Re: [PATCH 5/5] coresight: trbe: Prohibit tracing while handling an IRQ

From: Suzuki K Poulose
Date: Thu Jul 15 2021 - 04:52:47 EST


On 15/07/2021 04:09, Anshuman Khandual wrote:
A small nit. Paragraphs in the commit message do not seem to be aligned
properly to a maximum 75 characters width.

On 7/12/21 5:08 PM, Suzuki K Poulose wrote:
When the TRBE generates an IRQ, we stop the TRBE, collect the trace
and then reprogram the TRBE with the updated buffer pointers in case
of a spurious IRQ. We might also leave the TRBE disabled, on an
overflow interrupt, without touching the ETE. This means the
the ETE is only disabled when the event is disabled later (via irq_work).
This is incorrect, as the ETE trace is still ON without actually being
captured and may be routed to the ATB.

I had an assumption that when the TRBE is stopped, ETE would also stop
implicitly given that the trace packets are not being accepted anymore.
But if that assumption does not always hold true, then yes trace must
be stopped upon a TRBE IRQ.

No, the ETE never stops, until it is stopped. The ETE doesn't care who
is the consumer of the trace. Be it TRBE or ATB or any other sink.



So, we move the CPU into trace prohibited state (for all exception
levels) upon entering the IRQ handler. The state is restored before
enabling the TRBE back. Otherwise the trace remains prohibited.
Since, the ETM/ETE driver controls the TRFCR_EL1 per session,
(from commit "coresight: etm4x: Use Trace Filtering controls dynamically")

commit SHA ID ?


The patch is in this series, not committed yet.

the tracing can be restored/enabled back when the event is rescheduled
in.

Makes sense.


Fixes: 3fbf7f011f24 ("coresight: sink: Add TRBE driver")
Cc: Anshuman Khandual <anshuman.khandual@xxxxxxx>
Cc: Mathieu Poirier <mathieu.poirier@xxxxxxxxxx>
Cc: Mike Leach <mike.leach@xxxxxxxxxx>
Cc: Leo Yan <leo.yan@xxxxxxxxxx>
Signed-off-by: Suzuki K Poulose <suzuki.poulose@xxxxxxx>
---
drivers/hwtracing/coresight/coresight-trbe.c | 43 ++++++++++++++++++--
1 file changed, 40 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)

diff --git a/drivers/hwtracing/coresight/coresight-trbe.c b/drivers/hwtracing/coresight/coresight-trbe.c
index c0c264264427..e4d88e0de2a8 100644
--- a/drivers/hwtracing/coresight/coresight-trbe.c
+++ b/drivers/hwtracing/coresight/coresight-trbe.c
@@ -83,6 +83,31 @@ struct trbe_drvdata {
struct platform_device *pdev;
};
+static inline void write_trfcr(u64 val)
+{
+ write_sysreg_s(val, SYS_TRFCR_EL1);
+ isb();
+}
+

There is another instance of write_trfcr() in coresight-etm4x-core.c and
some other writes into SYS_TRFCR_EL1 elsewhere. write_trfcr() should be
factored out and moved to a common place.

Agreed, but I couldn't find a right candidate for this. Welcome
to suggestions. May be we could add something like:

asm/self-hosted.h


+/*
+ * Prohibit the CPU tracing at all ELs, in preparation to collect
+ * the trace buffer.
+ *
+ * Returns the original value of the trfcr for restoring later.
+ */
+static u64 cpu_prohibit_tracing(void)
+{
+ u64 trfcr = read_sysreg_s(SYS_TRFCR_EL1);
+
+ write_trfcr(trfcr & ~(TRFCR_ELx_ExTRE | TRFCR_ELx_E0TRE));
+ return trfcr;
+}

This also should be factored out along with etm4x_prohibit_trace()
usage and moved to a common header instead.

+
+static void cpu_restore_tracing(u64 trfcr)
+{
+ write_trfcr(trfcr);
+}
+
static int trbe_alloc_node(struct perf_event *event)
{
if (event->cpu == -1)
@@ -681,7 +706,7 @@ static int arm_trbe_disable(struct coresight_device *csdev)
return 0;
}
-static void trbe_handle_spurious(struct perf_output_handle *handle)
+static void trbe_handle_spurious(struct perf_output_handle *handle, u64 trfcr)
{
struct trbe_buf *buf = etm_perf_sink_config(handle);
@@ -691,6 +716,7 @@ static void trbe_handle_spurious(struct perf_output_handle *handle)
trbe_drain_and_disable_local();
return;
}

A small comment here would be great because this will be the only
IRQ handler path, where it actually restores the tracing back.

Agreed


+ cpu_restore_tracing(trfcr);
trbe_enable_hw(buf);
}
@@ -760,7 +786,18 @@ static irqreturn_t arm_trbe_irq_handler(int irq, void *dev)
struct perf_output_handle **handle_ptr = dev;
struct perf_output_handle *handle = *handle_ptr;
enum trbe_fault_action act;
- u64 status;
+ u64 status, trfcr;
+
+ /*
+ * Prohibit the tracing, while we process this. We turn
+ * things back right, if we get to enabling the TRBE
+ * back again. Otherwise, the tracing still remains
+ * prohibited, until the perf event state changes
+ * or another event is scheduled. This ensures that
+ * the trace is not generated when it cannot be
+ * captured.
+ */

Right.

But a small nit though. Please keep the comments here formatted and
aligned with the existing ones.


ok

+ trfcr = cpu_prohibit_tracing();
/*
* Ensure the trace is visible to the CPUs and
@@ -791,7 +828,7 @@ static irqreturn_t arm_trbe_irq_handler(int irq, void *dev)
trbe_handle_overflow(handle);
break;
case TRBE_FAULT_ACT_SPURIOUS:
- trbe_handle_spurious(handle);
+ trbe_handle_spurious(handle, trfcr);
break;
case TRBE_FAULT_ACT_FATAL:
trbe_stop_and_truncate_event(handle);


But stopping the trace (even though from a sink IRQ handler) is a source
device action. Should not this be done via a new coresight_ops_source
callback instead ?

It is a valid point. But that has limitations.
Here is the list:

* Stopping the source is a heavy hammer, especially if we
are about to continue the trace soon. (e.g, spurious
interrupt and possibly soon for FILL events with reworking
the flags)

* Stopping the source, via source_ops() is doing things
under the driving mode of the session, perf vs sysfs.
We only support perf though, but if there is another
user.

* This is agnostic to the mode (as above), the TRBE driver
doesn't need to be taught, how to find the path and
stop the current session for the given mode.

* If the tracing is enabled in kernel mode, the ETE still
generates the trace until we trigger the longer route
for disabling, which is not nice.

Suzuki