On Thu, Mar 3, 2022 at 8:25 AM Ravi Bangoria <ravi.bangoria@xxxxxxx> wrote:
On 03-Mar-22 10:08 AM, Jim Mattson wrote:
On Mon, Feb 21, 2022 at 2:02 AM Ravi Bangoria <ravi.bangoria@xxxxxxx> wrote:
On 21-Feb-22 1:27 PM, Like Xu wrote:
On 21/2/2022 3:31 pm, Ravi Bangoria wrote:
void reprogram_counter(struct kvm_pmu *pmu, int pmc_idx)
{
struct kvm_pmc *pmc = kvm_x86_ops.pmu_ops->pmc_idx_to_pmc(pmu, pmc_idx);
+ bool is_intel = !strncmp(kvm_x86_ops.name, "kvm_intel", 9);
How about using guest_cpuid_is_intel(vcpu)
Yeah, that's better then strncmp().
directly in the reprogram_gp_counter() ?
We need this flag in reprogram_fixed_counter() as well.
Explicit "is_intel" checks in any form seem clumsy,
Indeed. However introducing arch specific callback for such tiny
logic seemed overkill to me. So thought to just do it this way.
I agree that arch-specific callbacks are ridiculous for these distinctions.
since we have
already put some effort into abstracting away the implementation
differences in struct kvm_pmu. It seems like these differences could
be handled by adding three masks to that structure: the "raw event
mask" (i.e. event selector and unit mask), the hsw_in_tx mask, and the
hsw_in_tx_checkpointed mask.
struct kvm_pmu is arch independent. You mean struct kvm_pmu_ops?
No; I meant exactly what I said. See, for example, how the
reserved_bits field is used. It is initialized in the vendor-specific
pmu_refresh functions, and from then on, it facilitates
vendor-specific behaviors without explicit checks or vendor-specific
callbacks. An eventsel_mask field would be a natural addition to this
structure, to deal with the vendor-specific event selector widths. The
hsw_in_tx_mask and hsw_in_tx_checkpointed_mask fields are less
natural, since they will be 0 on AMD, but they would make it simple to
write the corresponding code in a vendor-neutral fashion.
BTW, am I the only one who finds the HSW_ prefixes a bit absurd here,
since TSX was never functional on Haswell?
These changes should also be coordinated with Like's series that
eliminates all of the PERF_TYPE_HARDWARE nonsense.
I'll rebase this on Like's patch series.
That's not exactly what I meant, but okay.