hw_events *cpuhw, 968 u64 event_id[], unsigned int cflags[], 969 int n_ev, struct perf_event **event) 970 { 971 unsigned long mask, value, nv; 972 unsigned long smasks[MAX_HWEVENTS], svalues[MAX_HWEVENTS]; 973 int n_alt[MAX_HWEVENTS], choice[MAX_HWEVENTS]; 974 int i, j; 975 unsigned long addf = ppmu->add_fields; 976 unsigned long tadd = ppmu->test_adder; 977 unsigned long grp_mask = ppmu->group_constraint_mask; 978 unsigned long grp_val = ppmu->group_constraint_val; 979 980 if (n_ev > ppmu->n_counter) 981 return -1; 982 983 /* First see if the events will go on as-is */ 984 for (i = 0; i < n_ev; ++i) { 985 if ((cflags[i] & PPMU_LIMITED_PMC_REQD) 986 && !ppmu->limited_pmc_event(event_id[i])) { 987 ppmu->get_alternatives(event_id[i], cflags[i], 988 cpuhw->alternatives[i]); 989 event_id[i] = cpuhw->alternatives[i][0]; 990 } 991 if (ppmu->get_constraint(event_id[i], &cpuhw->amasks[i][0], 992 &cpuhw->avalues[i][0], event[i]->attr.config1)) 993 return -1; 994 } 995 value = mask = 0; 996 for (i = 0; i < n_ev; ++i) { 997 nv = (value | cpuhw->avalues[i][0]) + 998 (value & cpuhw->avalues[i][0] & addf); 999 1000 if (((((nv + tadd) ^ value) & mask) & (~grp_mask)) != 0) 1001 break; 1002 1003 if (((((nv + tadd) ^ cpuhw->avalues[i][0]) & cpuhw->amasks[i][0]) 1004 & (~grp_mask)) != 0) 1005 break; 1006 1007 value = nv; 1008 mask |= cpuhw->amasks[i][0]; 1009 } 1010 if (i == n_ev) { 1011 if ((value & mask & grp_mask) != (mask & grp_val)) 1012 return -1; 1013 else 1014 return 0; /* all OK */ 1015 } 1016 1017 /* doesn't work, gather alternatives... */ 1018 if (!ppmu->get_alternatives) 1019 return -1; 1020 for (i = 0; i < n_ev; ++i) { 1021 choice[i] = 0; 1022 n_alt[i] = ppmu->get_alternatives(event_id[i], cflags[i], 1023 cpuhw->alternatives[i]); 1024 for (j = 1; j < n_alt[i]; ++j) 1025 ppmu->get_constraint(cpuhw->alternatives[i][j], 1026 &cpuhw->amasks[i][j], 1027 &cpuhw->avalues[i][j], 1028 event[i]->attr.config1); 1029 } 1030 1031 /* enumerate all possibilities and see if any will work */ 1032 i = 0; 1033 j = -1; 1034 value = mask = nv = 0; 1035 while (i < n_ev) { 1036 if (j >= 0) { 1037 /* we're backtracking, restore context */ 1038 value = svalues[i]; 1039 mask = smasks[i]; 1040 j = choice[i]; 1041 } 1042 /* 1043 * See if any alternative k for event_id i, 1044 * where k > j, will satisfy the constraints. 1045 */ 1046 while (++j < n_alt[i]) { 1047 nv = (value | cpuhw->avalues[i][j]) + 1048 (value & cpuhw->avalues[i][j] & addf); 1049 if ((((nv + tadd) ^ value) & mask) == 0 && 1050 (((nv + tadd) ^ cpuhw->avalues[i][j]) 1051 & cpuhw->amasks[i][j]) == 0) 1052 break; 1053 } 1054 if (j >= n_alt[i]) { 1055 /* 1056 * No feasible alternative, backtrack 1057 * to event_id i-1 and continue enumerating its 1058 * alternatives from where we got up to. 1059 */ 1060 if (--i < 0) 1061 return -1; 1062 } else { 1063 /* 1064 * Found a feasible alternative for event_id i, 1065 * remember where we got up to with this event_id, 1066 * go on to the next event_id, and start with 1067 * the first alternative for it. 1068 */ 1069 choice[i] = j; 1070 svalues[i] = value; 1071 smasks[i] = mask; 1072 value = nv; 1073 mask |= cpuhw->amasks[i][j]; 1074 ++i; 1075 j = -1; 1076 } 1077 } 1078 1079 /* OK, we have a feasible combination, tell the caller the solution */ 1080 for (i = 0; i < n_ev; ++i) 1081 event_id[i] = cpuhw->alternatives[i][choice[i]]; 1082 return 0; 1083 } 1084 1085 /* 1086 * Check if newly-added events have consistent settings for 1087 * exclude_{user,kernel,hv} with each other and any previously 1088 * added events. 1089 */ 1090 static int check_excludes(struct perf_event **ctrs, unsigned int cflags[], 1091 int n_prev, int n_new) 1092 { 1093 int eu = 0, ek = 0, eh = 0; 1094 int i, n, first; 1095 struct perf_event *event; 1096 1097 /* 1098 * If the PMU we're on supports per event exclude settings then we 1099 * don't need to do any of this logic. NB. This assumes no PMU has both 1100 * per event exclude and limited PMCs. 1101 */ 1102 if (ppmu->flags & PPMU_ARCH_207S) 1103 return 0; 1104 1105 n = n_prev + n_new; 1106 if (n <= 1) 1107 return 0; 1108 1109 first = 1; 1110 for (i = 0; i < n; ++i) { 1111 if (cflags[i] & PPMU_LIMITED_PMC_OK) { 1112 cflags[i] &= ~PPMU_LIMITED_PMC_REQD; 1113 continue; 1114 } 1115 event = ctrs[i]; 1116 if (first) { 1117 eu = event->attr.exclude_user; 1118 ek = event->attr.exclude_kernel; 1119 eh = event->attr.exclude_hv; 1120 first = 0; 1121 } else if (event->attr.exclude_user != eu || 1122 event->attr.exclude_kernel != ek || 1123 event->attr.exclude_hv != eh) { 1124 return -EAGAIN; 1125 } 1126 } 1127 1128 if (eu || ek || eh) 1129 for (i = 0; i < n; ++i) 1130 if (cflags[i] & PPMU_LIMITED_PMC_OK) 1131 cflags[i] |= PPMU_LIMITED_PMC_REQD; 1132 1133 return 0; 1134 } 1135 1136 static u64 check_and_compute_delta(u64 prev, u64 val) 1137 { 1138 u64 delta = (val - prev) & 0xfffffffful; 1139 1140 /* 1141 * POWER7 can roll back counter values, if the new value is smaller 1142 * than the previous value it will cause the delta and the counter to 1143 * have bogus values unless we rolled a counter over. If a counter is 1144 * rolled back, it will be smaller, but within 256, which is the maximum 1145 * number of events to rollback at once. If we detect a rollback 1146 * return 0. This can lead to a small lack of precision in the 1147 * counters. 1148 */ 1149 if (prev > val && (prev - val) < 256) 1150 delta = 0; 1151 1152 return delta; 1153 } 1154 1155 static void power_pmu_read(struct perf_event *event) 1156 { 1157 s64 val, delta, prev; 1158 1159 if (event->hw.state & PERF_HES_STOPPED) 1160 return; 1161 1162 if (!event->hw.idx) 1163 return; 1164 1165 if (is_ebb_event(event)) { 1166 val = read_pmc(event->hw.idx); 1167 local64_set(&event->hw.prev_count, val); 1168 return; 1169 } 1170 1171 /* 1172 * Performance monitor interrupts come even when interrupts 1173 * are soft-disabled, as long as interrupts are hard-enabled. 