1.. 2 Copyright (C) 2017, Emilio G. Cota <cota@braap.org> 3 Copyright (c) 2019, Linaro Limited 4 Written by Emilio Cota and Alex Bennée 5 6QEMU TCG Plugins 7================ 8 9QEMU TCG plugins provide a way for users to run experiments taking 10advantage of the total system control emulation can have over a guest. 11It provides a mechanism for plugins to subscribe to events during 12translation and execution and optionally callback into the plugin 13during these events. TCG plugins are unable to change the system state 14only monitor it passively. However they can do this down to an 15individual instruction granularity including potentially subscribing 16to all load and store operations. 17 18Usage 19----- 20 21Any QEMU binary with TCG support has plugins enabled by default. 22Earlier releases needed to be explicitly enabled with:: 23 24 configure --enable-plugins 25 26Once built a program can be run with multiple plugins loaded each with 27their own arguments:: 28 29 $QEMU $OTHER_QEMU_ARGS \ 30 -plugin tests/plugin/libhowvec.so,inline=on,count=hint \ 31 -plugin tests/plugin/libhotblocks.so 32 33Arguments are plugin specific and can be used to modify their 34behaviour. In this case the howvec plugin is being asked to use inline 35ops to count and break down the hint instructions by type. 36 37Writing plugins 38--------------- 39 40API versioning 41~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 42 43This is a new feature for QEMU and it does allow people to develop 44out-of-tree plugins that can be dynamically linked into a running QEMU 45process. However the project reserves the right to change or break the 46API should it need to do so. The best way to avoid this is to submit 47your plugin upstream so they can be updated if/when the API changes. 48 49All plugins need to declare a symbol which exports the plugin API 50version they were built against. This can be done simply by:: 51 52 QEMU_PLUGIN_EXPORT int qemu_plugin_version = QEMU_PLUGIN_VERSION; 53 54The core code will refuse to load a plugin that doesn't export a 55``qemu_plugin_version`` symbol or if plugin version is outside of QEMU's 56supported range of API versions. 57 58Additionally the ``qemu_info_t`` structure which is passed to the 59``qemu_plugin_install`` method of a plugin will detail the minimum and 60current API versions supported by QEMU. The API version will be 61incremented if new APIs are added. The minimum API version will be 62incremented if existing APIs are changed or removed. 63 64Lifetime of the query handle 65~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 66 67Each callback provides an opaque anonymous information handle which 68can usually be further queried to find out information about a 69translation, instruction or operation. The handles themselves are only 70valid during the lifetime of the callback so it is important that any 71information that is needed is extracted during the callback and saved 72by the plugin. 73 74Plugin life cycle 75~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 76 77First the plugin is loaded and the public qemu_plugin_install function 78is called. The plugin will then register callbacks for various plugin 79events. Generally plugins will register a handler for the *atexit* 80if they want to dump a summary of collected information once the 81program/system has finished running. 82 83When a registered event occurs the plugin callback is invoked. The 84callbacks may provide additional information. In the case of a 85translation event the plugin has an option to enumerate the 86instructions in a block of instructions and optionally register 87callbacks to some or all instructions when they are executed. 88 89There is also a facility to add an inline event where code to 90increment a counter can be directly inlined with the translation. 91Currently only a simple increment is supported. This is not atomic so 92can miss counts. If you want absolute precision you should use a 93callback which can then ensure atomicity itself. 94 95Finally when QEMU exits all the registered *atexit* callbacks are 96invoked. 97 98Exposure of QEMU internals 99~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 100 101The plugin architecture actively avoids leaking implementation details 102about how QEMU's translation works to the plugins. While there are 103conceptions such as translation time and translation blocks the 104details are opaque to plugins. The plugin is able to query select 105details of instructions and system configuration only through the 106exported *qemu_plugin* functions. 