xref: /openbmc/linux/Documentation/powerpc/imc.rst (revision f5c27da4)
1.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
2.. _imc:
3
4===================================
5IMC (In-Memory Collection Counters)
6===================================
7
8Anju T Sudhakar, 10 May 2019
9
10.. contents::
11    :depth: 3
12
13
14Basic overview
15==============
16
17IMC (In-Memory collection counters) is a hardware monitoring facility that
18collects large numbers of hardware performance events at Nest level (these are
19on-chip but off-core), Core level and Thread level.
20
21The Nest PMU counters are handled by a Nest IMC microcode which runs in the OCC
22(On-Chip Controller) complex. The microcode collects the counter data and moves
23the nest IMC counter data to memory.
24
25The Core and Thread IMC PMU counters are handled in the core. Core level PMU
26counters give us the IMC counters' data per core and thread level PMU counters
27give us the IMC counters' data per CPU thread.
28
29OPAL obtains the IMC PMU and supported events information from the IMC Catalog
30and passes on to the kernel via the device tree. The event's information
31contains:
32
33- Event name
34- Event Offset
35- Event description
36
37and possibly also:
38
39- Event scale
40- Event unit
41
42Some PMUs may have a common scale and unit values for all their supported
43events. For those cases, the scale and unit properties for those events must be
44inherited from the PMU.
45
46The event offset in the memory is where the counter data gets accumulated.
47
48IMC catalog is available at:
49	https://github.com/open-power/ima-catalog
50
51The kernel discovers the IMC counters information in the device tree at the
52`imc-counters` device node which has a compatible field
53`ibm,opal-in-memory-counters`. From the device tree, the kernel parses the PMUs
54and their event's information and register the PMU and its attributes in the
55kernel.
56
57IMC example usage
58=================
59
60.. code-block:: sh
61
62  # perf list
63  [...]
64  nest_mcs01/PM_MCS01_64B_RD_DISP_PORT01/            [Kernel PMU event]
65  nest_mcs01/PM_MCS01_64B_RD_DISP_PORT23/            [Kernel PMU event]
66  [...]
67  core_imc/CPM_0THRD_NON_IDLE_PCYC/                  [Kernel PMU event]
68  core_imc/CPM_1THRD_NON_IDLE_INST/                  [Kernel PMU event]
69  [...]
70  thread_imc/CPM_0THRD_NON_IDLE_PCYC/                [Kernel PMU event]
71  thread_imc/CPM_1THRD_NON_IDLE_INST/                [Kernel PMU event]
72
73To see per chip data for nest_mcs0/PM_MCS_DOWN_128B_DATA_XFER_MC0/:
74
75.. code-block:: sh
76
77  # ./perf stat -e "nest_mcs01/PM_MCS01_64B_WR_DISP_PORT01/" -a --per-socket
78
79To see non-idle instructions for core 0:
80
81.. code-block:: sh
82
83  # ./perf stat -e "core_imc/CPM_NON_IDLE_INST/" -C 0 -I 1000
84
85To see non-idle instructions for a "make":
86
87.. code-block:: sh
88
89  # ./perf stat -e "thread_imc/CPM_NON_IDLE_PCYC/" make
90
91
92IMC Trace-mode
93===============
94
95POWER9 supports two modes for IMC which are the Accumulation mode and Trace
96mode. In Accumulation mode, event counts are accumulated in system Memory.
97Hypervisor then reads the posted counts periodically or when requested. In IMC
98Trace mode, the 64 bit trace SCOM value is initialized with the event
99information. The CPMCxSEL and CPMC_LOAD in the trace SCOM, specifies the event
100to be monitored and the sampling duration. On each overflow in the CPMCxSEL,
101hardware snapshots the program counter along with event counts and writes into
102memory pointed by LDBAR.
103
104LDBAR is a 64 bit special purpose per thread register, it has bits to indicate
105whether hardware is configured for accumulation or trace mode.
106
107LDBAR Register Layout
108---------------------
109
110  +-------+----------------------+
111  | 0     | Enable/Disable       |
112  +-------+----------------------+
113  | 1     | 0: Accumulation Mode |
114  |       +----------------------+
115  |       | 1: Trace Mode        |
116  +-------+----------------------+
117  | 2:3   | Reserved             |
118  +-------+----------------------+
119  | 4-6   | PB scope             |
120  +-------+----------------------+
121  | 7     | Reserved             |
122  +-------+----------------------+
123  | 8:50  | Counter Address      |
124  +-------+----------------------+
125  | 51:63 | Reserved             |
126  +-------+----------------------+
127
128TRACE_IMC_SCOM bit representation
129---------------------------------
130
131  +-------+------------+
132  | 0:1   | SAMPSEL    |
133  +-------+------------+
134  | 2:33  | CPMC_LOAD  |
135  +-------+------------+
136  | 34:40 | CPMC1SEL   |
137  +-------+------------+
138  | 41:47 | CPMC2SEL   |
139  +-------+------------+
140  | 48:50 | BUFFERSIZE |
141  +-------+------------+
142  | 51:63 | RESERVED   |
143  +-------+------------+
144
145CPMC_LOAD contains the sampling duration. SAMPSEL and CPMCxSEL determines the
146event to count. BUFFERSIZE indicates the memory range. On each overflow,
147hardware snapshots the program counter along with event counts and updates the
148memory and reloads the CMPC_LOAD value for the next sampling duration. IMC
149hardware does not support exceptions, so it quietly wraps around if memory
150buffer reaches the end.
151
152*Currently the event monitored for trace-mode is fixed as cycle.*
153
154Trace IMC example usage
155=======================
156
157.. code-block:: sh
158
159  # perf list
160  [....]
161  trace_imc/trace_cycles/                            [Kernel PMU event]
162
163To record an application/process with trace-imc event:
164
165.. code-block:: sh
166
167  # perf record -e trace_imc/trace_cycles/ yes > /dev/null
168  [ perf record: Woken up 1 times to write data ]
169  [ perf record: Captured and wrote 0.012 MB perf.data (21 samples) ]
170
171The `perf.data` generated, can be read using perf report.
172
173Benefits of using IMC trace-mode
174================================
175
176PMI (Performance Monitoring Interrupts) interrupt handling is avoided, since IMC
177trace mode snapshots the program counter and updates to the memory. And this
178also provide a way for the operating system to do instruction sampling in real
179time without PMI processing overhead.
180
181Performance data using `perf top` with and without trace-imc event.
182
183PMI interrupts count when `perf top` command is executed without trace-imc event.
184
185.. code-block:: sh
186
187  # grep PMI /proc/interrupts
188  PMI:          0          0          0          0   Performance monitoring interrupts
189  # ./perf top
190  ...
191  # grep PMI /proc/interrupts
192  PMI:      39735       8710      17338      17801   Performance monitoring interrupts
193  # ./perf top -e trace_imc/trace_cycles/
194  ...
195  # grep PMI /proc/interrupts
196  PMI:      39735       8710      17338      17801   Performance monitoring interrupts
197
198
199That is, the PMI interrupt counts do not increment when using the `trace_imc` event.
200