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24 * Robert Bragg <robert@sixbynine.org>
29 * DOC: i915 Perf Overview
31 * Gen graphics supports a large number of performance counters that can help
32 * driver and application developers understand and optimize their use of the
35 * This i915 perf interface enables userspace to configure and open a file
36 * descriptor representing a stream of GPU metrics which can then be read() as
37 * a stream of sample records.
39 * The interface is particularly suited to exposing buffered metrics that are
40 * captured by DMA from the GPU, unsynchronized with and unrelated to the CPU.
42 * Streams representing a single context are accessible to applications with a
43 * corresponding drm file descriptor, such that OpenGL can use the interface
44 * without special privileges. Access to system-wide metrics requires root
45 * privileges by default, unless changed via the dev.i915.perf_event_paranoid
51 * DOC: i915 Perf History and Comparison with Core Perf
53 * The interface was initially inspired by the core Perf infrastructure but
54 * some notable differences are:
56 * i915 perf file descriptors represent a "stream" instead of an "event"; where
57 * a perf event primarily corresponds to a single 64bit value, while a stream
58 * might sample sets of tightly-coupled counters, depending on the
59 * configuration. For example the Gen OA unit isn't designed to support
60 * orthogonal configurations of individual counters; it's configured for a set
61 * of related counters. Samples for an i915 perf stream capturing OA metrics
62 * will include a set of counter values packed in a compact HW specific format.
63 * The OA unit supports a number of different packing formats which can be
64 * selected by the user opening the stream. Perf has support for grouping
65 * events, but each event in the group is configured, validated and
66 * authenticated individually with separate system calls.
68 * i915 perf stream configurations are provided as an array of u64 (key,value)
69 * pairs, instead of a fixed struct with multiple miscellaneous config members,
70 * interleaved with event-type specific members.
72 * i915 perf doesn't support exposing metrics via an mmap'd circular buffer.
73 * The supported metrics are being written to memory by the GPU unsynchronized
74 * with the CPU, using HW specific packing formats for counter sets. Sometimes
75 * the constraints on HW configuration require reports to be filtered before it
76 * would be acceptable to expose them to unprivileged applications - to hide
77 * the metrics of other processes/contexts. For these use cases a read() based
78 * interface is a good fit, and provides an opportunity to filter data as it
79 * gets copied from the GPU mapped buffers to userspace buffers.
82 * Issues hit with first prototype based on Core Perf
83 * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
85 * The first prototype of this driver was based on the core perf
86 * infrastructure, and while we did make that mostly work, with some changes to
87 * perf, we found we were breaking or working around too many assumptions baked
88 * into perf's currently cpu centric design.
90 * In the end we didn't see a clear benefit to making perf's implementation and
91 * interface more complex by changing design assumptions while we knew we still
92 * wouldn't be able to use any existing perf based userspace tools.
94 * Also considering the Gen specific nature of the Observability hardware and
95 * how userspace will sometimes need to combine i915 perf OA metrics with
96 * side-band OA data captured via MI_REPORT_PERF_COUNT commands; we're
97 * expecting the interface to be used by a platform specific userspace such as
98 * OpenGL or tools. This is to say; we aren't inherently missing out on having
99 * a standard vendor/architecture agnostic interface by not using perf.
102 * For posterity, in case we might re-visit trying to adapt core perf to be
103 * better suited to exposing i915 metrics these were the main pain points we
106 * - The perf based OA PMU driver broke some significant design assumptions:
108 * Existing perf pmus are used for profiling work on a cpu and we were
109 * introducing the idea of _IS_DEVICE pmus with different security
110 * implications, the need to fake cpu-related data (such as user/kernel
111 * registers) to fit with perf's current design, and adding _DEVICE records
112 * as a way to forward device-specific status records.
114 * The OA unit writes reports of counters into a circular buffer, without
115 * involvement from the CPU, making our PMU driver the first of a kind.
117 * Given the way we were periodically forward data from the GPU-mapped, OA
118 * buffer to perf's buffer, those bursts of sample writes looked to perf like
119 * we were sampling too fast and so we had to subvert its throttling checks.
121 * Perf supports groups of counters and allows those to be read via
122 * transactions internally but transactions currently seem designed to be
123 * explicitly initiated from the cpu (say in response to a userspace read())
124 * and while we could pull a report out of the OA buffer we can't
125 * trigger a report from the cpu on demand.
127 * Related to being report based; the OA counters are configured in HW as a
128 * set while perf generally expects counter configurations to be orthogonal.
129 * Although counters can be associated with a group leader as they are
130 * opened, there's no clear precedent for being able to provide group-wide
131 * configuration attributes (for example we want to let userspace choose the
132 * OA unit report format used to capture all counters in a set, or specify a
133 * GPU context to filter metrics on). We avoided using perf's grouping
134 * feature and forwarded OA reports to userspace via perf's 'raw' sample
135 * field. This suited our userspace well considering how coupled the counters
136 * are when dealing with normalizing. It would be inconvenient to split
137 * counters up into separate events, only to require userspace to recombine
138 * them. For Mesa it's also convenient to be forwarded raw, periodic reports
139 * for combining with the side-band raw reports it captures using
140 * MI_REPORT_PERF_COUNT commands.
142 * - As a side note on perf's grouping feature; there was also some concern
143 * that using PERF_FORMAT_GROUP as a way to pack together counter values
144 * would quite drastically inflate our sample sizes, which would likely
145 * lower the effective sampling resolutions we could use when the available
146 * memory bandwidth is limited.
148 * With the OA unit's report formats, counters are packed together as 32
149 * or 40bit values, with the largest report size being 256 bytes.
151 * PERF_FORMAT_GROUP values are 64bit, but there doesn't appear to be a
152 * documented ordering to the values, implying PERF_FORMAT_ID must also be
153 * used to add a 64bit ID before each value; giving 16 bytes per counter.
155 * Related to counter orthogonality; we can't time share the OA unit, while
156 * event scheduling is a central design idea within perf for allowing
157 * userspace to open + enable more events than can be configured in HW at any
158 * one time. The OA unit is not designed to allow re-configuration while in
159 * use. We can't reconfigure the OA unit without losing internal OA unit
160 * state which we can't access explicitly to save and restore. Reconfiguring
161 * the OA unit is also relatively slow, involving ~100 register writes. From
162 * userspace Mesa also depends on a stable OA configuration when emitting
163 * MI_REPORT_PERF_COUNT commands and importantly the OA unit can't be
164 * disabled while there are outstanding MI_RPC commands lest we hang the
167 * The contents of sample records aren't extensible by device drivers (i.e.
168 * the sample_type bits). As an example; Sourab Gupta had been looking to
169 * attach GPU timestamps to our OA samples. We were shoehorning OA reports
170 * into sample records by using the 'raw' field, but it's tricky to pack more
171 * than one thing into this field because events/core.c currently only lets a
172 * pmu give a single raw data pointer plus len which will be copied into the
173 * ring buffer. To include more than the OA report we'd have to copy the
174 * report into an intermediate larger buffer. I'd been considering allowing a
175 * vector of data+len values to be specified for copying the raw data, but
176 * it felt like a kludge to being using the raw field for this purpose.
178 * - It felt like our perf based PMU was making some technical compromises
179 * just for the sake of using perf:
181 * perf_event_open() requires events to either relate to a pid or a specific
182 * cpu core, while our device pmu related to neither. Events opened with a
183 * pid will be automatically enabled/disabled according to the scheduling of
184 * that process - so not appropriate for us. When an event is related to a
185 * cpu id, perf ensures pmu methods will be invoked via an inter process
186 * interrupt on that core. To avoid invasive changes our userspace opened OA
187 * perf events for a specific cpu. This was workable but it meant the
188 * majority of the OA driver ran in atomic context, including all OA report
189 * forwarding, which wasn't really necessary in our case and seems to make
190 * our locking requirements somewhat complex as we handled the interaction
191 * with the rest of the i915 driver.
194 #include <linux/anon_inodes.h>
195 #include <linux/sizes.h>
196 #include <linux/uuid.h>
198 #include "gem/i915_gem_context.h"
199 #include "gem/i915_gem_pm.h"
200 #include "gt/intel_lrc_reg.h"
202 #include "i915_drv.h"
203 #include "i915_perf.h"
204 #include "oa/i915_oa_hsw.h"
205 #include "oa/i915_oa_bdw.h"
206 #include "oa/i915_oa_chv.h"
207 #include "oa/i915_oa_sklgt2.h"
208 #include "oa/i915_oa_sklgt3.h"
209 #include "oa/i915_oa_sklgt4.h"
210 #include "oa/i915_oa_bxt.h"
211 #include "oa/i915_oa_kblgt2.h"
212 #include "oa/i915_oa_kblgt3.h"
213 #include "oa/i915_oa_glk.h"
214 #include "oa/i915_oa_cflgt2.h"
215 #include "oa/i915_oa_cflgt3.h"
216 #include "oa/i915_oa_cnl.h"
217 #include "oa/i915_oa_icl.h"
219 /* HW requires this to be a power of two, between 128k and 16M, though driver
220 * is currently generally designed assuming the largest 16M size is used such
221 * that the overflow cases are unlikely in normal operation.
223 #define OA_BUFFER_SIZE SZ_16M
225 #define OA_TAKEN(tail, head) ((tail - head) & (OA_BUFFER_SIZE - 1))
228 * DOC: OA Tail Pointer Race
230 * There's a HW race condition between OA unit tail pointer register updates and
231 * writes to memory whereby the tail pointer can sometimes get ahead of what's
232 * been written out to the OA buffer so far (in terms of what's visible to the
235 * Although this can be observed explicitly while copying reports to userspace
236 * by checking for a zeroed report-id field in tail reports, we want to account
237 * for this earlier, as part of the oa_buffer_check to avoid lots of redundant
240 * In effect we define a tail pointer for reading that lags the real tail
241 * pointer by at least %OA_TAIL_MARGIN_NSEC nanoseconds, which gives enough
242 * time for the corresponding reports to become visible to the CPU.
244 * To manage this we actually track two tail pointers:
245 * 1) An 'aging' tail with an associated timestamp that is tracked until we
246 * can trust the corresponding data is visible to the CPU; at which point
247 * it is considered 'aged'.
248 * 2) An 'aged' tail that can be used for read()ing.
250 * The two separate pointers let us decouple read()s from tail pointer aging.
252 * The tail pointers are checked and updated at a limited rate within a hrtimer
253 * callback (the same callback that is used for delivering EPOLLIN events)
255 * Initially the tails are marked invalid with %INVALID_TAIL_PTR which
256 * indicates that an updated tail pointer is needed.
258 * Most of the implementation details for this workaround are in
259 * oa_buffer_check_unlocked() and _append_oa_reports()
261 * Note for posterity: previously the driver used to define an effective tail
262 * pointer that lagged the real pointer by a 'tail margin' measured in bytes
263 * derived from %OA_TAIL_MARGIN_NSEC and the configured sampling frequency.
264 * This was flawed considering that the OA unit may also automatically generate
265 * non-periodic reports (such as on context switch) or the OA unit may be
266 * enabled without any periodic sampling.
268 #define OA_TAIL_MARGIN_NSEC 100000ULL
269 #define INVALID_TAIL_PTR 0xffffffff
271 /* frequency for checking whether the OA unit has written new reports to the
272 * circular OA buffer...
274 #define POLL_FREQUENCY 200
275 #define POLL_PERIOD (NSEC_PER_SEC / POLL_FREQUENCY)
277 /* for sysctl proc_dointvec_minmax of dev.i915.perf_stream_paranoid */
278 static u32 i915_perf_stream_paranoid = true;
280 /* The maximum exponent the hardware accepts is 63 (essentially it selects one
281 * of the 64bit timestamp bits to trigger reports from) but there's currently
282 * no known use case for sampling as infrequently as once per 47 thousand years.
284 * Since the timestamps included in OA reports are only 32bits it seems
285 * reasonable to limit the OA exponent where it's still possible to account for
286 * overflow in OA report timestamps.
288 #define OA_EXPONENT_MAX 31
290 #define INVALID_CTX_ID 0xffffffff
292 /* On Gen8+ automatically triggered OA reports include a 'reason' field... */
293 #define OAREPORT_REASON_MASK 0x3f
294 #define OAREPORT_REASON_SHIFT 19
295 #define OAREPORT_REASON_TIMER (1<<0)
296 #define OAREPORT_REASON_CTX_SWITCH (1<<3)
297 #define OAREPORT_REASON_CLK_RATIO (1<<5)
300 /* For sysctl proc_dointvec_minmax of i915_oa_max_sample_rate
302 * The highest sampling frequency we can theoretically program the OA unit
303 * with is always half the timestamp frequency: E.g. 6.25Mhz for Haswell.
305 * Initialized just before we register the sysctl parameter.
307 static int oa_sample_rate_hard_limit;
309 /* Theoretically we can program the OA unit to sample every 160ns but don't
310 * allow that by default unless root...
312 * The default threshold of 100000Hz is based on perf's similar
313 * kernel.perf_event_max_sample_rate sysctl parameter.
315 static u32 i915_oa_max_sample_rate = 100000;
317 /* XXX: beware if future OA HW adds new report formats that the current
318 * code assumes all reports have a power-of-two size and ~(size - 1) can
319 * be used as a mask to align the OA tail pointer.
321 static const struct i915_oa_format hsw_oa_formats[I915_OA_FORMAT_MAX] = {
322 [I915_OA_FORMAT_A13] = { 0, 64 },
323 [I915_OA_FORMAT_A29] = { 1, 128 },
324 [I915_OA_FORMAT_A13_B8_C8] = { 2, 128 },
325 /* A29_B8_C8 Disallowed as 192 bytes doesn't factor into buffer size */
326 [I915_OA_FORMAT_B4_C8] = { 4, 64 },
327 [I915_OA_FORMAT_A45_B8_C8] = { 5, 256 },
328 [I915_OA_FORMAT_B4_C8_A16] = { 6, 128 },
329 [I915_OA_FORMAT_C4_B8] = { 7, 64 },
332 static const struct i915_oa_format gen8_plus_oa_formats[I915_OA_FORMAT_MAX] = {
333 [I915_OA_FORMAT_A12] = { 0, 64 },
334 [I915_OA_FORMAT_A12_B8_C8] = { 2, 128 },
335 [I915_OA_FORMAT_A32u40_A4u32_B8_C8] = { 5, 256 },
336 [I915_OA_FORMAT_C4_B8] = { 7, 64 },
339 #define SAMPLE_OA_REPORT (1<<0)
342 * struct perf_open_properties - for validated properties given to open a stream
343 * @sample_flags: `DRM_I915_PERF_PROP_SAMPLE_*` properties are tracked as flags
344 * @single_context: Whether a single or all gpu contexts should be monitored
345 * @ctx_handle: A gem ctx handle for use with @single_context
346 * @metrics_set: An ID for an OA unit metric set advertised via sysfs
347 * @oa_format: An OA unit HW report format
348 * @oa_periodic: Whether to enable periodic OA unit sampling
349 * @oa_period_exponent: The OA unit sampling period is derived from this
351 * As read_properties_unlocked() enumerates and validates the properties given
352 * to open a stream of metrics the configuration is built up in the structure
353 * which starts out zero initialized.
