NAME
pctr
—
driver for CPU performance
counters
SYNOPSIS
pseudo-device pctr 1
DESCRIPTION
The pctr
device provides access to the
performance counters on AMD and Intel brand processors, and to the TSC on
others.
Intel processors have two 40-bit performance counters which can be programmed to count events such as cache misses, branch target buffer hits, TLB misses, dual-issues, interrupts, pipeline flushes, and more. While AMD processors have four 48-bit counters, their precision is decreased to 40 bits.
There is one ioctl call to read the status of all counters, and one ioctl call to program the function of each counter. All require the following includes:
#include <sys/types.h> #include <machine/cpu.h> #include <machine/pctr.h>
The current state of all counters can be read with the
PCIOCRD
ioctl, which takes an
argument of type struct pctrst
:
#define PCTR_NUM 4 struct pctrst { u_int pctr_fn[PCTR_NUM]; pctrval pctr_tsc; pctrval pctr_hwc[PCTR_NUM]; };
In this structure,
ctr_fn contains
the functions of the counters, as previously set by the
PCIOCS0
, PCIOCS1
,
PCIOCS2
and PCIOCS3
ioctls
(see below).
pctr_hwc
contains the actual value of the hardware counters.
pctr_tsc
is a free-running, 64-bit cycle counter.
The functions of the counters can be programmed with ioctls
PCIOCS0
, PCIOCS1
,
PCIOCS2
and PCIOCS3
which
require a writeable file descriptor and take an argument of type
unsigned int
. The meaning
of this integer is dependent on the particular CPU.
Time stamp counter
The time stamp counter is available on most of the AMD and Intel CPUs. It is set to zero at boot time, and then increments with each cycle. Because the counter is 64-bits wide, it does not overflow.
The value of the time stamp counter is returned by the
PCIOCRD
ioctl, so that one can get
an exact timestamp on readings of the hardware event counters.
The performance counters can be read directly from
user-mode without need to invoke the kernel. The macro
rdpmc
(ctr)
takes 0, 1, 2 or 3 as an argument to specify a counter, and returns that
counter's 40-bit value (which will be of type
pctrval).
This is generally preferable to making a system call as it introduces less
distortion in measurements.
Counter functions supported by these CPUs contain several parts.
The most significant byte (an 8-bit integer shifted left by
PCTR_CM_SHIFT
) contains a counter
mask. If non-zero, this sets a threshold for the number of times an
event must occur in one cycle for the counter to be incremented. The
counter mask can therefore be used to count cycles in
which an event occurs at least some number of times. The next byte contains
several flags:
PCTR_U
- Enables counting of events that occur in user mode.
PCTR_K
- Enables counting of events that occur in kernel mode. You must set at
least one of
PCTR_K
andPCTR_U
to count anything. PCTR_E
- Counts edges rather than cycles. For some functions this allows you to get an estimate of the number of events rather than the number of cycles occupied by those events.
PCTR_EN
- Enable counters. This bit must be set in the function for counter 0 in order for either of the counters to be enabled. This bit should probably be set in counter 1 as well.
PCTR_I
- Inverts the sense of the counter mask. When this bit is set, the counter only increments on cycles in which there are no more events than specified in the counter mask.
The next byte (shifted left by the
PCTR_UM_SHIFT
) contains flags specific to the event
being counted, also known as the unit mask.
For events dealing with the L2 cache, the following flags are valid on Intel brand processors:
PCTR_UM_M
- Count events involving modified cache coherency state lines.
PCTR_UM_E
- Count events involving exclusive cache coherency state lines.
PCTR_UM_S
- Count events involving shared cache coherency state lines.
PCTR_UM_I
- Count events involving invalid cache coherency state lines.
To measure all L2 cache activity, all these bits should be set.
They can be set with the macro PCTR_UM_MESI
which
contains the bitwise or of all of the above.
For event types dealing with bus transactions, there is another flag that can be set in the unit mask:
PCTR_UM_A
- Count all appropriate bus events, not just those initiated by the processor.
Events marked
(MESI) require the
PCTR_UM_[MESI]
bits in the unit
mask. Events marked
(A) can take
the PCTR_UM_A
bit.
Finally, the least significant byte of the counter function is the
event type to count. A list of possible event functions could be obtained by
running a pctr(1) command with -l
option.
FILES
- /dev/pctr
ERRORS
- [
ENODEV
] - An attempt was made to set the counter functions on a CPU that does not support counters.
- [
EINVAL
] - An invalid counter function was provided as an argument to the
PCIOCSx
ioctl. - [
EPERM
] - An attempt was made to set the counter functions, but the device was not open for writing.
SEE ALSO
HISTORY
A pctr
device first appeared in
OpenBSD 2.0. Support for amd64 architecture appeared
in OpenBSD 4.3.
AUTHORS
The pctr
device was written by
David Mazieres
<dm@lcs.mit.edu>.
Support for amd64 architecture was written by Mike
Belopuhov
<mikeb@openbsd.org>.
BUGS
Not all counter functions are completely accurate. Some of the
functions may not make any sense at all. Also you should be aware of the
possibility of an interrupt between invocations of
rdpmc
() that can potentially decrease the accuracy
of measurements.