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1======================================
2Coresight - HW Assisted Tracing on ARM
3======================================
4
5 :Author: Mathieu Poirier <mathieu.poirier@linaro.org>
6 :Date: September 11th, 2014
7
8Introduction
9------------
10
11Coresight is an umbrella of technologies allowing for the debugging of ARM
12based SoC. It includes solutions for JTAG and HW assisted tracing. This
13document is concerned with the latter.
14
15HW assisted tracing is becoming increasingly useful when dealing with systems
16that have many SoCs and other components like GPU and DMA engines. ARM has
17developed a HW assisted tracing solution by means of different components, each
18being added to a design at synthesis time to cater to specific tracing needs.
19Components are generally categorised as source, link and sinks and are
20(usually) discovered using the AMBA bus.
21
22"Sources" generate a compressed stream representing the processor instruction
23path based on tracing scenarios as configured by users. From there the stream
24flows through the coresight system (via ATB bus) using links that are connecting
25the emanating source to a sink(s). Sinks serve as endpoints to the coresight
26implementation, either storing the compressed stream in a memory buffer or
27creating an interface to the outside world where data can be transferred to a
28host without fear of filling up the onboard coresight memory buffer.
29
30At typical coresight system would look like this::
31
32 *****************************************************************
33 **************************** AMBA AXI ****************************===||
34 ***************************************************************** ||
35 ^ ^ | ||
36 | | * **
37 0000000 ::::: 0000000 ::::: ::::: @@@@@@@ ||||||||||||
38 0 CPU 0<-->: C : 0 CPU 0<-->: C : : C : @ STM @ || System ||
39 |->0000000 : T : |->0000000 : T : : T :<--->@@@@@ || Memory ||
40 | #######<-->: I : | #######<-->: I : : I : @@@<-| ||||||||||||
41 | # ETM # ::::: | # PTM # ::::: ::::: @ |
42 | ##### ^ ^ | ##### ^ ! ^ ! . | |||||||||
43 | |->### | ! | |->### | ! | ! . | || DAP ||
44 | | # | ! | | # | ! | ! . | |||||||||
45 | | . | ! | | . | ! | ! . | | |
46 | | . | ! | | . | ! | ! . | | *
47 | | . | ! | | . | ! | ! . | | SWD/
48 | | . | ! | | . | ! | ! . | | JTAG
49 *****************************************************************<-|
50 *************************** AMBA Debug APB ************************
51 *****************************************************************
52 | . ! . ! ! . |
53 | . * . * * . |
54 *****************************************************************
55 ******************** Cross Trigger Matrix (CTM) *******************
56 *****************************************************************
57 | . ^ . . |
58 | * ! * * |
59 *****************************************************************
60 ****************** AMBA Advanced Trace Bus (ATB) ******************
61 *****************************************************************
62 | ! =============== |
63 | * ===== F =====<---------|
64 | ::::::::: ==== U ====
65 |-->:: CTI ::<!! === N ===
66 | ::::::::: ! == N ==
67 | ^ * == E ==
68 | ! &&&&&&&&& IIIIIII == L ==
69 |------>&& ETB &&<......II I =======
70 | ! &&&&&&&&& II I .
71 | ! I I .
72 | ! I REP I<..........
73 | ! I I
74 | !!>&&&&&&&&& II I *Source: ARM ltd.
75 |------>& TPIU &<......II I DAP = Debug Access Port
76 &&&&&&&&& IIIIIII ETM = Embedded Trace Macrocell
77 ; PTM = Program Trace Macrocell
78 ; CTI = Cross Trigger Interface
79 * ETB = Embedded Trace Buffer
80 To trace port TPIU= Trace Port Interface Unit
81 SWD = Serial Wire Debug
82
83While on target configuration of the components is done via the APB bus,
84all trace data are carried out-of-band on the ATB bus. The CTM provides
85a way to aggregate and distribute signals between CoreSight components.