355 struct perf_open_properties {
358 u64 single_context:1;
361 /* OA sampling state */
365 int oa_period_exponent;
368 static enum hrtimer_restart oa_poll_check_timer_cb(struct hrtimer *hrtimer);
370 static void free_oa_config(struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv,
371 struct i915_oa_config *oa_config)
373 if (!PTR_ERR(oa_config->flex_regs))
374 kfree(oa_config->flex_regs);
375 if (!PTR_ERR(oa_config->b_counter_regs))
376 kfree(oa_config->b_counter_regs);
377 if (!PTR_ERR(oa_config->mux_regs))
378 kfree(oa_config->mux_regs);
382 static void put_oa_config(struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv,
383 struct i915_oa_config *oa_config)
385 if (!atomic_dec_and_test(&oa_config->ref_count))
388 free_oa_config(dev_priv, oa_config);
391 static int get_oa_config(struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv,
393 struct i915_oa_config **out_config)
397 if (metrics_set == 1) {
398 *out_config = &dev_priv->perf.test_config;
399 atomic_inc(&dev_priv->perf.test_config.ref_count);
403 ret = mutex_lock_interruptible(&dev_priv->perf.metrics_lock);
407 *out_config = idr_find(&dev_priv->perf.metrics_idr, metrics_set);
411 atomic_inc(&(*out_config)->ref_count);
413 mutex_unlock(&dev_priv->perf.metrics_lock);
418 static u32 gen8_oa_hw_tail_read(struct i915_perf_stream *stream)
420 struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv = stream->dev_priv;
422 return I915_READ(GEN8_OATAILPTR) & GEN8_OATAILPTR_MASK;
425 static u32 gen7_oa_hw_tail_read(struct i915_perf_stream *stream)
427 struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv = stream->dev_priv;
428 u32 oastatus1 = I915_READ(GEN7_OASTATUS1);
430 return oastatus1 & GEN7_OASTATUS1_TAIL_MASK;
434 * oa_buffer_check_unlocked - check for data and update tail ptr state
435 * @stream: i915 stream instance
437 * This is either called via fops (for blocking reads in user ctx) or the poll
438 * check hrtimer (atomic ctx) to check the OA buffer tail pointer and check
439 * if there is data available for userspace to read.
441 * This function is central to providing a workaround for the OA unit tail
442 * pointer having a race with respect to what data is visible to the CPU.
443 * It is responsible for reading tail pointers from the hardware and giving
444 * the pointers time to 'age' before they are made available for reading.
445 * (See description of OA_TAIL_MARGIN_NSEC above for further details.)
447 * Besides returning true when there is data available to read() this function
448 * also has the side effect of updating the oa_buffer.tails[], .aging_timestamp
449 * and .aged_tail_idx state used for reading.
451 * Note: It's safe to read OA config state here unlocked, assuming that this is
452 * only called while the stream is enabled, while the global OA configuration
455 * Returns: %true if the OA buffer contains data, else %false
457 static bool oa_buffer_check_unlocked(struct i915_perf_stream *stream)
459 struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv = stream->dev_priv;
460 int report_size = stream->oa_buffer.format_size;
462 unsigned int aged_idx;
463 u32 head, hw_tail, aged_tail, aging_tail;
466 /* We have to consider the (unlikely) possibility that read() errors
467 * could result in an OA buffer reset which might reset the head,
468 * tails[] and aged_tail state.
470 spin_lock_irqsave(&stream->oa_buffer.ptr_lock, flags);
472 /* NB: The head we observe here might effectively be a little out of
473 * date (between head and tails[aged_idx].offset if there is currently
474 * a read() in progress.
476 head = stream->oa_buffer.head;
478 aged_idx = stream->oa_buffer.aged_tail_idx;
479 aged_tail = stream->oa_buffer.tails[aged_idx].offset;
480 aging_tail = stream->oa_buffer.tails[!aged_idx].offset;
482 hw_tail = dev_priv->perf.ops.oa_hw_tail_read(stream);
484 /* The tail pointer increases in 64 byte increments,
485 * not in report_size steps...
487 hw_tail &= ~(report_size - 1);
489 now = ktime_get_mono_fast_ns();
491 /* Update the aged tail
493 * Flip the tail pointer available for read()s once the aging tail is
494 * old enough to trust that the corresponding data will be visible to
497 * Do this before updating the aging pointer in case we may be able to
498 * immediately start aging a new pointer too (if new data has become
499 * available) without needing to wait for a later hrtimer callback.
501 if (aging_tail != INVALID_TAIL_PTR &&
502 ((now - stream->oa_buffer.aging_timestamp) >
503 OA_TAIL_MARGIN_NSEC)) {
506 stream->oa_buffer.aged_tail_idx = aged_idx;
508 aged_tail = aging_tail;
510 /* Mark that we need a new pointer to start aging... */
511 stream->oa_buffer.tails[!aged_idx].offset = INVALID_TAIL_PTR;
512 aging_tail = INVALID_TAIL_PTR;
515 /* Update the aging tail
517 * We throttle aging tail updates until we have a new tail that
518 * represents >= one report more data than is already available for
519 * reading. This ensures there will be enough data for a successful
520 * read once this new pointer has aged and ensures we will give the new
521 * pointer time to age.
523 if (aging_tail == INVALID_TAIL_PTR &&
524 (aged_tail == INVALID_TAIL_PTR ||
525 OA_TAKEN(hw_tail, aged_tail) >= report_size)) {
526 struct i915_vma *vma = stream->oa_buffer.vma;
527 u32 gtt_offset = i915_ggtt_offset(vma);
529 /* Be paranoid and do a bounds check on the pointer read back
530 * from hardware, just in case some spurious hardware condition
531 * could put the tail out of bounds...
533 if (hw_tail >= gtt_offset &&
534 hw_tail < (gtt_offset + OA_BUFFER_SIZE)) {
535 stream->oa_buffer.tails[!aged_idx].offset =
536 aging_tail = hw_tail;
537 stream->oa_buffer.aging_timestamp = now;
539 DRM_ERROR("Ignoring spurious out of range OA buffer tail pointer = %u\n",
544 spin_unlock_irqrestore(&stream->oa_buffer.ptr_lock, flags);
546 return aged_tail == INVALID_TAIL_PTR ?
547 false : OA_TAKEN(aged_tail, head) >= report_size;
551 * append_oa_status - Appends a status record to a userspace read() buffer.
552 * @stream: An i915-perf stream opened for OA metrics
553 * @buf: destination buffer given by userspace
554 * @count: the number of bytes userspace wants to read
555 * @offset: (inout): the current position for writing into @buf
556 * @type: The kind of status to report to userspace
558 * Writes a status record (such as `DRM_I915_PERF_RECORD_OA_REPORT_LOST`)
559 * into the userspace read() buffer.
561 * The @buf @offset will only be updated on success.
563 * Returns: 0 on success, negative error code on failure.
565 static int append_oa_status(struct i915_perf_stream *stream,
569 enum drm_i915_perf_record_type type)
571 struct drm_i915_perf_record_header header = { type, 0, sizeof(header) };
573 if ((count - *offset) < header.size)
576 if (copy_to_user(buf + *offset, &header, sizeof(header)))
579 (*offset) += header.size;
585 * append_oa_sample - Copies single OA report into userspace read() buffer.
586 * @stream: An i915-perf stream opened for OA metrics
587 * @buf: destination buffer given by userspace
588 * @count: the number of bytes userspace wants to read
589 * @offset: (inout): the current position for writing into @buf
590 * @report: A single OA report to (optionally) include as part of the sample
592 * The contents of a sample are configured through `DRM_I915_PERF_PROP_SAMPLE_*`
593 * properties when opening a stream, tracked as `stream->sample_flags`. This
594 * function copies the requested components of a single sample to the given
597 * The @buf @offset will only be updated on success.
599 * Returns: 0 on success, negative error code on failure.
601 static int append_oa_sample(struct i915_perf_stream *stream,
607 int report_size = stream->oa_buffer.format_size;
608 struct drm_i915_perf_record_header header;
609 u32 sample_flags = stream->sample_flags;
611 header.type = DRM_I915_PERF_RECORD_SAMPLE;
613 header.size = stream->sample_size;
615 if ((count - *offset) < header.size)
619 if (copy_to_user(buf, &header, sizeof(header)))
621 buf += sizeof(header);
623 if (sample_flags & SAMPLE_OA_REPORT) {
624 if (copy_to_user(buf, report, report_size))
628 (*offset) += header.size;
634 * Copies all buffered OA reports into userspace read() buffer.
635 * @stream: An i915-perf stream opened for OA metrics
636 * @buf: destination buffer given by userspace
637 * @count: the number of bytes userspace wants to read
638 * @offset: (inout): the current position for writing into @buf
640 * Notably any error condition resulting in a short read (-%ENOSPC or
641 * -%EFAULT) will be returned even though one or more records may
642 * have been successfully copied. In this case it's up to the caller
643 * to decide if the error should be squashed before returning to
646 * Note: reports are consumed from the head, and appended to the
647 * tail, so the tail chases the head?... If you think that's mad
648 * and back-to-front you're not alone, but this follows the
649 * Gen PRM naming convention.
651 * Returns: 0 on success, negative error code on failure.
653 static int gen8_append_oa_reports(struct i915_perf_stream *stream,
658 struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv = stream->dev_priv;
659 int report_size = stream->oa_buffer.format_size;
660 u8 *oa_buf_base = stream->oa_buffer.vaddr;
661 u32 gtt_offset = i915_ggtt_offset(stream->oa_buffer.vma);
662 u32 mask = (OA_BUFFER_SIZE - 1);
663 size_t start_offset = *offset;
665 unsigned int aged_tail_idx;
670 if (WARN_ON(!stream->enabled))
673 spin_lock_irqsave(&stream->oa_buffer.ptr_lock, flags);
675 head = stream->oa_buffer.head;
676 aged_tail_idx = stream->oa_buffer.aged_tail_idx;
677 tail = stream->oa_buffer.tails[aged_tail_idx].offset;
679 spin_unlock_irqrestore(&stream->oa_buffer.ptr_lock, flags);
682 * An invalid tail pointer here means we're still waiting for the poll
683 * hrtimer callback to give us a pointer
685 if (tail == INVALID_TAIL_PTR)
689 * NB: oa_buffer.head/tail include the gtt_offset which we don't want
690 * while indexing relative to oa_buf_base.
696 * An out of bounds or misaligned head or tail pointer implies a driver
697 * bug since we validate + align the tail pointers we read from the
698 * hardware and we are in full control of the head pointer which should
699 * only be incremented by multiples of the report size (notably also
700 * all a power of two).
702 if (WARN_ONCE(head > OA_BUFFER_SIZE || head % report_size ||
703 tail > OA_BUFFER_SIZE || tail % report_size,
704 "Inconsistent OA buffer pointers: head = %u, tail = %u\n",
710 (taken = OA_TAKEN(tail, head));
711 head = (head + report_size) & mask) {
712 u8 *report = oa_buf_base + head;
713 u32 *report32 = (void *)report;
718 * All the report sizes factor neatly into the buffer
719 * size so we never expect to see a report split
720 * between the beginning and end of the buffer.
722 * Given the initial alignment check a misalignment
723 * here would imply a driver bug that would result
726 if (WARN_ON((OA_BUFFER_SIZE - head) < report_size)) {
727 DRM_ERROR("Spurious OA head ptr: non-integral report offset\n");
732 * The reason field includes flags identifying what
733 * triggered this specific report (mostly timer
734 * triggered or e.g. due to a context switch).
736 * This field is never expected to be zero so we can
737 * check that the report isn't invalid before copying
740 reason = ((report32[0] >> OAREPORT_REASON_SHIFT) &
741 OAREPORT_REASON_MASK);
743 if (__ratelimit(&dev_priv->perf.spurious_report_rs))
744 DRM_NOTE("Skipping spurious, invalid OA report\n");
748 ctx_id = report32[2] & stream->specific_ctx_id_mask;
751 * Squash whatever is in the CTX_ID field if it's marked as
752 * invalid to be sure we avoid false-positive, single-context
755 * Note: that we don't clear the valid_ctx_bit so userspace can
756 * understand that the ID has been squashed by the kernel.
758 if (!(report32[0] & dev_priv->perf.gen8_valid_ctx_bit))
759 ctx_id = report32[2] = INVALID_CTX_ID;
762 * NB: For Gen 8 the OA unit no longer supports clock gating
763 * off for a specific context and the kernel can't securely
764 * stop the counters from updating as system-wide / global
767 * Automatic reports now include a context ID so reports can be
768 * filtered on the cpu but it's not worth trying to
769 * automatically subtract/hide counter progress for other
770 * contexts while filtering since we can't stop userspace
771 * issuing MI_REPORT_PERF_COUNT commands which would still
772 * provide a side-band view of the real values.
774 * To allow userspace (such as Mesa/GL_INTEL_performance_query)
775 * to normalize counters for a single filtered context then it
776 * needs be forwarded bookend context-switch reports so that it
777 * can track switches in between MI_REPORT_PERF_COUNT commands
778 * and can itself subtract/ignore the progress of counters
779 * associated with other contexts. Note that the hardware
780 * automatically triggers reports when switching to a new
781 * context which are tagged with the ID of the newly active
782 * context. To avoid the complexity (and likely fragility) of
783 * reading ahead while parsing reports to try and minimize
784 * forwarding redundant context switch reports (i.e. between
785 * other, unrelated contexts) we simply elect to forward them
788 * We don't rely solely on the reason field to identify context
789 * switches since it's not-uncommon for periodic samples to
790 * identify a switch before any 'context switch' report.
792 if (!dev_priv->perf.exclusive_stream->ctx ||
793 stream->specific_ctx_id == ctx_id ||
794 stream->oa_buffer.last_ctx_id == stream->specific_ctx_id ||
795 reason & OAREPORT_REASON_CTX_SWITCH) {
798 * While filtering for a single context we avoid
799 * leaking the IDs of other contexts.
801 if (dev_priv->perf.exclusive_stream->ctx &&
802 stream->specific_ctx_id != ctx_id) {
803 report32[2] = INVALID_CTX_ID;
806 ret = append_oa_sample(stream, buf, count, offset,
811 stream->oa_buffer.last_ctx_id = ctx_id;
815 * The above reason field sanity check is based on
816 * the assumption that the OA buffer is initially
817 * zeroed and we reset the field after copying so the
818 * check is still meaningful once old reports start
824 if (start_offset != *offset) {
825 spin_lock_irqsave(&stream->oa_buffer.ptr_lock, flags);
828 * We removed the gtt_offset for the copy loop above, indexing
829 * relative to oa_buf_base so put back here...
833 I915_WRITE(GEN8_OAHEADPTR, head & GEN8_OAHEADPTR_MASK);
834 stream->oa_buffer.head = head;
836 spin_unlock_irqrestore(&stream->oa_buffer.ptr_lock, flags);
843 * gen8_oa_read - copy status records then buffered OA reports
844 * @stream: An i915-perf stream opened for OA metrics
845 * @buf: destination buffer given by userspace
846 * @count: the number of bytes userspace wants to read
847 * @offset: (inout): the current position for writing into @buf
849 * Checks OA unit status registers and if necessary appends corresponding
850 * status records for userspace (such as for a buffer full condition) and then
851 * initiate appending any buffered OA reports.
853 * Updates @offset according to the number of bytes successfully copied into
854 * the userspace buffer.
856 * NB: some data may be successfully copied to the userspace buffer
857 * even if an error is returned, and this is reflected in the
860 * Returns: zero on success or a negative error code
862 static int gen8_oa_read(struct i915_perf_stream *stream,
867 struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv = stream->dev_priv;
871 if (WARN_ON(!stream->oa_buffer.vaddr))
874 oastatus = I915_READ(GEN8_OASTATUS);
877 * We treat OABUFFER_OVERFLOW as a significant error:
879 * Although theoretically we could handle this more gracefully
880 * sometimes, some Gens don't correctly suppress certain
881 * automatically triggered reports in this condition and so we
882 * have to assume that old reports are now being trampled
885 * Considering how we don't currently give userspace control
886 * over the OA buffer size and always configure a large 16MB
887 * buffer, then a buffer overflow does anyway likely indicate
888 * that something has gone quite badly wrong.
