From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: jbaron@redhat.com (Jason Baron) Date: Tue, 24 Mar 2009 13:33:54 -0400 Subject: [ltt-dev] [patch 2/9] LTTng instrumentation - irq In-Reply-To: <20090324160148.080628193@polymtl.ca> References: <20090324155625.420966314@polymtl.ca> <20090324160148.080628193@polymtl.ca> Message-ID: <20090324173354.GC3129@redhat.com> On Tue, Mar 24, 2009 at 11:56:27AM -0400, Mathieu Desnoyers wrote: > Instrumentation of IRQ related events : irq_entry, irq_exit and > irq_next_handler. > > It allows tracers to perform latency analysis on those various types of > interrupts and to detect interrupts with max/min/avg duration. It helps > detecting driver or hardware problems which cause an ISR to take ages to > execute. It has been shown to be the case with bogus hardware causing an mmio > read to take a few milliseconds. > > Those tracepoints are used by LTTng. > > About the performance impact of tracepoints (which is comparable to markers), > even without immediate values optimizations, tests done by Hideo Aoki on ia64 > show no regression. His test case was using hackbench on a kernel where > scheduler instrumentation (about 5 events in code scheduler code) was added. > See the "Tracepoints" patch header for performance result detail. > > irq_entry and irq_exit not declared static because they appear in x86 arch code. > > The idea behind logging irq/softirq/tasklet/(and eventually syscall) entry and > exit events is to be able to recreate the kernel execution state at a given > point in time. Knowing which execution context is responsible for a given trace > event is _very_ valuable in trace data analysis. > > The IRQ instrumentation instruments the IRQ handler entry and exit. Jason > instrumented the irq notifier chain calls (irq_handler_entry/exit). His approach > provides information about which handler is being called, but does not map > correctly to the fact that _multiple_ handlers are being called from within the > same interrupt handler. From an interrupt latency analysis POV, this is > incorrect. > Since we are passing back the irq number, and we can not be interrupted by the same irq, I think it should be pretty clear we are in the same handler. That said, the extra entry/exit tracepoints could make the sequence of events simpler to decipher, which is important. The code looks good, and provides at least as much information as the patch that I proposed. So i'll be happy either way :) thanks, -Jason