Steven,

Timerlat auto-analysis:

  - Timerlat is reporting thread interference time without thread noise
    events occurrence. It was caused because the thread interference variable
    was not reset after the analysis of a timerlat activation that did not
    hit the threshold.

  - The IRQ handler delay is estimated from the delta of the IRQ latency
    reported by timerlat, and the timestamp from IRQ handler start event.
    If the delta is near-zero, the drift from the external clock and the
    trace event and/or the overhead can cause the value to be negative.
    If the value is negative, print a zero-delay.

  - IRQ handlers happening after the timerlat thread event but before
    the stop tracing were being reported as IRQ that happened before the
    *current* IRQ occurrence. Ignore Previous IRQ noise in this condition
    because they are valid only for the *next* timerlat activation.

Timerlat user-space:

  - Timerlat is stopping all user-space thread if a CPU becomes
    offline. Do not stop the entire tool if a CPU is/become offline,
    but only the thread of the unavailable CPU. Stop the tool only,
    if all threads leave because the CPUs become/are offline.

man-pages:

  - Fix command line example in timerlat hist man page.


Please pull the latest rtla-v6.6-fixes tree, which can be found at:


  git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/bristot/linux.git
rtla-v6.6-fixes

Tag SHA1: 6a0df51b5c0a075a553a5ad73b1fd421f559eb6b
Head SHA1: 81ec384b80ffbda752c230778d39ea620c7e3bcf


Daniel Bristot de Oliveira (4):
      rtla/timerlat_aa: Zero thread sum after every sample analysis
      rtla/timerlat_aa: Fix negative IRQ delay
      rtla/timerlat_aa: Fix previous IRQ delay for IRQs that happens after 
thread sample
      rtla/timerlat: Do not stop user-space if a cpu is offline

Xie XiuQi (1):
      rtla: fix a example in rtla-timerlat-hist.rst

----
 Documentation/tools/rtla/rtla-timerlat-hist.rst |  4 ++--
 tools/tracing/rtla/src/timerlat_aa.c            | 32 ++++++++++++++++++++-----
 tools/tracing/rtla/src/timerlat_u.c             |  6 +++--
 3 files changed, 32 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-)
---------------------------
diff --git a/Documentation/tools/rtla/rtla-timerlat-hist.rst 
b/Documentation/tools/rtla/rtla-timerlat-hist.rst
index 057db78d4095..03b7f3deb069 100644
--- a/Documentation/tools/rtla/rtla-timerlat-hist.rst
+++ b/Documentation/tools/rtla/rtla-timerlat-hist.rst
@@ -36,11 +36,11 @@ EXAMPLE
 In the example below, **rtla timerlat hist** is set to run for *10* minutes,
 in the cpus *0-4*, *skipping zero* only lines. Moreover, **rtla timerlat
 hist** will change the priority of the *timerlat* threads to run under
-*SCHED_DEADLINE* priority, with a *10us* runtime every *1ms* period. The
+*SCHED_DEADLINE* priority, with a *100us* runtime every *1ms* period. The
 *1ms* period is also passed to the *timerlat* tracer. Auto-analysis is disabled
 to reduce overhead ::
 
-  [root@alien ~]# timerlat hist -d 10m -c 0-4 -P d:100us:1ms -p 1ms --no-aa
+  [root@alien ~]# timerlat hist -d 10m -c 0-4 -P d:100us:1ms -p 1000 --no-aa
   # RTLA timerlat histogram
   # Time unit is microseconds (us)
   # Duration:   0 00:10:00
diff --git a/tools/tracing/rtla/src/timerlat_aa.c 
b/tools/tracing/rtla/src/timerlat_aa.c
index e0ffe69c271c..7093fd5333be 100644
--- a/tools/tracing/rtla/src/timerlat_aa.c
+++ b/tools/tracing/rtla/src/timerlat_aa.c
@@ -159,6 +159,7 @@ static int timerlat_aa_irq_latency(struct timerlat_aa_data 
*taa_data,
        taa_data->thread_nmi_sum = 0;
        taa_data->thread_irq_sum = 0;
        taa_data->thread_softirq_sum = 0;
+       taa_data->thread_thread_sum = 0;
        taa_data->thread_blocking_duration = 0;
        taa_data->timer_irq_start_time = 0;
        taa_data->timer_irq_duration = 0;
@@ -337,7 +338,23 @@ static int timerlat_aa_irq_handler(struct trace_seq *s, 
struct tep_record *recor
                taa_data->timer_irq_start_time = start;
                taa_data->timer_irq_duration = duration;
 
