xref: /linux/Documentation/arch/x86/resctrl.rst (revision 1e525507)
1.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
2.. include:: <isonum.txt>
3
4===========================================
5User Interface for Resource Control feature
6===========================================
7
8:Copyright: |copy| 2016 Intel Corporation
9:Authors: - Fenghua Yu <fenghua.yu@intel.com>
10          - Tony Luck <tony.luck@intel.com>
11          - Vikas Shivappa <vikas.shivappa@intel.com>
12
13
14Intel refers to this feature as Intel Resource Director Technology(Intel(R) RDT).
15AMD refers to this feature as AMD Platform Quality of Service(AMD QoS).
16
17This feature is enabled by the CONFIG_X86_CPU_RESCTRL and the x86 /proc/cpuinfo
18flag bits:
19
20===============================================	================================
21RDT (Resource Director Technology) Allocation	"rdt_a"
22CAT (Cache Allocation Technology)		"cat_l3", "cat_l2"
23CDP (Code and Data Prioritization)		"cdp_l3", "cdp_l2"
24CQM (Cache QoS Monitoring)			"cqm_llc", "cqm_occup_llc"
25MBM (Memory Bandwidth Monitoring)		"cqm_mbm_total", "cqm_mbm_local"
26MBA (Memory Bandwidth Allocation)		"mba"
27SMBA (Slow Memory Bandwidth Allocation)         ""
28BMEC (Bandwidth Monitoring Event Configuration) ""
29===============================================	================================
30
31Historically, new features were made visible by default in /proc/cpuinfo. This
32resulted in the feature flags becoming hard to parse by humans. Adding a new
33flag to /proc/cpuinfo should be avoided if user space can obtain information
34about the feature from resctrl's info directory.
35
36To use the feature mount the file system::
37
38 # mount -t resctrl resctrl [-o cdp[,cdpl2][,mba_MBps][,debug]] /sys/fs/resctrl
39
40mount options are:
41
42"cdp":
43	Enable code/data prioritization in L3 cache allocations.
44"cdpl2":
45	Enable code/data prioritization in L2 cache allocations.
46"mba_MBps":
47	Enable the MBA Software Controller(mba_sc) to specify MBA
48	bandwidth in MiBps
49"debug":
50	Make debug files accessible. Available debug files are annotated with
51	"Available only with debug option".
52
53L2 and L3 CDP are controlled separately.
54
55RDT features are orthogonal. A particular system may support only
56monitoring, only control, or both monitoring and control.  Cache
57pseudo-locking is a unique way of using cache control to "pin" or
58"lock" data in the cache. Details can be found in
59"Cache Pseudo-Locking".
60
61
62The mount succeeds if either of allocation or monitoring is present, but
63only those files and directories supported by the system will be created.
64For more details on the behavior of the interface during monitoring
65and allocation, see the "Resource alloc and monitor groups" section.
66
67Info directory
68==============
69
70The 'info' directory contains information about the enabled
71resources. Each resource has its own subdirectory. The subdirectory
72names reflect the resource names.
73
74Each subdirectory contains the following files with respect to
75allocation:
76
77Cache resource(L3/L2)  subdirectory contains the following files
78related to allocation:
79
80"num_closids":
81		The number of CLOSIDs which are valid for this
82		resource. The kernel uses the smallest number of
83		CLOSIDs of all enabled resources as limit.
84"cbm_mask":
85		The bitmask which is valid for this resource.
86		This mask is equivalent to 100%.
87"min_cbm_bits":
88		The minimum number of consecutive bits which
89		must be set when writing a mask.
90
91"shareable_bits":
92		Bitmask of shareable resource with other executing
93		entities (e.g. I/O). User can use this when
94		setting up exclusive cache partitions. Note that
95		some platforms support devices that have their
96		own settings for cache use which can over-ride
97		these bits.
98"bit_usage":
99		Annotated capacity bitmasks showing how all
100		instances of the resource are used. The legend is:
101
102			"0":
103			      Corresponding region is unused. When the system's
104			      resources have been allocated and a "0" is found
105			      in "bit_usage" it is a sign that resources are
106			      wasted.
107
108			"H":
109			      Corresponding region is used by hardware only
110			      but available for software use. If a resource
111			      has bits set in "shareable_bits" but not all
112			      of these bits appear in the resource groups'
113			      schematas then the bits appearing in
114			      "shareable_bits" but no resource group will
115			      be marked as "H".
116			"X":
117			      Corresponding region is available for sharing and
118			      used by hardware and software. These are the
119			      bits that appear in "shareable_bits" as
120			      well as a resource group's allocation.
121			"S":
122			      Corresponding region is used by software
123			      and available for sharing.
124			"E":
125			      Corresponding region is used exclusively by
126			      one resource group. No sharing allowed.
127			"P":
128			      Corresponding region is pseudo-locked. No
129			      sharing allowed.
130"sparse_masks":
131		Indicates if non-contiguous 1s value in CBM is supported.
132
133			"0":
134			      Only contiguous 1s value in CBM is supported.
135			"1":
136			      Non-contiguous 1s value in CBM is supported.
137
138Memory bandwidth(MB) subdirectory contains the following files
139with respect to allocation:
140
141"min_bandwidth":
142		The minimum memory bandwidth percentage which
143		user can request.