1174 * Therefore we treat them like NMIs. 1175 */ 1176 do { 1177 prev = local64_read(&event->hw.prev_count); 1178 barrier(); 1179 val = read_pmc(event->hw.idx); 1180 delta = check_and_compute_delta(prev, val); 1181 if (!delta) 1182 return; 1183 } while (local64_cmpxchg(&event->hw.prev_count, prev, val) != prev); 1184 1185 local64_add(delta, &event->count); 1186 1187 /* 1188 * A number of places program the PMC with (0x80000000 - period_left). 1189 * We never want period_left to be less than 1 because we will program 1190 * the PMC with a value >= 0x800000000 and an edge detected PMC will 1191 * roll around to 0 before taking an exception. We have seen this 1192 * on POWER8. 1193 * 1194 * To fix this, clamp the minimum value of period_left to 1. 1195 */ 1196 do { 1197 prev = local64_read(&event->hw.period_left); 1198 val = prev - delta; 1199 if (val < 1) 1200 val = 1; 1201 } while (local64_cmpxchg(&event->hw.period_left, prev, val) != prev); 1202 } 1203 1204 /* 1205 * On some machines, PMC5 and PMC6 can't be written, don't respect 1206 * the freeze conditions, and don't generate interrupts. This tells 1207 * us if `event' is using such a PMC. 1208 */ 1209 static int is_limited_pmc(int pmcnum) 1210 { 1211 return (ppmu->flags & PPMU_LIMITED_PMC5_6) 1212 && (pmcnum == 5 || pmcnum == 6); 1213 } 1214 1215 static void freeze_limited_counters(struct cpu_hw_events *cpuhw, 1216 unsigned long pmc5, unsigned long pmc6) 1217 { 1218 struct perf_event *event; 1219 u64 val, prev, delta; 1220 int i; 1221 1222 for (i = 0; i < cpuhw->n_limited; ++i) { 1223 event = cpuhw->limited_counter[i]; 1224 if (!event->hw.idx) 1225 continue; 1226 val = (event->hw.idx == 5) ? pmc5 : pmc6; 1227 prev = local64_read(&event->hw.prev_count); 1228 event->hw.idx = 0; 1229 delta = check_and_compute_delta(prev, val); 1230 if (delta) 1231 local64_add(delta, &event->count); 1232 } 1233 } 1234 1235 static void thaw_limited_counters(struct cpu_hw_events *cpuhw, 1236 unsigned long pmc5, unsigned long pmc6) 1237 { 1238 struct perf_event *event; 1239 u64 val, prev; 1240 int i; 1241 1242 for (i = 0; i < cpuhw->n_limited; ++i) { 1243 event = cpuhw->limited_counter[i]; 1244 event->hw.idx = cpuhw->limited_hwidx[i]; 1245 val = (event->hw.idx == 5) ? pmc5 : pmc6; 1246 prev = local64_read(&event->hw.prev_count); 1247 if (check_and_compute_delta(prev, val)) 1248 local64_set(&event->hw.prev_count, val); 1249 perf_event_update_userpage(event); 1250 } 1251 } 1252 1253 /* 1254 * Since limited events don't respect the freeze conditions, we 1255 * have to read them immediately after freezing or unfreezing the 1256 * other events. We try to keep the values from the limited 1257 * events as consistent as possible by keeping the delay (in 1258 * cycles and instructions) between freezing/unfreezing and reading 1259 * the limited events as small and consistent as possible. 1260 * Therefore, if any limited events are in use, we read them 1261 * both, and always in the same order, to minimize variability, 1262 * and do it inside the same asm that writes MMCR0. 1263 */ 1264 static void write_mmcr0(struct cpu_hw_events *cpuhw, unsigned long mmcr0) 1265 { 1266 unsigned long pmc5, pmc6; 1267 1268 if (!cpuhw->n_limited) { 1269 mtspr(SPRN_MMCR0, mmcr0); 1270 return; 1271 } 1272 1273 /* 1274 * Write MMCR0, then read PMC5 and PMC6 immediately. 1275 * To ensure we don't get a performance monitor interrupt 1276 * between writing MMCR0 and freezing/thawing the limited 1277 * events, we first write MMCR0 with the event overflow 1278 * interrupt enable bits turned off. 1279 */ 1280 asm volatile("mtspr %3,%2; mfspr %0,%4; mfspr %1,%5" 1281 : "=&r" (pmc5), "=&r" (pmc6) 1282 : "r" (mmcr0 & ~(MMCR0_PMC1CE | MMCR0_PMCjCE)), 1283 "i" (SPRN_MMCR0), 1284 "i" (SPRN_PMC5), "i" (SPRN_PMC6)); 1285 1286 if (mmcr0 & MMCR0_FC) 1287 freeze_limited_counters(cpuhw, pmc5, pmc6); 1288 else 1289 thaw_limited_counters(cpuhw, pmc5, pmc6); 1290 1291 /* 1292 * Write the full MMCR0 including the event overflow interrupt 1293 * enable bits, if necessary. 1294 */ 1295 if (mmcr0 & (MMCR0_PMC1CE | MMCR0_PMCjCE)) 1296 mtspr(SPRN_MMCR0, mmcr0); 1297 } 1298 1299 /* 1300 * Disable all events to prevent PMU interrupts and to allow 1301 * events to be added or removed. 1302 */ 1303 static void power_pmu_disable(struct pmu *pmu) 1304 { 1305 struct cpu_hw_events *cpuhw; 1306 unsigned long flags, mmcr0, val, mmcra; 1307 1308 if (!ppmu) 1309 return; 1310 local_irq_save(flags); 1311 cpuhw = this_cpu_ptr(&cpu_hw_events); 1312 1313 if (!cpuhw->disabled) { 1314 /* 1315 * Check if we ever enabled the PMU on this cpu. 1316 */ 1317 if (!cpuhw->pmcs_enabled) { 1318 ppc_enable_pmcs(); 1319 cpuhw->pmcs_enabled = 1; 1320 } 1321 1322 /* 1323 * Set the 'freeze counters' bit, clear EBE/BHRBA/PMCC/PMAO/FC56 1324 * Also clear PMXE to disable PMI's getting triggered in some 1325 * corner cases during PMU disable. 1326 */ 1327 val = mmcr0 = mfspr(SPRN_MMCR0); 1328 val |= MMCR0_FC; 1329 val &= ~(MMCR0_EBE | MMCR0_BHRBA | MMCR0_PMCC | MMCR0_PMAO | 1330 MMCR0_PMXE | MMCR0_FC56); 1331 /* Set mmcr0 PMCCEXT for p10 */ 1332 if (ppmu->flags & PPMU_ARCH_31) 1333 val |= MMCR0_PMCCEXT; 1334 1335 /* 1336 * The barrier is to make sure the mtspr has been 1337 * executed and the PMU has frozen the events etc. 1338 * before we return. 1339 */ 1340 write_mmcr0(cpuhw, val); 1341 mb(); 1342 isync(); 1343 1344 /* 1345 * Some corner cases could clear the PMU counter overflow 1346 * while a masked PMI is pending. One such case is when 1347 * a PMI happens during interrupt replay and perf counter 1348 * values are cleared by PMU callbacks before replay. 1349 * 1350 * Disable the interrupt by clearing the paca bit for PMI 1351 * since we are disabling the PMU now. Otherwise provide a 1352 * warning if there is PMI pending, but no counter is found 1353 * overflown. 1354 * 1355 * Since power_pmu_disable runs under local_irq_save, it 1356 * could happen that code hits a PMC overflow without PMI 1357 * pending in paca. Hence only clear PMI pending if it was 1358 * set. 1359 * 1360 * If a PMI is pending, then MSR[EE] must be disabled (because 1361 * the masked PMI handler disabling EE). So it is safe to 1362 * call clear_pmi_irq_pending(). 