bionic (3) libpfm_perf_event_raw.3.gz

Provided by: libpfm4-dev_4.9.0-2_amd64 bug

NAME

       libpfm_perf_event_raw - support for perf_events raw events syntax

SYNOPSIS

       #include <perfmon/pfmlib.h>

       PMU name: perf_raw
       PMU desc: Raw perf_events event syntax

DESCRIPTION

       The  library  supports  a pseudo PMU model to allow raw encodings of PMU events for the Linux perf_events
       kernel interface.

       With this PMU, it is possible to provide the raw hexadecimal encoding of any hardware event for  any  PMU
       models. The raw encoding is passed as is to the kernel. All events are encoded as PERF_TYPE_RAW. As such,
       perf_events generic events, such as cycles, instructions, cannot be encoded by this PMU.

       The syntax is very simple: rX. X is the hexadecimal 64-bit value for the event.   It  may  include  event
       filters on some PMU models. The hexadecimal number is passed without the 0x prefix, e.g., r01c4.

       The  library's  standard perf_events attributes are supported by this PMU model.  They are separated with
       colons as is customary with the library.

MODIFIERS

       The following modifiers are supported by this PMU model:

       u      Measure at user level which includes privilege levels 1, 2, 3. This corresponds to PFM_PLM3.  This
              is a boolean modifier.

       k      Measure at kernel level which includes privilege level 0. This corresponds to PFM_PLM0.  This is a
              boolean modifier.

       h      Measure at the hypervisor level. This corresponds to PFM_PLMH.  This is a boolean modifier

       mg     Measure guest execution only. This is a boolean modifier

       mh     Measure host execution only. This is a boolean modifier

       period Specify the the sampling period value. Value can be expressed in decimal or hexadecimal.  Value is
              64-bit  wide.  This option is mutually exclusive with freq. The period is expressed in the unit of
              the event. There is no default value.

       freq   Specify the the sampling frequency value. Value can be expressed in decimal or hexadecimal.  Value
              is  64-bit  wide. This options is mutually exclusive with period. The value is expressed in Hertz.
              For instance, freq=100, means that the event should be sampled 100 times per  second  on  average.
              There is no default value.

       excl   The  associated event is the only event measured on the PMU. This applies only to hardware events.
              This attribute requires admin privileges. Default is off.

       precise
              Enables precise sampling mode. This option is only valid on sampling events. This  is  an  integer
              value.  It can have the following values: 1 enable precise sampling, 2 enable precise sampling and
              eliminate skid. Not all events  necessarily  support  precise  mode,  this  is  dependent  on  the
              underlying PMU. Eliminating skid is a best effort feature. It may not work for all samples.

       cpu    This  integer  option is used with system-wide events, i.e., events attached to a CPU instead of a
              thread. The value designate the CPU to attach the event to. It is up to the caller of the  library
              to  use  the cpu field in the library event encoding argument to create the event. No verification
              on the validity of the CPU number is made by the library. Default value is -1 for this field.

       pinned This boolean option is used with system-wide events, i.e., events attached to a CPU instead  of  a
              thread.  If set, then the event is marked as pinned. That means it needs to remain on the counters
              at all time, i.e., it cannot be multiplexed. There can only be as many pinned events as there  are
              counters,  yet  the  library  does  not check for that, the perf_event subsystem does. The default
              value for this field is false, i.e., the event is not pinned.

AUTHORS

       Stephane Eranian <eranian@gmail.com>

                                                 February, 2014                                        LIBPFM(3)