86
87The coresight framework provides a central point to represent, configure and
88manage coresight devices on a platform. This first implementation centers on
89the basic tracing functionality, enabling components such ETM/PTM, funnel,
90replicator, TMC, TPIU and ETB. Future work will enable more
91intricate IP blocks such as STM and CTI.
92
93
94Acronyms and Classification
95---------------------------
96
97Acronyms:
98
99PTM:
100 Program Trace Macrocell
101ETM:
102 Embedded Trace Macrocell
103STM:
104 System trace Macrocell
105ETB:
106 Embedded Trace Buffer
107ITM:
108 Instrumentation Trace Macrocell
109TPIU:
110 Trace Port Interface Unit
111TMC-ETR:
112 Trace Memory Controller, configured as Embedded Trace Router
113TMC-ETF:
114 Trace Memory Controller, configured as Embedded Trace FIFO
115CTI:
116 Cross Trigger Interface
117
118Classification:
119
120Source:
121 ETMv3.x ETMv4, PTMv1.0, PTMv1.1, STM, STM500, ITM
122Link:
123 Funnel, replicator (intelligent or not), TMC-ETR
124Sinks:
125 ETBv1.0, ETB1.1, TPIU, TMC-ETF
126Misc:
127 CTI
128
129
130Device Tree Bindings
131--------------------
132
133See Documentation/devicetree/bindings/arm/arm,coresight-\*.yaml for details.
134
135As of this writing drivers for ITM, STMs and CTIs are not provided but are
136expected to be added as the solution matures.
137
138
139Framework and implementation
140----------------------------
141
142The coresight framework provides a central point to represent, configure and
143manage coresight devices on a platform. Any coresight compliant device can
144register with the framework for as long as they use the right APIs:
145
146.. c:function:: struct coresight_device *coresight_register(struct coresight_desc *desc);
147.. c:function:: void coresight_unregister(struct coresight_device *csdev);
148
149The registering function is taking a ``struct coresight_desc *desc`` and
150register the device with the core framework. The unregister function takes
151a reference to a ``struct coresight_device *csdev`` obtained at registration time.
152
153If everything goes well during the registration process the new devices will
154show up under /sys/bus/coresight/devices, as showns here for a TC2 platform::
155
156 root:~# ls /sys/bus/coresight/devices/
157 replicator 20030000.tpiu 2201c000.ptm 2203c000.etm 2203e000.etm
158 20010000.etb 20040000.funnel 2201d000.ptm 2203d000.etm
159 root:~#
160
161The functions take a ``struct coresight_device``, which looks like this::
162
163 struct coresight_desc {
164 enum coresight_dev_type type;
165 struct coresight_dev_subtype subtype;
166 const struct coresight_ops *ops;
167 struct coresight_platform_data *pdata;
168 struct device *dev;
169 const struct attribute_group **groups;
170 };
171
172
173The "coresight_dev_type" identifies what the device is, i.e, source link or
174sink while the "coresight_dev_subtype" will characterise that type further.
175
176The ``struct coresight_ops`` is mandatory and will tell the framework how to
177perform base operations related to the components, each component having
178a different set of requirement. For that ``struct coresight_ops_sink``,
179``struct coresight_ops_link`` and ``struct coresight_ops_source`` have been
180provided.
181
182The next field ``struct coresight_platform_data *pdata`` is acquired by calling
183``of_get_coresight_platform_data()``, as part of the driver's _probe routine and
184``struct device *dev`` gets the device reference embedded in the ``amba_device``::
185
186 static int etm_probe(struct amba_device *adev, const struct amba_id *id)
187 {
188 ...
189 ...
190 drvdata->dev = &adev->dev;
191 ...
192 }
193
194Specific class of device (source, link, or sink) have generic operations
195that can be performed on them (see ``struct coresight_ops``). The ``**groups``
196is a list of sysfs entries pertaining to operations
197specific to that component only. "Implementation defined" customisations are
198expected to be accessed and controlled using those entries.