144
145"bandwidth_gran":
146		The granularity in which the memory bandwidth
147		percentage is allocated. The allocated
148		b/w percentage is rounded off to the next
149		control step available on the hardware. The
150		available bandwidth control steps are:
151		min_bandwidth + N * bandwidth_gran.
152
153"delay_linear":
154		Indicates if the delay scale is linear or
155		non-linear. This field is purely informational
156		only.
157
158"thread_throttle_mode":
159		Indicator on Intel systems of how tasks running on threads
160		of a physical core are throttled in cases where they
161		request different memory bandwidth percentages:
162
163		"max":
164			the smallest percentage is applied
165			to all threads
166		"per-thread":
167			bandwidth percentages are directly applied to
168			the threads running on the core
169
170If RDT monitoring is available there will be an "L3_MON" directory
171with the following files:
172
173"num_rmids":
174		The number of RMIDs available. This is the
175		upper bound for how many "CTRL_MON" + "MON"
176		groups can be created.
177
178"mon_features":
179		Lists the monitoring events if
180		monitoring is enabled for the resource.
181		Example::
182
183			# cat /sys/fs/resctrl/info/L3_MON/mon_features
184			llc_occupancy
185			mbm_total_bytes
186			mbm_local_bytes
187
188		If the system supports Bandwidth Monitoring Event
189		Configuration (BMEC), then the bandwidth events will
190		be configurable. The output will be::
191
192			# cat /sys/fs/resctrl/info/L3_MON/mon_features
193			llc_occupancy
194			mbm_total_bytes
195			mbm_total_bytes_config
196			mbm_local_bytes
197			mbm_local_bytes_config
198
199"mbm_total_bytes_config", "mbm_local_bytes_config":
200	Read/write files containing the configuration for the mbm_total_bytes
201	and mbm_local_bytes events, respectively, when the Bandwidth
202	Monitoring Event Configuration (BMEC) feature is supported.
203	The event configuration settings are domain specific and affect
204	all the CPUs in the domain. When either event configuration is
205	changed, the bandwidth counters for all RMIDs of both events
206	(mbm_total_bytes as well as mbm_local_bytes) are cleared for that
207	domain. The next read for every RMID will report "Unavailable"
208	and subsequent reads will report the valid value.
209
210	Following are the types of events supported:
211
212	====    ========================================================
213	Bits    Description
214	====    ========================================================
215	6       Dirty Victims from the QOS domain to all types of memory
216	5       Reads to slow memory in the non-local NUMA domain
217	4       Reads to slow memory in the local NUMA domain
218	3       Non-temporal writes to non-local NUMA domain
219	2       Non-temporal writes to local NUMA domain
220	1       Reads to memory in the non-local NUMA domain
221	0       Reads to memory in the local NUMA domain
222	====    ========================================================
223
224	By default, the mbm_total_bytes configuration is set to 0x7f to count
225	all the event types and the mbm_local_bytes configuration is set to
226	0x15 to count all the local memory events.
227
228	Examples:
229
230	* To view the current configuration::
231	  ::
232
233	    # cat /sys/fs/resctrl/info/L3_MON/mbm_total_bytes_config
234	    0=0x7f;1=0x7f;2=0x7f;3=0x7f
235
236	    # cat /sys/fs/resctrl/info/L3_MON/mbm_local_bytes_config
237	    0=0x15;1=0x15;3=0x15;4=0x15
238
239	* To change the mbm_total_bytes to count only reads on domain 0,
240	  the bits 0, 1, 4 and 5 needs to be set, which is 110011b in binary
241	  (in hexadecimal 0x33):
242	  ::
243
244	    # echo  "0=0x33" > /sys/fs/resctrl/info/L3_MON/mbm_total_bytes_config
245
246	    # cat /sys/fs/resctrl/info/L3_MON/mbm_total_bytes_config
247	    0=0x33;1=0x7f;2=0x7f;3=0x7f
248
249	* To change the mbm_local_bytes to count all the slow memory reads on
250	  domain 0 and 1, the bits 4 and 5 needs to be set, which is 110000b
251	  in binary (in hexadecimal 0x30):
252	  ::
253
254	    # echo  "0=0x30;1=0x30" > /sys/fs/resctrl/info/L3_MON/mbm_local_bytes_config
255
256	    # cat /sys/fs/resctrl/info/L3_MON/mbm_local_bytes_config
257	    0=0x30;1=0x30;3=0x15;4=0x15
258
259"max_threshold_occupancy":
260		Read/write file provides the largest value (in
261		bytes) at which a previously used LLC_occupancy
262		counter can be considered for re-use.
263
264Finally, in the top level of the "info" directory there is a file
265named "last_cmd_status". This is reset with every "command" issued
266via the file system (making new directories or writing to any of the
267control files). If the command was successful, it will read as "ok".
268If the command failed, it will provide more information that can be
269conveyed in the error returns from file operations. E.g.
270::
271
272	# echo L3:0=f7 > schemata
273	bash: echo: write error: Invalid argument
274	# cat info/last_cmd_status
275	mask f7 has non-consecutive 1-bits
276
277Resource alloc and monitor groups
278=================================
279
280Resource groups are represented as directories in the resctrl file
281system.  The default group is the root directory which, immediately
282after mounting, owns all the tasks and cpus in the system and can make
283full use of all resources.