890 if (oastatus & GEN8_OASTATUS_OABUFFER_OVERFLOW) {
891 ret = append_oa_status(stream, buf, count, offset,
892 DRM_I915_PERF_RECORD_OA_BUFFER_LOST);
896 DRM_DEBUG("OA buffer overflow (exponent = %d): force restart\n",
897 stream->period_exponent);
899 dev_priv->perf.ops.oa_disable(stream);
900 dev_priv->perf.ops.oa_enable(stream);
903 * Note: .oa_enable() is expected to re-init the oabuffer and
904 * reset GEN8_OASTATUS for us
906 oastatus = I915_READ(GEN8_OASTATUS);
909 if (oastatus & GEN8_OASTATUS_REPORT_LOST) {
910 ret = append_oa_status(stream, buf, count, offset,
911 DRM_I915_PERF_RECORD_OA_REPORT_LOST);
914 I915_WRITE(GEN8_OASTATUS,
915 oastatus & ~GEN8_OASTATUS_REPORT_LOST);
918 return gen8_append_oa_reports(stream, buf, count, offset);
922 * Copies all buffered OA reports into userspace read() buffer.
923 * @stream: An i915-perf stream opened for OA metrics
924 * @buf: destination buffer given by userspace
925 * @count: the number of bytes userspace wants to read
926 * @offset: (inout): the current position for writing into @buf
928 * Notably any error condition resulting in a short read (-%ENOSPC or
929 * -%EFAULT) will be returned even though one or more records may
930 * have been successfully copied. In this case it's up to the caller
931 * to decide if the error should be squashed before returning to
934 * Note: reports are consumed from the head, and appended to the
935 * tail, so the tail chases the head?... If you think that's mad
936 * and back-to-front you're not alone, but this follows the
937 * Gen PRM naming convention.
939 * Returns: 0 on success, negative error code on failure.
941 static int gen7_append_oa_reports(struct i915_perf_stream *stream,
946 struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv = stream->dev_priv;
947 int report_size = stream->oa_buffer.format_size;
948 u8 *oa_buf_base = stream->oa_buffer.vaddr;
949 u32 gtt_offset = i915_ggtt_offset(stream->oa_buffer.vma);
950 u32 mask = (OA_BUFFER_SIZE - 1);
951 size_t start_offset = *offset;
953 unsigned int aged_tail_idx;
958 if (WARN_ON(!stream->enabled))
961 spin_lock_irqsave(&stream->oa_buffer.ptr_lock, flags);
963 head = stream->oa_buffer.head;
964 aged_tail_idx = stream->oa_buffer.aged_tail_idx;
965 tail = stream->oa_buffer.tails[aged_tail_idx].offset;
967 spin_unlock_irqrestore(&stream->oa_buffer.ptr_lock, flags);
969 /* An invalid tail pointer here means we're still waiting for the poll
970 * hrtimer callback to give us a pointer
972 if (tail == INVALID_TAIL_PTR)
975 /* NB: oa_buffer.head/tail include the gtt_offset which we don't want
976 * while indexing relative to oa_buf_base.
981 /* An out of bounds or misaligned head or tail pointer implies a driver
982 * bug since we validate + align the tail pointers we read from the
983 * hardware and we are in full control of the head pointer which should
984 * only be incremented by multiples of the report size (notably also
985 * all a power of two).
987 if (WARN_ONCE(head > OA_BUFFER_SIZE || head % report_size ||
988 tail > OA_BUFFER_SIZE || tail % report_size,
989 "Inconsistent OA buffer pointers: head = %u, tail = %u\n",
995 (taken = OA_TAKEN(tail, head));
996 head = (head + report_size) & mask) {
997 u8 *report = oa_buf_base + head;
998 u32 *report32 = (void *)report;
1000 /* All the report sizes factor neatly into the buffer
1001 * size so we never expect to see a report split
1002 * between the beginning and end of the buffer.
1004 * Given the initial alignment check a misalignment
1005 * here would imply a driver bug that would result
1008 if (WARN_ON((OA_BUFFER_SIZE - head) < report_size)) {
1009 DRM_ERROR("Spurious OA head ptr: non-integral report offset\n");
1013 /* The report-ID field for periodic samples includes
1014 * some undocumented flags related to what triggered
1015 * the report and is never expected to be zero so we
1016 * can check that the report isn't invalid before
1017 * copying it to userspace...
1019 if (report32[0] == 0) {
1020 if (__ratelimit(&dev_priv->perf.spurious_report_rs))
1021 DRM_NOTE("Skipping spurious, invalid OA report\n");
1025 ret = append_oa_sample(stream, buf, count, offset, report);
1029 /* The above report-id field sanity check is based on
1030 * the assumption that the OA buffer is initially
1031 * zeroed and we reset the field after copying so the
1032 * check is still meaningful once old reports start
1033 * being overwritten.
1038 if (start_offset != *offset) {
1039 spin_lock_irqsave(&stream->oa_buffer.ptr_lock, flags);
1041 /* We removed the gtt_offset for the copy loop above, indexing
1042 * relative to oa_buf_base so put back here...
1046 I915_WRITE(GEN7_OASTATUS2,
1047 ((head & GEN7_OASTATUS2_HEAD_MASK) |
1048 GEN7_OASTATUS2_MEM_SELECT_GGTT));
1049 stream->oa_buffer.head = head;
1051 spin_unlock_irqrestore(&stream->oa_buffer.ptr_lock, flags);
1058 * gen7_oa_read - copy status records then buffered OA reports
1059 * @stream: An i915-perf stream opened for OA metrics
1060 * @buf: destination buffer given by userspace
1061 * @count: the number of bytes userspace wants to read
1062 * @offset: (inout): the current position for writing into @buf
1064 * Checks Gen 7 specific OA unit status registers and if necessary appends
1065 * corresponding status records for userspace (such as for a buffer full
1066 * condition) and then initiate appending any buffered OA reports.
1068 * Updates @offset according to the number of bytes successfully copied into
1069 * the userspace buffer.
1071 * Returns: zero on success or a negative error code
1073 static int gen7_oa_read(struct i915_perf_stream *stream,
1078 struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv = stream->dev_priv;
1082 if (WARN_ON(!stream->oa_buffer.vaddr))
1085 oastatus1 = I915_READ(GEN7_OASTATUS1);
1087 /* XXX: On Haswell we don't have a safe way to clear oastatus1
1088 * bits while the OA unit is enabled (while the tail pointer
1089 * may be updated asynchronously) so we ignore status bits
1090 * that have already been reported to userspace.
1092 oastatus1 &= ~dev_priv->perf.gen7_latched_oastatus1;
1094 /* We treat OABUFFER_OVERFLOW as a significant error:
1096 * - The status can be interpreted to mean that the buffer is
1097 * currently full (with a higher precedence than OA_TAKEN()
1098 * which will start to report a near-empty buffer after an
1099 * overflow) but it's awkward that we can't clear the status
1100 * on Haswell, so without a reset we won't be able to catch
1103 * - Since it also implies the HW has started overwriting old
1104 * reports it may also affect our sanity checks for invalid
1105 * reports when copying to userspace that assume new reports
1106 * are being written to cleared memory.
1108 * - In the future we may want to introduce a flight recorder
1109 * mode where the driver will automatically maintain a safe
1110 * guard band between head/tail, avoiding this overflow
1111 * condition, but we avoid the added driver complexity for
1114 if (unlikely(oastatus1 & GEN7_OASTATUS1_OABUFFER_OVERFLOW)) {
1115 ret = append_oa_status(stream, buf, count, offset,
1116 DRM_I915_PERF_RECORD_OA_BUFFER_LOST);
1120 DRM_DEBUG("OA buffer overflow (exponent = %d): force restart\n",
1121 stream->period_exponent);
1123 dev_priv->perf.ops.oa_disable(stream);
1124 dev_priv->perf.ops.oa_enable(stream);
1126 oastatus1 = I915_READ(GEN7_OASTATUS1);
1129 if (unlikely(oastatus1 & GEN7_OASTATUS1_REPORT_LOST)) {
1130 ret = append_oa_status(stream, buf, count, offset,
1131 DRM_I915_PERF_RECORD_OA_REPORT_LOST);
1134 dev_priv->perf.gen7_latched_oastatus1 |=
1135 GEN7_OASTATUS1_REPORT_LOST;
1138 return gen7_append_oa_reports(stream, buf, count, offset);
1142 * i915_oa_wait_unlocked - handles blocking IO until OA data available
1143 * @stream: An i915-perf stream opened for OA metrics
1145 * Called when userspace tries to read() from a blocking stream FD opened
1146 * for OA metrics. It waits until the hrtimer callback finds a non-empty
1147 * OA buffer and wakes us.
1149 * Note: it's acceptable to have this return with some false positives
1150 * since any subsequent read handling will return -EAGAIN if there isn't
1151 * really data ready for userspace yet.
1153 * Returns: zero on success or a negative error code
1155 static int i915_oa_wait_unlocked(struct i915_perf_stream *stream)
1157 /* We would wait indefinitely if periodic sampling is not enabled */
1158 if (!stream->periodic)
1161 return wait_event_interruptible(stream->poll_wq,
1162 oa_buffer_check_unlocked(stream));
1166 * i915_oa_poll_wait - call poll_wait() for an OA stream poll()
1167 * @stream: An i915-perf stream opened for OA metrics
1168 * @file: An i915 perf stream file
1169 * @wait: poll() state table
1171 * For handling userspace polling on an i915 perf stream opened for OA metrics,
1172 * this starts a poll_wait with the wait queue that our hrtimer callback wakes
1173 * when it sees data ready to read in the circular OA buffer.
1175 static void i915_oa_poll_wait(struct i915_perf_stream *stream,
1179 poll_wait(file, &stream->poll_wq, wait);
1183 * i915_oa_read - just calls through to &i915_oa_ops->read
1184 * @stream: An i915-perf stream opened for OA metrics
1185 * @buf: destination buffer given by userspace
1186 * @count: the number of bytes userspace wants to read
1187 * @offset: (inout): the current position for writing into @buf
1189 * Updates @offset according to the number of bytes successfully copied into
1190 * the userspace buffer.
1192 * Returns: zero on success or a negative error code
1194 static int i915_oa_read(struct i915_perf_stream *stream,
1199 struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv = stream->dev_priv;
1201 return dev_priv->perf.ops.read(stream, buf, count, offset);
1204 static struct intel_context *oa_pin_context(struct i915_perf_stream *stream)
1206 struct i915_gem_engines_iter it;
1207 struct drm_i915_private *i915 = stream->dev_priv;
1208 struct i915_gem_context *ctx = stream->ctx;
1209 struct intel_context *ce;
1212 err = i915_mutex_lock_interruptible(&i915->drm);
1214 return ERR_PTR(err);
1216 for_each_gem_engine(ce, i915_gem_context_lock_engines(ctx), it) {
1217 if (ce->engine->class != RENDER_CLASS)
1221 * As the ID is the gtt offset of the context's vma we
1222 * pin the vma to ensure the ID remains fixed.
1224 err = intel_context_pin(ce);
1226 stream->pinned_ctx = ce;
1230 i915_gem_context_unlock_engines(ctx);
1232 mutex_unlock(&i915->drm.struct_mutex);
1234 return ERR_PTR(err);
1236 return stream->pinned_ctx;
1240 * oa_get_render_ctx_id - determine and hold ctx hw id
1241 * @stream: An i915-perf stream opened for OA metrics
1243 * Determine the render context hw id, and ensure it remains fixed for the
1244 * lifetime of the stream. This ensures that we don't have to worry about
1245 * updating the context ID in OACONTROL on the fly.
1247 * Returns: zero on success or a negative error code
1249 static int oa_get_render_ctx_id(struct i915_perf_stream *stream)
1251 struct drm_i915_private *i915 = stream->dev_priv;
1252 struct intel_context *ce;
1254 ce = oa_pin_context(stream);
1258 switch (INTEL_GEN(i915)) {
1261 * On Haswell we don't do any post processing of the reports
1262 * and don't need to use the mask.
1264 stream->specific_ctx_id = i915_ggtt_offset(ce->state);
1265 stream->specific_ctx_id_mask = 0;
1272 if (USES_GUC_SUBMISSION(i915)) {
1274 * When using GuC, the context descriptor we write in
1275 * i915 is read by GuC and rewritten before it's
1276 * actually written into the hardware. The LRCA is
1277 * what is put into the context id field of the
1278 * context descriptor by GuC. Because it's aligned to
1279 * a page, the lower 12bits are always at 0 and
1280 * dropped by GuC. They won't be part of the context
1281 * ID in the OA reports, so squash those lower bits.
1283 stream->specific_ctx_id =
1284 lower_32_bits(ce->lrc_desc) >> 12;
1287 * GuC uses the top bit to signal proxy submission, so
1290 stream->specific_ctx_id_mask =
1291 (1U << (GEN8_CTX_ID_WIDTH - 1)) - 1;
1293 stream->specific_ctx_id_mask =
1294 (1U << GEN8_CTX_ID_WIDTH) - 1;
1295 stream->specific_ctx_id =
1296 upper_32_bits(ce->lrc_desc);
1297 stream->specific_ctx_id &=
1298 stream->specific_ctx_id_mask;
1303 stream->specific_ctx_id_mask =
1304 ((1U << GEN11_SW_CTX_ID_WIDTH) - 1) << (GEN11_SW_CTX_ID_SHIFT - 32) |
1305 ((1U << GEN11_ENGINE_INSTANCE_WIDTH) - 1) << (GEN11_ENGINE_INSTANCE_SHIFT - 32) |
1306 ((1 << GEN11_ENGINE_CLASS_WIDTH) - 1) << (GEN11_ENGINE_CLASS_SHIFT - 32);
1307 stream->specific_ctx_id = upper_32_bits(ce->lrc_desc);
1308 stream->specific_ctx_id &=
1309 stream->specific_ctx_id_mask;
1314 MISSING_CASE(INTEL_GEN(i915));
1317 DRM_DEBUG_DRIVER("filtering on ctx_id=0x%x ctx_id_mask=0x%x\n",
1318 stream->specific_ctx_id,
1319 stream->specific_ctx_id_mask);
1325 * oa_put_render_ctx_id - counterpart to oa_get_render_ctx_id releases hold
1326 * @stream: An i915-perf stream opened for OA metrics
1328 * In case anything needed doing to ensure the context HW ID would remain valid
1329 * for the lifetime of the stream, then that can be undone here.
1331 static void oa_put_render_ctx_id(struct i915_perf_stream *stream)
1333 struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv = stream->dev_priv;
1334 struct intel_context *ce;
1336 stream->specific_ctx_id = INVALID_CTX_ID;
1337 stream->specific_ctx_id_mask = 0;
1339 ce = fetch_and_zero(&stream->pinned_ctx);
1341 mutex_lock(&dev_priv->drm.struct_mutex);
1342 intel_context_unpin(ce);
1343 mutex_unlock(&dev_priv->drm.struct_mutex);
1348 free_oa_buffer(struct i915_perf_stream *stream)
1350 struct drm_i915_private *i915 = stream->dev_priv;
1352 mutex_lock(&i915->drm.struct_mutex);
1354 i915_vma_unpin_and_release(&stream->oa_buffer.vma,
1355 I915_VMA_RELEASE_MAP);
1357 mutex_unlock(&i915->drm.struct_mutex);
1359 stream->oa_buffer.vaddr = NULL;
1362 static void i915_oa_stream_destroy(struct i915_perf_stream *stream)
1364 struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv = stream->dev_priv;
1366 BUG_ON(stream != dev_priv->perf.exclusive_stream);
1369 * Unset exclusive_stream first, it will be checked while disabling
1370 * the metric set on gen8+.
