From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: anurupvasu@gmail.com (Anurup M) Date: Thu, 12 Jan 2017 11:17:37 +0530 Subject: [PATCH v3 04/10] Documentation: perf: hisi: Documentation for HiP05/06/07 PMU event counting. In-Reply-To: <20170110175500.GD24036@leverpostej> References: <1483339777-23973-1-git-send-email-anurup.m@huawei.com> <20170110175500.GD24036@leverpostej> Message-ID: <58771879.2010604@gmail.com> To: linux-arm-kernel@lists.infradead.org List-Id: linux-arm-kernel.lists.infradead.org On Tuesday 10 January 2017 11:25 PM, Mark Rutland wrote: > On Mon, Jan 02, 2017 at 01:49:37AM -0500, Anurup M wrote: >> +The Hisilicon SoC HiP05/06/07 chips consist of various independent system >> +device PMU's such as L3 cache(L3C) and Miscellaneous Nodes(MN). >> +These PMU devices are independent and have hardware logic to gather >> +statistics and performance information. >> + >> +HiP0x chips are encapsulated by multiple CPU and IO die's. The CPU die is >> +called as Super CPU cluster (SCCL) which includes 16 cpu-cores. Every SCCL >> +is further grouped as CPU clusters (CCL) which includes 4 cpu-cores each. >> +Each SCCL has 1 L3 cache and 1 MN units. > Are there systems with multiple SCCLs? Or is there only one SCCL per > system? The HiP0x are encapsulated by multiple SCCL (CPU die) and SICL (IO die). The HiP06 and HiP07 have two SCCLs. >> +The L3 cache is shared by all CPU cores in a CPU die. The L3C has four banks >> +(or instances). Each bank or instance of L3C has Eight 32-bit counter >> +registers and also event control registers. The HiP05/06 chip L3 cache has >> +22 statistics events. The HiP07 chip has 66 statistics events. These events >> +are very useful for debugging. > Is an L3C associated with a subset of physical memory (as with the ARM > CCN's L3C), or is it associated with a set of CPUs (e.g. only those in > a single SCCL) covering all physical memory (as with each CPU's L1 & > L2)? Yes the L3C is associated with the set of CPUs in a single SCCL covering all physical memory. The L3 cache in all the SCCLs share the complete physical memory. Thanks, Anurup > Thanks, > Mark.