Hi Ricardo, On Mon, 18 Jul 2022 16:49:10 +0100, Ricardo Koller <ricarkol@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > A chained event overflowing on the low counter can set the overflow flag > in PMOVS. KVM does not set it, but real HW and the fast-model seem to. > Moreover, the AArch64.IncrementEventCounter() pseudocode in the ARM ARM > (DDI 0487H.a, J1.1.1 "aarch64/debug") also sets the PMOVS bit on > overflow. > > The pmu chain tests fail on bare metal when checking the overflow flag > of the low counter _not_ being set on overflow. Fix by removing the > checks. > > Signed-off-by: Ricardo Koller <ricarkol@xxxxxxxxxx> > --- > arm/pmu.c | 21 ++++++++++----------- > 1 file changed, 10 insertions(+), 11 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/arm/pmu.c b/arm/pmu.c > index a7899c3c..4f2c5096 100644 > --- a/arm/pmu.c > +++ b/arm/pmu.c > @@ -581,7 +581,6 @@ static void test_chained_counters(void) > precise_instrs_loop(22, pmu.pmcr_ro | PMU_PMCR_E); > > report(read_regn_el0(pmevcntr, 1) == 1, "CHAIN counter #1 incremented"); > - report(!read_sysreg(pmovsclr_el0), "no overflow recorded for chained incr #1"); > > /* test 64b overflow */ > > @@ -593,7 +592,7 @@ static void test_chained_counters(void) > precise_instrs_loop(22, pmu.pmcr_ro | PMU_PMCR_E); > report_info("overflow reg = 0x%lx", read_sysreg(pmovsclr_el0)); > report(read_regn_el0(pmevcntr, 1) == 2, "CHAIN counter #1 set to 2"); > - report(!read_sysreg(pmovsclr_el0), "no overflow recorded for chained incr #2"); > + report((read_sysreg(pmovsclr_el0) & 0x2) == 0, "no overflow recorded for chained incr #2"); > > write_regn_el0(pmevcntr, 0, PRE_OVERFLOW); > write_regn_el0(pmevcntr, 1, ALL_SET); > @@ -601,7 +600,7 @@ static void test_chained_counters(void) > precise_instrs_loop(22, pmu.pmcr_ro | PMU_PMCR_E); > report_info("overflow reg = 0x%lx", read_sysreg(pmovsclr_el0)); > report(!read_regn_el0(pmevcntr, 1), "CHAIN counter #1 wrapped"); > - report(read_sysreg(pmovsclr_el0) == 0x2, "overflow on chain counter"); > + report(read_sysreg(pmovsclr_el0) & 0x2, "overflow on chain counter"); > } > > static void test_chained_sw_incr(void) > @@ -626,10 +625,10 @@ static void test_chained_sw_incr(void) > for (i = 0; i < 100; i++) > write_sysreg(0x1, pmswinc_el0); > > - report(!read_sysreg(pmovsclr_el0) && (read_regn_el0(pmevcntr, 1) == 1), > - "no overflow and chain counter incremented after 100 SW_INCR/CHAIN"); > + report(read_regn_el0(pmevcntr, 1) == 1, > + "no chain counter incremented after 100 SW_INCR/CHAIN"); > report_info("overflow=0x%lx, #0=%ld #1=%ld", read_sysreg(pmovsclr_el0), > - read_regn_el0(pmevcntr, 0), read_regn_el0(pmevcntr, 1)); > + read_regn_el0(pmevcntr, 0), read_regn_el0(pmevcntr, 1)); > > /* 64b SW_INCR and overflow on CHAIN counter*/ > pmu_reset(); > @@ -644,7 +643,7 @@ static void test_chained_sw_incr(void) > for (i = 0; i < 100; i++) > write_sysreg(0x1, pmswinc_el0); > > - report((read_sysreg(pmovsclr_el0) == 0x2) && > + report((read_sysreg(pmovsclr_el0) & 0x2) && > (read_regn_el0(pmevcntr, 1) == 0) && > (read_regn_el0(pmevcntr, 0) == 84), > "overflow on chain counter and expected values after 100 SW_INCR/CHAIN"); > @@ -727,8 +726,8 @@ static void test_chain_promotion(void) > report_info("MEM_ACCESS counter #0 has value 0x%lx", > read_regn_el0(pmevcntr, 0)); > > - report((read_regn_el0(pmevcntr, 