1372 mutex_lock(&dev_priv->drm.struct_mutex);
1373 dev_priv->perf.exclusive_stream = NULL;
1374 dev_priv->perf.ops.disable_metric_set(stream);
1375 mutex_unlock(&dev_priv->drm.struct_mutex);
1377 free_oa_buffer(stream);
1379 intel_uncore_forcewake_put(&dev_priv->uncore, FORCEWAKE_ALL);
1380 intel_runtime_pm_put(&dev_priv->runtime_pm, stream->wakeref);
1383 oa_put_render_ctx_id(stream);
1385 put_oa_config(dev_priv, stream->oa_config);
1387 if (dev_priv->perf.spurious_report_rs.missed) {
1388 DRM_NOTE("%d spurious OA report notices suppressed due to ratelimiting\n",
1389 dev_priv->perf.spurious_report_rs.missed);
1393 static void gen7_init_oa_buffer(struct i915_perf_stream *stream)
1395 struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv = stream->dev_priv;
1396 u32 gtt_offset = i915_ggtt_offset(stream->oa_buffer.vma);
1397 unsigned long flags;
1399 spin_lock_irqsave(&stream->oa_buffer.ptr_lock, flags);
1401 /* Pre-DevBDW: OABUFFER must be set with counters off,
1402 * before OASTATUS1, but after OASTATUS2
1404 I915_WRITE(GEN7_OASTATUS2,
1405 gtt_offset | GEN7_OASTATUS2_MEM_SELECT_GGTT); /* head */
1406 stream->oa_buffer.head = gtt_offset;
1408 I915_WRITE(GEN7_OABUFFER, gtt_offset);
1410 I915_WRITE(GEN7_OASTATUS1, gtt_offset | OABUFFER_SIZE_16M); /* tail */
1412 /* Mark that we need updated tail pointers to read from... */
1413 stream->oa_buffer.tails[0].offset = INVALID_TAIL_PTR;
1414 stream->oa_buffer.tails[1].offset = INVALID_TAIL_PTR;
1416 spin_unlock_irqrestore(&stream->oa_buffer.ptr_lock, flags);
1418 /* On Haswell we have to track which OASTATUS1 flags we've
1419 * already seen since they can't be cleared while periodic
1420 * sampling is enabled.
1422 dev_priv->perf.gen7_latched_oastatus1 = 0;
1424 /* NB: although the OA buffer will initially be allocated
1425 * zeroed via shmfs (and so this memset is redundant when
1426 * first allocating), we may re-init the OA buffer, either
1427 * when re-enabling a stream or in error/reset paths.
1429 * The reason we clear the buffer for each re-init is for the
1430 * sanity check in gen7_append_oa_reports() that looks at the
1431 * report-id field to make sure it's non-zero which relies on
1432 * the assumption that new reports are being written to zeroed
1435 memset(stream->oa_buffer.vaddr, 0, OA_BUFFER_SIZE);
1437 /* Maybe make ->pollin per-stream state if we support multiple
1438 * concurrent streams in the future.
1440 stream->pollin = false;
1443 static void gen8_init_oa_buffer(struct i915_perf_stream *stream)
1445 struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv = stream->dev_priv;
1446 u32 gtt_offset = i915_ggtt_offset(stream->oa_buffer.vma);
1447 unsigned long flags;
1449 spin_lock_irqsave(&stream->oa_buffer.ptr_lock, flags);
1451 I915_WRITE(GEN8_OASTATUS, 0);
1452 I915_WRITE(GEN8_OAHEADPTR, gtt_offset);
1453 stream->oa_buffer.head = gtt_offset;
1455 I915_WRITE(GEN8_OABUFFER_UDW, 0);
1460 * "This MMIO must be set before the OATAILPTR
1461 * register and after the OAHEADPTR register. This is
1462 * to enable proper functionality of the overflow
1465 I915_WRITE(GEN8_OABUFFER, gtt_offset |
1466 OABUFFER_SIZE_16M | GEN8_OABUFFER_MEM_SELECT_GGTT);
1467 I915_WRITE(GEN8_OATAILPTR, gtt_offset & GEN8_OATAILPTR_MASK);
1469 /* Mark that we need updated tail pointers to read from... */
1470 stream->oa_buffer.tails[0].offset = INVALID_TAIL_PTR;
1471 stream->oa_buffer.tails[1].offset = INVALID_TAIL_PTR;
1474 * Reset state used to recognise context switches, affecting which
1475 * reports we will forward to userspace while filtering for a single
1478 stream->oa_buffer.last_ctx_id = INVALID_CTX_ID;
1480 spin_unlock_irqrestore(&stream->oa_buffer.ptr_lock, flags);
1483 * NB: although the OA buffer will initially be allocated
1484 * zeroed via shmfs (and so this memset is redundant when
1485 * first allocating), we may re-init the OA buffer, either
1486 * when re-enabling a stream or in error/reset paths.
1488 * The reason we clear the buffer for each re-init is for the
1489 * sanity check in gen8_append_oa_reports() that looks at the
1490 * reason field to make sure it's non-zero which relies on
1491 * the assumption that new reports are being written to zeroed
1494 memset(stream->oa_buffer.vaddr, 0, OA_BUFFER_SIZE);
1497 * Maybe make ->pollin per-stream state if we support multiple
1498 * concurrent streams in the future.
1500 stream->pollin = false;
1503 static int alloc_oa_buffer(struct i915_perf_stream *stream)
1505 struct drm_i915_gem_object *bo;
1506 struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv = stream->dev_priv;
1507 struct i915_vma *vma;
1510 if (WARN_ON(stream->oa_buffer.vma))
1513 ret = i915_mutex_lock_interruptible(&dev_priv->drm);
1517 BUILD_BUG_ON_NOT_POWER_OF_2(OA_BUFFER_SIZE);
1518 BUILD_BUG_ON(OA_BUFFER_SIZE < SZ_128K || OA_BUFFER_SIZE > SZ_16M);
1520 bo = i915_gem_object_create_shmem(dev_priv, OA_BUFFER_SIZE);
1522 DRM_ERROR("Failed to allocate OA buffer\n");
1527 i915_gem_object_set_cache_coherency(bo, I915_CACHE_LLC);
1529 /* PreHSW required 512K alignment, HSW requires 16M */
1530 vma = i915_gem_object_ggtt_pin(bo, NULL, 0, SZ_16M, 0);
1535 stream->oa_buffer.vma = vma;
1537 stream->oa_buffer.vaddr =
1538 i915_gem_object_pin_map(bo, I915_MAP_WB);
1539 if (IS_ERR(stream->oa_buffer.vaddr)) {
1540 ret = PTR_ERR(stream->oa_buffer.vaddr);
1544 DRM_DEBUG_DRIVER("OA Buffer initialized, gtt offset = 0x%x, vaddr = %p\n",
1545 i915_ggtt_offset(stream->oa_buffer.vma),
1546 stream->oa_buffer.vaddr);
1551 __i915_vma_unpin(vma);
1554 i915_gem_object_put(bo);
1556 stream->oa_buffer.vaddr = NULL;
1557 stream->oa_buffer.vma = NULL;
1560 mutex_unlock(&dev_priv->drm.struct_mutex);
1564 static void config_oa_regs(struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv,
1565 const struct i915_oa_reg *regs,
1570 for (i = 0; i < n_regs; i++) {
1571 const struct i915_oa_reg *reg = regs + i;
1573 I915_WRITE(reg->addr, reg->value);
1577 static void delay_after_mux(void)
1580 * It apparently takes a fairly long time for a new MUX
1581 * configuration to be be applied after these register writes.
1582 * This delay duration was derived empirically based on the
1583 * render_basic config but hopefully it covers the maximum
1584 * configuration latency.
1586 * As a fallback, the checks in _append_oa_reports() to skip
1587 * invalid OA reports do also seem to work to discard reports
1588 * generated before this config has completed - albeit not
1591 * Unfortunately this is essentially a magic number, since we
1592 * don't currently know of a reliable mechanism for predicting
1593 * how long the MUX config will take to apply and besides
1594 * seeing invalid reports we don't know of a reliable way to
1595 * explicitly check that the MUX config has landed.
1597 * It's even possible we've miss characterized the underlying
1598 * problem - it just seems like the simplest explanation why
1599 * a delay at this location would mitigate any invalid reports.
1601 usleep_range(15000, 20000);
1604 static int hsw_enable_metric_set(struct i915_perf_stream *stream)
1606 struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv = stream->dev_priv;
1607 const struct i915_oa_config *oa_config = stream->oa_config;
1612 * OA unit is using “crclk” for its functionality. When trunk
1613 * level clock gating takes place, OA clock would be gated,
1614 * unable to count the events from non-render clock domain.
1615 * Render clock gating must be disabled when OA is enabled to
1616 * count the events from non-render domain. Unit level clock
1617 * gating for RCS should also be disabled.
1619 I915_WRITE(GEN7_MISCCPCTL, (I915_READ(GEN7_MISCCPCTL) &
1620 ~GEN7_DOP_CLOCK_GATE_ENABLE));
1621 I915_WRITE(GEN6_UCGCTL1, (I915_READ(GEN6_UCGCTL1) |
1622 GEN6_CSUNIT_CLOCK_GATE_DISABLE));
1624 config_oa_regs(dev_priv, oa_config->mux_regs, oa_config->mux_regs_len);
1627 config_oa_regs(dev_priv, oa_config->b_counter_regs,
1628 oa_config->b_counter_regs_len);
1633 static void hsw_disable_metric_set(struct i915_perf_stream *stream)
1635 struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv = stream->dev_priv;
1637 I915_WRITE(GEN6_UCGCTL1, (I915_READ(GEN6_UCGCTL1) &
1638 ~GEN6_CSUNIT_CLOCK_GATE_DISABLE));
1639 I915_WRITE(GEN7_MISCCPCTL, (I915_READ(GEN7_MISCCPCTL) |
1640 GEN7_DOP_CLOCK_GATE_ENABLE));
1642 I915_WRITE(GDT_CHICKEN_BITS, (I915_READ(GDT_CHICKEN_BITS) &
1646 static u32 oa_config_flex_reg(const struct i915_oa_config *oa_config,
1649 u32 mmio = i915_mmio_reg_offset(reg);
1653 * This arbitrary default will select the 'EU FPU0 Pipeline
1654 * Active' event. In the future it's anticipated that there
1655 * will be an explicit 'No Event' we can select, but not yet...
1660 for (i = 0; i < oa_config->flex_regs_len; i++) {
1661 if (i915_mmio_reg_offset(oa_config->flex_regs[i].addr) == mmio)
1662 return oa_config->flex_regs[i].value;
1668 * NB: It must always remain pointer safe to run this even if the OA unit
1669 * has been disabled.
1671 * It's fine to put out-of-date values into these per-context registers
1672 * in the case that the OA unit has been disabled.
1675 gen8_update_reg_state_unlocked(struct i915_perf_stream *stream,
1676 struct intel_context *ce,
1678 const struct i915_oa_config *oa_config)
1680 struct drm_i915_private *i915 = ce->engine->i915;
1681 u32 ctx_oactxctrl = i915->perf.ctx_oactxctrl_offset;
1682 u32 ctx_flexeu0 = i915->perf.ctx_flexeu0_offset;
1683 /* The MMIO offsets for Flex EU registers aren't contiguous */
1684 i915_reg_t flex_regs[] = {
1695 CTX_REG(reg_state, ctx_oactxctrl, GEN8_OACTXCONTROL,
1696 (stream->period_exponent << GEN8_OA_TIMER_PERIOD_SHIFT) |
1697 (stream->periodic ? GEN8_OA_TIMER_ENABLE : 0) |
1698 GEN8_OA_COUNTER_RESUME);
1700 for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(flex_regs); i++) {
1701 CTX_REG(reg_state, ctx_flexeu0 + i * 2, flex_regs[i],
1702 oa_config_flex_reg(oa_config, flex_regs[i]));
1706 CTX_R_PWR_CLK_STATE, GEN8_R_PWR_CLK_STATE,
1707 intel_sseu_make_rpcs(i915, &ce->sseu));
1717 gen8_store_flex(struct i915_request *rq,
1718 struct intel_context *ce,
1719 const struct flex *flex, unsigned int count)
1724 cs = intel_ring_begin(rq, 4 * count);
1728 offset = i915_ggtt_offset(ce->state) + LRC_STATE_PN * PAGE_SIZE;
1730 *cs++ = MI_STORE_DWORD_IMM_GEN4 | MI_USE_GGTT;
1731 *cs++ = offset + (flex->offset + 1) * sizeof(u32);
1733 *cs++ = flex->value;
1734 } while (flex++, --count);
1736 intel_ring_advance(rq, cs);
1742 gen8_load_flex(struct i915_request *rq,
1743 struct intel_context *ce,
1744 const struct flex *flex, unsigned int count)
1748 GEM_BUG_ON(!count || count > 63);
1750 cs = intel_ring_begin(rq, 2 * count + 2);
1754 *cs++ = MI_LOAD_REGISTER_IMM(count);
1756 *cs++ = i915_mmio_reg_offset(flex->reg);
1757 *cs++ = flex->value;
1758 } while (flex++, --count);
1761 intel_ring_advance(rq, cs);
1766 static int gen8_modify_context(struct intel_context *ce,
1767 const struct flex *flex, unsigned int count)
1769 struct i915_request *rq;
1772 lockdep_assert_held(&ce->pin_mutex);
1774 rq = i915_request_create(ce->engine->kernel_context);
1778 /* Serialise with the remote context */
1779 err = intel_context_prepare_remote_request(ce, rq);
1781 err = gen8_store_flex(rq, ce, flex, count);
1783 i915_request_add(rq);
1787 static int gen8_modify_self(struct intel_context *ce,
1788 const struct flex *flex, unsigned int count)
1790 struct i915_request *rq;
1793 rq = i915_request_create(ce);
1797 err = gen8_load_flex(rq, ce, flex, count);
1799 i915_request_add(rq);
1803 static int gen8_configure_context(struct i915_gem_context *ctx,
1804 struct flex *flex, unsigned int count)
1806 struct i915_gem_engines_iter it;
1807 struct intel_context *ce;
1810 for_each_gem_engine(ce, i915_gem_context_lock_engines(ctx), it) {
1811 GEM_BUG_ON(ce == ce->engine->kernel_context);
1813 if (ce->engine->class != RENDER_CLASS)
1816 err = intel_context_lock_pinned(ce);
1820 flex->value = intel_sseu_make_rpcs(ctx->i915, &ce->sseu);
1822 /* Otherwise OA settings will be set upon first use */
1823 if (intel_context_is_pinned(ce))
1824 err = gen8_modify_context(ce, flex, count);
1826 intel_context_unlock_pinned(ce);
1830 i915_gem_context_unlock_engines(ctx);
1836 * Manages updating the per-context aspects of the OA stream
1837 * configuration across all contexts.
1839 * The awkward consideration here is that OACTXCONTROL controls the
1840 * exponent for periodic sampling which is primarily used for system
1841 * wide profiling where we'd like a consistent sampling period even in
1842 * the face of context switches.