199
200Device Naming scheme
201--------------------
202
203The devices that appear on the "coresight" bus were named the same as their
204parent devices, i.e, the real devices that appears on AMBA bus or the platform bus.
205Thus the names were based on the Linux Open Firmware layer naming convention,
206which follows the base physical address of the device followed by the device
207type. e.g::
208
209 root:~# ls /sys/bus/coresight/devices/
210 20010000.etf 20040000.funnel 20100000.stm 22040000.etm
211 22140000.etm 230c0000.funnel 23240000.etm 20030000.tpiu
212 20070000.etr 20120000.replicator 220c0000.funnel
213 23040000.etm 23140000.etm 23340000.etm
214
215However, with the introduction of ACPI support, the names of the real
216devices are a bit cryptic and non-obvious. Thus, a new naming scheme was
217introduced to use more generic names based on the type of the device. The
218following rules apply::
219
220 1) Devices that are bound to CPUs, are named based on the CPU logical
221 number.
222
223 e.g, ETM bound to CPU0 is named "etm0"
224
225 2) All other devices follow a pattern, "<device_type_prefix>N", where :
226
227 <device_type_prefix> - A prefix specific to the type of the device
228 N - a sequential number assigned based on the order
229 of probing.
230
231 e.g, tmc_etf0, tmc_etr0, funnel0, funnel1
232
233Thus, with the new scheme the devices could appear as ::
234
235 root:~# ls /sys/bus/coresight/devices/
236 etm0 etm1 etm2 etm3 etm4 etm5 funnel0
237 funnel1 funnel2 replicator0 stm0 tmc_etf0 tmc_etr0 tpiu0
238
239Some of the examples below might refer to old naming scheme and some
240to the newer scheme, to give a confirmation that what you see on your
241system is not unexpected. One must use the "names" as they appear on
242the system under specified locations.
243
244Topology Representation
245-----------------------
246
247Each CoreSight component has a ``connections`` directory which will contain
248links to other CoreSight components. This allows the user to explore the trace
249topology and for larger systems, determine the most appropriate sink for a
250given source. The connection information can also be used to establish
251which CTI devices are connected to a given component. This directory contains a
252``nr_links`` attribute detailing the number of links in the directory.
253
254For an ETM source, in this case ``etm0`` on a Juno platform, a typical
255arrangement will be::
256
257 linaro-developer:~# ls - l /sys/bus/coresight/devices/etm0/connections
258 <file details> cti_cpu0 -> ../../../23020000.cti/cti_cpu0
259 <file details> nr_links
260 <file details> out:0 -> ../../../230c0000.funnel/funnel2
261
262Following the out port to ``funnel2``::
263
264 linaro-developer:~# ls -l /sys/bus/coresight/devices/funnel2/connections
265 <file details> in:0 -> ../../../23040000.etm/etm0
266 <file details> in:1 -> ../../../23140000.etm/etm3
267 <file details> in:2 -> ../../../23240000.etm/etm4
268 <file details> in:3 -> ../../../23340000.etm/etm5
269 <file details> nr_links
270 <file details> out:0 -> ../../../20040000.funnel/funnel0
271
272And again to ``funnel0``::
273
274 linaro-developer:~# ls -l /sys/bus/coresight/devices/funnel0/connections
275 <file details> in:0 -> ../../../220c0000.funnel/funnel1
276 <file details> in:1 -> ../../../230c0000.funnel/funnel2
277 <file details> nr_links
278 <file details> out:0 -> ../../../20010000.etf/tmc_etf0
279
280Finding the first sink ``tmc_etf0``. This can be used to collect data
281as a sink, or as a link to propagate further along the chain::
282
283 linaro-developer:~# ls -l /sys/bus/coresight/devices/tmc_etf0/connections
284 <file details> cti_sys0 -> ../../../20020000.cti/cti_sys0
285 <file details> in:0 -> ../../../20040000.funnel/funnel0
286 <file details> nr_links
287 <file details> out:0 -> ../../../20150000.funnel/funnel4
288
289via ``funnel4``::
290
291 linaro-developer:~# ls -l /sys/bus/coresight/devices/funnel4/connections
292 <file details> in:0 -> ../../../20010000.etf/tmc_etf0
293 <file details> in:1 -> ../../../20140000.etf/tmc_etf1