-               taa_data->timer_irq_start_delay = 
taa_data->timer_irq_start_time - expected_start;
+               /*
+                * We are dealing with two different clock sources: the
+                * external clock source that timerlat uses as a reference
+                * and the clock used by the tracer. There are also two
+                * moments: the time reading the clock and the timer in
+                * which the event is placed in the buffer (the trace
+                * event timestamp). If the processor is slow or there
+                * is some hardware noise, the difference between the
+                * timestamp and the external clock read can be longer
+                * than the IRQ handler delay, resulting in a negative
+                * time. If so, set IRQ start delay as 0. In the end,
+                * it is less relevant than the noise.
+                */
+               if (expected_start < taa_data->timer_irq_start_time)
+                       taa_data->timer_irq_start_delay = 
taa_data->timer_irq_start_time - expected_start;
+               else
+                       taa_data->timer_irq_start_delay = 0;
 
                /*
                 * not exit from idle.
@@ -528,7 +545,7 @@ static int timerlat_aa_kworker_start_handler(struct 
trace_seq *s, struct tep_rec
 static void timerlat_thread_analysis(struct timerlat_aa_data *taa_data, int 
cpu,
                                     int irq_thresh, int thread_thresh)
 {
-       unsigned long long exp_irq_ts;
+       long long exp_irq_ts;
        int total;
        int irq;
 
@@ -545,12 +562,15 @@ static void timerlat_thread_analysis(struct 
timerlat_aa_data *taa_data, int cpu,
 
        /*
         * Expected IRQ arrival time using the trace clock as the base.
+        *
+        * TODO: Add a list of previous IRQ, and then run the list backwards.
         */
        exp_irq_ts = taa_data->timer_irq_start_time - 
taa_data->timer_irq_start_delay;
-
-       if (exp_irq_ts < taa_data->prev_irq_timstamp + 
taa_data->prev_irq_duration)
-               printf("  Previous IRQ interference:    \t\t up to  %9.2f us\n",
-                       ns_to_usf(taa_data->prev_irq_duration));
+       if (exp_irq_ts < taa_data->prev_irq_timstamp + 
taa_data->prev_irq_duration) {
+               if (taa_data->prev_irq_timstamp < 
taa_data->timer_irq_start_time)
+                       printf("  Previous IRQ interference:    \t\t up to  
%9.2f us\n",
+                               ns_to_usf(taa_data->prev_irq_duration));
+       }
 
        /*
         * The delay that the IRQ suffered before starting.
diff --git a/tools/tracing/rtla/src/timerlat_u.c 
b/tools/tracing/rtla/src/timerlat_u.c
index 05e310696dd5..01dbf9a6b5a5 100644
--- a/tools/tracing/rtla/src/timerlat_u.c
+++ b/tools/tracing/rtla/src/timerlat_u.c
@@ -45,7 +45,7 @@ static int timerlat_u_main(int cpu, struct timerlat_u_params 
*params)
 
        retval = sched_setaffinity(gettid(), sizeof(set), &set);
        if (retval == -1) {
-               err_msg("Error setting user thread affinity\n");
+               debug_msg("Error setting user thread affinity %d, is the CPU 
online?\n", cpu);
                exit(1);
        }
 
@@ -193,7 +193,9 @@ void *timerlat_u_dispatcher(void *data)
                                        procs_count--;
                                }
                        }
-                       break;
+
+                       if (!procs_count)
+                               break;
                }
 
                sleep(1);

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