1) == 1) && !read_sysreg(pmovsclr_el0), > - "CHAIN counter enabled: CHAIN counter was incremented and no overflow"); > + report((read_regn_el0(pmevcntr, 1) == 1), > + "CHAIN counter enabled: CHAIN counter was incremented"); > > report_info("CHAIN counter #1 = 0x%lx, overflow=0x%lx", > read_regn_el0(pmevcntr, 1), read_sysreg(pmovsclr_el0)); > @@ -755,8 +754,8 @@ static void test_chain_promotion(void) > report_info("MEM_ACCESS counter #0 has value 0x%lx", > read_regn_el0(pmevcntr, 0)); > > - report((read_regn_el0(pmevcntr, 1) == 1) && !read_sysreg(pmovsclr_el0), > - "32b->64b: CHAIN counter incremented and no overflow"); > + report((read_regn_el0(pmevcntr, 1) == 1), > + "32b->64b: CHAIN counter incremented"); > > report_info("CHAIN counter #1 = 0x%lx, overflow=0x%lx", > read_regn_el0(pmevcntr, 1), read_sysreg(pmovsclr_el0)); I'm looking at fixing KVM to match this (see the binch of hacks at [1]), and still getting a couple of failures in the PMU overflow tests despite my best effort to fix the code: $ ./arm-run arm/pmu.flat --append pmu-overflow-interrupt /usr/bin/qemu-system-aarch64 -nodefaults -machine virt,gic-version=host -accel kvm -cpu host -device virtio-serial-device -device virtconsole,chardev=ctd -chardev testdev,id=ctd -device pci-testdev -display none -serial stdio -kernel arm/pmu.flat --append pmu-overflow-interrupt # -initrd /tmp/tmp.RQ6FmkvXay INFO: PMU version: 0x1 INFO: PMU implementer/ID code: 0x41("A")/0x3 INFO: Implements 6 event counters PASS: pmu: pmu-overflow-interrupt: no overflow interrupt after preset PASS: pmu: pmu-overflow-interrupt: no overflow interrupt after counting INFO: pmu: pmu-overflow-interrupt: overflow=0x0 PASS: pmu: pmu-overflow-interrupt: overflow interrupts expected on #0 and #1 FAIL: pmu: pmu-overflow-interrupt: no overflow interrupt expected on 32b boundary FAIL: pmu: pmu-overflow-interrupt: expect overflow interrupt on odd counter SUMMARY: 5 tests, 2 unexpected failures Looking at the kut code, I'm wondering whether you're still missing a couple of extra fixes such as: diff --git a/arm/pmu.c b/arm/pmu.c index 4f2c5096..e0b9f71a 100644 --- a/arm/pmu.c +++ b/arm/pmu.c @@ -861,8 +861,8 @@ static void test_overflow_interrupt(void) write_regn_el0(pmevcntr, 0, PRE_OVERFLOW); isb(); mem_access_loop(addr, 200, pmu.pmcr_ro | PMU_PMCR_E); - report(expect_interrupts(0), - "no overflow interrupt expected on 32b boundary"); + report(expect_interrupts(1), + "expect overflow interrupt on 32b counter"); /* overflow on odd counter */ pmu_reset_stats(); @@ -870,8 +870,8 @@ static void test_overflow_interrupt(void) write_regn_el0(pmevcntr, 1, ALL_SET); isb(); mem_access_loop(addr, 400, pmu.pmcr_ro | PMU_PMCR_E); - report(expect_interrupts(0x2), - "expect overflow interrupt on odd counter"); + report(expect_interrupts(0x3), + "expect overflow interrupt on even+odd counters"); } #endif With that, all PMU tests pass. Am I missing something? Did you notice these failing on HW? Thanks, M. [1] https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/maz/arm-platforms.git/log/?h=kvm-arm64/pmu-chained -- Without deviation from the norm, progress is not possible. _______________________________________________ kvmarm mailing list kvmarm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.cs.columbia.edu/mailman/listinfo/kvmarm