284
285On a system with RDT control features additional directories can be
286created in the root directory that specify different amounts of each
287resource (see "schemata" below). The root and these additional top level
288directories are referred to as "CTRL_MON" groups below.
289
290On a system with RDT monitoring the root directory and other top level
291directories contain a directory named "mon_groups" in which additional
292directories can be created to monitor subsets of tasks in the CTRL_MON
293group that is their ancestor. These are called "MON" groups in the rest
294of this document.
295
296Removing a directory will move all tasks and cpus owned by the group it
297represents to the parent. Removing one of the created CTRL_MON groups
298will automatically remove all MON groups below it.
299
300Moving MON group directories to a new parent CTRL_MON group is supported
301for the purpose of changing the resource allocations of a MON group
302without impacting its monitoring data or assigned tasks. This operation
303is not allowed for MON groups which monitor CPUs. No other move
304operation is currently allowed other than simply renaming a CTRL_MON or
305MON group.
306
307All groups contain the following files:
308
309"tasks":
310	Reading this file shows the list of all tasks that belong to
311	this group. Writing a task id to the file will add a task to the
312	group. Multiple tasks can be added by separating the task ids
313	with commas. Tasks will be assigned sequentially. Multiple
314	failures are not supported. A single failure encountered while
315	attempting to assign a task will cause the operation to abort and
316	already added tasks before the failure will remain in the group.
317	Failures will be logged to /sys/fs/resctrl/info/last_cmd_status.
318
319	If the group is a CTRL_MON group the task is removed from
320	whichever previous CTRL_MON group owned the task and also from
321	any MON group that owned the task. If the group is a MON group,
322	then the task must already belong to the CTRL_MON parent of this
323	group. The task is removed from any previous MON group.
324
325
326"cpus":
327	Reading this file shows a bitmask of the logical CPUs owned by
328	this group. Writing a mask to this file will add and remove
329	CPUs to/from this group. As with the tasks file a hierarchy is
330	maintained where MON groups may only include CPUs owned by the
331	parent CTRL_MON group.
332	When the resource group is in pseudo-locked mode this file will
333	only be readable, reflecting the CPUs associated with the
334	pseudo-locked region.
335
336
337"cpus_list":
338	Just like "cpus", only using ranges of CPUs instead of bitmasks.
339
340
341When control is enabled all CTRL_MON groups will also contain:
342
343"schemata":
344	A list of all the resources available to this group.
345	Each resource has its own line and format - see below for details.
346
347"size":
348	Mirrors the display of the "schemata" file to display the size in
349	bytes of each allocation instead of the bits representing the
350	allocation.
351
352"mode":
353	The "mode" of the resource group dictates the sharing of its
354	allocations. A "shareable" resource group allows sharing of its
355	allocations while an "exclusive" resource group does not. A
356	cache pseudo-locked region is created by first writing
357	"pseudo-locksetup" to the "mode" file before writing the cache
358	pseudo-locked region's schemata to the resource group's "schemata"
359	file. On successful pseudo-locked region creation the mode will
360	automatically change to "pseudo-locked".
361
362"ctrl_hw_id":
363	Available only with debug option. The identifier used by hardware
364	for the control group. On x86 this is the CLOSID.
365
366When monitoring is enabled all MON groups will also contain:
367
368"mon_data":
369	This contains a set of files organized by L3 domain and by
370	RDT event. E.g. on a system with two L3 domains there will
371	be subdirectories "mon_L3_00" and "mon_L3_01".	Each of these
372	directories have one file per event (e.g. "llc_occupancy",
373	"mbm_total_bytes", and "mbm_local_bytes"). In a MON group these
374	files provide a read out of the current value of the event for
375	all tasks in the group. In CTRL_MON groups these files provide
376	the sum for all tasks in the CTRL_MON group and all tasks in
377	MON groups. Please see example section for more details on usage.
378
379"mon_hw_id":
380	Available only with debug option. The identifier used by hardware
381	for the monitor group. On x86 this is the RMID.
382
383Resource allocation rules
384-------------------------
385
386When a task is running the following rules define which resources are
387available to it:
388
3891) If the task is a member of a non-default group, then the schemata
390   for that group is used.
391
3922) Else if the task belongs to the default group, but is running on a
393   CPU that is assigned to some specific group, then the schemata for the
394   CPU's group is used.
395
3963) Otherwise the schemata for the default group is used.
397
398Resource monitoring rules
399-------------------------
4001) If a task is a member of a MON group, or non-default CTRL_MON group
401   then RDT events for the task will be reported in that group.
402
4032) If a task is a member of the default CTRL_MON group, but is running
404   on a CPU that is assigned to some specific group, then the RDT events
405   for the task will be reported in that group.
406
4073) Otherwise RDT events for the task will be reported in the root level
408   "mon_data" group.
409
410
411Notes on cache occupancy monitoring and control
412===============================================
413When moving a task from one group to another you should remember that
414this only affects *new* cache allocations by the task. E.g. you may have
415a task in a monitor group showing 3 MB of cache occupancy. If you move
416to a new group and immediately check the occupancy of the old and new
417groups you will likely see that the old group is still showing 3 MB and
418the new group zero. When the task accesses locations still in cache from
419before the move, the h/w does not update any counters. On a busy system
420you will likely see the occupancy in the old group go down as cache lines
421are evicted and re-used while the occupancy in the new group rises as
422the task accesses memory and loads into the cache are counted based on
423membership in the new group.