1844 * Our approach of updating the register state context (as opposed to
1845 * say using a workaround batch buffer) ensures that the hardware
1846 * won't automatically reload an out-of-date timer exponent even
1847 * transiently before a WA BB could be parsed.
1849 * This function needs to:
1850 * - Ensure the currently running context's per-context OA state is
1852 * - Ensure that all existing contexts will have the correct per-context
1853 * OA state if they are scheduled for use.
1854 * - Ensure any new contexts will be initialized with the correct
1855 * per-context OA state.
1857 * Note: it's only the RCS/Render context that has any OA state.
1859 static int gen8_configure_all_contexts(struct i915_perf_stream *stream,
1860 const struct i915_oa_config *oa_config)
1862 struct drm_i915_private *i915 = stream->dev_priv;
1863 /* The MMIO offsets for Flex EU registers aren't contiguous */
1864 const u32 ctx_flexeu0 = i915->perf.ctx_flexeu0_offset;
1865 #define ctx_flexeuN(N) (ctx_flexeu0 + 2 * (N))
1866 struct flex regs[] = {
1868 GEN8_R_PWR_CLK_STATE,
1869 CTX_R_PWR_CLK_STATE,
1873 i915->perf.ctx_oactxctrl_offset,
1874 ((stream->period_exponent << GEN8_OA_TIMER_PERIOD_SHIFT) |
1875 (stream->periodic ? GEN8_OA_TIMER_ENABLE : 0) |
1876 GEN8_OA_COUNTER_RESUME)
1878 { EU_PERF_CNTL0, ctx_flexeuN(0) },
1879 { EU_PERF_CNTL1, ctx_flexeuN(1) },
1880 { EU_PERF_CNTL2, ctx_flexeuN(2) },
1881 { EU_PERF_CNTL3, ctx_flexeuN(3) },
1882 { EU_PERF_CNTL4, ctx_flexeuN(4) },
1883 { EU_PERF_CNTL5, ctx_flexeuN(5) },
1884 { EU_PERF_CNTL6, ctx_flexeuN(6) },
1887 struct intel_engine_cs *engine;
1888 struct i915_gem_context *ctx;
1891 for (i = 2; i < ARRAY_SIZE(regs); i++)
1892 regs[i].value = oa_config_flex_reg(oa_config, regs[i].reg);
1894 lockdep_assert_held(&i915->drm.struct_mutex);
1897 * The OA register config is setup through the context image. This image
1898 * might be written to by the GPU on context switch (in particular on
1899 * lite-restore). This means we can't safely update a context's image,
1900 * if this context is scheduled/submitted to run on the GPU.
1902 * We could emit the OA register config through the batch buffer but
1903 * this might leave small interval of time where the OA unit is
1904 * configured at an invalid sampling period.
1906 * Note that since we emit all requests from a single ring, there
1907 * is still an implicit global barrier here that may cause a high
1908 * priority context to wait for an otherwise independent low priority
1909 * context. Contexts idle at the time of reconfiguration are not
1910 * trapped behind the barrier.
1912 list_for_each_entry(ctx, &i915->contexts.list, link) {
1915 if (ctx == i915->kernel_context)
1918 err = gen8_configure_context(ctx, regs, ARRAY_SIZE(regs));
1924 * After updating all other contexts, we need to modify ourselves.
1925 * If we don't modify the kernel_context, we do not get events while
1928 for_each_uabi_engine(engine, i915) {
1929 struct intel_context *ce = engine->kernel_context;
1932 if (engine->class != RENDER_CLASS)
1935 regs[0].value = intel_sseu_make_rpcs(i915, &ce->sseu);
1937 err = gen8_modify_self(ce, regs, ARRAY_SIZE(regs));
1945 static int gen8_enable_metric_set(struct i915_perf_stream *stream)
1947 struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv = stream->dev_priv;
1948 const struct i915_oa_config *oa_config = stream->oa_config;
1952 * We disable slice/unslice clock ratio change reports on SKL since
1953 * they are too noisy. The HW generates a lot of redundant reports
1954 * where the ratio hasn't really changed causing a lot of redundant
1955 * work to processes and increasing the chances we'll hit buffer
1958 * Although we don't currently use the 'disable overrun' OABUFFER
1959 * feature it's worth noting that clock ratio reports have to be
1960 * disabled before considering to use that feature since the HW doesn't
1961 * correctly block these reports.
1963 * Currently none of the high-level metrics we have depend on knowing
1964 * this ratio to normalize.
1966 * Note: This register is not power context saved and restored, but
1967 * that's OK considering that we disable RC6 while the OA unit is
1970 * The _INCLUDE_CLK_RATIO bit allows the slice/unslice frequency to
1971 * be read back from automatically triggered reports, as part of the
1974 if (IS_GEN_RANGE(dev_priv, 9, 11)) {
1975 I915_WRITE(GEN8_OA_DEBUG,
1976 _MASKED_BIT_ENABLE(GEN9_OA_DEBUG_DISABLE_CLK_RATIO_REPORTS |
1977 GEN9_OA_DEBUG_INCLUDE_CLK_RATIO));
1981 * Update all contexts prior writing the mux configurations as we need
1982 * to make sure all slices/subslices are ON before writing to NOA
1985 ret = gen8_configure_all_contexts(stream, oa_config);
1989 config_oa_regs(dev_priv, oa_config->mux_regs, oa_config->mux_regs_len);
1992 config_oa_regs(dev_priv, oa_config->b_counter_regs,
1993 oa_config->b_counter_regs_len);
1998 static void gen8_disable_metric_set(struct i915_perf_stream *stream)
2000 struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv = stream->dev_priv;
2002 /* Reset all contexts' slices/subslices configurations. */
2003 gen8_configure_all_contexts(stream, NULL);
2005 I915_WRITE(GDT_CHICKEN_BITS, (I915_READ(GDT_CHICKEN_BITS) &
2009 static void gen10_disable_metric_set(struct i915_perf_stream *stream)
2011 struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv = stream->dev_priv;
2013 /* Reset all contexts' slices/subslices configurations. */
2014 gen8_configure_all_contexts(stream, NULL);
2016 /* Make sure we disable noa to save power. */
2017 I915_WRITE(RPM_CONFIG1,
2018 I915_READ(RPM_CONFIG1) & ~GEN10_GT_NOA_ENABLE);
2021 static void gen7_oa_enable(struct i915_perf_stream *stream)
2023 struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv = stream->dev_priv;
2024 struct i915_gem_context *ctx = stream->ctx;
2025 u32 ctx_id = stream->specific_ctx_id;
2026 bool periodic = stream->periodic;
2027 u32 period_exponent = stream->period_exponent;
2028 u32 report_format = stream->oa_buffer.format;
2031 * Reset buf pointers so we don't forward reports from before now.
2033 * Think carefully if considering trying to avoid this, since it
2034 * also ensures status flags and the buffer itself are cleared
2035 * in error paths, and we have checks for invalid reports based
2036 * on the assumption that certain fields are written to zeroed
2037 * memory which this helps maintains.
2039 gen7_init_oa_buffer(stream);
2041 I915_WRITE(GEN7_OACONTROL,
2042 (ctx_id & GEN7_OACONTROL_CTX_MASK) |
2044 GEN7_OACONTROL_TIMER_PERIOD_SHIFT) |
2045 (periodic ? GEN7_OACONTROL_TIMER_ENABLE : 0) |
2046 (report_format << GEN7_OACONTROL_FORMAT_SHIFT) |
2047 (ctx ? GEN7_OACONTROL_PER_CTX_ENABLE : 0) |
2048 GEN7_OACONTROL_ENABLE);
2051 static void gen8_oa_enable(struct i915_perf_stream *stream)
2053 struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv = stream->dev_priv;
2054 u32 report_format = stream->oa_buffer.format;
2057 * Reset buf pointers so we don't forward reports from before now.
2059 * Think carefully if considering trying to avoid this, since it
2060 * also ensures status flags and the buffer itself are cleared
2061 * in error paths, and we have checks for invalid reports based
2062 * on the assumption that certain fields are written to zeroed
2063 * memory which this helps maintains.
2065 gen8_init_oa_buffer(stream);
2068 * Note: we don't rely on the hardware to perform single context
2069 * filtering and instead filter on the cpu based on the context-id
2072 I915_WRITE(GEN8_OACONTROL, (report_format <<
2073 GEN8_OA_REPORT_FORMAT_SHIFT) |
2074 GEN8_OA_COUNTER_ENABLE);
2078 * i915_oa_stream_enable - handle `I915_PERF_IOCTL_ENABLE` for OA stream
2079 * @stream: An i915 perf stream opened for OA metrics
2081 * [Re]enables hardware periodic sampling according to the period configured
2082 * when opening the stream. This also starts a hrtimer that will periodically
2083 * check for data in the circular OA buffer for notifying userspace (e.g.
2084 * during a read() or poll()).
2086 static void i915_oa_stream_enable(struct i915_perf_stream *stream)
2088 struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv = stream->dev_priv;
2090 dev_priv->perf.ops.oa_enable(stream);
2092 if (stream->periodic)
2093 hrtimer_start(&stream->poll_check_timer,
2094 ns_to_ktime(POLL_PERIOD),
2095 HRTIMER_MODE_REL_PINNED);
2098 static void gen7_oa_disable(struct i915_perf_stream *stream)
2100 struct intel_uncore *uncore = &stream->dev_priv->uncore;
2102 intel_uncore_write(uncore, GEN7_OACONTROL, 0);
2103 if (intel_wait_for_register(uncore,
2104 GEN7_OACONTROL, GEN7_OACONTROL_ENABLE, 0,
2106 DRM_ERROR("wait for OA to be disabled timed out\n");
2109 static void gen8_oa_disable(struct i915_perf_stream *stream)
2111 struct intel_uncore *uncore = &stream->dev_priv->uncore;
2113 intel_uncore_write(uncore, GEN8_OACONTROL, 0);
2114 if (intel_wait_for_register(uncore,
2115 GEN8_OACONTROL, GEN8_OA_COUNTER_ENABLE, 0,
2117 DRM_ERROR("wait for OA to be disabled timed out\n");
2121 * i915_oa_stream_disable - handle `I915_PERF_IOCTL_DISABLE` for OA stream
2122 * @stream: An i915 perf stream opened for OA metrics
2124 * Stops the OA unit from periodically writing counter reports into the
2125 * circular OA buffer. This also stops the hrtimer that periodically checks for
2126 * data in the circular OA buffer, for notifying userspace.
2128 static void i915_oa_stream_disable(struct i915_perf_stream *stream)
2130 struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv = stream->dev_priv;
2132 dev_priv->perf.ops.oa_disable(stream);
2134 if (stream->periodic)
2135 hrtimer_cancel(&stream->poll_check_timer);
2138 static const struct i915_perf_stream_ops i915_oa_stream_ops = {
2139 .destroy = i915_oa_stream_destroy,
2140 .enable = i915_oa_stream_enable,
2141 .disable = i915_oa_stream_disable,
2142 .wait_unlocked = i915_oa_wait_unlocked,
2143 .poll_wait = i915_oa_poll_wait,
2144 .read = i915_oa_read,
2148 * i915_oa_stream_init - validate combined props for OA stream and init
2149 * @stream: An i915 perf stream
2150 * @param: The open parameters passed to `DRM_I915_PERF_OPEN`
2151 * @props: The property state that configures stream (individually validated)
2153 * While read_properties_unlocked() validates properties in isolation it
2154 * doesn't ensure that the combination necessarily makes sense.
2156 * At this point it has been determined that userspace wants a stream of
2157 * OA metrics, but still we need to further validate the combined
2158 * properties are OK.
2160 * If the configuration makes sense then we can allocate memory for
2161 * a circular OA buffer and apply the requested metric set configuration.
2163 * Returns: zero on success or a negative error code.
2165 static int i915_oa_stream_init(struct i915_perf_stream *stream,
2166 struct drm_i915_perf_open_param *param,
2167 struct perf_open_properties *props)
2169 struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv = stream->dev_priv;
2173 /* If the sysfs metrics/ directory wasn't registered for some
2174 * reason then don't let userspace try their luck with config
2177 if (!dev_priv->perf.metrics_kobj) {
2178 DRM_DEBUG("OA metrics weren't advertised via sysfs\n");
2182 if (!(props->sample_flags & SAMPLE_OA_REPORT)) {
2183 DRM_DEBUG("Only OA report sampling supported\n");
2187 if (!dev_priv->perf.ops.enable_metric_set) {
2188 DRM_DEBUG("OA unit not supported\n");
2192 /* To avoid the complexity of having to accurately filter
2193 * counter reports and marshal to the appropriate client
2194 * we currently only allow exclusive access
2196 if (dev_priv->perf.exclusive_stream) {
2197 DRM_DEBUG("OA unit already in use\n");
2201 if (!props->oa_format) {
2202 DRM_DEBUG("OA report format not specified\n");
2206 stream->sample_size = sizeof(struct drm_i915_perf_record_header);
2208 format_size = dev_priv->perf.oa_formats[props->oa_format].size;
2210 stream->sample_flags |= SAMPLE_OA_REPORT;
2211 stream->sample_size += format_size;
2213 stream->oa_buffer.format_size = format_size;
2214 if (WARN_ON(stream->oa_buffer.format_size == 0))
2217 stream->oa_buffer.format =
2218 dev_priv->perf.oa_formats[props->oa_format].format;
2220 stream->periodic = props->oa_periodic;
2221 if (stream->periodic)
2222 stream->period_exponent = props->oa_period_exponent;
2225 ret = oa_get_render_ctx_id(stream);
2227 DRM_DEBUG("Invalid context id to filter with\n");
2232 ret = get_oa_config(dev_priv, props->metrics_set, &stream->oa_config);
2234 DRM_DEBUG("Invalid OA config id=%i\n", props->metrics_set);
2238 /* PRM - observability performance counters:
2240 * OACONTROL, performance counter enable, note:
2242 * "When this bit is set, in order to have coherent counts,
2243 * RC6 power state and trunk clock gating must be disabled.
2244 * This can be achieved by programming MMIO registers as
2245 * 0xA094=0 and 0xA090[31]=1"
2247 * In our case we are expecting that taking pm + FORCEWAKE
2248 * references will effectively disable RC6.
2250 stream->wakeref = intel_runtime_pm_get(&dev_priv->runtime_pm);
2251 intel_uncore_forcewake_get(&dev_priv->uncore, FORCEWAKE_ALL);
2253 ret = alloc_oa_buffer(stream);
2255 goto err_oa_buf_alloc;
2257 ret = i915_mutex_lock_interruptible(&dev_priv->drm);
2261 stream->ops = &i915_oa_stream_ops;
2262 dev_priv->perf.exclusive_stream = stream;
2264 ret = dev_priv->perf.ops.enable_metric_set(stream);
2266 DRM_DEBUG("Unable to enable metric set\n");
2270 mutex_unlock(&dev_priv->drm.struct_mutex);
2272 hrtimer_init(&stream->poll_check_timer,
2273 CLOCK_MONOTONIC, HRTIMER_MODE_REL);
2274 stream->poll_check_timer.function = oa_poll_check_timer_cb;
2275 init_waitqueue_head(&stream->poll_wq);
2276 spin_lock_init(&stream->oa_buffer.ptr_lock);
2281 dev_priv->perf.exclusive_stream = NULL;
2282 dev_priv->perf.ops.disable_metric_set(stream);
2283 mutex_unlock(&dev_priv->drm.struct_mutex);
2286 free_oa_buffer(stream);
2289 put_oa_config(dev_priv, stream->oa_config);
2291 intel_uncore_forcewake_put(&dev_priv->uncore, FORCEWAKE_ALL);
2292 intel_runtime_pm_put(&dev_priv->runtime_pm, stream->wakeref);
2296 oa_put_render_ctx_id(stream);
2301 void i915_oa_init_reg_state(struct intel_engine_cs *engine,
2302 struct intel_context *ce,
2305 struct i915_perf_stream *stream;
2307 if (engine->class != RENDER_CLASS)
2310 stream = engine->i915->perf.exclusive_stream;
2312 gen8_update_reg_state_unlocked(stream, ce, regs, stream->oa_config);
2316 * i915_perf_read_locked - &i915_perf_stream_ops->read with error normalisation
2317 * @stream: An i915 perf stream
2318 * @file: An i915 perf stream file
2319 * @buf: destination buffer given by userspace
2320 * @count: the number of bytes userspace wants to read
2321 * @ppos: (inout) file seek position (unused)
2323 * Besides wrapping &i915_perf_stream_ops->read this provides a common place to
2324 * ensure that if we've successfully copied any data then reporting that takes
2325 * precedence over any internal error status, so the data isn't lost.