1363 */ 1364 if (pmi_irq_pending()) 1365 clear_pmi_irq_pending(); 1366 1367 val = mmcra = cpuhw->mmcr.mmcra; 1368 1369 /* 1370 * Disable instruction sampling if it was enabled 1371 */ 1372 val &= ~MMCRA_SAMPLE_ENABLE; 1373 1374 /* Disable BHRB via mmcra (BHRBRD) for p10 */ 1375 if (ppmu->flags & PPMU_ARCH_31) 1376 val |= MMCRA_BHRB_DISABLE; 1377 1378 /* 1379 * Write SPRN_MMCRA if mmcra has either disabled 1380 * instruction sampling or BHRB. 1381 */ 1382 if (val != mmcra) { 1383 mtspr(SPRN_MMCRA, val); 1384 mb(); 1385 isync(); 1386 } 1387 1388 cpuhw->disabled = 1; 1389 cpuhw->n_added = 0; 1390 1391 ebb_switch_out(mmcr0); 1392 1393 #ifdef CONFIG_PPC64 1394 /* 1395 * These are readable by userspace, may contain kernel 1396 * addresses and are not switched by context switch, so clear 1397 * them now to avoid leaking anything to userspace in general 1398 * including to another process. 1399 */ 1400 if (ppmu->flags & PPMU_ARCH_207S) { 1401 mtspr(SPRN_SDAR, 0); 1402 mtspr(SPRN_SIAR, 0); 1403 } 1404 #endif 1405 } 1406 1407 local_irq_restore(flags); 1408 } 1409 1410 /* 1411 * Re-enable all events if disable == 0. 1412 * If we were previously disabled and events were added, then 1413 * put the new config on the PMU. 1414 */ 1415 static void power_pmu_enable(struct pmu *pmu) 1416 { 1417 struct perf_event *event; 1418 struct cpu_hw_events *cpuhw; 1419 unsigned long flags; 1420 long i; 1421 unsigned long val, mmcr0; 1422 s64 left; 1423 unsigned int hwc_index[MAX_HWEVENTS]; 1424 int n_lim; 1425 int idx; 1426 bool ebb; 1427 1428 if (!ppmu) 1429 return; 1430 local_irq_save(flags); 1431 1432 cpuhw = this_cpu_ptr(&cpu_hw_events); 1433 if (!cpuhw->disabled) 1434 goto out; 1435 1436 if (cpuhw->n_events == 0) { 1437 ppc_set_pmu_inuse(0); 1438 goto out; 1439 } 1440 1441 cpuhw->disabled = 0; 1442 1443 /* 1444 * EBB requires an exclusive group and all events must have the EBB 1445 * flag set, or not set, so we can just check a single event. Also we 1446 * know we have at least one event. 1447 */ 1448 ebb = is_ebb_event(cpuhw->event[0]); 1449 1450 /* 1451 * If we didn't change anything, or only removed events, 1452 * no need to recalculate MMCR* settings and reset the PMCs. 1453 * Just reenable the PMU with the current MMCR* settings 1454 * (possibly updated for removal of events). 1455 */ 1456 if (!cpuhw->n_added) { 1457 /* 1458 * If there is any active event with an overflown PMC 1459 * value, set back PACA_IRQ_PMI which would have been 1460 * cleared in power_pmu_disable(). 1461 */ 1462 hard_irq_disable(); 1463 if (any_pmc_overflown(cpuhw)) 1464 set_pmi_irq_pending(); 1465 1466 mtspr(SPRN_MMCRA, cpuhw->mmcr.mmcra & ~MMCRA_SAMPLE_ENABLE); 1467 mtspr(SPRN_MMCR1, cpuhw->mmcr.mmcr1); 1468 if (ppmu->flags & PPMU_ARCH_31) 1469 mtspr(SPRN_MMCR3, cpuhw->mmcr.mmcr3); 1470 goto out_enable; 1471 } 1472 1473 /* 1474 * Clear all MMCR settings and recompute them for the new set of events. 1475 */ 1476 memset(&cpuhw->mmcr, 0, sizeof(cpuhw->mmcr)); 1477 1478 if (ppmu->compute_mmcr(cpuhw->events, cpuhw->n_events, hwc_index, 1479 &cpuhw->mmcr, cpuhw->event, ppmu->flags)) { 1480 /* shouldn't ever get here */ 1481 printk(KERN_ERR "oops compute_mmcr failed\n"); 1482 goto out; 1483 } 1484 1485 if (!(ppmu->flags & PPMU_ARCH_207S)) { 1486 /* 1487 * Add in MMCR0 freeze bits corresponding to the attr.exclude_* 1488 * bits for the first event. We have already checked that all 1489 * events have the same value for these bits as the first event. 1490 */ 1491 event = cpuhw->event[0]; 1492 if (event->attr.exclude_user) 1493 cpuhw->mmcr.mmcr0 |= MMCR0_FCP; 1494 if (event->attr.exclude_kernel) 1495 cpuhw->mmcr.mmcr0 |= freeze_events_kernel; 1496 if (event->attr.exclude_hv) 1497 cpuhw->mmcr.mmcr0 |= MMCR0_FCHV; 1498 } 1499 1500 /* 1501 * Write the new configuration to MMCR* with the freeze 1502 * bit set and set the hardware events to their initial values. 1503 * Then unfreeze the events. 1504 */ 1505 ppc_set_pmu_inuse(1); 1506 mtspr(SPRN_MMCRA, cpuhw->mmcr.mmcra & ~MMCRA_SAMPLE_ENABLE); 1507 mtspr(SPRN_MMCR1, cpuhw->mmcr.mmcr1); 1508 mtspr(SPRN_MMCR0, (cpuhw->mmcr.mmcr0 & ~(MMCR0_PMC1CE | MMCR0_PMCjCE)) 1509 | MMCR0_FC); 1510 if (ppmu->flags & PPMU_ARCH_207S) 1511 mtspr(SPRN_MMCR2, cpuhw->mmcr.mmcr2); 1512 1513 if (ppmu->flags & PPMU_ARCH_31) 1514 mtspr(SPRN_MMCR3, cpuhw->mmcr.mmcr3); 1515 1516 /* 1517 * Read off any pre-existing events that need to move 1518 * to another PMC. 1519 */ 1520 for (i = 0; i < cpuhw->n_events; ++i) { 1521 event = cpuhw->event[i]; 1522 if (event->hw.idx && event->hw.idx != hwc_index[i] + 1) { 1523 power_pmu_read(event); 1524 write_pmc(event->hw.idx, 0); 1525 event->hw.idx = 0; 1526 } 1527 } 1528 1529 /* 1530 * Initialize the PMCs for all the new and moved events. 1531 */ 1532 cpuhw->n_limited = n_lim = 0; 1533 for (i = 0; i < cpuhw->n_events; ++i) { 1534 event = cpuhw->event[i]; 1535 if (event->hw.idx) 1536 continue; 1537 idx = hwc_index[i] + 1; 1538 if (is_limited_pmc(idx)) { 1539 cpuhw->limited_counter[n_lim] = event; 1540 cpuhw->limited_hwidx[n_lim] = idx; 1541 ++n_lim; 1542 continue; 1543 } 1544 1545 if (ebb) 1546 val = local64_read(&event->hw.prev_count); 1547 else { 1548 val = 0; 1549 if (event->hw.sample_period) { 1550 left = local64_read(&event->hw.period_left); 1551 if (left < 0x80000000L) 1552 val = 0x80000000L - left; 1553 } 1554 local64_set(&event->hw.prev_count, val); 1555 } 1556 1557 event->hw.idx = idx; 1558 if (event->hw.state & PERF_HES_STOPPED) 1559 val = 0; 1560 write_pmc(idx, val); 1561 1562 perf_event_update_userpage(event); 1563 } 1564 cpuhw->n_limited = n_lim; 1565 cpuhw->mmcr.mmcr0 |= MMCR0_PMXE | MMCR0_FCECE; 1566 1567 out_enable: 1568 pmao_restore_workaround(ebb); 1569 1570 mmcr0 = ebb_switch_in(ebb, cpuhw); 1571 1572 mb(); 1573 if (cpuhw->bhrb_users) 1574 ppmu->config_bhrb(cpuhw->bhrb_filter); 1575 1576 write_mmcr0(cpuhw, mmcr0); 1577 1578 /* 1579 * Enable instruction sampling if necessary 1580 */ 1581 if (cpuhw->mmcr.mmcra & MMCRA_SAMPLE_ENABLE) { 1582 mb(); 1583 mtspr(SPRN_MMCRA, cpuhw->mmcr.mmcra); 1584 } 1585 1586 out: 1587 1588 local_irq_restore(flags); 1589 } 1590 1591 static int collect_events(struct perf_event *group, int max_count, 1592 struct perf_event *ctrs[], u64 *events, 1593 unsigned int *flags) 1594 { 1595 int n = 0; 1596 struct perf_event *event; 1597 1598 if (group->pmu->task_ctx_nr == perf_hw_context) { 1599 if (n >= max_count) 1600 return -1; 1601 ctrs[n] = group; 1602 flags[n] = group->hw.event_base; 1603 events[n++] = group->hw.config; 1604 } 1605 for_each_sibling_event(event, group) { 1606 if (event->pmu->task_ctx_nr == perf_hw_context && 1607 event->state != PERF_EVENT_STATE_OFF) { 1608 if (n >= max_count) 1609 return -1; 1610 ctrs[n] = event; 1611 flags[n] = event->hw.event_base; 1612 events[n++] = event->hw.config; 1613 } 1614 } 1615 return n; 1616 } 1617 1618 /* 1619 * Add an event to the PMU. 1620 * If all events are not already frozen, then we disable and 1621 * re-enable the PMU in order to get hw_perf_enable to do the 1622 * actual work of reconfiguring the PMU. 1623 */ 1624 static int power_pmu_add(struct perf_event *event, int ef_flags) 1625 { 1626 struct cpu_hw_events *cpuhw; 1627 unsigned long flags; 1628 int n0; 1629 int ret = -EAGAIN; 1630 1631 local_irq_save(flags); 1632 perf_pmu_disable(event->pmu); 1633 1634 /* 1635 * Add the event to the list (if there is room) 1636 * and check whether the total set is still feasible. 1637 */ 1638 cpuhw = this_cpu_ptr(&cpu_hw_events); 1639 n0 = cpuhw->n_events; 1640 if (n0 >= ppmu->n_counter) 1641 goto out; 1642 cpuhw->event[n0] = event; 1643 cpuhw->events[n0] = event->hw.config; 1644 cpuhw->flags[n0] = event->hw.event_base; 1645 1646 /* 1647 * This event may have been disabled/stopped in record_and_restart() 1648 * because we exceeded the ->event_limit. If re-starting the event, 1649 * clear the ->hw.state (STOPPED and UPTODATE flags), so the user 1650 * notification is re-enabled. 1651 */ 1652 if (!(ef_flags & PERF_EF_START)) 1653 event->hw.state = PERF_HES_STOPPED | PERF_HES_UPTODATE; 1654 else 1655 event->hw.state = 0; 1656 1657 /* 1658 * If group events scheduling transaction was started, 1659 * skip the schedulability test here, it will be performed 1660 * at commit time(->commit_txn) as a whole 1661 */ 1662 if (cpuhw->txn_flags & PERF_PMU_TXN_ADD) 1663 goto nocheck; 1664 1665 if (check_excludes(cpuhw->event, cpuhw->flags, n0, 1)) 1666 goto out; 1667 if (power_check_constraints(cpuhw, cpuhw->events, cpuhw->flags, n0 + 1, cpuhw->event)) 1668 goto out; 1669 event->hw.config = cpuhw->events[n0]; 1670 1671 nocheck: 1672 ebb_event_add(event); 1673 1674 ++cpuhw->n_events; 1675 ++cpuhw->n_added; 1676 1677 ret = 0; 1678 out: 1679 if (has_branch_stack(event)) { 1680 u64 bhrb_filter = -1; 1681 1682 if (ppmu->bhrb_filter_map) 1683 bhrb_filter = ppmu->bhrb_filter_map( 1684 event->attr.branch_sample_type); 1685 1686 if (bhrb_filter != -1) { 1687 cpuhw->bhrb_filter = bhrb_filter; 1688 power_pmu_bhrb_enable(event); 1689 } 1690 } 1691 1692 perf_pmu_enable(event->pmu); 1693 local_irq_restore(flags); 1694 return ret; 1695 } 1696 1697 /* 1698 * Remove an event from the PMU. 1699 */ 1700 static void power_pmu_del(struct perf_event *event, int ef_flags) 1701 { 1702 struct cpu_hw_events *cpuhw; 1703 long i; 1704 unsigned long flags; 1705 1706 local_irq_save(flags); 1707 perf_pmu_disable(event->pmu); 1708 1709 power_pmu_read(event); 1710 1711 cpuhw = this_cpu_ptr(&cpu_hw_events); 1712 for (i = 0; i < cpuhw->n_events; ++i) { 1713 if (event == cpuhw->event[i]) { 1714 while (++i < cpuhw->n_events) { 1715 cpuhw->event[i-1] = cpuhw->event[i]; 1716 cpuhw->events[i-1] = cpuhw->events[i]; 1717 cpuhw->flags[i-1] = cpuhw->flags[i]; 1718 } 1719 --cpuhw->n_events; 1720 ppmu->disable_pmc(event->hw.idx - 1, &cpuhw->mmcr); 1721 if (event->hw.idx) { 1722 write_pmc(event->hw.idx, 0); 1723 event->hw.idx = 0; 1724 } 1725 perf_event_update_userpage(event); 1726 break; 1727 } 1728 } 1729 for (i = 0; i < cpuhw->n_limited; ++i) 1730 if (event == cpuhw->limited_counter[i]) 1731 break; 1732 if (i < cpuhw->n_limited) { 1733 while (++i < cpuhw->n_limited) { 1734 cpuhw->limited_counter[i-1] = cpuhw->limited_counter[i]; 1735 cpuhw->limited_hwidx[i-1] = cpuhw->limited_hwidx[i]; 1736 } 1737 --cpuhw->n_limited; 1738 } 1739 if (cpuhw->n_events == 0) { 1740 /* disable exceptions if no events are running */ 1741 cpuhw->mmcr.mmcr0 &= ~(MMCR0_PMXE | MMCR0_FCECE); 1742 } 1743 1744 if (has_branch_stack(event)) 1745 power_pmu_bhrb_disable(event); 1746 1747 perf_pmu_enable(event->pmu); 1748 local_irq_restore(flags); 1749 } 1750 1751 /* 1752 * POWER-PMU does not support disabling individual counters, hence 1753 * program their cycle counter to their max value and ignore the interrupts. 1754 */ 1755 1756 static void power_pmu_start(struct perf_event *event, int ef_flags) 1757 { 1758 unsigned long flags; 1759 s64 left; 1760 unsigned long val; 1761 1762 if (!event->hw.idx || !event->hw.sample_period) 1763 return; 1764 1765 if (!(event->hw.state & PERF_HES_STOPPED)) 1766 return; 1767 1768 if (ef_flags & PERF_EF_RELOAD) 1769 WARN_ON_ONCE(!(event->hw.state & PERF_HES_UPTODATE)); 1770 1771 local_irq_save(flags); 1772 perf_pmu_disable(event->pmu); 1773 1774 event->hw.state = 0; 1775 left = local64_read(&event->hw.period_left); 1776 1777 val = 0; 1778 if (left < 0x80000000L) 1779 val = 0x80000000L - left; 1780 1781 write_pmc(event->hw.idx, val); 1782 1783 perf_event_update_userpage(event); 1784 perf_pmu_enable(event->pmu); 1785 local_irq_restore(flags); 1786 } 1787 1788 static void power_pmu_stop(struct perf_event *event, int ef_flags) 1789 { 1790 unsigned long flags; 1791 1792 if (!event->hw.idx || !event->hw.sample_period) 1793 return; 1794 1795 if (event->hw.state & PERF_HES_STOPPED) 1796 return; 1797 1798 local_irq_save(flags); 1799 perf_pmu_disable(event->pmu); 1800 1801 power_pmu_read(event); 1802 event->hw.state |= PERF_HES_STOPPED | PERF_HES_UPTODATE; 1803 write_pmc(event->hw.idx, 0); 1804 1805 perf_event_update_userpage(event); 1806 perf_pmu_enable(event->pmu); 1807 local_irq_restore(flags); 1808 } 1809 1810 /* 1811 * Start group events scheduling transaction 1812 * Set the flag to make pmu::enable() not perform the 1813 * schedulability test, it will be performed at commit time 1814 * 1815 * We only support PERF_PMU_TXN_ADD transactions. Save the 1816 * transaction flags but otherwise ignore non-PERF_PMU_TXN_ADD 1817 * transactions. 