424
425The same applies to cache allocation control. Moving a task to a group
426with a smaller cache partition will not evict any cache lines. The
427process may continue to use them from the old partition.
428
429Hardware uses CLOSid(Class of service ID) and an RMID(Resource monitoring ID)
430to identify a control group and a monitoring group respectively. Each of
431the resource groups are mapped to these IDs based on the kind of group. The
432number of CLOSid and RMID are limited by the hardware and hence the creation of
433a "CTRL_MON" directory may fail if we run out of either CLOSID or RMID
434and creation of "MON" group may fail if we run out of RMIDs.
435
436max_threshold_occupancy - generic concepts
437------------------------------------------
438
439Note that an RMID once freed may not be immediately available for use as
440the RMID is still tagged the cache lines of the previous user of RMID.
441Hence such RMIDs are placed on limbo list and checked back if the cache
442occupancy has gone down. If there is a time when system has a lot of
443limbo RMIDs but which are not ready to be used, user may see an -EBUSY
444during mkdir.
445
446max_threshold_occupancy is a user configurable value to determine the
447occupancy at which an RMID can be freed.
448
449Schemata files - general concepts
450---------------------------------
451Each line in the file describes one resource. The line starts with
452the name of the resource, followed by specific values to be applied
453in each of the instances of that resource on the system.
454
455Cache IDs
456---------
457On current generation systems there is one L3 cache per socket and L2
458caches are generally just shared by the hyperthreads on a core, but this
459isn't an architectural requirement. We could have multiple separate L3
460caches on a socket, multiple cores could share an L2 cache. So instead
461of using "socket" or "core" to define the set of logical cpus sharing
462a resource we use a "Cache ID". At a given cache level this will be a
463unique number across the whole system (but it isn't guaranteed to be a
464contiguous sequence, there may be gaps).  To find the ID for each logical
465CPU look in /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu*/cache/index*/id
466
467Cache Bit Masks (CBM)
468---------------------
469For cache resources we describe the portion of the cache that is available
470for allocation using a bitmask. The maximum value of the mask is defined
471by each cpu model (and may be different for different cache levels). It
472is found using CPUID, but is also provided in the "info" directory of
473the resctrl file system in "info/{resource}/cbm_mask". Some Intel hardware
474requires that these masks have all the '1' bits in a contiguous block. So
4750x3, 0x6 and 0xC are legal 4-bit masks with two bits set, but 0x5, 0x9
476and 0xA are not. Check /sys/fs/resctrl/info/{resource}/sparse_masks
477if non-contiguous 1s value is supported. On a system with a 20-bit mask
478each bit represents 5% of the capacity of the cache. You could partition
479the cache into four equal parts with masks: 0x1f, 0x3e0, 0x7c00, 0xf8000.
480
481Memory bandwidth Allocation and monitoring
482==========================================
483
484For Memory bandwidth resource, by default the user controls the resource
485by indicating the percentage of total memory bandwidth.
486
487The minimum bandwidth percentage value for each cpu model is predefined
488and can be looked up through "info/MB/min_bandwidth". The bandwidth
489granularity that is allocated is also dependent on the cpu model and can
490be looked up at "info/MB/bandwidth_gran". The available bandwidth
491control steps are: min_bw + N * bw_gran. Intermediate values are rounded
492to the next control step available on the hardware.
493
494The bandwidth throttling is a core specific mechanism on some of Intel
495SKUs. Using a high bandwidth and a low bandwidth setting on two threads
496sharing a core may result in both threads being throttled to use the
497low bandwidth (see "thread_throttle_mode").
498
499The fact that Memory bandwidth allocation(MBA) may be a core
500specific mechanism where as memory bandwidth monitoring(MBM) is done at
501the package level may lead to confusion when users try to apply control
502via the MBA and then monitor the bandwidth to see if the controls are
503effective. Below are such scenarios:
504
5051. User may *not* see increase in actual bandwidth when percentage
506   values are increased:
507
508This can occur when aggregate L2 external bandwidth is more than L3
509external bandwidth. Consider an SKL SKU with 24 cores on a package and
510where L2 external  is 10GBps (hence aggregate L2 external bandwidth is
511240GBps) and L3 external bandwidth is 100GBps. Now a workload with '20
512threads, having 50% bandwidth, each consuming 5GBps' consumes the max L3
513bandwidth of 100GBps although the percentage value specified is only 50%
514<< 100%. Hence increasing the bandwidth percentage will not yield any
515more bandwidth. This is because although the L2 external bandwidth still
516has capacity, the L3 external bandwidth is fully used. Also note that
517this would be dependent on number of cores the benchmark is run on.
518
5192. Same bandwidth percentage may mean different actual bandwidth
520   depending on # of threads:
521
522For the same SKU in #1, a 'single thread, with 10% bandwidth' and '4
523thread, with 10% bandwidth' can consume upto 10GBps and 40GBps although
524they have same percentage bandwidth of 10%. This is simply because as
525threads start using more cores in an rdtgroup, the actual bandwidth may
526increase or vary although user specified bandwidth percentage is same.
527
528In order to mitigate this and make the interface more user friendly,
529resctrl added support for specifying the bandwidth in MiBps as well.  The
530kernel underneath would use a software feedback mechanism or a "Software
531Controller(mba_sc)" which reads the actual bandwidth using MBM counters
532and adjust the memory bandwidth percentages to ensure::
533
534	"actual bandwidth < user specified bandwidth".
