Re: [PATCH RFC 1/3] KVM + perf: Rename *_intel_pt_intr() for generic usage

From: Sean Christopherson
Date: Mon Oct 03 2022 - 15:39:27 EST


On Mon, Sep 26, 2022, Like Xu wrote:
> From: Like Xu <likexu@xxxxxxxxxxx>
>
> The perf_guest_info_callbacks is common to KVM, while intel_pt is not,
> not even common to x86. In the VMX context, it makes sense to hook
> up the intel_pt specific hook, and given the uniqueness of this usage,
> calling the generic callback in the explicit location of the perf context
> is not functionally broken.

But it's extremely misleading. If I were a developer writing the perf hooks for
a different architecture, I would expect perf_handle_guest_intr() to be called on
_every_ perf interrupt that occurred in the guest.

Genericizing the hook also complicates wiring up the hook and consuming the interrupt
type. E.g. patch 3 is buggy; it wires up the VMX handler if and only if PT is in
PT_MODE_HOST_GUEST, and then takes a dependency on that buggy behavior by not
checking if Intel PT is supported in the now-generic vmx_handle_guest_intr().

This also doesn't really clean up the API from a non-x86 perspective, it just doesn't
make it any worse, i.e. other architectures are still exposed to an x86-specific hook.

Unless we anticipate ARM or RISC-V (which IIRC is gaining PMU support "soon") needing
to hook into "special" perf interrupts, it might be better to figure out a way to make
the hooks themselves more extensible for per-arch behavior. E.g similar to
kvm_vcpu and kvm_vcpu_arch, add an embedded arch (or vice versa) struct in
perf_guest_info_callbacks plus a perf-internal arch hook to update static calls,
and use that to wire up handle_intel_pt_int for x86. It'll require more work up
front, but in theory it will require less maintenance in the long run.

> Rename a bunch of intel_pt_intr() functions to the generic guest_intr().
> No functional change intended.

This changelog never says _why_. Looking forward, the reason for the rename is
to piggyback the hook for BTS.