On Tue, Aug 26, 2025 at 11:46:02PM +0100, Robin Murphy wrote: > On 2025-08-26 2:43 pm, Mark Rutland wrote: > > On Wed, Aug 13, 2025 at 06:01:10PM +0100, Robin Murphy wrote: > > To bikeshed a little here, I'm not keen on the PERF_PMU_CAP_RAW_EVENTS > > name, because it's not clear what "RAW" really means, and people will > > definitely read that to mean something else. > > > > Could we go with something like PERF_PMU_CAP_COMMON_CPU_EVENTS, to make > > it clear that this is about opting into CPU-PMU specific event types (of > > which PERF_TYPE_RAW is one of)? > > Indeed I started with that very intention after our previous discussion, but > soon realised that in fact nowhere in the code is there any definition or > even established notion of what "common" means in this context, so it's > hardly immune to misinterpretation either.
We can document that; it's everything less than PERF_TYPE_MAX: enum perf_type_id { PERF_TYPE_HARDWARE = 0, PERF_TYPE_SOFTWARE = 1, PERF_TYPE_TRACEPOINT = 2, PERF_TYPE_HW_CACHE = 3, PERF_TYPE_RAW = 4, PERF_TYPE_BREAKPOINT = 5, PERF_TYPE_MAX, /* non-ABI */ }; ... and maybe you could use "PERF_PMU_CAP_ABI_TYPES" to align with that comment? > Furthermore the semantics of the cap as it ended up are specifically > that the PMU wants the same behaviour as if it had registered as > PERF_TYPE_RAW, so having "raw" in the name started to look like the > more intuitive option after all (plus being nice and short helps.) I appreciate the shortness, but I think it's misleading to tie this to "RAW" specifically, when really this is a capabiltiy to say "please let me try to init any events for non-dynamic types, in addition to whatever specific type I am registered with". > If anything, it's "events" that carries the implication that's proving hard > to capture precisely and concisely here, so maybe the answer to avoid > ambiguity is to lean further away from a "what it represents" to a "what it > actually does" naming - PERF_PMU_CAP_TYPE_RAW, anyone? I'm happy with TYPE in the name; it's just RAW specifically that I'm objecting to. > > Likewise, s/is_raw_pmu()/pmu_supports_common_cpu_events()/. > > Case in point: is it any more logical and expected that supporting common > CPU events implies a PMU should be offered software or breakpoint events as > well? Because that's what such a mere rename would currently mean :/ Yes, I think it is. > > > --- > > > > > > A further possibility is to automatically add the cap to PERF_TYPE_RAW > > > PMUs in perf_pmu_register() to have a single point-of-use condition; I'm > > > undecided... > > > > I reckon we don't need to automagically do that, but I reckon that > > is_raw_pmu()/pmu_supports_common_cpu_events() should only check the cap, > > and we don't read anything special into any of > > PERF_TYPE_{RAW,HARDWARE,HW_CACHE}. > > OK, but that would then necessitate having to explicitly add the cap to all > 15-odd other drivers which register as PERF_TYPE_RAW as well, at which point > it starts to look like a more general "I am a CPU PMU in terms of most > typical assumptions you might want to make about that" flag... > > To clarify (and perhaps something for a v2 commit message), we currently > have 3 categories of PMU driver: > > 1: (Older/simpler CPUs) Registers as PERF_TYPE_RAW, wants > PERF_TYPE_RAW/HARDWARE/HW_CACHE events > 2: (Heterogeneous CPUs) Registers as dynamic type, wants > PERF_TYPE_RAW/HARDWARE/HW_CACHE events plus events of its own type > 3: (Mostly uncore) Registers as dynamic type, only wants events of its own > type Sure, but I think that separating 1 and 2 is an artificial distinction, and what we really have is: (a) Wants to handle (some of) the non-dynamic/common/ABI types (in addition to whatever specific type it was registered with). Needs to have a switch statement somewhere in pmu::event_init(). (b) Only wants to handle the specific type the PMU was registered with. > My vested interest is in making category 3 the default behaviour, given that > the growing majority of new drivers are uncore (and I keep having to write > them...) Yes, we're aligned on that. > However unclear the type overlaps in category 1 might be, it's been > like that for 15 years, so I didn't feel compelled to churn fossils like > Alpha more than reasonably necessary. Category 2 is only these 5 drivers, so > a relatively small tweak to distinguish them from category 3 and let them > retain the effective category 1 behaviour (which remains the current one of > potentially still being offered software etc. events too) seemed like the > neatest way to make progress. I just think we should combine 1 and 2 (into categroy a as above), since that removes the need to treat RAW specially going forwards. > I'm not saying I'm necessarily against a general overhaul of CPU PMUs being > attempted too, just that it seems more like a whole other side-quest, and > I'd really like to slay the uncore-boilerplate dragon first. I think that adding the cap to those 15 PMUs would take less time than it has taken me to write this email, so I do not understand the objection. Mark.