On Wed, Nov 1, 2023 at 7:07 PM Mi, Dapeng <dapeng1.mi@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > On 11/1/2023 9:33 PM, Liang, Kan wrote: > > > > On 2023-10-31 11:31 p.m., Mi, Dapeng wrote: > >> On 11/1/2023 11:04 AM, Jim Mattson wrote: > >>> On Tue, Oct 31, 2023 at 6:59 PM Mi, Dapeng > >>> <dapeng1.mi@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >>>> On 11/1/2023 2:22 AM, Jim Mattson wrote: > >>>>> On Tue, Oct 31, 2023 at 1:58 AM Dapeng Mi > >>>>> <dapeng1.mi@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >>>>>> This patch adds support for the architectural topdown slots event > >>>>>> which > >>>>>> is hinted by CPUID.0AH.EBX. > >>>>> Can't a guest already program an event selector to count event select > >>>>> 0xa4, unit mask 1, unless the event is prohibited by > >>>>> KVM_SET_PMU_EVENT_FILTER? > >>>> Actually defining this new slots arch event is to do the sanity check > >>>> for supported arch-events which is enumerated by CPUID.0AH.EBX. > >>>> Currently vPMU would check if the arch event from guest is supported by > >>>> KVM. If not, it would be rejected just like intel_hw_event_available() > >>>> shows. > >>>> > >>>> If we don't add the slots event in the intel_arch_events[] array, guest > >>>> may program the slots event and pass the sanity check of KVM on a > >>>> platform which actually doesn't support slots event and program the > >>>> event on a real GP counter and got an invalid count. This is not > >>>> correct. > >>> On physical hardware, it is possible to program a GP counter with the > >>> event selector and unit mask of the slots event whether or not the > >>> platform supports it. Isn't KVM wrong to disallow something that a > >>> physical CPU allows? > >> > >> Yeah, I agree. But I'm not sure if this is a flaw on PMU driver. If an > >> event is not supported by the hardware, we can't predict the PMU's > >> behavior and a meaningless count may be returned and this could mislead > >> the user. > > The user can program any events on the GP counter. The perf doesn't > > limit it. For the unsupported event, 0 should be returned. Please keep > > in mind, the event list keeps updating. If the kernel checks for each > > event, it could be a disaster. I don't think it's a flaw. > > > Thanks Kan, it would be ok as long as 0 is always returned for > unsupported events. IMO, it's a nice to have feature that KVM does this > sanity check for supported arch events, it won't break anything. The hardware PMU most assuredly does not return 0 for unsupported events. For example, if I use host perf to sample event selector 0xa4 unit mask 1 on a Broadwell host (406f1), I get... # perf stat -e r01a4 sleep 10 Performance counter stats for 'sleep 10': 386,964 r01a4 10.000907211 seconds time elapsed Broadwell does not advertise support for architectural event 7 in CPUID.0AH:EBX, so KVM will refuse to measure this event inside a guest. That seems broken to me. > > > > > Thanks, > > Kan > >> Add Kan to confirm this. > >> > >> Hi Kan, > >> > >> Have you any comments on this? Thanks. > >> > >> > >>>>> AFAICT, this change just enables event filtering based on > >>>>> CPUID.0AH:EBX[bit 7] (though it's not clear to me why two independent > >>>>> mechanisms are necessary for event filtering). > >>>> IMO, these are two different things. this change is just to enable the > >>>> supported arch events check for slot events, the event filtering is > >>>> another thing. > >>> How is clearing CPUID.0AH:EBX[bit 7] any different from putting {event > >>> select 0xa4, unit mask 1} in a deny list with the PMU event filter? > >> I think there is no difference in the conclusion but with two different > >> methods. > >> > >>