294 <file details> nr_links
295 <file details> out:0 -> ../../../20120000.replicator/replicator0
296
297and a ``replicator0``::
298
299 linaro-developer:~# ls -l /sys/bus/coresight/devices/replicator0/connections
300 <file details> in:0 -> ../../../20150000.funnel/funnel4
301 <file details> nr_links
302 <file details> out:0 -> ../../../20030000.tpiu/tpiu0
303 <file details> out:1 -> ../../../20070000.etr/tmc_etr0
304
305Arriving at the final sink in the chain, ``tmc_etr0``::
306
307 linaro-developer:~# ls -l /sys/bus/coresight/devices/tmc_etr0/connections
308 <file details> cti_sys0 -> ../../../20020000.cti/cti_sys0
309 <file details> in:0 -> ../../../20120000.replicator/replicator0
310 <file details> nr_links
311
312As described below, when using sysfs it is sufficient to enable a sink and
313a source for successful trace. The framework will correctly enable all
314intermediate links as required.
315
316Note: ``cti_sys0`` appears in two of the connections lists above.
317CTIs can connect to multiple devices and are arranged in a star topology
318via the CTM. See (Documentation/trace/coresight/coresight-ect.rst)
319[#fourth]_ for further details.
320Looking at this device we see 4 connections::
321
322 linaro-developer:~# ls -l /sys/bus/coresight/devices/cti_sys0/connections
323 <file details> nr_links
324 <file details> stm0 -> ../../../20100000.stm/stm0
325 <file details> tmc_etf0 -> ../../../20010000.etf/tmc_etf0
326 <file details> tmc_etr0 -> ../../../20070000.etr/tmc_etr0
327 <file details> tpiu0 -> ../../../20030000.tpiu/tpiu0
328
329
330How to use the tracer modules
331-----------------------------
332
333There are two ways to use the Coresight framework:
334
3351. using the perf cmd line tools.
3362. interacting directly with the Coresight devices using the sysFS interface.
337
338Preference is given to the former as using the sysFS interface
339requires a deep understanding of the Coresight HW. The following sections
340provide details on using both methods.
341
342Using the sysFS interface
343~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
344
345Before trace collection can start, a coresight sink needs to be identified.
346There is no limit on the amount of sinks (nor sources) that can be enabled at
347any given moment. As a generic operation, all device pertaining to the sink
348class will have an "active" entry in sysfs::
349
350 root:/sys/bus/coresight/devices# ls
351 replicator 20030000.tpiu 2201c000.ptm 2203c000.etm 2203e000.etm
352 20010000.etb 20040000.funnel 2201d000.ptm 2203d000.etm
353 root:/sys/bus/coresight/devices# ls 20010000.etb
354 enable_sink status trigger_cntr
355 root:/sys/bus/coresight/devices# echo 1 > 20010000.etb/enable_sink
356 root:/sys/bus/coresight/devices# cat 20010000.etb/enable_sink
357 1
358 root:/sys/bus/coresight/devices#
359
360At boot time the current etm3x driver will configure the first address
361comparator with "_stext" and "_etext", essentially tracing any instruction
362that falls within that range. As such "enabling" a source will immediately
363trigger a trace capture::
364
365 root:/sys/bus/coresight/devices# echo 1 > 2201c000.ptm/enable_source
366 root:/sys/bus/coresight/devices# cat 2201c000.ptm/enable_source
367 1
368 root:/sys/bus/coresight/devices# cat 20010000.etb/status
369 Depth: 0x2000
370 Status: 0x1
371 RAM read ptr: 0x0
372 RAM wrt ptr: 0x19d3 <----- The write pointer is moving
373 Trigger cnt: 0x0
374 Control: 0x1
375 Flush status: 0x0
376 Flush ctrl: 0x2001
377 root:/sys/bus/coresight/devices#
378
379Trace collection is stopped the same way::
380
381 root:/sys/bus/coresight/devices# echo 0 > 2201c000.ptm/enable_source
382 root:/sys/bus/coresight/devices#
383
384The content of the ETB buffer can be harvested directly from /dev::
385
386 root:/sys/bus/coresight/devices# dd if=/dev/20010000.etb \
387 of=~/cstrace.bin
388 64+0 records in
389 64+0 records out
390 32768 bytes (33 kB) copied, 0.00125258 s, 26.2 MB/s
391 root:/sys/bus/coresight/devices#
392
393The file cstrace.bin can be decompressed using "ptm2human", DS-5 or Trace32.
