bionic (1) likwid-perfctr.1.gz

Provided by: likwid_4.3.1+dfsg1-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       likwid-perfctr - configure and read out hardware performance counters on x86 CPUs

SYNOPSIS

       likwid-perfctr   [-vhHmaief]   [-c   core_list]   [-C  core_list_for_pinning]  [-g  performance_group  or
       performance_event_string] [-t timeline_frequency] [-S monitoring_time]  [-T  group_switch_frequency]  [-V
       verbosity] [-M access_mode] [-o output_file] [-s skip_mask] [-E search_str] [--stats]

DESCRIPTION

       likwid-perfctr  is  a lightweight command line application to configure and read out hardware performance
       monitoring data on supported x86 processors. It can  measure  either  as  wrapper  without  changing  the
       measured  application  or  with  marker  API  functions  inside  the code, which will turn on and off the
       counters. There are preconfigured  performance  groups  with  useful  event  sets  and  derived  metrics.
       Additionally,  arbitrary  events  can  be  measured  with  custom  event sets. The marker API can measure
       multiple named regions and the results are accumulated over multiple region calls.

OPTIONS

       -v, --version
              prints version information to standard output, then exits.

       -h, --help
              prints a help message to standard output, then exits.

       -H     prints group help message (use together with -g switch).

       -V <level>, --verbose <level>
              verbose output during execution for debugging. 0 for only errors, 1 for  informational  output,  2
              for detailed output and 3 for developer output

       -m     run in marker API mode

       -a     print available performance groups for current processor, then exit.

       -e     print available counters and performance events of current processor.

       -o, --output <filename>
              store  all  output  to  a  file instead of stdout. For the filename the following placeholders are
              supported: %j for PBS_JOBID, %r for MPI RANK (only Intel MPI at the moment), %h host name  and  %p
              for  process  pid.   The placeholders must be separated by underscore as, e.g., -o test_%h_%p. You
              must specify a suffix to the filename. For txt the output is printed as  is  to  the  file.  Other
              suffixes  trigger  a filter on the output.  Available filters are csv (comma separated values) and
              xml at the moment.

       -O     print output in CSV format (conform  to  RFC  4180,  see  https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4180  for
              details).

       -i, --info
              print  cpuid  information  about  processor  and about Intel Performance Monitoring features, then
              exit.

       -c <cpu expression>
              specify a numerical list of processors. The list may contain multiple items, separated  by  comma,
              and ranges. For example 0,3,9-11.

       -C <cpu expression>
              specify  a  numerical list of processors. The list may contain multiple items, separated by comma,
              and ranges. For example 0,3,9-11. This variant will also  pin  the  threads  to  the  cores.  Also
              logical numberings can be used.

       -g, --group <performance group> or <performance event set string>
              specify  which  performance group to measure. This can be one of the tags output with the -a flag.
              Also a custom event set can be specified by a comma separated list of events. Each event  has  the
              format  eventId:register  with  the the register being one of a architecture supported performance
              counter registers.

       -t <frequency of measurements>
              timeline mode for time resolved measurements. The time unit must be given on  command  line,  e.g.
              4s, 500ms or 900us.

       -S <waittime between measurements>
              End-to-end  measurement  using  likwid-perfctr  but sleep instead of executing an application. The
              time unit must be given on command line, e.g. 4s, 500ms or 900us.

       -T <time between group switches>
              Frequency to switch groups if multiple are given on commandline, default is 2s. Value  is  ignored
              for a single event set and default frequency of 30s is used to catch overflows. The time unit must
              be given on command line, e.g. 4s, 500ms or 900us.

       -s, --skip <mask>
              Specify skip mask as HEX number. For each set bit the corresponding thread is skipped.

       -f, --force
              Force writing of registers even if they are in use.

       -E <search_str>
              Print only events and corresponding counters matching <search_str>

       --stats
              Always print statistics table

EXAMPLE

       Because likwid-perfctr measures on processors and not single applications it is necessary to ensure  that
       processes  and  threads are pinned to dedicated resources. You can either pin the application yourself or
       use the builtin pin functionality.

       1.  As wrapper with performance group:

       likwid-perfctr -C 0-2 -g TLB ./cacheBench -n 2 -l 1048576 -i 100 -t Stream

       The parent process is pinned to processor 0, Thread 0 to processor 1 and Thread 1 to processor 2.

       2.  As wrapper with custom event set on AMD:

       likwid-perfctr -C 0-4 -g INSTRUCTIONS_RETIRED_SSE:PMC0,CPU_CLOCKS_UNHALTED:PMC3 ./cacheBench

       It is specified that the event INSTRUCTIONS_RETIRED_SSE  is  measured  on  counter  PMC0  and  the  event
       CPU_CLOCKS_UNHALTED  on  counter PMC3.  It is possible calculate the run time of all threads based on the
       CPU_CLOCKS_UNHALTED event. If you want this you have to include this event in your custom event string as
       shown above.

