Re: TRACE_EVENT() declarations belong to include/trace/

From: Mathieu Desnoyers
Date: Mon Apr 12 2010 - 20:27:45 EST


* Anton Blanchard (anton@xxxxxxxxx) wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> > states that this is done for setups where no in-kernel handler is called. But
> > it does not say if tracing the beginning and end of handle_IRQ_event() from
> > kernel/irq/handle.c would fix the problem. That would be a lot neater than
> > this arch-specific solution.
>
> Unfortunately that misses this problem completely. On some versions of the
> POWER hypervisor we can be presented with interrupts for our virtualisation
> layer that get handled in the get_irq hypervisor call. The code looks like
> this:
>
>
> void do_IRQ(struct pt_regs *regs)
> {
> struct pt_regs *old_regs = set_irq_regs(regs);
> unsigned int irq;
>
> trace_irq_entry(regs);
>
> irq_enter();
>
> check_stack_overflow();
>
> irq = ppc_md.get_irq(); <------------- jitter spikes here
>
> if (irq != NO_IRQ && irq != NO_IRQ_IGNORE)
> handle_one_irq(irq);
> else if (irq != NO_IRQ_IGNORE)
> __get_cpu_var(irq_stat).spurious_irqs++;
>
>
> We've had HPC customers who have experienced jitter in their applications
> caused by this and as a result I added the events so we can monitor it.
>
> Since this is a POWER specific issue I'm happy to rename the trace events to
> powerpc_irq_entry/exit. We could also look at changing the tracepoints, eg
> putting it around the ppc_md.get_irq(), but I can't see how we can remove
> them completely.

OK, I see. How about arch_irq_entry/exit() ?

This way, if we need to do something similar on another arch at the
architecture-level, we can use the same names.

Thanks,

Mathieu

>
> Anton

--
Mathieu Desnoyers
Operating System Efficiency R&D Consultant
EfficiOS Inc.
http://www.efficios.com
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