Hi Peter,
On 8/1/24 3:45 PM, Peter Newman wrote:
On Thu, Aug 1, 2024 at 2:50 PM Reinette Chatre
<reinette.chatre@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On 7/17/24 10:19 AM, Moger, Babu wrote:
On 7/12/24 17:03, Reinette Chatre wrote:
On 7/3/24 2:48 PM, Babu Moger wrote:
# Examples
a. Check if ABMC support is available
#mount -t resctrl resctrl /sys/fs/resctrl/
#cat /sys/fs/resctrl/info/L3_MON/mbm_mode
[abmc]
legacy
Linux kernel detected ABMC feature and it is enabled.
How about renaming "abmc" to "mbm_cntrs"? This will match the num_mbm_cntrs
info file and be the final step to make this generic so that another
architecture
can more easily support assignining hardware counters without needing to call
the feature AMD's "abmc".
I think we aleady settled this with "mbm_cntr_assignable".
For soft-RMID" it will be mbm_sw_assignable.
Maybe getting a bit long but how about "mbm_cntr_sw_assignable" to match
with the term "mbm_cntr" in accompanying "num_mbm_cntrs"?
My users are pushing for a consistent interface regardless of whether
counter assignment is implemented in hardware or software, so I would
like to avoid exposing implementation differences in the interface
where possible.
This seems a reasonable ask but can we be confident that if hardware
supports assignable counters then there will never be a reason to use
software assignable counters? (This needs to also consider how/if Arm
may use this feature.)
I am of course not familiar with details of the software implementation
- could there be benefits to using it even if hardware counters are
supported?
What I would like to avoid is future complexity of needing a new mount/config
option that user space needs to use to select if a single "mbm_cntr_assignable"
is backed by hardware or software.
The main semantic difference with SW assignments is that it is not
possible to assign counters to individual events. Because the
implementation is assigning RMIDs to groups, assignment results in all
events being counted.
I was considering introducing a boolean mbm_assign_events node to
indicate whether assigning individual events is supported. If true,
num_mbm_cntrs indicates the number of events which can be counted,
otherwise it indicates the number of groups to which counters can be
assigned and attempting to assign a single event is silently upgraded
to assigning counters to all events in the group.
How were you envisioning your users using the control file ("mbm_control")
in these scenarios? Does this file's interface even work for SW assignment
scenarios?
Users should expect consistent interface for "mbm_control" also.
It sounds to me that a potential "mbm_assign_events" will be false for SW
assignments. That would mean that "num_mbm_cntrs" will
contain the number of groups to which counters can be assigned?
Would user space be required to always enable all flags (enable all events) of
all domains to the same values ... or would enabling of one flag (one event)
in one domain automatically result in all flags (all events) enabled for all
domains ... or would enabling of one flag (one event) in one domain only appear
to user space to be enabled while in reality all flags/events are actually enabled?
However, If we don't expect to see these semantics in any other
implementation, these semantics could be implicit in the definition of
a SW assignable counter.
It is not clear to me how implementation differences between hardware
and software assignment can be hidden from user space. It is possible
to let user space enable individual events and then silently upgrade it
to all events. I see two options here, either "mbm_control" needs to
explicitly show this "silent upgrade" so that user space knows which
events are actually enabled, or "mbm_control" only shows flags/events enabled
from user space perspective. In the former scenario, this needs more
user space support since a generic user space cannot be confident which
flags are set after writing to "mbm_control". In the latter scenario,
meaning of "num_mbm_cntrs" becomes unclear since user space is expected
to rely on it to know which events can be enabled and if some are
actually "silently enabled" when user space still thinks it needs to be
enabled the number of available counters becomes vague.
It is not clear to me how to present hardware and software assignable
counters with a single consistent interface. Actually, what if the
"mbm_mode" is what distinguishes how counters are assigned instead of how
it is backed (hw vs sw)? What if, instead of "mbm_cntr_assignable" and
"mbm_cntr_sw_assignable" MBM modes the terms "mbm_cntr_event_assignable"
and "mbm_cntr_group_assignable" is used? Could that replace a
potential "mbm_assign_events" while also supporting user space in
interactions with "mbm_control"?
Reinette