2327 * For example ret will be -ENOSPC whenever there is more buffered data than
2328 * can be copied to userspace, but that's only interesting if we weren't able
2329 * to copy some data because it implies the userspace buffer is too small to
2330 * receive a single record (and we never split records).
2332 * Another case with ret == -EFAULT is more of a grey area since it would seem
2333 * like bad form for userspace to ask us to overrun its buffer, but the user
2336 * http://yarchive.net/comp/linux/partial_reads_writes.html
2338 * Returns: The number of bytes copied or a negative error code on failure.
2340 static ssize_t i915_perf_read_locked(struct i915_perf_stream *stream,
2346 /* Note we keep the offset (aka bytes read) separate from any
2347 * error status so that the final check for whether we return
2348 * the bytes read with a higher precedence than any error (see
2349 * comment below) doesn't need to be handled/duplicated in
2350 * stream->ops->read() implementations.
2353 int ret = stream->ops->read(stream, buf, count, &offset);
2355 return offset ?: (ret ?: -EAGAIN);
2359 * i915_perf_read - handles read() FOP for i915 perf stream FDs
2360 * @file: An i915 perf stream file
2361 * @buf: destination buffer given by userspace
2362 * @count: the number of bytes userspace wants to read
2363 * @ppos: (inout) file seek position (unused)
2365 * The entry point for handling a read() on a stream file descriptor from
2366 * userspace. Most of the work is left to the i915_perf_read_locked() and
2367 * &i915_perf_stream_ops->read but to save having stream implementations (of
2368 * which we might have multiple later) we handle blocking read here.
2370 * We can also consistently treat trying to read from a disabled stream
2371 * as an IO error so implementations can assume the stream is enabled
2374 * Returns: The number of bytes copied or a negative error code on failure.
2376 static ssize_t i915_perf_read(struct file *file,
2381 struct i915_perf_stream *stream = file->private_data;
2382 struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv = stream->dev_priv;
2385 /* To ensure it's handled consistently we simply treat all reads of a
2386 * disabled stream as an error. In particular it might otherwise lead
2387 * to a deadlock for blocking file descriptors...
2389 if (!stream->enabled)
2392 if (!(file->f_flags & O_NONBLOCK)) {
2393 /* There's the small chance of false positives from
2394 * stream->ops->wait_unlocked.
2396 * E.g. with single context filtering since we only wait until
2397 * oabuffer has >= 1 report we don't immediately know whether
2398 * any reports really belong to the current context
2401 ret = stream->ops->wait_unlocked(stream);
2405 mutex_lock(&dev_priv->perf.lock);
2406 ret = i915_perf_read_locked(stream, file,
2408 mutex_unlock(&dev_priv->perf.lock);
2409 } while (ret == -EAGAIN);
2411 mutex_lock(&dev_priv->perf.lock);
2412 ret = i915_perf_read_locked(stream, file, buf, count, ppos);
2413 mutex_unlock(&dev_priv->perf.lock);
2416 /* We allow the poll checking to sometimes report false positive EPOLLIN
2417 * events where we might actually report EAGAIN on read() if there's
2418 * not really any data available. In this situation though we don't
2419 * want to enter a busy loop between poll() reporting a EPOLLIN event
2420 * and read() returning -EAGAIN. Clearing the oa.pollin state here
2421 * effectively ensures we back off until the next hrtimer callback
2422 * before reporting another EPOLLIN event.
2424 if (ret >= 0 || ret == -EAGAIN) {
2425 /* Maybe make ->pollin per-stream state if we support multiple
2426 * concurrent streams in the future.
2428 stream->pollin = false;
2434 static enum hrtimer_restart oa_poll_check_timer_cb(struct hrtimer *hrtimer)
2436 struct i915_perf_stream *stream =
2437 container_of(hrtimer, typeof(*stream), poll_check_timer);
2439 if (oa_buffer_check_unlocked(stream)) {
2440 stream->pollin = true;
2441 wake_up(&stream->poll_wq);
2444 hrtimer_forward_now(hrtimer, ns_to_ktime(POLL_PERIOD));
2446 return HRTIMER_RESTART;
2450 * i915_perf_poll_locked - poll_wait() with a suitable wait queue for stream
2451 * @dev_priv: i915 device instance
2452 * @stream: An i915 perf stream
2453 * @file: An i915 perf stream file
2454 * @wait: poll() state table
2456 * For handling userspace polling on an i915 perf stream, this calls through to
2457 * &i915_perf_stream_ops->poll_wait to call poll_wait() with a wait queue that
2458 * will be woken for new stream data.
2460 * Note: The &drm_i915_private->perf.lock mutex has been taken to serialize
2461 * with any non-file-operation driver hooks.
2463 * Returns: any poll events that are ready without sleeping
2465 static __poll_t i915_perf_poll_locked(struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv,
2466 struct i915_perf_stream *stream,
2470 __poll_t events = 0;
2472 stream->ops->poll_wait(stream, file, wait);
2474 /* Note: we don't explicitly check whether there's something to read
2475 * here since this path may be very hot depending on what else
2476 * userspace is polling, or on the timeout in use. We rely solely on
2477 * the hrtimer/oa_poll_check_timer_cb to notify us when there are
2487 * i915_perf_poll - call poll_wait() with a suitable wait queue for stream
2488 * @file: An i915 perf stream file
2489 * @wait: poll() state table
2491 * For handling userspace polling on an i915 perf stream, this ensures
2492 * poll_wait() gets called with a wait queue that will be woken for new stream
2495 * Note: Implementation deferred to i915_perf_poll_locked()
2497 * Returns: any poll events that are ready without sleeping
2499 static __poll_t i915_perf_poll(struct file *file, poll_table *wait)
2501 struct i915_perf_stream *stream = file->private_data;
2502 struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv = stream->dev_priv;
2505 mutex_lock(&dev_priv->perf.lock);
2506 ret = i915_perf_poll_locked(dev_priv, stream, file, wait);
2507 mutex_unlock(&dev_priv->perf.lock);
2513 * i915_perf_enable_locked - handle `I915_PERF_IOCTL_ENABLE` ioctl
2514 * @stream: A disabled i915 perf stream
2516 * [Re]enables the associated capture of data for this stream.
2518 * If a stream was previously enabled then there's currently no intention
2519 * to provide userspace any guarantee about the preservation of previously
2522 static void i915_perf_enable_locked(struct i915_perf_stream *stream)
2524 if (stream->enabled)
2527 /* Allow stream->ops->enable() to refer to this */
2528 stream->enabled = true;
2530 if (stream->ops->enable)
2531 stream->ops->enable(stream);
2535 * i915_perf_disable_locked - handle `I915_PERF_IOCTL_DISABLE` ioctl
2536 * @stream: An enabled i915 perf stream
2538 * Disables the associated capture of data for this stream.
2540 * The intention is that disabling an re-enabling a stream will ideally be
2541 * cheaper than destroying and re-opening a stream with the same configuration,
2542 * though there are no formal guarantees about what state or buffered data
2543 * must be retained between disabling and re-enabling a stream.
2545 * Note: while a stream is disabled it's considered an error for userspace
2546 * to attempt to read from the stream (-EIO).
2548 static void i915_perf_disable_locked(struct i915_perf_stream *stream)
2550 if (!stream->enabled)
2553 /* Allow stream->ops->disable() to refer to this */
2554 stream->enabled = false;
2556 if (stream->ops->disable)
2557 stream->ops->disable(stream);
2561 * i915_perf_ioctl - support ioctl() usage with i915 perf stream FDs
2562 * @stream: An i915 perf stream
2563 * @cmd: the ioctl request
2564 * @arg: the ioctl data
2566 * Note: The &drm_i915_private->perf.lock mutex has been taken to serialize
2567 * with any non-file-operation driver hooks.
2569 * Returns: zero on success or a negative error code. Returns -EINVAL for
2570 * an unknown ioctl request.
2572 static long i915_perf_ioctl_locked(struct i915_perf_stream *stream,
2577 case I915_PERF_IOCTL_ENABLE:
2578 i915_perf_enable_locked(stream);
2580 case I915_PERF_IOCTL_DISABLE:
2581 i915_perf_disable_locked(stream);
2589 * i915_perf_ioctl - support ioctl() usage with i915 perf stream FDs
2590 * @file: An i915 perf stream file
2591 * @cmd: the ioctl request
2592 * @arg: the ioctl data
2594 * Implementation deferred to i915_perf_ioctl_locked().
2596 * Returns: zero on success or a negative error code. Returns -EINVAL for
2597 * an unknown ioctl request.
2599 static long i915_perf_ioctl(struct file *file,
2603 struct i915_perf_stream *stream = file->private_data;
2604 struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv = stream->dev_priv;
2607 mutex_lock(&dev_priv->perf.lock);
2608 ret = i915_perf_ioctl_locked(stream, cmd, arg);
2609 mutex_unlock(&dev_priv->perf.lock);
2615 * i915_perf_destroy_locked - destroy an i915 perf stream
2616 * @stream: An i915 perf stream
2618 * Frees all resources associated with the given i915 perf @stream, disabling
2619 * any associated data capture in the process.
2621 * Note: The &drm_i915_private->perf.lock mutex has been taken to serialize
2622 * with any non-file-operation driver hooks.
2624 static void i915_perf_destroy_locked(struct i915_perf_stream *stream)
2626 if (stream->enabled)
2627 i915_perf_disable_locked(stream);
2629 if (stream->ops->destroy)
2630 stream->ops->destroy(stream);
2632 list_del(&stream->link);
2635 i915_gem_context_put(stream->ctx);
2641 * i915_perf_release - handles userspace close() of a stream file
2642 * @inode: anonymous inode associated with file
2643 * @file: An i915 perf stream file
2645 * Cleans up any resources associated with an open i915 perf stream file.
2647 * NB: close() can't really fail from the userspace point of view.
2649 * Returns: zero on success or a negative error code.
2651 static int i915_perf_release(struct inode *inode, struct file *file)
2653 struct i915_perf_stream *stream = file->private_data;
2654 struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv = stream->dev_priv;
2656 mutex_lock(&dev_priv->perf.lock);
2657 i915_perf_destroy_locked(stream);
2658 mutex_unlock(&dev_priv->perf.lock);
2660 /* Release the reference the perf stream kept on the driver. */
2661 drm_dev_put(&dev_priv->drm);
2667 static const struct file_operations fops = {
2668 .owner = THIS_MODULE,
2669 .llseek = no_llseek,
2670 .release = i915_perf_release,
2671 .poll = i915_perf_poll,
2672 .read = i915_perf_read,
2673 .unlocked_ioctl = i915_perf_ioctl,
2674 /* Our ioctl have no arguments, so it's safe to use the same function
2675 * to handle 32bits compatibility.
2677 .compat_ioctl = i915_perf_ioctl,
2682 * i915_perf_open_ioctl_locked - DRM ioctl() for userspace to open a stream FD
2683 * @dev_priv: i915 device instance
2684 * @param: The open parameters passed to 'DRM_I915_PERF_OPEN`
2685 * @props: individually validated u64 property value pairs
2688 * See i915_perf_ioctl_open() for interface details.
2690 * Implements further stream config validation and stream initialization on
2691 * behalf of i915_perf_open_ioctl() with the &drm_i915_private->perf.lock mutex
2692 * taken to serialize with any non-file-operation driver hooks.
2694 * Note: at this point the @props have only been validated in isolation and
2695 * it's still necessary to validate that the combination of properties makes
2698 * In the case where userspace is interested in OA unit metrics then further
2699 * config validation and stream initialization details will be handled by
2700 * i915_oa_stream_init(). The code here should only validate config state that
2701 * will be relevant to all stream types / backends.
2703 * Returns: zero on success or a negative error code.
2706 i915_perf_open_ioctl_locked(struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv,
2707 struct drm_i915_perf_open_param *param,
2708 struct perf_open_properties *props,
2709 struct drm_file *file)
2711 struct i915_gem_context *specific_ctx = NULL;
2712 struct i915_perf_stream *stream = NULL;
2713 unsigned long f_flags = 0;
2714 bool privileged_op = true;
2718 if (props->single_context) {
2719 u32 ctx_handle = props->ctx_handle;
2720 struct drm_i915_file_private *file_priv = file->driver_priv;
2722 specific_ctx = i915_gem_context_lookup(file_priv, ctx_handle);
2723 if (!specific_ctx) {
2724 DRM_DEBUG("Failed to look up context with ID %u for opening perf stream\n",
2732 * On Haswell the OA unit supports clock gating off for a specific
2733 * context and in this mode there's no visibility of metrics for the
2734 * rest of the system, which we consider acceptable for a
2735 * non-privileged client.
2737 * For Gen8+ the OA unit no longer supports clock gating off for a
2738 * specific context and the kernel can't securely stop the counters
2739 * from updating as system-wide / global values. Even though we can
2740 * filter reports based on the included context ID we can't block
2741 * clients from seeing the raw / global counter values via
2742 * MI_REPORT_PERF_COUNT commands and so consider it a privileged op to
2743 * enable the OA unit by default.
2745 if (IS_HASWELL(dev_priv) && specific_ctx)
2746 privileged_op = false;
2748 /* Similar to perf's kernel.perf_paranoid_cpu sysctl option
2749 * we check a dev.i915.perf_stream_paranoid sysctl option
2750 * to determine if it's ok to access system wide OA counters
2751 * without CAP_SYS_ADMIN privileges.
2753 if (privileged_op &&
2754 i915_perf_stream_paranoid && !capable(CAP_SYS_ADMIN)) {
2755 DRM_DEBUG("Insufficient privileges to open system-wide i915 perf stream\n");
2760 stream = kzalloc(sizeof(*stream), GFP_KERNEL);
2766 stream->dev_priv = dev_priv;
2767 stream->ctx = specific_ctx;
2769 ret = i915_oa_stream_init(stream, param, props);
2773 /* we avoid simply assigning stream->sample_flags = props->sample_flags
2774 * to have _stream_init check the combination of sample flags more
2775 * thoroughly, but still this is the expected result at this point.
2777 if (WARN_ON(stream->sample_flags != props->sample_flags)) {
2782 list_add(&stream->link, &dev_priv->perf.streams);
2784 if (param->flags & I915_PERF_FLAG_FD_CLOEXEC)
2785 f_flags |= O_CLOEXEC;
2786 if (param->flags & I915_PERF_FLAG_FD_NONBLOCK)
2787 f_flags |= O_NONBLOCK;
2789 stream_fd = anon_inode_getfd("[i915_perf]", &fops, stream, f_flags);
2790 if (stream_fd < 0) {
2795 if (!(param->flags & I915_PERF_FLAG_DISABLED))
2796 i915_perf_enable_locked(stream);
2798 /* Take a reference on the driver that will be kept with stream_fd
2799 * until its release.