107 108API 109~~~ 110 111.. kernel-doc:: include/qemu/qemu-plugin.h 112 113Internals 114--------- 115 116Locking 117~~~~~~~ 118 119We have to ensure we cannot deadlock, particularly under MTTCG. For 120this we acquire a lock when called from plugin code. We also keep the 121list of callbacks under RCU so that we do not have to hold the lock 122when calling the callbacks. This is also for performance, since some 123callbacks (e.g. memory access callbacks) might be called very 124frequently. 125 126 * A consequence of this is that we keep our own list of CPUs, so that 127 we do not have to worry about locking order wrt cpu_list_lock. 128 * Use a recursive lock, since we can get registration calls from 129 callbacks. 130 131As a result registering/unregistering callbacks is "slow", since it 132takes a lock. But this is very infrequent; we want performance when 133calling (or not calling) callbacks, not when registering them. Using 134RCU is great for this. 135 136We support the uninstallation of a plugin at any time (e.g. from 137plugin callbacks). This allows plugins to remove themselves if they no 138longer want to instrument the code. This operation is asynchronous 139which means callbacks may still occur after the uninstall operation is 140requested. The plugin isn't completely uninstalled until the safe work 141has executed while all vCPUs are quiescent. 142 143Example Plugins 144--------------- 145 146There are a number of plugins included with QEMU and you are 147encouraged to contribute your own plugins plugins upstream. There is a 148``contrib/plugins`` directory where they can go. 149 150- tests/plugins 151 152These are some basic plugins that are used to test and exercise the 153API during the ``make check-tcg`` target. 154 155- contrib/plugins/hotblocks.c 156 157The hotblocks plugin allows you to examine the where hot paths of 158execution are in your program. Once the program has finished you will 159get a sorted list of blocks reporting the starting PC, translation 160count, number of instructions and execution count. This will work best 161with linux-user execution as system emulation tends to generate 162re-translations as blocks from different programs get swapped in and 163out of system memory. 164 165If your program is single-threaded you can use the ``inline`` option for 166slightly faster (but not thread safe) counters. 167 168Example:: 169 170 ./aarch64-linux-user/qemu-aarch64 \ 171 -plugin contrib/plugins/libhotblocks.so -d plugin \ 172 ./tests/tcg/aarch64-linux-user/sha1 173 SHA1=15dd99a1991e0b3826fede3deffc1feba42278e6 174 collected 903 entries in the hash table 175 pc, tcount, icount, ecount 176 0x0000000041ed10, 1, 5, 66087 177 0x000000004002b0, 1, 4, 66087 178 ... 179 180- contrib/plugins/hotpages.c 181 182Similar to hotblocks but this time tracks memory accesses:: 183 184 ./aarch64-linux-user/qemu-aarch64 \ 185 -plugin contrib/plugins/libhotpages.so -d plugin \ 186 ./tests/tcg/aarch64-linux-user/sha1 187 SHA1=15dd99a1991e0b3826fede3deffc1feba42278e6 188 Addr, RCPUs, Reads, WCPUs, Writes 189 0x000055007fe000, 0x0001, 31747952, 0x0001, 8835161 190 0x000055007ff000, 0x0001, 29001054, 0x0001, 8780625 191 0x00005500800000, 0x0001, 687465, 0x0001, 335857 192 0x0000000048b000, 0x0001, 130594, 0x0001, 355 193 0x0000000048a000, 0x0001, 1826, 0x0001, 11 194 195The hotpages plugin can be configured using the following arguments: 196 197 * sortby=reads|writes|address 198 199 Log the data sorted by either the number of reads, the number of writes, or 200 memory address. (Default: entries are sorted by the sum of reads and writes) 201 202 * io=on 203 204 Track IO addresses. Only relevant to full system emulation. (Default: off) 205 206 * pagesize=N 207 208 The page size used. (Default: N = 4096) 209 210- contrib/plugins/howvec.c 211 212This is an instruction classifier so can be used to count different 213types of instructions. It has a number of options to refine which get 214counted. You can give a value to the ``count`` argument for a class of 215instructions to break it down fully, so for example to see all the system 216registers