/pmu-tools

Intel PMU profiling tools

Primary LanguagePythonGNU General Public License v2.0GPL-2.0

pmu-tools

Python linting and testing jevents test

pmu tools is a collection of tools and libraries for profile collection and performance analysis on Intel CPUs on top of Linux perf. This uses performance counters in the CPU.

Quick (non-) installation

pmu-tools doesn't really need to be installed. It's enough to clone the repository and run the respective tool (like toplev or ocperf) out of the source directory.

To run it from other directories you can use export PATH=$PATH:/path/to/pmu-tools or symlink the tool you're interested in to /usr/local/bin or ~/bin. The tools automatically handle finding the python dependencies.

When first run toplev / ocperf will automatically download the Intel event lists from https://download.01.org. This requires working internet access. Later runs can be done offline. It's also possible to download the event lists ahead, see pmu-tools offline

toplev works with both python 2.7 and python 3. However it requires an not too old perf tools and depending on the CPU an uptodate kernel. For more details see toplev kernel support

The majority of the tools also don't require any python dependencies and run in "included batteries only" mode. The main exception is generating plots or XLSX spreadsheets, which require external libraries.

If you want to use those run

  pip install -r requirements.txt

once, or follow the command suggested in error messages.

jevents is a C library. It has no dependencies other than gcc and can be built with

cd jevents
make

Quick examples

toplev -l2 program

measure whole system in level 2 while program is running

toplev -l1 --single-thread program

measure single threaded program. system must be idle.

toplev -l3 --no-desc -I 100 -x, sleep X

measure whole system for X seconds every 100ms, outputting in CSV format.

toplev --all --core C0 taskset -c 0,1 program

Measure program running on core 0 with all nodes and metrics enabled.

toplev --all --xlsx x.xlsx -a sleep 10

Generate spreadsheet with full system measurement for 10 seconds

For more details on toplev please see the toplev tutorial

What tool to use for what?

You want to:

  • understand CPU bottlenecks on the high-level: use toplev.
  • display toplev output graphically: toplev --xlsx (or --graph)
  • know what CPU events to run, but want to use symbolic names for a new CPU: use ocperf.
  • measure interconnect/caches/memory/power management on Xeon E5+: use ucevent or toplev
  • Use perf events from a C program: use jevents
  • Query CPU topology or disable HyperThreading: use cputop
  • Change Model Specific Registers: use msr
  • Change PCI config space: use pci

For more details on the tools see TOOLS

All features:

Major tools/libraries

  • The "ocperf" wrapper to "perf" that provides a full core performance counter event list for common Intel CPUs. This allows to use all the Intel events, not just the builtin events of perf. Can be also used as a library from other python programs
  • The "toplev.py" tool to identify the micro-architectural bottleneck for a workload. This implements the TopDown or TopDown2 methodology.
  • The "ucevent" tool to manage and compute uncore performance events. Uncore is the part of the CPU that is not core. Supports many metrics for power management, IO, QPI (interconnect), caches, and others. ucevent automatically generates event descriptions for the perf uncore driver and pretty prints the output. It also supports computing higher level metrics derived from multiple events.
  • A library to resolve named intel events (like INST_RETIRED.ANY) to perf_event_attr (jevents) and provide higher level function for using the Linux perf API for self profiling or profiling other programs. It also has a "perf stat" clone called "jestat"
  • A variety of tools for plotting and post processing perf stat -I1000 -x, or toplev.py -I1000 -x, interval measurements.
  • Some utility libraries and functions for MSR access, CPU topology and other functionality,as well as example programs how to program the Intel PMU.

There are some obsolete tools which are not supported anymore, like simple-pebs. These are kept as PMU programming reference, but may need some updates to build on newer Linux kernels.

Recent new features:

  • toplev now has a --parallel argument to can process large --import input files with multiple threads. There is a new interval-merge tool that can merge multiple perf-output files.
  • toplev now supports a --subset argument that can process parts of --import input files, either by splitting them or by sampling. This is a building block for more efficient processing of large input files.
  • toplev can now generate scripts to collect data with perf stat record to lower runtime collection overhead, and import the perf.data, using a new --script-record option. This currently requires unreleased perf patches, hopefully in Linux 5.11.
  • toplev can now support json files for Chrome's about://tracing with --json
  • toplev now supports --no-multiplex in interval mode (-Ixxx)
  • The tools now don't force python 2 anymore to support running out of the box on distributions which do not install python 2.
  • toplev now hides the perf command line by default. Override with --perf.
  • Updated to TMA 4.11: Fixed an error in misprediction-related and Power License metrics
  • toplev now supports the new fixed TMA metrics counters on Icelake. This requires the upcoming 5.9+ kernel.
  • toplev was updated to Ahmad Yasin's/Anton Hanna's TMA 4.1 New Metrics:
    • Re-arrange Retiring Level 2 into Light_Operations & Heavy_Operations. Light_Operations replaces the previous Base (or "General Retirement") while Heavy_Operations is a superset of the Microcode_Sequencer node (that moves to Level 3)
    • Mixing_Vectors: hints on a pitfall when intermixing the newer AVX* with legacy SSE* vectors, a tree node under Core Bound [SKL onwards] Key Enhancements & fixes
    • Tuning of Level 2 breakdown for Backend_Bound, Frontend_Bound (rollback FRONTEND_RETIRED 2-events use) [SKL onwards]
    • Improved branch misprediction related metrics to leverage a new PerfMon event [ICL onwards]
    • Improved CORE_CLKS & #Retire_Slots-based metrics [ICL onwards]
    • Adjusted cost of all nodes using MEM_LOADRETIRED. in case of shadow L1 d-cache misses
    • renamed Frontend_ to FetchLatency/Bandwidth [all]
    • Additional documentation/details to aid automated parsing in ‘For Tool Developers’.
    • Other fixes including Thresholds, Tagging (e.g. $issueSnoops), Locate-with, Metric Group
  • toplev can now generate charts in xlsx files with the --xchart option.

Older changes in CHANGES

Help wanted

  • The plotting tools could use a lot of improvements. Both tl-serve and tl-barplot. If you're good in python or JS plotting any help improving those would be appreciated.

Mailing list

Please post to the linux-perf-users@vger.kernel.org mailing list. For bugs please open an issue on https://github.com/andikleen/pmu-tools/issues

Licenses

ocperf, toplev, ucevent, parser are under GPLv2, jevents is under the modified BSD license.

Andi Kleen pmu-tools@halobates.de