       3.  As wrapper with custom event set on Intel:

       likwid-perfctr   -C  0  -g  INSTR_RETIRED_ANY:FIXC0,CPU_CLK_UNHALTED_CORE:FIXC1,UNC_L3_LINES_IN_ANY:UPMC0
       ./stream-icc

       On Intel processors fixed events are measured on dedicated  counters.  These  are  INSTR_RETIRED_ANY  and
       CPU_CLK_UNHALTED_CORE.  If you configure these fixed counters, likwid-perfctr will calculate the run time
       and CPI metrics for your run.

       4.  Using the marker API to measure only parts of your code (this can be used both with groups or  custom
           event sets):

       likwid-perfctr -m -C 0-4 -g INSTRUCTIONS_RETIRED_SSE:PMC0,CPU_CLOCKS_UNHALTED:PMC3 ./cacheBench

       You  have  to  link you code against liblikwid.so and use the marker API calls.  Examples can be found in
       examples folder /usr/share/likwid/examples.  The following code snippet shows the necessary calls:

       #include <likwid.h>

       /* only one thread calls init */
       LIKWID_MARKER_INIT;

       /* Must be called by each thread the should
        * perform measurements.
        * If you place it in the same parallel
        * region as LIKWID_MARKER_START, perform a
        * barrier between the statements to avoid
        * timing problems.
        */
       LIKWID_MARKER_THREADINIT;

       /* If you run the code region only once, register
        * the region tag previously to reduce the overhead
        * of START and STOP calls. Call it once for each
        * thread in parallel environment.
        * Note: No whitespace characters are allowed in the region tags
        * This call is optional, START will do the same operations.
        */
       LIKWID_MARKER_REGISTER("name");

       /* Start measurement
        * Note: No whitespace characters are allowed in the region tags
        */
       LIKWID_MARKER_START("name");
       /*
        * Your code to be measured is here
        * You can also nest named regions
        * No whitespaces are allowed in the region names!
        */
       LIKWID_MARKER_STOP("name");

       /* If you want to measure multiple groups/event sets
        * Switches through groups in round-robin fashion
        */
       LIKWID_MARKER_SWITCH;

       /* Finally */
       LIKWID_MARKER_CLOSE;

       5.  Using likwid in timeline mode:

       likwid-perfctr -c 0-3 -g FLOPS_DP -t 300ms ./cacheBench > out.txt

       This will read out the counters every 300ms on physical cores 0-3 and write the results to out.txt.   The
       application is not pinned to the CPUs. The output syntax of the timeline mode is for custom event sets:

       <groupID>   <numberOfEvents>   <numberOfThreads>   <Timestamp>   <Event1_Thread1>   <Event2_Thread1>  ...
       <Event1_Thread2> ... <EventN_ThreadM>

       For  performance  groups  with  metrics:  <groupID>   <numberOfMetrics>   <numberOfThreads>   <Timestamp>
       <Metric1_Thread1> <Metric2_Thread1> ... <Metric1_Thread2> ...<MetricN_ThreadM>

       For  timeline  mode  there  is a frontend application likwid-perfscope(1), which enables live plotting of
       selected events. Please be aware that with high frequencies (<100ms), the values  differ  from  the  real
       results but the behavior of them is valid.

       6.  Using likwid in stethoscope mode:

       likwid-perfctr -c 0-3 -g FLOPS_DP -S 2s

       This  will  start  the counters and read them out after 2s on physical cores 0-3 and write the results to
       stdout.

       7.  Using likwid with counter options:

       likwid-perfctr -c S0:1@S1:1 -g LLC_LOOKUPS_DATA_READ:CBOX0C0:STATE=0x9 ./cacheBench

       This will program the counter CBOX0C0 (the counter 0 of the  LLC  cache  box  0)  to  measure  the  event
       LLC_LOOKUPS_DATA_READ  and  filter  the increments by the state of a cacheline.  STATE=0x9 for this event
       means all <invalid> and <modified> cachelines. Which options are allowed  for  which  box  is  listed  in
       LIKWID's  html  documentation.  The  values  for  the  options  can  be  found in the vendors performance
       monitoring documentations. Likwid measures the first CPU of socket 0 and the first CPU of socket  1.  See
       likwid-pin(1)  for  details  regarding  the  cpu  expressions.  For more code examples have a look at the
       likwid WIKI pages and LIKWID's html documentation.

AUTHOR

       Written by Thomas Roehl <thomas.roehl@googlemail.com>.

BUGS

       Report Bugs on <https://github.com/RRZE-HPC/likwid/issues>.

SEE ALSO

       likwid-topology(1), likwid-perfscope(1), likwid-pin(1), likwid-bench(1)