394
395Following is a DS-5 output of an experimental loop that increments a variable up
396to a certain value. The example is simple and yet provides a glimpse of the
397wealth of possibilities that coresight provides.
398::
399
400 Info Tracing enabled
401 Instruction 106378866 0x8026B53C E52DE004 false PUSH {lr}
402 Instruction 0 0x8026B540 E24DD00C false SUB sp,sp,#0xc
403 Instruction 0 0x8026B544 E3A03000 false MOV r3,#0
404 Instruction 0 0x8026B548 E58D3004 false STR r3,[sp,#4]
405 Instruction 0 0x8026B54C E59D3004 false LDR r3,[sp,#4]
406 Instruction 0 0x8026B550 E3530004 false CMP r3,#4
407 Instruction 0 0x8026B554 E2833001 false ADD r3,r3,#1
408 Instruction 0 0x8026B558 E58D3004 false STR r3,[sp,#4]
409 Instruction 0 0x8026B55C DAFFFFFA true BLE {pc}-0x10 ; 0x8026b54c
410 Timestamp Timestamp: 17106715833
411 Instruction 319 0x8026B54C E59D3004 false LDR r3,[sp,#4]
412 Instruction 0 0x8026B550 E3530004 false CMP r3,#4
413 Instruction 0 0x8026B554 E2833001 false ADD r3,r3,#1
414 Instruction 0 0x8026B558 E58D3004 false STR r3,[sp,#4]
415 Instruction 0 0x8026B55C DAFFFFFA true BLE {pc}-0x10 ; 0x8026b54c
416 Instruction 9 0x8026B54C E59D3004 false LDR r3,[sp,#4]
417 Instruction 0 0x8026B550 E3530004 false CMP r3,#4
418 Instruction 0 0x8026B554 E2833001 false ADD r3,r3,#1
419 Instruction 0 0x8026B558 E58D3004 false STR r3,[sp,#4]
420 Instruction 0 0x8026B55C DAFFFFFA true BLE {pc}-0x10 ; 0x8026b54c
421 Instruction 7 0x8026B54C E59D3004 false LDR r3,[sp,#4]
422 Instruction 0 0x8026B550 E3530004 false CMP r3,#4
423 Instruction 0 0x8026B554 E2833001 false ADD r3,r3,#1
424 Instruction 0 0x8026B558 E58D3004 false STR r3,[sp,#4]
425 Instruction 0 0x8026B55C DAFFFFFA true BLE {pc}-0x10 ; 0x8026b54c
426 Instruction 7 0x8026B54C E59D3004 false LDR r3,[sp,#4]
427 Instruction 0 0x8026B550 E3530004 false CMP r3,#4
428 Instruction 0 0x8026B554 E2833001 false ADD r3,r3,#1
429 Instruction 0 0x8026B558 E58D3004 false STR r3,[sp,#4]
430 Instruction 0 0x8026B55C DAFFFFFA true BLE {pc}-0x10 ; 0x8026b54c
431 Instruction 10 0x8026B54C E59D3004 false LDR r3,[sp,#4]
432 Instruction 0 0x8026B550 E3530004 false CMP r3,#4
433 Instruction 0 0x8026B554 E2833001 false ADD r3,r3,#1
434 Instruction 0 0x8026B558 E58D3004 false STR r3,[sp,#4]
435 Instruction 0 0x8026B55C DAFFFFFA true BLE {pc}-0x10 ; 0x8026b54c
436 Instruction 6 0x8026B560 EE1D3F30 false MRC p15,#0x0,r3,c13,c0,#1
437 Instruction 0 0x8026B564 E1A0100D false MOV r1,sp
438 Instruction 0 0x8026B568 E3C12D7F false BIC r2,r1,#0x1fc0
439 Instruction 0 0x8026B56C E3C2203F false BIC r2,r2,#0x3f