1818 */ 1819 static void power_pmu_start_txn(struct pmu *pmu, unsigned int txn_flags) 1820 { 1821 struct cpu_hw_events *cpuhw = this_cpu_ptr(&cpu_hw_events); 1822 1823 WARN_ON_ONCE(cpuhw->txn_flags); /* txn already in flight */ 1824 1825 cpuhw->txn_flags = txn_flags; 1826 if (txn_flags & ~PERF_PMU_TXN_ADD) 1827 return; 1828 1829 perf_pmu_disable(pmu); 1830 cpuhw->n_txn_start = cpuhw->n_events; 1831 } 1832 1833 /* 1834 * Stop group events scheduling transaction 1835 * Clear the flag and pmu::enable() will perform the 1836 * schedulability test. 1837 */ 1838 static void power_pmu_cancel_txn(struct pmu *pmu) 1839 { 1840 struct cpu_hw_events *cpuhw = this_cpu_ptr(&cpu_hw_events); 1841 unsigned int txn_flags; 1842 1843 WARN_ON_ONCE(!cpuhw->txn_flags); /* no txn in flight */ 1844 1845 txn_flags = cpuhw->txn_flags; 1846 cpuhw->txn_flags = 0; 1847 if (txn_flags & ~PERF_PMU_TXN_ADD) 1848 return; 1849 1850 perf_pmu_enable(pmu); 1851 } 1852 1853 /* 1854 * Commit group events scheduling transaction 1855 * Perform the group schedulability test as a whole 1856 * Return 0 if success 1857 */ 1858 static int power_pmu_commit_txn(struct pmu *pmu) 1859 { 1860 struct cpu_hw_events *cpuhw; 1861 long i, n; 1862 1863 if (!ppmu) 1864 return -EAGAIN; 1865 1866 cpuhw = this_cpu_ptr(&cpu_hw_events); 1867 WARN_ON_ONCE(!cpuhw->txn_flags); /* no txn in flight */ 1868 1869 if (cpuhw->txn_flags & ~PERF_PMU_TXN_ADD) { 1870 cpuhw->txn_flags = 0; 1871 return 0; 1872 } 1873 1874 n = cpuhw->n_events; 1875 if (check_excludes(cpuhw->event, cpuhw->flags, 0, n)) 1876 return -EAGAIN; 1877 i = power_check_constraints(cpuhw, cpuhw->events, cpuhw->flags, n, cpuhw->event); 1878 if (i < 0) 1879 return -EAGAIN; 1880 1881 for (i = cpuhw->n_txn_start; i < n; ++i) 1882 cpuhw->event[i]->hw.config = cpuhw->events[i]; 1883 1884 cpuhw->txn_flags = 0; 1885 perf_pmu_enable(pmu); 1886 return 0; 1887 } 1888 1889 /* 1890 * Return 1 if we might be able to put event on a limited PMC, 1891 * or 0 if not. 1892 * An event can only go on a limited PMC if it counts something 1893 * that a limited PMC can count, doesn't require interrupts, and 1894 * doesn't exclude any processor mode. 1895 */ 1896 static int can_go_on_limited_pmc(struct perf_event *event, u64 ev, 1897 unsigned int flags) 1898 { 1899 int n; 1900 u64 alt[MAX_EVENT_ALTERNATIVES]; 1901 1902 if (event->attr.exclude_user 1903 || event->attr.exclude_kernel 1904 || event->attr.exclude_hv 1905 || event->attr.sample_period) 1906 return 0; 1907 1908 if (ppmu->limited_pmc_event(ev)) 1909 return 1; 1910 1911 /* 1912 * The requested event_id isn't on a limited PMC already; 1913 * see if any alternative code goes on a limited PMC. 1914 */ 1915 if (!ppmu->get_alternatives) 1916 return 0; 1917 1918 flags |= PPMU_LIMITED_PMC_OK | PPMU_LIMITED_PMC_REQD; 1919 n = ppmu->get_alternatives(ev, flags, alt); 1920 1921 return n > 0; 1922 } 1923 1924 /* 1925 * Find an alternative event_id that goes on a normal PMC, if possible, 1926 * and return the event_id code, or 0 if there is no such alternative. 1927 * (Note: event_id code 0 is "don't count" on all machines.) 1928 */ 1929 static u64 normal_pmc_alternative(u64 ev, unsigned long flags) 1930 { 1931 u64 alt[MAX_EVENT_ALTERNATIVES]; 1932 int n; 1933 1934 flags &= ~(PPMU_LIMITED_PMC_OK | PPMU_LIMITED_PMC_REQD); 1935 n = ppmu->get_alternatives(ev, flags, alt); 1936 if (!n) 1937 return 0; 1938 return alt[0]; 1939 } 1940 1941 /* Number of perf_events counting hardware events */ 1942 static atomic_t num_events; 1943 /* Used to avoid races in calling reserve/release_pmc_hardware */ 1944 static DEFINE_MUTEX(pmc_reserve_mutex); 1945 1946 /* 1947 * Release the PMU if this is the last perf_event. 1948 */ 1949 static void hw_perf_event_destroy(struct perf_event *event) 1950 { 1951 if (!atomic_add_unless(&num_events, -1, 1)) { 1952 mutex_lock(&pmc_reserve_mutex); 1953 if (atomic_dec_return(&num_events) == 0) 1954 release_pmc_hardware(); 1955 mutex_unlock(&pmc_reserve_mutex); 1956 } 1957 } 1958 1959 /* 1960 * Translate a generic cache event_id config to a raw event_id code. 1961 */ 1962 static int hw_perf_cache_event(u64 config, u64 *eventp) 1963 { 1964 unsigned long type, op, result; 1965 u64 ev; 1966 1967 if (!ppmu->cache_events) 1968 return -EINVAL; 1969 1970 /* unpack config */ 1971 type = config & 0xff; 1972 op = (config >> 8) & 0xff; 1973 result = (config >> 16) & 0xff; 1974 1975 if (type >= PERF_COUNT_HW_CACHE_MAX || 1976 op >= PERF_COUNT_HW_CACHE_OP_MAX || 1977 result >= PERF_COUNT_HW_CACHE_RESULT_MAX) 1978 return -EINVAL; 1979 1980 ev = (*ppmu->cache_events)[type][op][result]; 1981 if (ev == 0) 1982 return -EOPNOTSUPP; 1983 if (ev == -1) 1984 return -EINVAL; 1985 *eventp = ev; 1986 return 0; 1987 } 1988 1989 static bool is_event_blacklisted(u64 ev) 1990 { 1991 int i; 1992 1993 for (i=0; i < ppmu->n_blacklist_ev; i++) { 1994 if (ppmu->blacklist_ev[i] == ev) 1995 return true; 1996 } 1997 1998 return false; 1999 } 2000 2001 static int power_pmu_event_init(struct perf_event *event) 2002 { 2003 u64 ev; 2004 unsigned long flags, irq_flags; 2005 struct perf_event *ctrs[MAX_HWEVENTS]; 2006 u64 events[MAX_HWEVENTS]; 2007 unsigned int cflags[MAX_HWEVENTS]; 2008 int n; 2009 int err; 2010 struct cpu_hw_events *cpuhw; 2011 2012 if (!ppmu) 2013 return -ENOENT; 2014 2015 if (has_branch_stack(event)) { 2016 /* PMU has BHRB enabled */ 2017 if (!