535
536By default, the schemata would take the bandwidth percentage values
537where as user can switch to the "MBA software controller" mode using
538a mount option 'mba_MBps'. The schemata format is specified in the below
539sections.
540
541L3 schemata file details (code and data prioritization disabled)
542----------------------------------------------------------------
543With CDP disabled the L3 schemata format is::
544
545	L3:<cache_id0>=<cbm>;<cache_id1>=<cbm>;...
546
547L3 schemata file details (CDP enabled via mount option to resctrl)
548------------------------------------------------------------------
549When CDP is enabled L3 control is split into two separate resources
550so you can specify independent masks for code and data like this::
551
552	L3DATA:<cache_id0>=<cbm>;<cache_id1>=<cbm>;...
553	L3CODE:<cache_id0>=<cbm>;<cache_id1>=<cbm>;...
554
555L2 schemata file details
556------------------------
557CDP is supported at L2 using the 'cdpl2' mount option. The schemata
558format is either::
559
560	L2:<cache_id0>=<cbm>;<cache_id1>=<cbm>;...
561
562or
563
564	L2DATA:<cache_id0>=<cbm>;<cache_id1>=<cbm>;...
565	L2CODE:<cache_id0>=<cbm>;<cache_id1>=<cbm>;...
566
567
568Memory bandwidth Allocation (default mode)
569------------------------------------------
570
571Memory b/w domain is L3 cache.
572::
573
574	MB:<cache_id0>=bandwidth0;<cache_id1>=bandwidth1;...
575
576Memory bandwidth Allocation specified in MiBps
577----------------------------------------------
578
579Memory bandwidth domain is L3 cache.
580::
581
582	MB:<cache_id0>=bw_MiBps0;<cache_id1>=bw_MiBps1;...
583
584Slow Memory Bandwidth Allocation (SMBA)
585---------------------------------------
586AMD hardware supports Slow Memory Bandwidth Allocation (SMBA).
587CXL.memory is the only supported "slow" memory device. With the
588support of SMBA, the hardware enables bandwidth allocation on
589the slow memory devices. If there are multiple such devices in
590the system, the throttling logic groups all the slow sources
591together and applies the limit on them as a whole.
592
593The presence of SMBA (with CXL.memory) is independent of slow memory
594devices presence. If there are no such devices on the system, then
595configuring SMBA will have no impact on the performance of the system.
596
597The bandwidth domain for slow memory is L3 cache. Its schemata file
598is formatted as:
599::
600
601	SMBA:<cache_id0>=bandwidth0;<cache_id1>=bandwidth1;...
602
603Reading/writing the schemata file
604---------------------------------
605Reading the schemata file will show the state of all resources
606on all domains. When writing you only need to specify those values
607which you wish to change.  E.g.
608::
609
610  # cat schemata
611  L3DATA:0=fffff;1=fffff;2=fffff;3=fffff
612  L3CODE:0=fffff;1=fffff;2=fffff;3=fffff
613  # echo "L3DATA:2=3c0;" > schemata
614  # cat schemata
615  L3DATA:0=fffff;1=fffff;2=3c0;3=fffff
616  L3CODE:0=fffff;1=fffff;2=fffff;3=fffff
617
618Reading/writing the schemata file (on AMD systems)
619--------------------------------------------------
620Reading the schemata file will show the current bandwidth limit on all
621domains. The allocated resources are in multiples of one eighth GB/s.
622When writing to the file, you need to specify what cache id you wish to
623configure the bandwidth limit.
624
625For example, to allocate 2GB/s limit on the first cache id:
626
627::
628
629  # cat schemata
630    MB:0=2048;1=2048;2=2048;3=2048
631    L3:0=ffff;1=ffff;2=ffff;3=ffff
632
633  # echo "MB:1=16" > schemata
634  # cat schemata
635    MB:0=2048;1=  16;2=2048;3=2048
636    L3:0=ffff;1=ffff;2=ffff;3=ffff
637
638Reading/writing the schemata file (on AMD systems) with SMBA feature
639--------------------------------------------------------------------
640Reading and writing the schemata file is the same as without SMBA in
641above section.
642
643For example, to allocate 8GB/s limit on the first cache id:
644
645::
646
647  # cat schemata
648    SMBA:0=2048;1=2048;2=2048;3=2048
649      MB:0=2048;1=2048;2=2048;3=2048
650      L3:0=ffff;1=ffff;2=ffff;3=ffff
651
652  # echo "SMBA:1=64" > schemata
653  # cat schemata
654    SMBA:0=2048;1=  64;2=2048;3=2048
655      MB:0=2048;1=2048;2=2048;3=2048
656      L3:0=ffff;1=ffff;2=ffff;3=ffff
657
658Cache Pseudo-Locking
659====================
660CAT enables a user to specify the amount of cache space that an
661application can fill. Cache pseudo-locking builds on the fact that a
662CPU can still read and write data pre-allocated outside its current
663allocated area on a cache hit. With cache pseudo-locking, data can be
664preloaded into a reserved portion of cache that no application can
665fill, and from that point on will only serve cache hits. The cache
666pseudo-locked memory is made accessible to user space where an
667application can map it into its virtual address space and thus have
668a region of memory with reduced average read latency.
