Andi, On Sat, Mar 31, 2007 at 04:31:29AM +0200, Andi Kleen wrote: > Stephane Eranian <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > > It seems that the kernel does not expose the Front-Side Bus (FSN) Clock > > speed to user applications. > > You mean the APIC timer frequency which happens to match the FSB > on some CPUs?
Well, I am talking about the bus that connects the processor socket to the chipset on Intel machines. On Intel Core 2 Duo (aka Woodcrest), you have 2 sockets, thus two buses connecting to the chipset which then connects to the memory (among other things). The Woodcrest (Intel Core PMU) is capable of measuring the number of bus transactions to memory (look at the BUS_* events). You can count per core or for the entire socket (both cores). In order to know if you saturate the bus (from socket to chipset), you need to know the theoretical peak number of transactions the bus can sustain. For that you need to bus frequency. I am not interested in older processors, but I think for all recent Intel processors, there is a fairly simple algorithm to get the frequency using a couple of MSRs (including MSR_IA32_EBL_CR_POWERON or MSR_FSB_FREQ). Don't we already have /sys entries that exits only for certain processors or platforms? I think the Opteron have HYPERTRANSPORT-related events which could be used to obtain similar metrics. Knowledge of bus saturation is important for multi-core programming. > > > Knowledge the the FSB speed is very useful to monitoring tools. It is used > > to compute certain bus-related metrics. > > Can you describe those metrics in detail? > > -Andi -- -Stephane - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/