(ppmu->flags & PPMU_ARCH_207S)) 2018 return -EOPNOTSUPP; 2019 } 2020 2021 switch (event->attr.type) { 2022 case PERF_TYPE_HARDWARE: 2023 ev = event->attr.config; 2024 if (ev >= ppmu->n_generic || ppmu->generic_events[ev] == 0) 2025 return -EOPNOTSUPP; 2026 2027 if (ppmu->blacklist_ev && is_event_blacklisted(ev)) 2028 return -EINVAL; 2029 ev = ppmu->generic_events[ev]; 2030 break; 2031 case PERF_TYPE_HW_CACHE: 2032 err = hw_perf_cache_event(event->attr.config, &ev); 2033 if (err) 2034 return err; 2035 2036 if (ppmu->blacklist_ev && is_event_blacklisted(ev)) 2037 return -EINVAL; 2038 break; 2039 case PERF_TYPE_RAW: 2040 ev = event->attr.config; 2041 2042 if (ppmu->blacklist_ev && is_event_blacklisted(ev)) 2043 return -EINVAL; 2044 break; 2045 default: 2046 return -ENOENT; 2047 } 2048 2049 /* 2050 * PMU config registers have fields that are 2051 * reserved and some specific values for bit fields are reserved. 2052 * For ex., MMCRA[61:62] is Random Sampling Mode (SM) 2053 * and value of 0b11 to this field is reserved. 2054 * Check for invalid values in attr.config. 2055 */ 2056 if (ppmu->check_attr_config && 2057 ppmu->check_attr_config(event)) 2058 return -EINVAL; 2059 2060 event->hw.config_base = ev; 2061 event->hw.idx = 0; 2062 2063 /* 2064 * If we are not running on a hypervisor, force the 2065 * exclude_hv bit to 0 so that we don't care what 2066 * the user set it to. 2067 */ 2068 if (!firmware_has_feature(FW_FEATURE_LPAR)) 2069 event->attr.exclude_hv = 0; 2070 2071 /* 2072 * If this is a per-task event, then we can use 2073 * PM_RUN_* events interchangeably with their non RUN_* 2074 * equivalents, e.g. PM_RUN_CYC instead of PM_CYC. 2075 * XXX we should check if the task is an idle task. 2076 */ 2077 flags = 0; 2078 if (event->attach_state & PERF_ATTACH_TASK) 2079 flags |= PPMU_ONLY_COUNT_RUN; 2080 2081 /* 2082 * If this machine has limited events, check whether this 2083 * event_id could go on a limited event. 2084 */ 2085 if (ppmu->flags & PPMU_LIMITED_PMC5_6) { 2086 if (can_go_on_limited_pmc(event, ev, flags)) { 2087 flags |= PPMU_LIMITED_PMC_OK; 2088 } else if (ppmu->limited_pmc_event(ev)) { 2089 /* 2090 * The requested event_id is on a limited PMC, 2091 * but we can't use a limited PMC; see if any 2092 * alternative goes on a normal PMC. 2093 */ 2094 ev = normal_pmc_alternative(ev, flags); 2095 if (!ev) 2096 return -EINVAL; 2097 } 2098 } 2099 2100 /* Extra checks for EBB */ 2101 err = ebb_event_check(event); 2102 if (err) 2103 return err; 2104 2105 /* 2106 * If this is in a group, check if it can go on with all the 2107 * other hardware events in the group. We assume the event 2108 * hasn't been linked into its leader's sibling list at this point. 2109 */ 2110 n = 0; 2111 if (event->group_leader != event) { 2112 n = collect_events(event->group_leader, ppmu->n_counter - 1, 2113 ctrs, events, cflags); 2114 if (n < 0) 2115 return -EINVAL; 2116 } 2117 events[n] = ev; 2118 ctrs[n] = event; 2119 cflags[n] = flags; 2120 if (check_excludes(ctrs, cflags, n, 1)) 2121 return -EINVAL; 2122 2123 local_irq_save(irq_flags); 2124 cpuhw = this_cpu_ptr(&cpu_hw_events); 2125 2126 err = power_check_constraints(cpuhw, events, cflags, n + 1, ctrs); 2127 2128 if (has_branch_stack(event)) { 2129 u64 bhrb_filter = -1; 2130 2131 /* 2132 * Currently no PMU supports having multiple branch filters 2133 * at the same time. Branch filters are set via MMCRA IFM[32:33] 2134 * bits for Power8 and above. Return EOPNOTSUPP when multiple 2135 * branch filters are requested in the event attr. 2136 * 2137 * When opening event via perf_event_open(), branch_sample_type 2138 * gets adjusted in perf_copy_attr(). Kernel will automatically 2139 * adjust the branch_sample_type based on the event modifier 2140 * settings to include PERF_SAMPLE_BRANCH_PLM_ALL. Hence drop 2141 * the check for PERF_SAMPLE_BRANCH_PLM_ALL. 2142 */ 2143 if (hweight64(event->attr.branch_sample_type & ~PERF_SAMPLE_BRANCH_PLM_ALL) > 1) { 2144 local_irq_restore(irq_flags); 2145 return -EOPNOTSUPP; 2146 } 2147 2148 if (ppmu->bhrb_filter_map) 2149 bhrb_filter = ppmu->bhrb_filter_map( 2150 event->attr.branch_sample_type); 2151 2152 if (bhrb_filter == -1) { 2153 local_irq_restore(irq_flags); 2154 return -EOPNOTSUPP; 2155 } 2156 cpuhw->bhrb_filter = bhrb_filter; 2157 } 2158 2159 local_irq_restore(irq_flags); 2160 if (err) 2161 return -EINVAL; 2162 2163 event->hw.config = events[n]; 2164 event->hw.event_base = cflags[n]; 2165 event->hw.last_period = event->hw.sample_period; 2166 local64_set(&event->hw.period_left, event->hw.last_period); 2167 2168 /* 2169 * For EBB events we just context switch the PMC value, we don't do any 2170 * of the sample_period logic. We use hw.prev_count for this. 2171 */ 2172 if (is_ebb_event(event)) 2173 local64_set(&event->hw.prev_count, 0); 2174 2175 /* 2176 * See if we need to reserve the PMU. 2177 * If no events are currently in use, then we have to take a 2178 * mutex to ensure that we don't race with another task doing 2179 * reserve_pmc_hardware or release_pmc_hardware. 2180 */ 2181 err = 0; 2182 if (!atomic_inc_not_zero(&num_events)) { 2183 mutex_lock(&pmc_reserve_mutex); 2184 if (atomic_read(&num_events) == 0 && 2185 reserve_pmc_hardware(perf_event_interrupt)) 2186 err = -EBUSY; 2187 else 2188 atomic_inc(&num_events); 2189 mutex_unlock(&pmc_reserve_mutex); 2190 } 2191 event->destroy = hw_perf_event_destroy; 2192 2193 return err; 2194 } 2195 2196 static int power_pmu_event_idx(struct perf_event *event) 2197 { 2198 return event->hw.idx; 2199 } 2200 2201 ssize_t power_events_sysfs_show(struct device *dev, 2202 struct device_attribute *attr, char *page) 2203 { 2204 struct perf_pmu_events_attr *pmu_attr; 2205 2206 pmu_attr = container_of(attr, struct perf_pmu_events_attr, attr); 2207 2208 return sysfs_emit(page, "event=0x%02llx\n", pmu_attr->id); 2209 } 2210 2211 static struct pmu power_pmu = { 2212 .pmu_enable = power_pmu_enable, 2213 .pmu_disable = power_pmu_disable, 2214 .event_init = power_pmu_event_init, 2215 .add = power_pmu_add, 2216 .del = power_pmu_del, 2217 .start = power_pmu_start, 2218 .stop = power_pmu_stop, 2219 .read = power_pmu_read, 2220 .start_txn = power_pmu_start_txn, 2221 .cancel_txn = power_pmu_cancel_txn, 2222 .commit_txn = power_pmu_commit_txn, 2223 .event_idx = power_pmu_event_idx, 2224 .sched_task = power_pmu_sched_task, 2225 }; 2226 2227 #define PERF_SAMPLE_ADDR_TYPE (PERF_SAMPLE_ADDR | \ 2228 PERF_SAMPLE_PHYS_ADDR | \ 2229 PERF_SAMPLE_DATA_PAGE_SIZE) 2230 2231 #define SIER_TYPE_SHIFT 15 2232 #define SIER_TYPE_MASK (0x7ull << SIER_TYPE_SHIFT) 2233 2234 /* 2235 * A counter has overflowed; update its count and record 2236 * things if requested. Note that interrupts are hard-disabled 2237 * here so there is no possibility of being interrupted. 