2801 drm_dev_get(&dev_priv->drm);
2806 list_del(&stream->link);
2808 if (stream->ops->destroy)
2809 stream->ops->destroy(stream);
2814 i915_gem_context_put(specific_ctx);
2819 static u64 oa_exponent_to_ns(struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv, int exponent)
2821 return div64_u64(1000000000ULL * (2ULL << exponent),
2822 1000ULL * RUNTIME_INFO(dev_priv)->cs_timestamp_frequency_khz);
2826 * read_properties_unlocked - validate + copy userspace stream open properties
2827 * @dev_priv: i915 device instance
2828 * @uprops: The array of u64 key value pairs given by userspace
2829 * @n_props: The number of key value pairs expected in @uprops
2830 * @props: The stream configuration built up while validating properties
2832 * Note this function only validates properties in isolation it doesn't
2833 * validate that the combination of properties makes sense or that all
2834 * properties necessary for a particular kind of stream have been set.
2836 * Note that there currently aren't any ordering requirements for properties so
2837 * we shouldn't validate or assume anything about ordering here. This doesn't
2838 * rule out defining new properties with ordering requirements in the future.
2840 static int read_properties_unlocked(struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv,
2843 struct perf_open_properties *props)
2845 u64 __user *uprop = uprops;
2848 memset(props, 0, sizeof(struct perf_open_properties));
2851 DRM_DEBUG("No i915 perf properties given\n");
2855 /* Considering that ID = 0 is reserved and assuming that we don't
2856 * (currently) expect any configurations to ever specify duplicate
2857 * values for a particular property ID then the last _PROP_MAX value is
2858 * one greater than the maximum number of properties we expect to get
2861 if (n_props >= DRM_I915_PERF_PROP_MAX) {
2862 DRM_DEBUG("More i915 perf properties specified than exist\n");
2866 for (i = 0; i < n_props; i++) {
2867 u64 oa_period, oa_freq_hz;
2871 ret = get_user(id, uprop);
2875 ret = get_user(value, uprop + 1);
2879 if (id == 0 || id >= DRM_I915_PERF_PROP_MAX) {
2880 DRM_DEBUG("Unknown i915 perf property ID\n");
2884 switch ((enum drm_i915_perf_property_id)id) {
2885 case DRM_I915_PERF_PROP_CTX_HANDLE:
2886 props->single_context = 1;
2887 props->ctx_handle = value;
2889 case DRM_I915_PERF_PROP_SAMPLE_OA:
2891 props->sample_flags |= SAMPLE_OA_REPORT;
2893 case DRM_I915_PERF_PROP_OA_METRICS_SET:
2895 DRM_DEBUG("Unknown OA metric set ID\n");
2898 props->metrics_set = value;
2900 case DRM_I915_PERF_PROP_OA_FORMAT:
2901 if (value == 0 || value >= I915_OA_FORMAT_MAX) {
2902 DRM_DEBUG("Out-of-range OA report format %llu\n",
2906 if (!dev_priv->perf.oa_formats[value].size) {
2907 DRM_DEBUG("Unsupported OA report format %llu\n",
2911 props->oa_format = value;
2913 case DRM_I915_PERF_PROP_OA_EXPONENT:
2914 if (value > OA_EXPONENT_MAX) {
2915 DRM_DEBUG("OA timer exponent too high (> %u)\n",
2920 /* Theoretically we can program the OA unit to sample
2921 * e.g. every 160ns for HSW, 167ns for BDW/SKL or 104ns
2922 * for BXT. We don't allow such high sampling
2923 * frequencies by default unless root.
2926 BUILD_BUG_ON(sizeof(oa_period) != 8);
2927 oa_period = oa_exponent_to_ns(dev_priv, value);
2929 /* This check is primarily to ensure that oa_period <=
2930 * UINT32_MAX (before passing to do_div which only
2931 * accepts a u32 denominator), but we can also skip
2932 * checking anything < 1Hz which implicitly can't be
2933 * limited via an integer oa_max_sample_rate.
2935 if (oa_period <= NSEC_PER_SEC) {
2936 u64 tmp = NSEC_PER_SEC;
2937 do_div(tmp, oa_period);
2942 if (oa_freq_hz > i915_oa_max_sample_rate &&
2943 !capable(CAP_SYS_ADMIN)) {
2944 DRM_DEBUG("OA exponent would exceed the max sampling frequency (sysctl dev.i915.oa_max_sample_rate) %uHz without root privileges\n",
2945 i915_oa_max_sample_rate);
2949 props->oa_periodic = true;
2950 props->oa_period_exponent = value;
2952 case DRM_I915_PERF_PROP_MAX:
2964 * i915_perf_open_ioctl - DRM ioctl() for userspace to open a stream FD
2966 * @data: ioctl data copied from userspace (unvalidated)
2969 * Validates the stream open parameters given by userspace including flags
2970 * and an array of u64 key, value pair properties.
2972 * Very little is assumed up front about the nature of the stream being
2973 * opened (for instance we don't assume it's for periodic OA unit metrics). An
2974 * i915-perf stream is expected to be a suitable interface for other forms of
2975 * buffered data written by the GPU besides periodic OA metrics.
2977 * Note we copy the properties from userspace outside of the i915 perf
2978 * mutex to avoid an awkward lockdep with mmap_sem.
2980 * Most of the implementation details are handled by
2981 * i915_perf_open_ioctl_locked() after taking the &drm_i915_private->perf.lock
2982 * mutex for serializing with any non-file-operation driver hooks.
2984 * Return: A newly opened i915 Perf stream file descriptor or negative
2985 * error code on failure.
2987 int i915_perf_open_ioctl(struct drm_device *dev, void *data,
2988 struct drm_file *file)
2990 struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv = dev->dev_private;
2991 struct drm_i915_perf_open_param *param = data;
2992 struct perf_open_properties props;
2993 u32 known_open_flags;
2996 if (!dev_priv->perf.initialized) {
2997 DRM_DEBUG("i915 perf interface not available for this system\n");
3001 known_open_flags = I915_PERF_FLAG_FD_CLOEXEC |
3002 I915_PERF_FLAG_FD_NONBLOCK |
3003 I915_PERF_FLAG_DISABLED;
3004 if (param->flags & ~known_open_flags) {
3005 DRM_DEBUG("Unknown drm_i915_perf_open_param flag\n");
3009 ret = read_properties_unlocked(dev_priv,
3010 u64_to_user_ptr(param->properties_ptr),
3011 param->num_properties,
3016 mutex_lock(&dev_priv->perf.lock);
3017 ret = i915_perf_open_ioctl_locked(dev_priv, param, &props, file);
3018 mutex_unlock(&dev_priv->perf.lock);
3024 * i915_perf_register - exposes i915-perf to userspace
3025 * @dev_priv: i915 device instance
3027 * In particular OA metric sets are advertised under a sysfs metrics/
3028 * directory allowing userspace to enumerate valid IDs that can be
3029 * used to open an i915-perf stream.
3031 void i915_perf_register(struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv)
3035 if (!dev_priv->perf.initialized)
3038 /* To be sure we're synchronized with an attempted
3039 * i915_perf_open_ioctl(); considering that we register after
3040 * being exposed to userspace.
3042 mutex_lock(&dev_priv->perf.lock);
3044 dev_priv->perf.metrics_kobj =
3045 kobject_create_and_add("metrics",
3046 &dev_priv->drm.primary->kdev->kobj);
3047 if (!dev_priv->perf.metrics_kobj)
3050 sysfs_attr_init(&dev_priv->perf.test_config.sysfs_metric_id.attr);
3052 if (INTEL_GEN(dev_priv) >= 11) {
3053 i915_perf_load_test_config_icl(dev_priv);
3054 } else if (IS_CANNONLAKE(dev_priv)) {
3055 i915_perf_load_test_config_cnl(dev_priv);
3056 } else if (IS_COFFEELAKE(dev_priv)) {
3057 if (IS_CFL_GT2(dev_priv))
3058 i915_perf_load_test_config_cflgt2(dev_priv);
3059 if (IS_CFL_GT3(dev_priv))
3060 i915_perf_load_test_config_cflgt3(dev_priv);
3061 } else if (IS_GEMINILAKE(dev_priv)) {
3062 i915_perf_load_test_config_glk(dev_priv);
3063 } else if (IS_KABYLAKE(dev_priv)) {
3064 if (IS_KBL_GT2(dev_priv))
3065 i915_perf_load_test_config_kblgt2(dev_priv);
3066 else if (IS_KBL_GT3(dev_priv))
3067 i915_perf_load_test_config_kblgt3(dev_priv);
3068 } else if (IS_BROXTON(dev_priv)) {
3069 i915_perf_load_test_config_bxt(dev_priv);
3070 } else if (IS_SKYLAKE(dev_priv)) {
3071 if (IS_SKL_GT2(dev_priv))
3072 i915_perf_load_test_config_sklgt2(dev_priv);
3073 else if (IS_SKL_GT3(dev_priv))
3074 i915_perf_load_test_config_sklgt3(dev_priv);
3075 else if (IS_SKL_GT4(dev_priv))
3076 i915_perf_load_test_config_sklgt4(dev_priv);
3077 } else if (IS_CHERRYVIEW(dev_priv)) {
3078 i915_perf_load_test_config_chv(dev_priv);
3079 } else if (IS_BROADWELL(dev_priv)) {
3080 i915_perf_load_test_config_bdw(dev_priv);
3081 } else if (IS_HASWELL(dev_priv)) {
3082 i915_perf_load_test_config_hsw(dev_priv);
3085 if (dev_priv->perf.test_config.id == 0)
3088 ret = sysfs_create_group(dev_priv->perf.metrics_kobj,
3089 &dev_priv->perf.test_config.sysfs_metric);
3093 atomic_set(&dev_priv->perf.test_config.ref_count, 1);
3098 kobject_put(dev_priv->perf.metrics_kobj);
3099 dev_priv->perf.metrics_kobj = NULL;
3102 mutex_unlock(&dev_priv->perf.lock);
3106 * i915_perf_unregister - hide i915-perf from userspace
3107 * @dev_priv: i915 device instance
3109 * i915-perf state cleanup is split up into an 'unregister' and
3110 * 'deinit' phase where the interface is first hidden from
3111 * userspace by i915_perf_unregister() before cleaning up
3112 * remaining state in i915_perf_fini().
3114 void i915_perf_unregister(struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv)
3116 if (!dev_priv->perf.metrics_kobj)
3119 sysfs_remove_group(dev_priv->perf.metrics_kobj,
3120 &dev_priv->perf.test_config.sysfs_metric);
3122 kobject_put(dev_priv->perf.metrics_kobj);
3123 dev_priv->perf.metrics_kobj = NULL;
3126 static bool gen8_is_valid_flex_addr(struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv, u32 addr)
3128 static const i915_reg_t flex_eu_regs[] = {
3139 for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(flex_eu_regs); i++) {
3140 if (i915_mmio_reg_offset(flex_eu_regs[i]) == addr)
3146 static bool gen7_is_valid_b_counter_addr(struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv, u32 addr)
3148 return (addr >= i915_mmio_reg_offset(OASTARTTRIG1) &&
3149 addr <= i915_mmio_reg_offset(OASTARTTRIG8)) ||
3150 (addr >= i915_mmio_reg_offset(OAREPORTTRIG1) &&
3151 addr <= i915_mmio_reg_offset(OAREPORTTRIG8)) ||
3152 (addr >= i915_mmio_reg_offset(OACEC0_0) &&
3153 addr <= i915_mmio_reg_offset(OACEC7_1));
3156 static bool gen7_is_valid_mux_addr(struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv, u32 addr)
3158 return addr == i915_mmio_reg_offset(HALF_SLICE_CHICKEN2) ||
3159 (addr >= i915_mmio_reg_offset(MICRO_BP0_0) &&
3160 addr <= i915_mmio_reg_offset(NOA_WRITE)) ||
3161 (addr >= i915_mmio_reg_offset(OA_PERFCNT1_LO) &&
3162 addr <= i915_mmio_reg_offset(OA_PERFCNT2_HI)) ||
3163 (addr >= i915_mmio_reg_offset(OA_PERFMATRIX_LO) &&
3164 addr <= i915_mmio_reg_offset(OA_PERFMATRIX_HI));
3167 static bool gen8_is_valid_mux_addr(struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv, u32 addr)
3169 return gen7_is_valid_mux_addr(dev_priv, addr) ||
3170 addr == i915_mmio_reg_offset(WAIT_FOR_RC6_EXIT) ||
3171 (addr >= i915_mmio_reg_offset(RPM_CONFIG0) &&
3172 addr <= i915_mmio_reg_offset(NOA_CONFIG(8)));
3175 static bool gen10_is_valid_mux_addr(struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv, u32 addr)
3177 return gen8_is_valid_mux_addr(dev_priv, addr) ||
3178 addr == i915_mmio_reg_offset(GEN10_NOA_WRITE_HIGH) ||
3179 (addr >= i915_mmio_reg_offset(OA_PERFCNT3_LO) &&
3180 addr <= i915_mmio_reg_offset(OA_PERFCNT4_HI));
3183 static bool hsw_is_valid_mux_addr(struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv, u32 addr)
3185 return gen7_is_valid_mux_addr(dev_priv, addr) ||
3186 (addr >= 0x25100 && addr <= 0x2FF90) ||
3187 (addr >= i915_mmio_reg_offset(HSW_MBVID2_NOA0) &&
3188 addr <= i915_mmio_reg_offset(HSW_MBVID2_NOA9)) ||
3189 addr == i915_mmio_reg_offset(HSW_MBVID2_MISR0);
3192 static bool chv_is_valid_mux_addr(struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv, u32 addr)
3194 return gen7_is_valid_mux_addr(dev_priv, addr) ||
3195 (addr >= 0x182300 && addr <= 0x1823A4);
3198 static u32 mask_reg_value(u32 reg, u32 val)
3200 /* HALF_SLICE_CHICKEN2 is programmed with a the
3201 * WaDisableSTUnitPowerOptimization workaround. Make sure the value
3202 * programmed by userspace doesn't change this.
