Thread (14 messages) 14 messages, 5 authors, 2021-07-15

Re: [PATCH 1/3] KVM: arm64: Narrow PMU sysreg reset values to architectural requirements

From: Robin Murphy <robin.murphy@arm.com>
Date: 2021-07-15 11:53:53
Also in: kvm, kvmarm

On 2021-07-15 12:11, Marc Zyngier wrote:
Hi Alex,

On Wed, 14 Jul 2021 16:48:07 +0100,
Alexandru Elisei [off-list ref] wrote:
quoted
Hi Marc,

On 7/13/21 2:58 PM, Marc Zyngier wrote:
quoted
A number of the PMU sysregs expose reset values that are not in
compliant with the architecture (set bits in the RES0 ranges,
for example).

This in turn has the effect that we need to pointlessly mask
some register when using them.

Let's start by making sure we don't have illegal values in the
shadow registers at reset time. This affects all the registers
that dedicate one bit per counter, the counters themselves,
PMEVTYPERn_EL0 and PMSELR_EL0.

Reported-by: Alexandre Chartre <redacted>
Signed-off-by: Marc Zyngier <maz@kernel.org>
---
  arch/arm64/kvm/sys_regs.c | 46 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++---
  1 file changed, 43 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)
diff --git a/arch/arm64/kvm/sys_regs.c b/arch/arm64/kvm/sys_regs.c
index f6f126eb6ac1..95ccb8f45409 100644
--- a/arch/arm64/kvm/sys_regs.c
+++ b/arch/arm64/kvm/sys_regs.c
@@ -603,6 +603,44 @@ static unsigned int pmu_visibility(const struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu,
  	return REG_HIDDEN;
  }
  
+static void reset_pmu_reg(struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu, const struct sys_reg_desc *r)
+{
+	u64 n, mask;
+
+	/* No PMU available, any PMU reg may UNDEF... */
+	if (!kvm_arm_support_pmu_v3())
+		return;
+
+	n = read_sysreg(pmcr_el0) >> ARMV8_PMU_PMCR_N_SHIFT;
Isn't this going to cause a lot of unnecessary traps with NV? Is
that going to be a problem?
We'll get a new traps at L2 VM creation if we expose a PMU to the L1
guest, and if L2 gets one too. I don't think that's a real problem, as
the performance of an L2 PMU is bound to be hilarious, and if we are
really worried about that, we can always cache it locally. Which is
likely the best thing to do if you think of big-little.

Let's not think of big-little.

Another thing is that we could perfectly ignore the number of counter
on the host and always expose the architectural maximum, given that
the PMU is completely emulated. With that, no trap.
Although that would deliberately exacerbate the existing problem of 
guest counters mysteriously under-reporting due to the host event 
getting multiplexed, thus arguably make the L2 PMU even less useful.

But then trying to analyse application performance under NV at all seems 
to stand a high chance of being akin to shovelling fog, so...

Robin.

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