On Mon, Feb 05, 2024 at 05:57:29PM +0800, richard clark wrote: > Hi guys, > > With the ipi_raise event enabled and filtered with: > echo 'reason == "Function call interrupts"' > filter, then the 'cat > trace' output below messages: > ... > insmod-3355 [010] ....1.. 24479.230381: ipi_raise: > target_mask=00000000,00000bff (Function call interrupts) > ... > The above output is triggered by my kernel module where it will smp > cross call a remote function from cpu#10 to cpu#11, for the > 'target_mask' value, what does the '00000000,00000bff' mean?
That's a cpumask bitmap: 0xbff is 0b1011_1111_1111, which is: ,- CPU 10 | 1011_1111_1111 | '__________' | | | `- CPUs 9 to 0 | `- CPU 11 Note that bitmap has CPUs 0-9 and CPU 11 set, but CPU 10 is not set. I suspect your kernel module has generated the bitmap incorrectly; it looks like you have a mask for CPUs 0-11 minus a mask for CPU 10? For CPUs 10 and 11, that should be 0xc00 / 0b1100_0000_0000. > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > > Another question is for the filter, I'd like to catch the IPI only > happening on cpu#11 *AND* a remote function call, so how to write the > 'target_cpus' in the filter expression? > > I try to write below: > echo 'target_cpus == 11 && reason == "Function call interrupts"' > > events/ipi/ipi_raise/filter The '=' checks if the target_cpus bitmap *only* contains CPU 11. If the cpumask contains other CPUs, the filter will skip the call. I believe you can use '&' to check whether a cpumask contains a CPU, e.g. 'target_cpus & 11' Thanks, Mark.