669
670The creation of a cache pseudo-locked region is triggered by a request
671from the user to do so that is accompanied by a schemata of the region
672to be pseudo-locked. The cache pseudo-locked region is created as follows:
673
674- Create a CAT allocation CLOSNEW with a CBM matching the schemata
675  from the user of the cache region that will contain the pseudo-locked
676  memory. This region must not overlap with any current CAT allocation/CLOS
677  on the system and no future overlap with this cache region is allowed
678  while the pseudo-locked region exists.
679- Create a contiguous region of memory of the same size as the cache
680  region.
681- Flush the cache, disable hardware prefetchers, disable preemption.
682- Make CLOSNEW the active CLOS and touch the allocated memory to load
683  it into the cache.
684- Set the previous CLOS as active.
685- At this point the closid CLOSNEW can be released - the cache
686  pseudo-locked region is protected as long as its CBM does not appear in
687  any CAT allocation. Even though the cache pseudo-locked region will from
688  this point on not appear in any CBM of any CLOS an application running with
689  any CLOS will be able to access the memory in the pseudo-locked region since
690  the region continues to serve cache hits.
691- The contiguous region of memory loaded into the cache is exposed to
692  user-space as a character device.
693
694Cache pseudo-locking increases the probability that data will remain
695in the cache via carefully configuring the CAT feature and controlling
696application behavior. There is no guarantee that data is placed in
697cache. Instructions like INVD, WBINVD, CLFLUSH, etc. can still evict
698“locked” data from cache. Power management C-states may shrink or
699power off cache. Deeper C-states will automatically be restricted on
700pseudo-locked region creation.
701
702It is required that an application using a pseudo-locked region runs
703with affinity to the cores (or a subset of the cores) associated
704with the cache on which the pseudo-locked region resides. A sanity check
705within the code will not allow an application to map pseudo-locked memory
706unless it runs with affinity to cores associated with the cache on which the
707pseudo-locked region resides. The sanity check is only done during the
708initial mmap() handling, there is no enforcement afterwards and the
709application self needs to ensure it remains affine to the correct cores.
710
711Pseudo-locking is accomplished in two stages:
712
7131) During the first stage the system administrator allocates a portion
714   of cache that should be dedicated to pseudo-locking. At this time an
715   equivalent portion of memory is allocated, loaded into allocated
716   cache portion, and exposed as a character device.
7172) During the second stage a user-space application maps (mmap()) the
718   pseudo-locked memory into its address space.
719
720Cache Pseudo-Locking Interface
721------------------------------
722A pseudo-locked region is created using the resctrl interface as follows:
723
7241) Create a new resource group by creating a new directory in /sys/fs/resctrl.
7252) Change the new resource group's mode to "pseudo-locksetup" by writing
726   "pseudo-locksetup" to the "mode" file.
7273) Write the schemata of the pseudo-locked region to the "schemata" file. All
728   bits within the schemata should be "unused" according to the "bit_usage"
729   file.
730
731On successful pseudo-locked region creation the "mode" file will contain
732"pseudo-locked" and a new character device with the same name as the resource
733group will exist in /dev/pseudo_lock. This character device can be mmap()'ed
734by user space in order to obtain access to the pseudo-locked memory region.
735
736An example of cache pseudo-locked region creation and usage can be found below.
737
738Cache Pseudo-Locking Debugging Interface
739----------------------------------------
740The pseudo-locking debugging interface is enabled by default (if
741CONFIG_DEBUG_FS is enabled) and can be found in /sys/kernel/debug/resctrl.
742
743There is no explicit way for the kernel to test if a provided memory
744location is present in the cache. The pseudo-locking debugging interface uses
745the tracing infrastructure to provide two ways to measure cache residency of
746the pseudo-locked region:
747
7481) Memory access latency using the pseudo_lock_mem_latency tracepoint. Data
749   from these measurements are best visualized using a hist trigger (see
750   example below). In this test the pseudo-locked region is traversed at
751   a stride of 32 bytes while hardware prefetchers and preemption
752   are disabled. This also provides a substitute visualization of cache
753   hits and misses.
7542) Cache hit and miss measurements using model specific precision counters if
755   available. Depending on the levels of cache on the system the pseudo_lock_l2
756   and pseudo_lock_l3 tracepoints are available.
757
758When a pseudo-locked region is created a new debugfs directory is created for
759it in debugfs as /sys/kernel/debug/resctrl/<newdir>. A single
760write-only file, pseudo_lock_measure, is present in this directory. The
761measurement of the pseudo-locked region depends on the number written to this
762debugfs file:
763
7641:
765     writing "1" to the pseudo_lock_measure file will trigger the latency
766     measurement captured in the pseudo_lock_mem_latency tracepoint. See
767     example below.
7682:
769     writing "2" to the pseudo_lock_measure file will trigger the L2 cache
770     residency (cache hits and misses) measurement captured in the
771     pseudo_lock_l2 tracepoint. See example below.
7723:
773     writing "3" to the pseudo_lock_measure file will trigger the L3 cache
774     residency (cache hits and misses) measurement captured in the
775     pseudo_lock_l3 tracepoint.
776
777All measurements are recorded with the tracing infrastructure. This requires
778the relevant tracepoints to be enabled before the measurement is triggered.
