On Wed, Aug 27, 2025 at 1:18 AM Mark Rutland <mark.rutl...@arm.com> wrote:
>
> On Tue, Aug 26, 2025 at 11:48:48AM -0700, Ian Rogers wrote:
> > On Tue, Aug 26, 2025 at 8:32 AM Robin Murphy <robin.mur...@arm.com> wrote:
> > >
> > > On 2025-08-26 2:03 pm, Peter Zijlstra wrote:
> > > > On Wed, Aug 13, 2025 at 06:01:04PM +0100, Robin Murphy wrote:
> > > >> It may have been different long ago, but today it seems wrong for these
> > > >> drivers to skip counting disabled sibling events in group validation,
> > > >> given that perf_event_enable() could make them schedulable again, and
> > > >> thus increase the effective size of the group later. Conversely, if a
> > > >> sibling event is truly dead then it stands to reason that the whole
> > > >> group is dead, so it's not worth going to any special effort to try to
> > > >> squeeze in a new event that's never going to run anyway. Thus, we can
> > > >> simply remove all these checks.
> > > >
> > > > So currently you can do sort of a manual event rotation inside an
> > > > over-sized group and have it work.
> > > >
> > > > I'm not sure if anybody actually does this, but its possible.
> > > >
> > > > Eg. on a PMU that supports only 4 counters, create a group of 5 and
> > > > periodically cycle which of the 5 events is off.
> >
> > I'm not sure this is true, I thought this would fail in the
> > perf_event_open when adding the 5th event and there being insufficient
> > counters for the group.
>
> We're talking specifically about cases where the logic in a pmu's
> pmu::event_init() callback doesn't count events in specific states, and
> hence the 5th even doesn't get rejected when it is initialised.
>
> For example, in arch/x86/events/core.c, validate_group() uses
> collect_events(), which has:
>
>         for_each_sibling_event(event, leader) {
>                 if (!is_x86_event(event) || event->state <= 
> PERF_EVENT_STATE_OFF)
>                         continue;
>
>                 if (collect_event(cpuc, event, max_count, n))
>                         return -EINVAL;
>
>                 n++;
>         }
>
> ... and so where an event's state is <= PERF_EVENT_STATE_OFF at init
> time, that event is not counted to see if it fits into HW counters.

Hmm.. Thinking out loud. So it looked like perf with weak groups could
be broken then:
```
$ sudo perf stat -vv -e '{instructions,cycles}:W' true
...
perf_event_attr:
 type                             0 (PERF_TYPE_HARDWARE)
 size                             136
 config                           0x400000001
(cpu_core/PERF_COUNT_HW_INSTRUCTIONS/)
 sample_type                      IDENTIFIER
 read_format                      TOTAL_TIME_ENABLED|TOTAL_TIME_RUNNING|ID|GROUP
 disabled                         1
 inherit                          1
 enable_on_exec                   1
------------------------------------------------------------
sys_perf_event_open: pid 3337764  cpu -1  group_fd -1  flags 0x8 = 5
------------------------------------------------------------
perf_event_attr:
 type                             0 (PERF_TYPE_HARDWARE)
 size                             136
 config                           0x400000000
(cpu_core/PERF_COUNT_HW_CPU_CYCLES/)
 sample_type                      IDENTIFIER
 read_format                      TOTAL_TIME_ENABLED|TOTAL_TIME_RUNNING|ID|GROUP
 inherit                          1
------------------------------------------------------------
sys_perf_event_open: pid 3337764  cpu -1  group_fd 5  flags 0x8 = 7
...
```
Note, the group leader (instructions) is disabled because of:
https://web.git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/perf/perf-tools-next.git/tree/tools/perf/util/stat.c?h=perf-tools-next#n761
```
/*
* Disabling all counters initially, they will be enabled
* either manually by us or by kernel via enable_on_exec
* set later.
*/
if (evsel__is_group_leader(evsel)) {
        attr->disabled = 1;
```
but the checking of being disabled (PERF_EVENT_STATE_OFF) is only done
on siblings in the code you show above. So yes, you can disable the
group events to allow the perf_event_open to succeed but not on the
leader which is always checked (no PERF_EVENT_STATE_OFF check):
https://web.git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/perf/perf-tools-next.git/tree/arch/x86/events/core.c?h=perf-tools-next#n1204
```
if (is_x86_event(leader)) {
        if (collect_event(cpuc, leader, max_count, n))
                return -EINVAL;
```

Thanks,
Ian

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