2238 */ 2239 static void record_and_restart(struct perf_event *event, unsigned long val, 2240 struct pt_regs *regs) 2241 { 2242 u64 period = event->hw.sample_period; 2243 const u64 last_period = event->hw.last_period; 2244 s64 prev, delta, left; 2245 int record = 0; 2246 int mark_event = regs->dsisr & MMCRA_SAMPLE_ENABLE; 2247 2248 if (event->hw.state & PERF_HES_STOPPED) { 2249 write_pmc(event->hw.idx, 0); 2250 return; 2251 } 2252 2253 /* we don't have to worry about interrupts here */ 2254 prev = local64_read(&event->hw.prev_count); 2255 delta = check_and_compute_delta(prev, val); 2256 local64_add(delta, &event->count); 2257 2258 /* 2259 * See if the total period for this event has expired, 2260 * and update for the next period. 2261 */ 2262 val = 0; 2263 left = local64_read(&event->hw.period_left) - delta; 2264 if (delta == 0) 2265 left++; 2266 if (period) { 2267 if (left <= 0) { 2268 left += period; 2269 if (left <= 0) 2270 left = period; 2271 2272 /* 2273 * If address is not requested in the sample via 2274 * PERF_SAMPLE_IP, just record that sample irrespective 2275 * of SIAR valid check. 2276 */ 2277 if (event->attr.sample_type & PERF_SAMPLE_IP) 2278 record = siar_valid(regs); 2279 else 2280 record = 1; 2281 2282 event->hw.last_period = event->hw.sample_period; 2283 } 2284 if (left < 0x80000000LL) 2285 val = 0x80000000LL - left; 2286 } 2287 2288 write_pmc(event->hw.idx, val); 2289 local64_set(&event->hw.prev_count, val); 2290 local64_set(&event->hw.period_left, left); 2291 perf_event_update_userpage(event); 2292 2293 /* 2294 * Due to hardware limitation, sometimes SIAR could sample a kernel 2295 * address even when freeze on supervisor state (kernel) is set in 2296 * MMCR2. Check attr.exclude_kernel and address to drop the sample in 2297 * these cases. 2298 */ 2299 if (event->attr.exclude_kernel && 2300 (event->attr.sample_type & PERF_SAMPLE_IP) && 2301 is_kernel_addr(mfspr(SPRN_SIAR))) 2302 record = 0; 2303 2304 /* 2305 * SIER[46-48] presents instruction type of the sampled instruction. 2306 * In ISA v3.0 and before values "0" and "7" are considered reserved. 2307 * In ISA v3.1, value "7" has been used to indicate "larx/stcx". 2308 * Drop the sample if "type" has reserved values for this field with a 2309 * ISA version check for marked events. 2310 */ 2311 if (mark_event && event->attr.sample_type & PERF_SAMPLE_DATA_SRC && 2312 ppmu->get_mem_data_src) { 2313 val = (regs->dar & SIER_TYPE_MASK) >> SIER_TYPE_SHIFT; 2314 if (val == 0 || (val == 7 && !cpu_has_feature(CPU_FTR_ARCH_31))) { 2315 record = 0; 2316 atomic64_inc(&event->lost_samples); 2317 } 2318 } 2319 2320 /* 2321 * Finally record data if requested. 2322 */ 2323 if (record) { 2324 struct perf_sample_data data; 2325 2326 perf_sample_data_init(&data, ~0ULL, last_period); 2327 2328 if (event->attr.sample_type & PERF_SAMPLE_ADDR_TYPE) 2329 perf_get_data_addr(event, regs, &data.addr); 2330 2331 if (event->attr.sample_type & PERF_SAMPLE_BRANCH_STACK) { 2332 struct cpu_hw_events *cpuhw; 2333 cpuhw = this_cpu_ptr(&cpu_hw_events); 2334 power_pmu_bhrb_read(event, cpuhw); 2335 perf_sample_save_brstack(&data, event, &cpuhw->bhrb_stack, NULL); 2336 } 2337 2338 if (event->attr.sample_type & PERF_SAMPLE_DATA_SRC && 2339 ppmu->get_mem_data_src) { 2340 ppmu->get_mem_data_src(&data.data_src, ppmu->flags, regs); 2341 data.sample_flags |= PERF_SAMPLE_DATA_SRC; 2342 } 2343 2344 if (event->attr.sample_type & PERF_SAMPLE_WEIGHT_TYPE && 2345 ppmu->get_mem_weight) { 2346 ppmu->get_mem_weight(&data.weight.full, event->attr.sample_type); 2347 data.sample_flags |= PERF_SAMPLE_WEIGHT_TYPE; 2348 } 2349 perf_event_overflow(event, &data, regs); 2350 } else if (period) { 2351 /* Account for interrupt in case of invalid SIAR */ 2352 perf_event_account_interrupt(event); 2353 } 2354 } 2355 2356 /* 2357 * Called from generic code to get the misc flags (i.e. processor mode) 2358 * for an event_id. 2359 */ 2360 unsigned long perf_arch_misc_flags(struct pt_regs *regs) 2361 { 2362 u32 flags = perf_get_misc_flags(regs); 2363 2364 if (flags) 2365 return flags; 2366 return user_mode(regs) ? PERF_RECORD_MISC_USER : 2367 PERF_RECORD_MISC_KERNEL; 2368 } 2369 2370 /* 2371 * Called from generic code to get the instruction pointer 2372 * for an event_id. 2373 */ 2374 unsigned long perf_arch_instruction_pointer(struct pt_regs *regs) 2375 { 2376 unsigned long siar = mfspr(SPRN_SIAR); 2377 2378 if (regs_use_siar(regs) && siar_valid(regs) && siar) 2379 return siar + perf_ip_adjust(regs); 2380 else 2381 return regs->nip; 2382 } 2383 2384 static bool pmc_overflow_power7(unsigned long val) 2385 { 2386 /* 2387 * Events on POWER7 can roll back if a speculative event doesn't 2388 * eventually complete. Unfortunately in some rare cases they will 2389 * raise a performance monitor exception. We need to catch this to 2390 * ensure we reset the PMC. In all cases the PMC will be 256 or less 2391 * cycles from overflow. 