Re: [PATCH 0/3] perfcounter: callchain symbol resolving and fixes

From: Frederic Weisbecker
Date: Wed Jul 01 2009 - 12:33:38 EST


On Wed, Jul 01, 2009 at 10:18:14AM +0200, Ingo Molnar wrote:
>
> * Frederic Weisbecker <fweisbec@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> > Hi,
> >
> > This patchset provides the symbol resolving for callchains.
> > Example:
> >
> > perf report -s sym -c
> >
> > 5.40% [k] __d_lookup
> > 3.60%
> > __d_lookup
> > perf_callchain
> > perf_counter_overflow
> > intel_pmu_handle_irq
> > perf_counter_nmi_handler
> > notifier_call_chain
> > atomic_notifier_call_chain
> > notify_die
> > do_nmi
> > nmi
> > do_lookup
> > __link_path_walk
> > path_walk
> > do_path_lookup
> > user_path_at
> > vfs_fstatat
> > vfs_lstat
> > sys_newlstat
> > system_call_fastpath
> > __lxstat
> > 0x406fb1
>
> nice!
>
> > Sorry about the third patch, it's a kind of all-in-one monolithic
> > thing which gathers various fixes. I should have granulate it...
>
> No problem, it's good enough - it's all about the same topic.
>
> >
> > Still in my plans:
> >
> > - profit we have a tree to display a better graph hierarchy
> > - let the user provide a limit for hit percentage, depth, number of
> > backtraces, etc...
> > - better output
> > - colors
> >
> > And another one:
> >
> > - remove the perfcounter internal nmi call frame (ie: every nmi frame)
> > so that we drop this header from each callchain:
> >
> > perf_callchain
> > perf_counter_overflow
> > intel_pmu_handle_irq
> > perf_counter_nmi_handler
> > notifier_call_chain
> > atomic_notifier_call_chain
> > notify_die
> > do_nmi
> > nmi
>
> Sounds good. I suspect this latter one is the most important one
> because right now the backtrace output screen real estate is
> dominated by the repetitive nmi entries, making it hard to interpret
> the result 'at a glance'.
>
> I think we should skip those NMI entries right in the kernel - that
> will also make call-chain event records quite a bit smaller, by
> about 72 bytes per call-chain record.
>
> We can do the skipping by using this backtrace-generator callback in
> arch/x86/kernel/cpu/perf_counter.c:
>
> static int backtrace_stack(void *data, char *name)
> {
> /* Process all stacks: */
> return 0;
> }
>
> The 'name' parameter passed in signals the type of stack frame we
> are processing. If you look into arch/x86/kernel/dumpstack_64.c, it
> can be one of these strings:
>
> static char ids[][8] = {
> [DEBUG_STACK - 1] = "#DB",
> [NMI_STACK - 1] = "NMI",
> [DOUBLEFAULT_STACK - 1] = "#DF",
> [STACKFAULT_STACK - 1] = "#SS",
> [MCE_STACK - 1] = "#MC",
>
> A quick check to see whether this concept works would be expose the
> ids array and do:
>
> static int PER_CPU(int, is_nmi_frame);
>
> static int backtrace_stack(void *data, char *name)
> {
> if (name == x86_stack_ids[NMI_STACK-1])


IIRC, gcc manages to factorize the string table in the elf
format right?
So that a simple == should indeed work here.

Because if you look at dumpstack_64.c, the calls to ->stack()
use plain const string for some of them:

ops->stack(data, "IRQ")

But "NMI" is always passed by its real address in the ids so
that should work without problem here.

(I just feared about using strcmp is such a fastpath).



> per_cpu(is_nmi_frame, raw_processor_id()) = 1;
> else
> per_cpu(is_nmi_frame, raw_processor_id()) = 0;
>
> /* Process all stacks: */
> return 0;
> }
>
> and to add something like this to backtrace_address():
>
> if (per_cpu(is_nmi_frame, raw_processor_id())
> return;
>
> Ingo


Heh, looks like I'll almost only have to copy-paste this mail :)

Another solution would be to handle an IGNORE return value
from dump_trace() instead of always terminate the trace when
->stack() < 0

Would it be useful for other kind of uses?
For now I just asssume ignoring a stack is not a known pattern
so I'll just implement your solution.

Thanks.

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