3204 if (i915_mmio_reg_offset(HALF_SLICE_CHICKEN2) == reg)
3205 val = val & ~_MASKED_BIT_ENABLE(GEN8_ST_PO_DISABLE);
3207 /* WAIT_FOR_RC6_EXIT has only one bit fullfilling the function
3208 * indicated by its name and a bunch of selection fields used by OA
3211 if (i915_mmio_reg_offset(WAIT_FOR_RC6_EXIT) == reg)
3212 val = val & ~_MASKED_BIT_ENABLE(HSW_WAIT_FOR_RC6_EXIT_ENABLE);
3217 static struct i915_oa_reg *alloc_oa_regs(struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv,
3218 bool (*is_valid)(struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv, u32 addr),
3222 struct i915_oa_reg *oa_regs;
3229 if (!access_ok(regs, n_regs * sizeof(u32) * 2))
3230 return ERR_PTR(-EFAULT);
3232 /* No is_valid function means we're not allowing any register to be programmed. */
3233 GEM_BUG_ON(!is_valid);
3235 return ERR_PTR(-EINVAL);
3237 oa_regs = kmalloc_array(n_regs, sizeof(*oa_regs), GFP_KERNEL);
3239 return ERR_PTR(-ENOMEM);
3241 for (i = 0; i < n_regs; i++) {
3244 err = get_user(addr, regs);
3248 if (!is_valid(dev_priv, addr)) {
3249 DRM_DEBUG("Invalid oa_reg address: %X\n", addr);
3254 err = get_user(value, regs + 1);
3258 oa_regs[i].addr = _MMIO(addr);
3259 oa_regs[i].value = mask_reg_value(addr, value);
3268 return ERR_PTR(err);
3271 static ssize_t show_dynamic_id(struct device *dev,
3272 struct device_attribute *attr,
3275 struct i915_oa_config *oa_config =
3276 container_of(attr, typeof(*oa_config), sysfs_metric_id);
3278 return sprintf(buf, "%d\n", oa_config->id);
3281 static int create_dynamic_oa_sysfs_entry(struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv,
3282 struct i915_oa_config *oa_config)
3284 sysfs_attr_init(&oa_config->sysfs_metric_id.attr);
3285 oa_config->sysfs_metric_id.attr.name = "id";
3286 oa_config->sysfs_metric_id.attr.mode = S_IRUGO;
3287 oa_config->sysfs_metric_id.show = show_dynamic_id;
3288 oa_config->sysfs_metric_id.store = NULL;
3290 oa_config->attrs[0] = &oa_config->sysfs_metric_id.attr;
3291 oa_config->attrs[1] = NULL;
3293 oa_config->sysfs_metric.name = oa_config->uuid;
3294 oa_config->sysfs_metric.attrs = oa_config->attrs;
3296 return sysfs_create_group(dev_priv->perf.metrics_kobj,
3297 &oa_config->sysfs_metric);
3301 * i915_perf_add_config_ioctl - DRM ioctl() for userspace to add a new OA config
3303 * @data: ioctl data (pointer to struct drm_i915_perf_oa_config) copied from
3304 * userspace (unvalidated)
3307 * Validates the submitted OA register to be saved into a new OA config that
3308 * can then be used for programming the OA unit and its NOA network.
3310 * Returns: A new allocated config number to be used with the perf open ioctl
3311 * or a negative error code on failure.
3313 int i915_perf_add_config_ioctl(struct drm_device *dev, void *data,
3314 struct drm_file *file)
3316 struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv = dev->dev_private;
3317 struct drm_i915_perf_oa_config *args = data;
3318 struct i915_oa_config *oa_config, *tmp;
3321 if (!dev_priv->perf.initialized) {
3322 DRM_DEBUG("i915 perf interface not available for this system\n");
3326 if (!dev_priv->perf.metrics_kobj) {
3327 DRM_DEBUG("OA metrics weren't advertised via sysfs\n");
3331 if (i915_perf_stream_paranoid && !capable(CAP_SYS_ADMIN)) {
3332 DRM_DEBUG("Insufficient privileges to add i915 OA config\n");
3336 if ((!args->mux_regs_ptr || !args->n_mux_regs) &&
3337 (!args->boolean_regs_ptr || !args->n_boolean_regs) &&
3338 (!args->flex_regs_ptr || !args->n_flex_regs)) {
3339 DRM_DEBUG("No OA registers given\n");
3343 oa_config = kzalloc(sizeof(*oa_config), GFP_KERNEL);
3345 DRM_DEBUG("Failed to allocate memory for the OA config\n");
3349 atomic_set(&oa_config->ref_count, 1);
3351 if (!uuid_is_valid(args->uuid)) {
3352 DRM_DEBUG("Invalid uuid format for OA config\n");
3357 /* Last character in oa_config->uuid will be 0 because oa_config is
3360 memcpy(oa_config->uuid, args->uuid, sizeof(args->uuid));
3362 oa_config->mux_regs_len = args->n_mux_regs;
3363 oa_config->mux_regs =
3364 alloc_oa_regs(dev_priv,
3365 dev_priv->perf.ops.is_valid_mux_reg,
3366 u64_to_user_ptr(args->mux_regs_ptr),
3369 if (IS_ERR(oa_config->mux_regs)) {
3370 DRM_DEBUG("Failed to create OA config for mux_regs\n");
3371 err = PTR_ERR(oa_config->mux_regs);
3375 oa_config->b_counter_regs_len = args->n_boolean_regs;
3376 oa_config->b_counter_regs =
3377 alloc_oa_regs(dev_priv,
3378 dev_priv->perf.ops.is_valid_b_counter_reg,
3379 u64_to_user_ptr(args->boolean_regs_ptr),
3380 args->n_boolean_regs);
3382 if (IS_ERR(oa_config->b_counter_regs)) {
3383 DRM_DEBUG("Failed to create OA config for b_counter_regs\n");
3384 err = PTR_ERR(oa_config->b_counter_regs);
3388 if (INTEL_GEN(dev_priv) < 8) {
3389 if (args->n_flex_regs != 0) {
3394 oa_config->flex_regs_len = args->n_flex_regs;
3395 oa_config->flex_regs =
3396 alloc_oa_regs(dev_priv,
3397 dev_priv->perf.ops.is_valid_flex_reg,
3398 u64_to_user_ptr(args->flex_regs_ptr),
3401 if (IS_ERR(oa_config->flex_regs)) {
3402 DRM_DEBUG("Failed to create OA config for flex_regs\n");
3403 err = PTR_ERR(oa_config->flex_regs);
3408 err = mutex_lock_interruptible(&dev_priv->perf.metrics_lock);
3412 /* We shouldn't have too many configs, so this iteration shouldn't be
3415 idr_for_each_entry(&dev_priv->perf.metrics_idr, tmp, id) {
3416 if (!strcmp(tmp->uuid, oa_config->uuid)) {
3417 DRM_DEBUG("OA config already exists with this uuid\n");
3423 err = create_dynamic_oa_sysfs_entry(dev_priv, oa_config);
3425 DRM_DEBUG("Failed to create sysfs entry for OA config\n");
3429 /* Config id 0 is invalid, id 1 for kernel stored test config. */
3430 oa_config->id = idr_alloc(&dev_priv->perf.metrics_idr,
3433 if (oa_config->id < 0) {
3434 DRM_DEBUG("Failed to create sysfs entry for OA config\n");
3435 err = oa_config->id;
3439 mutex_unlock(&dev_priv->perf.metrics_lock);
3441 DRM_DEBUG("Added config %s id=%i\n", oa_config->uuid, oa_config->id);
3443 return oa_config->id;
3446 mutex_unlock(&dev_priv->perf.metrics_lock);
3448 put_oa_config(dev_priv, oa_config);
3449 DRM_DEBUG("Failed to add new OA config\n");
3454 * i915_perf_remove_config_ioctl - DRM ioctl() for userspace to remove an OA config
3456 * @data: ioctl data (pointer to u64 integer) copied from userspace
3459 * Configs can be removed while being used, the will stop appearing in sysfs
3460 * and their content will be freed when the stream using the config is closed.
3462 * Returns: 0 on success or a negative error code on failure.
3464 int i915_perf_remove_config_ioctl(struct drm_device *dev, void *data,
3465 struct drm_file *file)
3467 struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv = dev->dev_private;
3469 struct i915_oa_config *oa_config;
3472 if (!dev_priv->perf.initialized) {
3473 DRM_DEBUG("i915 perf interface not available for this system\n");
3477 if (i915_perf_stream_paranoid && !capable(CAP_SYS_ADMIN)) {
3478 DRM_DEBUG("Insufficient privileges to remove i915 OA config\n");
3482 ret = mutex_lock_interruptible(&dev_priv->perf.metrics_lock);
3486 oa_config = idr_find(&dev_priv->perf.metrics_idr, *arg);
3488 DRM_DEBUG("Failed to remove unknown OA config\n");
3493 GEM_BUG_ON(*arg != oa_config->id);
3495 sysfs_remove_group(dev_priv->perf.metrics_kobj,
3496 &oa_config->sysfs_metric);
3498 idr_remove(&dev_priv->perf.metrics_idr, *arg);
3500 DRM_DEBUG("Removed config %s id=%i\n", oa_config->uuid, oa_config->id);
3502 put_oa_config(dev_priv, oa_config);
3505 mutex_unlock(&dev_priv->perf.metrics_lock);
3510 static struct ctl_table oa_table[] = {
3512 .procname = "perf_stream_paranoid",
3513 .data = &i915_perf_stream_paranoid,
3514 .maxlen = sizeof(i915_perf_stream_paranoid),
3516 .proc_handler = proc_dointvec_minmax,
3517 .extra1 = SYSCTL_ZERO,
3518 .extra2 = SYSCTL_ONE,
3521 .procname = "oa_max_sample_rate",
3522 .data = &i915_oa_max_sample_rate,
3523 .maxlen = sizeof(i915_oa_max_sample_rate),
3525 .proc_handler = proc_dointvec_minmax,
3526 .extra1 = SYSCTL_ZERO,
3527 .extra2 = &oa_sample_rate_hard_limit,
3532 static struct ctl_table i915_root[] = {
3542 static struct ctl_table dev_root[] = {
3553 * i915_perf_init - initialize i915-perf state on module load
3554 * @dev_priv: i915 device instance
3556 * Initializes i915-perf state without exposing anything to userspace.
3558 * Note: i915-perf initialization is split into an 'init' and 'register'
3559 * phase with the i915_perf_register() exposing state to userspace.
3561 void i915_perf_init(struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv)
3563 if (IS_HASWELL(dev_priv)) {
3564 dev_priv->perf.ops.is_valid_b_counter_reg =
3565 gen7_is_valid_b_counter_addr;
3566 dev_priv->perf.ops.is_valid_mux_reg =
3567 hsw_is_valid_mux_addr;
3568 dev_priv->perf.ops.is_valid_flex_reg = NULL;
3569 dev_priv->perf.ops.enable_metric_set = hsw_enable_metric_set;
3570 dev_priv->perf.ops.disable_metric_set = hsw_disable_metric_set;
3571 dev_priv->perf.ops.oa_enable = gen7_oa_enable;
3572 dev_priv->perf.ops.oa_disable = gen7_oa_disable;
3573 dev_priv->perf.ops.read = gen7_oa_read;
3574 dev_priv->perf.ops.oa_hw_tail_read =
3575 gen7_oa_hw_tail_read;
3577 dev_priv->perf.oa_formats = hsw_oa_formats;
3578 } else if (HAS_LOGICAL_RING_CONTEXTS(dev_priv)) {
3579 /* Note: that although we could theoretically also support the
3580 * legacy ringbuffer mode on BDW (and earlier iterations of
3581 * this driver, before upstreaming did this) it didn't seem
3582 * worth the complexity to maintain now that BDW+ enable
3583 * execlist mode by default.
3585 dev_priv->perf.oa_formats = gen8_plus_oa_formats;
3587 dev_priv->perf.ops.oa_enable = gen8_oa_enable;
3588 dev_priv->perf.ops.oa_disable = gen8_oa_disable;
3589 dev_priv->perf.ops.read = gen8_oa_read;
3590 dev_priv->perf.ops.oa_hw_tail_read = gen8_oa_hw_tail_read;
3592 if (IS_GEN_RANGE(dev_priv, 8, 9)) {
3593 dev_priv->perf.ops.is_valid_b_counter_reg =
3594 gen7_is_valid_b_counter_addr;
3595 dev_priv->perf.ops.is_valid_mux_reg =
3596 gen8_is_valid_mux_addr;
3597 dev_priv->perf.ops.is_valid_flex_reg =
3598 gen8_is_valid_flex_addr;
3600 if (IS_CHERRYVIEW(dev_priv)) {
3601 dev_priv->perf.ops.is_valid_mux_reg =
3602 chv_is_valid_mux_addr;
3605 dev_priv->perf.ops.enable_metric_set = gen8_enable_metric_set;
3606 dev_priv->perf.ops.disable_metric_set = gen8_disable_metric_set;
3608 if (IS_GEN(dev_priv, 8)) {
3609 dev_priv->perf.ctx_oactxctrl_offset = 0x120;
3610 dev_priv->perf.ctx_flexeu0_offset = 0x2ce;
3612 dev_priv->perf.gen8_valid_ctx_bit = BIT(25);
3614 dev_priv->perf.ctx_oactxctrl_offset = 0x128;
3615 dev_priv->perf.ctx_flexeu0_offset = 0x3de;
3617 dev_priv->perf.gen8_valid_ctx_bit = BIT(16);
3619 } else if (IS_GEN_RANGE(dev_priv, 10, 11)) {
3620 dev_priv->perf.ops.is_valid_b_counter_reg =
3621 gen7_is_valid_b_counter_addr;
3622 dev_priv->perf.ops.is_valid_mux_reg =
3623 gen10_is_valid_mux_addr;
3624 dev_priv->perf.ops.is_valid_flex_reg =
3625 gen8_is_valid_flex_addr;
3627 dev_priv->perf.ops.enable_metric_set = gen8_enable_metric_set;
3628 dev_priv->perf.ops.disable_metric_set = gen10_disable_metric_set;
3630 if (IS_GEN(dev_priv, 10)) {
3631 dev_priv->perf.ctx_oactxctrl_offset = 0x128;
3632 dev_priv->perf.ctx_flexeu0_offset = 0x3de;
3634 dev_priv->perf.ctx_oactxctrl_offset = 0x124;
3635 dev_priv->perf.ctx_flexeu0_offset = 0x78e;
3637 dev_priv->perf.gen8_valid_ctx_bit = BIT(16);
3641 if (dev_priv->perf.ops.enable_metric_set) {
3642 INIT_LIST_HEAD(&dev_priv->perf.streams);
3643 mutex_init(&dev_priv->perf.lock);
3645 oa_sample_rate_hard_limit = 1000 *
3646 (RUNTIME_INFO(dev_priv)->cs_timestamp_frequency_khz / 2);
3647 dev_priv->perf.sysctl_header = register_sysctl_table(dev_root);
3649 mutex_init(&dev_priv->perf.metrics_lock);
3650 idr_init(&dev_priv->perf.metrics_idr);
3652 /* We set up some ratelimit state to potentially throttle any
3653 * _NOTES about spurious, invalid OA reports which we don't
3654 * forward to userspace.
3656 * We print a _NOTE about any throttling when closing the
3657 * stream instead of waiting until driver _fini which no one
3660 * Using the same limiting factors as printk_ratelimit()
3662 ratelimit_state_init(&dev_priv->perf.spurious_report_rs,
3664 /* Since we use a DRM_NOTE for spurious reports it would be
3665 * inconsistent to let __ratelimit() automatically print a
3666 * warning for throttling.
3668 ratelimit_set_flags(&dev_priv->perf.spurious_report_rs,
3669 RATELIMIT_MSG_ON_RELEASE);
3671 dev_priv->perf.initialized = true;
3675 static int destroy_config(int id, void *p, void *data)
3677 struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv = data;
3678 struct i915_oa_config *oa_config = p;
3680 put_oa_config(dev_priv, oa_config);
3686 * i915_perf_fini - Counter part to i915_perf_init()
3687 * @dev_priv: i915 device instance
3689 void i915_perf_fini(struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv)
3691 if (!dev_priv->perf.initialized)
3694 idr_for_each(&dev_priv->perf.metrics_idr, destroy_config, dev_priv);
3695 idr_destroy(&dev_priv->perf.metrics_idr);
3697 unregister_sysctl_table(dev_priv->perf.sysctl_header);
3699 memset(&dev_priv->perf.ops, 0, sizeof(dev_priv->perf.ops));
3701 dev_priv->perf.initialized = false;