779
780Example of latency debugging interface
781~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
782In this example a pseudo-locked region named "newlock" was created. Here is
783how we can measure the latency in cycles of reading from this region and
784visualize this data with a histogram that is available if CONFIG_HIST_TRIGGERS
785is set::
786
787  # :> /sys/kernel/tracing/trace
788  # echo 'hist:keys=latency' > /sys/kernel/tracing/events/resctrl/pseudo_lock_mem_latency/trigger
789  # echo 1 > /sys/kernel/tracing/events/resctrl/pseudo_lock_mem_latency/enable
790  # echo 1 > /sys/kernel/debug/resctrl/newlock/pseudo_lock_measure
791  # echo 0 > /sys/kernel/tracing/events/resctrl/pseudo_lock_mem_latency/enable
792  # cat /sys/kernel/tracing/events/resctrl/pseudo_lock_mem_latency/hist
793
794  # event histogram
795  #
796  # trigger info: hist:keys=latency:vals=hitcount:sort=hitcount:size=2048 [active]
797  #
798
799  { latency:        456 } hitcount:          1
800  { latency:         50 } hitcount:         83
801  { latency:         36 } hitcount:         96
802  { latency:         44 } hitcount:        174
803  { latency:         48 } hitcount:        195
804  { latency:         46 } hitcount:        262
805  { latency:         42 } hitcount:        693
806  { latency:         40 } hitcount:       3204
807  { latency:         38 } hitcount:       3484
808
809  Totals:
810      Hits: 8192
811      Entries: 9
812    Dropped: 0
813
814Example of cache hits/misses debugging
815~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
816In this example a pseudo-locked region named "newlock" was created on the L2
817cache of a platform. Here is how we can obtain details of the cache hits
818and misses using the platform's precision counters.
819::
820
821  # :> /sys/kernel/tracing/trace
822  # echo 1 > /sys/kernel/tracing/events/resctrl/pseudo_lock_l2/enable
823  # echo 2 > /sys/kernel/debug/resctrl/newlock/pseudo_lock_measure
824  # echo 0 > /sys/kernel/tracing/events/resctrl/pseudo_lock_l2/enable
825  # cat /sys/kernel/tracing/trace
826
827  # tracer: nop
828  #
829  #                              _-----=> irqs-off
830  #                             / _----=> need-resched
831  #                            | / _---=> hardirq/softirq
832  #                            || / _--=> preempt-depth
833  #                            ||| /     delay
834  #           TASK-PID   CPU#  ||||    TIMESTAMP  FUNCTION
835  #              | |       |   ||||       |         |
836  pseudo_lock_mea-1672  [002] ....  3132.860500: pseudo_lock_l2: hits=4097 miss=0
837
838
839Examples for RDT allocation usage
840~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
841
8421) Example 1
843
844On a two socket machine (one L3 cache per socket) with just four bits
845for cache bit masks, minimum b/w of 10% with a memory bandwidth
846granularity of 10%.
847::
848
849  # mount -t resctrl resctrl /sys/fs/resctrl
850  # cd /sys/fs/resctrl
851  # mkdir p0 p1
852  # echo "L3:0=3;1=c\nMB:0=50;1=50" > /sys/fs/resctrl/p0/schemata
853  # echo "L3:0=3;1=3\nMB:0=50;1=50" > /sys/fs/resctrl/p1/schemata
854
855The default resource group is unmodified, so we have access to all parts
856of all caches (its schemata file reads "L3:0=f;1=f").
857
858Tasks that are under the control of group "p0" may only allocate from the
859"lower" 50% on cache ID 0, and the "upper" 50% of cache ID 1.
860Tasks in group "p1" use the "lower" 50% of cache on both sockets.
861
862Similarly, tasks that are under the control of group "p0" may use a
863maximum memory b/w of 50% on socket0 and 50% on socket 1.
864Tasks in group "p1" may also use 50% memory b/w on both sockets.
865Note that unlike cache masks, memory b/w cannot specify whether these
866allocations can overlap or not. The allocations specifies the maximum
867b/w that the group may be able to use and the system admin can configure
868the b/w accordingly.
869
870If resctrl is using the software controller (mba_sc) then user can enter the
871max b/w in MB rather than the percentage values.
872::
873
874  # echo "L3:0=3;1=c\nMB:0=1024;1=500" > /sys/fs/resctrl/p0/schemata
875  # echo "L3:0=3;1=3\nMB:0=1024;1=500" > /sys/fs/resctrl/p1/schemata
876
877In the above example the tasks in "p1" and "p0" on socket 0 would use a max b/w
878of 1024MB where as on socket 1 they would use 500MB.
879
8802) Example 2
881
882Again two sockets, but this time with a more realistic 20-bit mask.
883
884Two real time tasks pid=1234 running on processor 0 and pid=5678 running on
885processor 1 on socket 0 on a 2-socket and dual core machine. To avoid noisy
886neighbors, each of the two real-time tasks exclusively occupies one quarter
887of L3 cache on socket 0.
888::
889
890  # mount -t resctrl resctrl /sys/fs/resctrl
891  # cd /sys/fs/resctrl
892
893First we reset the schemata for the default group so that the "upper"
89450% of the L3 cache on socket 0 and 50% of memory b/w cannot be used by
895ordinary tasks::
896
897  # echo "L3:0=3ff;1=fffff\nMB:0=50;1=100" > schemata
898
899Next we make a resource group for our first real time task and give
900it access to the "top" 25% of the cache on socket 0.
