exclude_guest is currently only supported on x86. However, not
specifying 'exclude_guest' implies that you can count guest events
should you run one. This creates an ABI issue whereby some non-x86
kernels require specifying exclude_guest = 1 explicitly.

Signed-off-by: J. Dekker <j...@itanimul.li>
---
 tests/checkasm/checkasm.c | 3 +++
 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+)

diff --git a/tests/checkasm/checkasm.c b/tests/checkasm/checkasm.c
index dcd2fd6957..8be6cb0f55 100644
--- a/tests/checkasm/checkasm.c
+++ b/tests/checkasm/checkasm.c
@@ -742,6 +742,9 @@ static int bench_init_linux(void)
         .disabled       = 1, // start counting only on demand
         .exclude_kernel = 1,
         .exclude_hv     = 1,
+#if !ARCH_X86
+        .exclude_guest  = 1,
+#endif
     };
 
     printf("benchmarking with Linux Perf Monitoring API\n");
-- 
2.44.0

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