440 Instruction 0 0x8026B570 E59D1004 false LDR r1,[sp,#4]
441 Instruction 0 0x8026B574 E59F0010 false LDR r0,[pc,#16] ; [0x8026B58C] = 0x80550368
442 Instruction 0 0x8026B578 E592200C false LDR r2,[r2,#0xc]
443 Instruction 0 0x8026B57C E59221D0 false LDR r2,[r2,#0x1d0]
444 Instruction 0 0x8026B580 EB07A4CF true BL {pc}+0x1e9344 ; 0x804548c4
445 Info Tracing enabled
446 Instruction 13570831 0x8026B584 E28DD00C false ADD sp,sp,#0xc
447 Instruction 0 0x8026B588 E8BD8000 true LDM sp!,{pc}
448 Timestamp Timestamp: 17107041535
449
450Using perf framework
451~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
452
453Coresight tracers are represented using the Perf framework's Performance
454Monitoring Unit (PMU) abstraction. As such the perf framework takes charge of
455controlling when tracing gets enabled based on when the process of interest is
456scheduled. When configured in a system, Coresight PMUs will be listed when
457queried by the perf command line tool:
458
459 linaro@linaro-nano:~$ ./perf list pmu
460
461 List of pre-defined events (to be used in -e):
462
463 cs_etm// [Kernel PMU event]
464
465 linaro@linaro-nano:~$
466
467Regardless of the number of tracers available in a system (usually equal to the
468amount of processor cores), the "cs_etm" PMU will be listed only once.
469
470A Coresight PMU works the same way as any other PMU, i.e the name of the PMU is
471listed along with configuration options within forward slashes '/'. Since a
472Coresight system will typically have more than one sink, the name of the sink to
473work with needs to be specified as an event option.
474On newer kernels the available sinks are listed in sysFS under
475($SYSFS)/bus/event_source/devices/cs_etm/sinks/::
476
477 root@localhost:/sys/bus/event_source/devices/cs_etm/sinks# ls
478 tmc_etf0 tmc_etr0 tpiu0
479
480On older kernels, this may need to be found from the list of coresight devices,
481available under ($SYSFS)/bus/coresight/devices/::
482
483 root:~# ls /sys/bus/coresight/devices/
484 etm0 etm1 etm2 etm3 etm4 etm5 funnel0
485 funnel1 funnel2 replicator0 stm0 tmc_etf0 tmc_etr0 tpiu0
486 root@linaro-nano:~# perf record -e cs_etm/@tmc_etr0/u --per-thread program
487
488As mentioned above in section "Device Naming scheme", the names of the devices could
489look different from what is used in the example above. One must use the device names
490as it appears under the sysFS.
491
492The syntax within the forward slashes '/' is important. The '@' character
493tells the parser that a sink is about to be specified and that this is the sink
494to use for the trace session.