accesses:: 217 218 ./aarch64-softmmu/qemu-system-aarch64 $(QEMU_ARGS) \ 219 -append "root=/dev/sda2 systemd.unit=benchmark.service" \ 220 -smp 4 -plugin ./contrib/plugins/libhowvec.so,count=sreg -d plugin 221 222which will lead to a sorted list after the class breakdown:: 223 224 Instruction Classes: 225 Class: UDEF not counted 226 Class: SVE (68 hits) 227 Class: PCrel addr (47789483 hits) 228 Class: Add/Sub (imm) (192817388 hits) 229 Class: Logical (imm) (93852565 hits) 230 Class: Move Wide (imm) (76398116 hits) 231 Class: Bitfield (44706084 hits) 232 Class: Extract (5499257 hits) 233 Class: Cond Branch (imm) (147202932 hits) 234 Class: Exception Gen (193581 hits) 235 Class: NOP not counted 236 Class: Hints (6652291 hits) 237 Class: Barriers (8001661 hits) 238 Class: PSTATE (1801695 hits) 239 Class: System Insn (6385349 hits) 240 Class: System Reg counted individually 241 Class: Branch (reg) (69497127 hits) 242 Class: Branch (imm) (84393665 hits) 243 Class: Cmp & Branch (110929659 hits) 244 Class: Tst & Branch (44681442 hits) 245 Class: AdvSimd ldstmult (736 hits) 246 Class: ldst excl (9098783 hits) 247 Class: Load Reg (lit) (87189424 hits) 248 Class: ldst noalloc pair (3264433 hits) 249 Class: ldst pair (412526434 hits) 250 Class: ldst reg (imm) (314734576 hits) 251 Class: Loads & Stores (2117774 hits) 252 Class: Data Proc Reg (223519077 hits) 253 Class: Scalar FP (31657954 hits) 254 Individual Instructions: 255 Instr: mrs x0, sp_el0 (2682661 hits) (op=0xd5384100/ System Reg) 256 Instr: mrs x1, tpidr_el2 (1789339 hits) (op=0xd53cd041/ System Reg) 257 Instr: mrs x2, tpidr_el2 (1513494 hits) (op=0xd53cd042/ System Reg) 258 Instr: mrs x0, tpidr_el2 (1490823 hits) (op=0xd53cd040/ System Reg) 259 Instr: mrs x1, sp_el0 (933793 hits) (op=0xd5384101/ System Reg) 260 Instr: mrs x2, sp_el0 (699516 hits) (op=0xd5384102/ System Reg) 261 Instr: mrs x4, tpidr_el2 (528437 hits) (op=0xd53cd044/ System Reg) 262 Instr: mrs x30, ttbr1_el1 (480776 hits) (op=0xd538203e/ System Reg) 263 Instr: msr ttbr1_el1, x30 (480713 hits) (op=0xd518203e/ System Reg) 264 Instr: msr vbar_el1, x30 (480671 hits) (op=0xd518c01e/ System Reg) 265 ... 266 267To find the argument shorthand for the class you need to examine the 268source code of the plugin at the moment, specifically the ``*opt`` 269argument in the InsnClassExecCount tables. 270 271- contrib/plugins/lockstep.c 272 273This is a debugging tool for developers who want to find out when and 274where execution diverges after a subtle change to TCG code generation. 275It is not an exact science and results are likely to be mixed once 276asynchronous events are introduced. While the use of -icount can 277introduce determinism to the execution flow it doesn't always follow 278the translation sequence will be exactly the same. Typically this is 279caused by a timer firing to service the GUI causing a block to end 280early. However in some cases it has proved to be useful in pointing 281people at roughly where execution diverges. The only argument you need 282for the plugin is a path for the socket the two instances will 283communicate over:: 284 285 286 ./sparc-softmmu/qemu-system-sparc -monitor none -parallel none \ 287 -net none -M SS-20 -m 256 -kernel day11/zImage.elf \ 288 -plugin ./contrib/plugins/liblockstep.so,sockpath=lockstep-sparc.sock \ 289 -d plugin,nochain 290 291which will eventually report:: 292 293 qemu-system-sparc: warning: nic lance.0 has no peer 294 @ 0x000000ffd06678 vs 0x000000ffd001e0 (2/1 since last) 295 @ 0x000000ffd07d9c vs 0x000000ffd06678 (3/1 since last) 296 Δ insn_count @ 0x000000ffd07d9c (809900609) vs 0x000000ffd06678 (809900612) 297 previously @ 0x000000ffd06678/10 (809900609 insns) 298 previously @ 0x000000ffd001e0/4 (809900599 insns) 299 previously @ 0x000000ffd080ac/2 (809900595 insns) 300 previously @ 0x000000ffd08098/5 (809900593 insns) 301 previously @ 0x000000ffd080c0/1 (809900588 insns) 302 303- contrib/plugins/hwprofile.c 304 305The hwprofile tool can only be used with system emulation and allows 306the user to see what hardware is accessed how often. It has a number of options: 307 308 * track=read or track=write 309 310 By default the plugin tracks both reads and writes. You can use one 311 of these options to limit the tracking to just one class of accesses. 