On Mon, May 06, 2024 at 03:53:40PM -0300, Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo wrote: > On Mon, May 06, 2024 at 11:05:17AM -0700, Namhyung Kim wrote: > > On Mon, May 6, 2024 at 6:58 AM Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > On Sat, May 04, 2024 at 02:50:31PM -0700, Andrii Nakryiko wrote: > > > > On Sat, May 4, 2024 at 8:28 AM Greg KH <gregkh@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > On Fri, May 03, 2024 at 05:30:03PM -0700, Andrii Nakryiko wrote: > > > > > > Note also, that fetching VMA name (e.g., backing file path, or special > > > > > > hard-coded or user-provided names) is optional just like build ID. If > > > > > > user sets vma_name_size to zero, kernel code won't attempt to retrieve > > > > > > it, saving resources. > > > > > > > Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andrii@xxxxxxxxxx> > > > > > > Where is the userspace code that uses this new api you have created? > > > > > So I added a faithful comparison of existing /proc/<pid>/maps vs new > > > > ioctl() API to solve a common problem (as described above) in patch > > > > #5. The plan is to put it in mentioned blazesym library at the very > > > > least. > > > > > > > > I'm sure perf would benefit from this as well (cc'ed Arnaldo and > > > > linux-perf-user), as they need to do stack symbolization as well. > > > I think the general use case in perf is different. This ioctl API is great > > for live tracing of a single (or a small number of) process(es). And > > yes, perf tools have those tracing use cases too. But I think the > > major use case of perf tools is system-wide profiling. > > > For system-wide profiling, you need to process samples of many > > different processes at a high frequency. Now perf record doesn't > > process them and just save it for offline processing (well, it does > > at the end to find out build-ID but it can be omitted). > > Since: > > Author: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@xxxxxxxxxx> > Date: Mon Dec 14 11:54:49 2020 +0100 > 1ca6e80254141d26 ("perf tools: Store build id when available in PERF_RECORD_MMAP2 metadata events") > > We don't need to to process the events to find the build ids. I haven't > checked if we still do it to find out which DSOs had hits, but we > shouldn't need to do it for build-ids (unless they were not in memory > when the kernel tried to stash them in the PERF_RECORD_MMAP2, which I > haven't checked but IIRC is a possibility if that ELF part isn't in > memory at the time we want to copy it). > If we're still traversing it like that I guess we can have a knob and > make it the default to not do that and instead create the perf.data > build ID header table with all the build-ids we got from > PERF_RECORD_MMAP2, a (slightly) bigger perf.data file but no event > processing at the end of a 'perf record' session. But then we don't process the PERF_RECORD_MMAP2 in 'perf record', it just goes on directly to the perf.data file :-\ Humm, perhaps the sideband thread... - Arnaldo