On Wed, 04 Mar 2020 00:52:34 -0800, Lionel Landwerlin wrote: > > On 04/03/2020 07:48, Dixit, Ashutosh wrote: > > On Tue, 03 Mar 2020 14:19:05 -0800, Umesh Nerlige Ramappa wrote: > >> From: Lionel Landwerlin <lionel.g.landwerlin@xxxxxxxxx> > >> > >> With the currently available parameters for the i915-perf stream, > >> there are still situations that are not well covered : > >> > >> If an application opens the stream with polling disable or at very low > >> frequency and OA interrupt enabled, no data will be available even > >> though somewhere between nothing and half of the OA buffer worth of > >> data might have landed in memory. > >> > >> To solve this issue we have a new flush ioctl on the perf stream that > >> forces the i915-perf driver to look at the state of the buffer when > >> called and makes any data available through both poll() & read() type > >> syscalls. > >> > >> v2: Version the ioctl (Joonas) > >> v3: Rebase (Umesh) > >> > >> Signed-off-by: Lionel Landwerlin <lionel.g.landwerlin@xxxxxxxxx> > >> Signed-off-by: Umesh Nerlige Ramappa <umesh.nerlige.ramappa@xxxxxxxxx> > > [snip] > > > >> +/** > >> + * i915_perf_flush_data - handle `I915_PERF_IOCTL_FLUSH_DATA` ioctl > >> + * @stream: An enabled i915 perf stream > >> + * > >> + * The intention is to flush all the data available for reading from the OA > >> + * buffer > >> + */ > >> +static void i915_perf_flush_data(struct i915_perf_stream *stream) > >> +{ > >> + stream->pollin = oa_buffer_check(stream, true); > >> +} > > Since this function doesn't actually wake up any thread (which anyway can > > be done by sending a signal to the blocked thread), is the only purpose of > > this function to update OA buffer head/tail? But in that it is not clear > > why a separate ioctl should be created for this, can't the read() call > > itself call oa_buffer_check() to update the OA buffer head/tail? > > > > Again just trying to minimize uapi changes if possible. > > Most applications will call read() after being notified by poll()/select() > that some data is available. Correct this is the standard non blocking read behavior. > Changing that behavior will break some of the existing perf tests . I am not suggesting changing that (that standard non blocking read behavior). > If any data is available, this new ioctl will wake up existing waiters on > poll()/select(). The issue is we are not calling wake_up() in the above function to wake up any blocked waiters. The ioctl will just update the OA buffer head/tail so that (a) a subsequent blocking read will not block, or (b) a subsequent non blocking read will return valid data (not -EAGAIN), or (c) a poll/select will not block but return immediately saying data is available. That is why it seems to me the ioctl is not required, updating the OA buffer head/tail can be done as part of the read() (and the poll/select) calls themselves. We will investigate if this can be done and update the patches in the next revision accordingly. Thanks! _______________________________________________ Intel-gfx mailing list Intel-gfx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/intel-gfx