495
496More information on the above and other example on how to use Coresight with
497the perf tools can be found in the "HOWTO.md" file of the openCSD gitHub
498repository [#third]_.
499
500Advanced perf framework usage
501-----------------------------
502
503AutoFDO analysis using the perf tools
504~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
505
506perf can be used to record and analyze trace of programs.
507
508Execution can be recorded using 'perf record' with the cs_etm event,
509specifying the name of the sink to record to, e.g::
510
511 perf record -e cs_etm/@tmc_etr0/u --per-thread
512
513The 'perf report' and 'perf script' commands can be used to analyze execution,
514synthesizing instruction and branch events from the instruction trace.
515'perf inject' can be used to replace the trace data with the synthesized events.
516The --itrace option controls the type and frequency of synthesized events
517(see perf documentation).
518
519Note that only 64-bit programs are currently supported - further work is
520required to support instruction decode of 32-bit Arm programs.
521
522Tracing PID
523~~~~~~~~~~~
524
525The kernel can be built to write the PID value into the PE ContextID registers.
526For a kernel running at EL1, the PID is stored in CONTEXTIDR_EL1. A PE may
527implement Arm Virtualization Host Extensions (VHE), which the kernel can
528run at EL2 as a virtualisation host; in this case, the PID value is stored in
529CONTEXTIDR_EL2.
530
531perf provides PMU formats that program the ETM to insert these values into the
532trace data; the PMU formats are defined as below:
533
534 "contextid1": Available on both EL1 kernel and EL2 kernel. When the
535 kernel is running at EL1, "contextid1" enables the PID
536 tracing; when the kernel is running at EL2, this enables
537 tracing the PID of guest applications.
538
539 "contextid2": Only usable when the kernel is running at EL2. When
540 selected, enables PID tracing on EL2 kernel.
541
542 "contextid": Will be an alias for the option that enables PID
543 tracing. I.e,
544 contextid == contextid1, on EL1 kernel.
545 contextid == contextid2, on EL2 kernel.
546
547perf will always enable PID tracing at the relevant EL, this is accomplished by
548automatically enable the "contextid" config - but for EL2 it is possible to make
549specific adjustments using configs "contextid1" and "contextid2", E.g. if a user
550wants to trace PIDs for both host and guest, the two configs "contextid1" and
551"contextid2" can be set at the same time:
552
553 perf record -e cs_etm/contextid1,contextid2/u -- vm
554
555
556Generating coverage files for Feedback Directed Optimization: AutoFDO
557~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
558
559'perf inject' accepts the --itrace option in which case tracing data is
560removed and replaced with the synthesized events. e.g.
561::
562
563 perf inject --itrace --strip -i perf.data -o perf.data.new
564
565Below is an example of using ARM ETM for autoFDO. It requires autofdo
566(https://github.com/google/autofdo) and gcc version 5. The bubble
567sort example is from the AutoFDO tutorial (https://gcc.gnu.org/wiki/AutoFDO/Tutorial).
568::
569
570 $ gcc-5 -O3 sort.c -o sort
571 $ taskset -c 2 ./sort
572 Bubble sorting array of 30000 elements
573 5910 ms
574
575 $ perf record -e cs_etm/@tmc_etr0/u --per-thread taskset -c 2 ./sort
576 Bubble sorting array of 30000 elements
577 12543 ms
578 [ perf record: Woken up 35 times to write data ]
579 [ perf record: Captured and wrote 69.640 MB perf.data ]
580
581 $ perf inject -i perf.data -o inj.data --itrace=il64 --strip
582 $ create_gcov --binary=./sort --profile=inj.data --gcov=sort.gcov -gcov_version=1
583 $ gcc-5 -O3 -fauto-profile=sort.gcov sort.c -o sort_autofdo
584 $ taskset -c 2 ./sort_autofdo
585 Bubble sorting array of 30000 elements
586 5806 ms
587
588Config option formats
589~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
590
591The following strings can be provided between // on the perf command line to enable various options.