312 313 * source 314 315 Will include a detailed break down of what the guest PC that made the 316 access was. Not compatible with the pattern option. Example output:: 317 318 cirrus-low-memory @ 0xfffffd00000a0000 319 pc:fffffc0000005cdc, 1, 256 320 pc:fffffc0000005ce8, 1, 256 321 pc:fffffc0000005cec, 1, 256 322 323 * pattern 324 325 Instead break down the accesses based on the offset into the HW 326 region. This can be useful for seeing the most used registers of a 327 device. Example output:: 328 329 pci0-conf @ 0xfffffd01fe000000 330 off:00000004, 1, 1 331 off:00000010, 1, 3 332 off:00000014, 1, 3 333 off:00000018, 1, 2 334 off:0000001c, 1, 2 335 off:00000020, 1, 2 336 ... 337 338- contrib/plugins/execlog.c 339 340The execlog tool traces executed instructions with memory access. It can be used 341for debugging and security analysis purposes. 342Please be aware that this will generate a lot of output. 343 344The plugin takes no argument:: 345 346 qemu-system-arm $(QEMU_ARGS) \ 347 -plugin ./contrib/plugins/libexeclog.so -d plugin 348 349which will output an execution trace following this structure:: 350 351 # vCPU, vAddr, opcode, disassembly[, load/store, memory addr, device]... 352 0, 0xa12, 0xf8012400, "movs r4, #0" 353 0, 0xa14, 0xf87f42b4, "cmp r4, r6" 354 0, 0xa16, 0xd206, "bhs #0xa26" 355 0, 0xa18, 0xfff94803, "ldr r0, [pc, #0xc]", load, 0x00010a28, RAM 356 0, 0xa1a, 0xf989f000, "bl #0xd30" 357 0, 0xd30, 0xfff9b510, "push {r4, lr}", store, 0x20003ee0, RAM, store, 0x20003ee4, RAM 358 0, 0xd32, 0xf9893014, "adds r0, #0x14" 359 0, 0xd34, 0xf9c8f000, "bl #0x10c8" 360 0, 0x10c8, 0xfff96c43, "ldr r3, [r0, #0x44]", load, 0x200000e4, RAM 361 362- contrib/plugins/cache.c 363 364Cache modelling plugin that measures the performance of a given L1 cache 365configuration, and optionally a unified L2 per-core cache when a given working 366set is run:: 367 368 qemu-x86_64 -plugin ./contrib/plugins/libcache.so \ 369 -d plugin -D cache.log ./tests/tcg/x86_64-linux-user/float_convs 370 371will report the following:: 372 373 core #, data accesses, data misses, dmiss rate, insn accesses, insn misses, imiss rate 374 0 996695 508 0.0510% 2642799 18617 0.7044% 375 376 address, data misses, instruction 377 0x424f1e (_int_malloc), 109, movq %rax, 8(%rcx) 378 0x41f395 (_IO_default_xsputn), 49, movb %dl, (%rdi, %rax) 379 0x42584d (ptmalloc_init.part.0), 33, movaps %xmm0, (%rax) 380 0x454d48 (__tunables_init), 20, cmpb $0, (%r8) 381 ... 382 383 address, fetch misses, instruction 384 0x4160a0 (__vfprintf_internal), 744, movl $1, %ebx 385 0x41f0a0 (_IO_setb), 744, endbr64 386 0x415882 (__vfprintf_internal), 744, movq %r12, %rdi 387 0x4268a0 (__malloc), 696, andq $0xfffffffffffffff0, %rax 388 ... 389 390The plugin has a number of arguments, all of them are optional: 391 392 * limit=N 393 394 Print top N icache and dcache thrashing instructions along with their 395 address, number of misses, and its disassembly. (default: 32) 396 397 * icachesize=N 398 * iblksize=B 399 * iassoc=A 400 401 Instruction cache configuration arguments. They specify the cache size, block 402 size, and associativity of the instruction cache, respectively. 403 (default: N = 16384, B = 64, A = 8) 404 405 * dcachesize=N 406 * dblksize=B 407 * dassoc=A 408 409 Data cache configuration arguments. They specify the cache size, block size, 410 and associativity of the data cache, respectively. 411 (default: N = 16384, B = 64, A = 8) 412 413 * evict=POLICY 414 415 Sets the eviction policy to POLICY. Available policies are: :code:`lru`, 416 :code:`fifo`, and :code:`rand`. The plugin will use the specified policy for 417 both instruction and data caches. (default: POLICY = :code:`lru`) 418 419 * cores=N 420 421 Sets the number of cores for which we maintain separate icache and dcache. 422 (default: for linux-user, N = 1, for full system emulation: N = cores 423 available to guest) 424 425 * l2=on 426 427 Simulates a unified L2 cache (stores blocks for both instructions and data) 428 using the default L2 configuration (cache size = 2MB, associativity = 16-way, 429 block size = 64B). 430 431 * l2cachesize=N 432 * l2blksize=B 433 * l2assoc=A 434 435 L2 cache configuration arguments. They specify the cache size, block size, and 436 associativity of the L2 cache, respectively. Setting any of the L2 437 configuration arguments implies ``l2=on``. 438 (default: N = 2097152 (2MB), B = 64, A = 16) 439