We may not idle immediately after a hang, and indeed may send a pulse
down the pipeline periodically to become idle. Rather than make a flimsy
assumption about how long we need to sleep before the system idles,
wait for the system to declare itself idle; flushing it to idle in the
process!

Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <ch...@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Cc: Tvrtko Ursulin <tvrtko.ursu...@linux.intel.com>
---
 tests/perf_pmu.c | 11 ++---------
 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 9 deletions(-)

diff --git a/tests/perf_pmu.c b/tests/perf_pmu.c
index 590e6526b..9af192dd8 100644
--- a/tests/perf_pmu.c
+++ b/tests/perf_pmu.c
@@ -281,16 +281,9 @@ single(int gem_fd, const struct intel_execution_engine2 
*e, unsigned int flags)
 
        /* Check for idle after hang. */
        if (flags & FLAG_HANG) {
-               /* Sleep for a bit for reset unwind to settle. */
-               usleep(500e3);
-               /*
-                * Ensure batch was executing before reset, meaning it must be
-                * idle by now. Unless it did not even manage to start before we
-                * triggered the reset, in which case the idleness check below
-                * might fail. The latter is very unlikely since there are two
-                * sleeps during which it had an opportunity to start.
-                */
+               gem_quiescent_gpu(gem_fd);
                igt_assert(!gem_bo_busy(gem_fd, spin->handle));
+
                val = pmu_read_single(fd);
                slept = measured_usleep(batch_duration_ns / 1000);
                val = pmu_read_single(fd) - val;
-- 
2.17.0

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