592They are also listed in the folder /sys/bus/event_source/devices/cs_etm/format/
593
594.. list-table::
595 :header-rows: 1
596
597 * - Option
598 - Description
599 * - branch_broadcast
600 - Session local version of the system wide setting:
601 :ref:`ETM_MODE_BB <coresight-branch-broadcast>`
602 * - contextid
603 - See `Tracing PID`_
604 * - contextid1
605 - See `Tracing PID`_
606 * - contextid2
607 - See `Tracing PID`_
608 * - configid
609 - Selection for a custom configuration. This is an implementation detail and not used directly,
610 see :ref:`trace/coresight/coresight-config:Using Configurations in perf`
611 * - preset
612 - Override for parameters in a custom configuration, see
613 :ref:`trace/coresight/coresight-config:Using Configurations in perf`
614 * - sinkid
615 - Hashed version of the string to select a sink, automatically set when using the @ notation.
616 This is an internal implementation detail and is not used directly, see `Using perf
617 framework`_.
618 * - cycacc
619 - Session local version of the system wide setting: :ref:`ETMv4_MODE_CYCACC
620 <coresight-cycle-accurate>`
621 * - retstack
622 - Session local version of the system wide setting: :ref:`ETM_MODE_RETURNSTACK
623 <coresight-return-stack>`
624 * - timestamp
625 - Session local version of the system wide setting: :ref:`ETMv4_MODE_TIMESTAMP
626 <coresight-timestamp>`
627
628How to use the STM module
629-------------------------
630
631Using the System Trace Macrocell module is the same as the tracers - the only
632difference is that clients are driving the trace capture rather
633than the program flow through the code.
634
635As with any other CoreSight component, specifics about the STM tracer can be
636found in sysfs with more information on each entry being found in [#first]_::
637
638 root@genericarmv8:~# ls /sys/bus/coresight/devices/stm0
639 enable_source hwevent_select port_enable subsystem uevent
640 hwevent_enable mgmt port_select traceid
641 root@genericarmv8:~#
642
643Like any other source a sink needs to be identified and the STM enabled before
644being used::
645
646 root@genericarmv8:~# echo 1 > /sys/bus/coresight/devices/tmc_etf0/enable_sink
647 root@genericarmv8:~# echo 1 > /sys/bus/coresight/devices/stm0/enable_source
648
649From there user space applications can request and use channels using the devfs
650interface provided for that purpose by the generic STM API::
651
652 root@genericarmv8:~# ls -l /dev/stm0
653 crw------- 1 root root 10, 61 Jan 3 18:11 /dev/stm0
654 root@genericarmv8:~#
655
656Details on how to use the generic STM API can be found here:
657- Documentation/trace/stm.rst [#second]_.
658
659The CTI & CTM Modules
660---------------------
661
662The CTI (Cross Trigger Interface) provides a set of trigger signals between
663individual CTIs and components, and can propagate these between all CTIs via
664channels on the CTM (Cross Trigger Matrix).
665
666A separate documentation file is provided to explain the use of these devices.
667(Documentation/trace/coresight/coresight-ect.rst) [#fourth]_.
668
669CoreSight System Configuration
670------------------------------
671
672CoreSight components can be complex devices with many programming options.
673Furthermore, components can be programmed to interact with each other across the
674complete system.
675
676A CoreSight System Configuration manager is provided to allow these complex programming
677configurations to be selected and used easily from perf and sysfs.
678
679See the separate document for further information.
680(Documentation/trace/coresight/coresight-config.rst) [#fifth]_.
681
682
683.. [#first] Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-bus-coresight-devices-stm
684
685.. [#second] Documentation/trace/stm.rst
686
687.. [#third] https://github.com/Linaro/perf-opencsd
688
689.. [#fourth] Documentation/trace/coresight/coresight-ect.rst
690
691.. [#fifth] Documentation/trace/coresight/coresight-config.rst