2392 * 2393 * We only do this if the first pass fails to find any overflowing 2394 * PMCs because a user might set a period of less than 256 and we 2395 * don't want to mistakenly reset them. 2396 */ 2397 if ((0x80000000 - val) <= 256) 2398 return true; 2399 2400 return false; 2401 } 2402 2403 static bool pmc_overflow(unsigned long val) 2404 { 2405 if ((int)val < 0) 2406 return true; 2407 2408 return false; 2409 } 2410 2411 /* 2412 * Performance monitor interrupt stuff 2413 */ 2414 static void __perf_event_interrupt(struct pt_regs *regs) 2415 { 2416 int i, j; 2417 struct cpu_hw_events *cpuhw = this_cpu_ptr(&cpu_hw_events); 2418 struct perf_event *event; 2419 int found, active; 2420 2421 if (cpuhw->n_limited) 2422 freeze_limited_counters(cpuhw, mfspr(SPRN_PMC5), 2423 mfspr(SPRN_PMC6)); 2424 2425 perf_read_regs(regs); 2426 2427 /* Read all the PMCs since we'll need them a bunch of times */ 2428 for (i = 0; i < ppmu->n_counter; ++i) 2429 cpuhw->pmcs[i] = read_pmc(i + 1); 2430 2431 /* Try to find what caused the IRQ */ 2432 found = 0; 2433 for (i = 0; i < ppmu->n_counter; ++i) { 2434 if (!pmc_overflow(cpuhw->pmcs[i])) 2435 continue; 2436 if (is_limited_pmc(i + 1)) 2437 continue; /* these won't generate IRQs */ 2438 /* 2439 * We've found one that's overflowed. For active 2440 * counters we need to log this. For inactive 2441 * counters, we need to reset it anyway 2442 */ 2443 found = 1; 2444 active = 0; 2445 for (j = 0; j < cpuhw->n_events; ++j) { 2446 event = cpuhw->event[j]; 2447 if (event->hw.idx == (i + 1)) { 2448 active = 1; 2449 record_and_restart(event, cpuhw->pmcs[i], regs); 2450 break; 2451 } 2452 } 2453 2454 /* 2455 * Clear PACA_IRQ_PMI in case it was set by 2456 * set_pmi_irq_pending() when PMU was enabled 2457 * after accounting for interrupts. 2458 */ 2459 clear_pmi_irq_pending(); 2460 2461 if (!active) 2462 /* reset non active counters that have overflowed */ 2463 write_pmc(i + 1, 0); 2464 } 2465 if (!found && pvr_version_is(PVR_POWER7)) { 2466 /* check active counters for special buggy p7 overflow */ 2467 for (i = 0; i < cpuhw->n_events; ++i) { 2468 event = cpuhw->event[i]; 2469 if (!event->hw.idx || is_limited_pmc(event->hw.idx)) 2470 continue; 2471 if (pmc_overflow_power7(cpuhw->pmcs[event->hw.idx - 1])) { 2472 /* event has overflowed in a buggy way*/ 2473 found = 1; 2474 record_and_restart(event, 2475 cpuhw->pmcs[event->hw.idx - 1], 2476 regs); 2477 } 2478 } 2479 } 2480 2481 /* 2482 * During system wide profiling or while specific CPU is monitored for an 2483 * event, some corner cases could cause PMC to overflow in idle path. This 2484 * will trigger a PMI after waking up from idle. Since counter values are _not_ 2485 * saved/restored in idle path, can lead to below "Can't find PMC" message. 2486 */ 2487 if (unlikely(!found) && !regs_irqs_disabled(regs)) 2488 printk_ratelimited(KERN_WARNING "Can't find PMC that caused IRQ\n"); 2489 2490 /* 2491 * Reset MMCR0 to its normal value. This will set PMXE and 2492 * clear FC (freeze counters) and PMAO (perf mon alert occurred) 2493 * and thus allow interrupts to occur again. 2494 * XXX might want to use MSR.PM to keep the events frozen until 2495 * we get back out of this interrupt. 2496 */ 2497 write_mmcr0(cpuhw, cpuhw->mmcr.mmcr0); 2498 2499 /* Clear the cpuhw->pmcs */ 2500 memset(&cpuhw->pmcs, 0, sizeof(cpuhw->pmcs)); 2501 2502 } 2503 2504 static void perf_event_interrupt(struct pt_regs *regs) 2505 { 2506 u64 start_clock = sched_clock(); 2507 2508 __perf_event_interrupt(regs); 2509 perf_sample_event_took(sched_clock() - start_clock); 2510 } 2511 2512 static int power_pmu_prepare_cpu(unsigned int cpu) 2513 { 2514 struct cpu_hw_events *cpuhw = &per_cpu(cpu_hw_events, cpu); 2515 2516 if (ppmu) { 2517 memset(cpuhw, 0, sizeof(*cpuhw)); 2518 cpuhw->mmcr.mmcr0 = MMCR0_FC; 2519 } 2520 return 0; 2521 } 2522 2523 static ssize_t pmu_name_show(struct device *cdev, 2524 struct device_attribute *attr, 2525 char *buf) 2526 { 2527 if (ppmu) 2528 return sysfs_emit(buf, "%s", ppmu->name); 2529 2530 return 0; 2531 } 2532 2533 static DEVICE_ATTR_RO(pmu_name); 2534 2535 static struct attribute *pmu_caps_attrs[] = { 2536 &dev_attr_pmu_name.attr, 2537 NULL 2538 }; 2539 2540 static const struct attribute_group pmu_caps_group = { 2541 .name = "caps", 2542 .attrs = pmu_caps_attrs, 2543 }; 2544 2545 static const struct attribute_group *pmu_caps_groups[] = { 2546 &pmu_caps_group, 2547 NULL, 2548 }; 2549 2550 int __init register_power_pmu(struct power_pmu *pmu) 2551 { 2552 if (ppmu) 2553 return -EBUSY; /* something's already registered */ 2554 2555 ppmu = pmu; 2556 pr_info("%s performance monitor hardware support registered\n", 2557 pmu->name); 2558 2559 power_pmu.attr_groups = ppmu->attr_groups; 2560 2561 if (ppmu->flags & PPMU_ARCH_207S) 2562 power_pmu.attr_update = pmu_caps_groups; 2563 2564 power_pmu.capabilities |= (ppmu->capabilities & PERF_PMU_CAP_EXTENDED_REGS); 2565 2566 #ifdef MSR_HV 2567 /* 2568 * Use FCHV to ignore kernel events if MSR.HV is set. 2569 */ 2570 if (mfmsr() & MSR_HV) 2571 freeze_events_kernel = MMCR0_FCHV; 2572 #endif /* CONFIG_PPC64 */ 2573 2574 perf_pmu_register(&power_pmu, "cpu", PERF_TYPE_RAW); 2575 cpuhp_setup_state(CPUHP_PERF_POWER, "perf/powerpc:prepare", 2576 power_pmu_prepare_cpu, NULL); 2577 return 0; 2578 } 2579 2580 #ifdef CONFIG_PPC64 2581 static bool pmu_override = false; 2582 static unsigned long pmu_override_val; 2583 static void do_pmu_override(void *data) 2584 { 2585 ppc_set_pmu_inuse(1); 2586 if (pmu_override_val) 2587 mtspr(SPRN_MMCR1, pmu_override_val); 2588 mtspr(SPRN_MMCR0, mfspr(SPRN_MMCR0) & ~MMCR0_FC); 2589 } 2590 2591 static int __init init_ppc64_pmu(void) 2592 { 2593 if (cpu_has_feature(CPU_FTR_HVMODE) && pmu_override) { 2594 pr_warn("disabling perf due to pmu_override= command line option.\n"); 2595 on_each_cpu(do_pmu_override, NULL, 1); 2596 return 0; 2597 } 2598 2599 /* run through all the pmu drivers one at a time */ 2600 if (!init_power5_pmu()) 2601 return 0; 2602 else if (!init_power5p_pmu()) 2603 return 0; 2604 else if (!init_power6_pmu()) 2605 return 0; 2606 else if (!init_power7_pmu()) 2607 return 0; 2608 else if (!init_power8_pmu()) 2609 return 0; 2610 else if (!init_power9_pmu()) 2611 return 0; 2612 else if (!init_power10_pmu()) 2613 return 0; 2614 else if (!init_power11_pmu()) 2615 return 0; 2616 else if (!init_ppc970_pmu()) 2617 return 0; 2618 else 2619 return init_generic_compat_pmu(); 2620 } 2621 early_initcall(init_ppc64_pmu); 2622 2623 static int __init pmu_setup(char *str) 2624 { 2625 unsigned long val; 2626 2627 if (!early_cpu_has_feature(CPU_FTR_HVMODE)) 2628 return 0; 2629 2630 pmu_override = true; 2631 2632 if (kstrtoul(str, 0, &val)) 2633 val = 0; 2634 2635 pmu_override_val = val; 2636 2637 return 1; 2638 } 2639 __setup("pmu_override=", pmu_setup); 2640 2641 #endif 2642