901::
902
903  # mkdir p0
904  # echo "L3:0=f8000;1=fffff" > p0/schemata
905
906Finally we move our first real time task into this resource group. We
907also use taskset(1) to ensure the task always runs on a dedicated CPU
908on socket 0. Most uses of resource groups will also constrain which
909processors tasks run on.
910::
911
912  # echo 1234 > p0/tasks
913  # taskset -cp 1 1234
914
915Ditto for the second real time task (with the remaining 25% of cache)::
916
917  # mkdir p1
918  # echo "L3:0=7c00;1=fffff" > p1/schemata
919  # echo 5678 > p1/tasks
920  # taskset -cp 2 5678
921
922For the same 2 socket system with memory b/w resource and CAT L3 the
923schemata would look like(Assume min_bandwidth 10 and bandwidth_gran is
92410):
925
926For our first real time task this would request 20% memory b/w on socket 0.
927::
928
929  # echo -e "L3:0=f8000;1=fffff\nMB:0=20;1=100" > p0/schemata
930
931For our second real time task this would request an other 20% memory b/w
932on socket 0.
933::
934
935  # echo -e "L3:0=f8000;1=fffff\nMB:0=20;1=100" > p0/schemata
936
9373) Example 3
938
939A single socket system which has real-time tasks running on core 4-7 and
940non real-time workload assigned to core 0-3. The real-time tasks share text
941and data, so a per task association is not required and due to interaction
942with the kernel it's desired that the kernel on these cores shares L3 with
943the tasks.
944::
945
946  # mount -t resctrl resctrl /sys/fs/resctrl
947  # cd /sys/fs/resctrl
948
949First we reset the schemata for the default group so that the "upper"
95050% of the L3 cache on socket 0, and 50% of memory bandwidth on socket 0
951cannot be used by ordinary tasks::
952
953  # echo "L3:0=3ff\nMB:0=50" > schemata
954
955Next we make a resource group for our real time cores and give it access
956to the "top" 50% of the cache on socket 0 and 50% of memory bandwidth on
957socket 0.
958::
959
960  # mkdir p0
961  # echo "L3:0=ffc00\nMB:0=50" > p0/schemata
962
963Finally we move core 4-7 over to the new group and make sure that the
964kernel and the tasks running there get 50% of the cache. They should
965also get 50% of memory bandwidth assuming that the cores 4-7 are SMT
966siblings and only the real time threads are scheduled on the cores 4-7.
967::
968
969  # echo F0 > p0/cpus
970
9714) Example 4
972
973The resource groups in previous examples were all in the default "shareable"
974mode allowing sharing of their cache allocations. If one resource group
975configures a cache allocation then nothing prevents another resource group
976to overlap with that allocation.
977
978In this example a new exclusive resource group will be created on a L2 CAT
979system with two L2 cache instances that can be configured with an 8-bit
980capacity bitmask. The new exclusive resource group will be configured to use
98125% of each cache instance.
982::
983
984  # mount -t resctrl resctrl /sys/fs/resctrl/
985  # cd /sys/fs/resctrl
986
987First, we observe that the default group is configured to allocate to all L2
988cache::
989
990  # cat schemata
991  L2:0=ff;1=ff
992
993We could attempt to create the new resource group at this point, but it will
994fail because of the overlap with the schemata of the default group::
995
996  # mkdir p0
997  # echo 'L2:0=0x3;1=0x3' > p0/schemata
998  # cat p0/mode
999  shareable
1000  # echo exclusive > p0/mode
1001  -sh: echo: write error: Invalid argument
1002  # cat info/last_cmd_status
1003  schemata overlaps
1004
1005To ensure that there is no overlap with another resource group the default
1006resource group's schemata has to change, making it possible for the new
1007resource group to become exclusive.
1008::
1009
1010  # echo 'L2:0=0xfc;1=0xfc' > schemata
1011  # echo exclusive > p0/mode
1012  # grep . p0/*
1013  p0/cpus:0
1014  p0/mode:exclusive
1015  p0/schemata:L2:0=03;1=03
1016  p0/size:L2:0=262144;1=262144
1017
1018A new resource group will on creation not overlap with an exclusive resource
1019group::
1020
1021  # mkdir p1
1022  # grep . p1/*
1023  p1/cpus:0
1024  p1/mode:shareable
1025  p1/schemata:L2:0=fc;1=fc
1026  p1/size:L2:0=786432;1=786432
1027
1028The bit_usage will reflect how the cache is used::
1029
1030  # cat info/L2/bit_usage
1031  0=SSSSSSEE;1=SSSSSSEE
1032
1033A resource group cannot be forced to overlap with an exclusive resource group::
1034
1035  # echo 'L2:0=0x1;1=0x1' > p1/schemata
1036  -sh: echo: write error: Invalid argument
1037  # cat info/last_cmd_status
1038  overlaps with exclusive group
1039
1040Example of Cache Pseudo-Locking
1041~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1042Lock portion of L2 cache from cache id 1 using CBM 0x3. Pseudo-locked
1043region is exposed at /dev/pseudo_lock/newlock that can be provided to
1044application for argument to mmap().
1045::
1046
1047  # mount -t resctrl resctrl /sys/fs/resctrl/
1048  # cd /sys/fs/resctrl
1049
1050Ensure that there are bits available that can be pseudo-locked, since only
1051unused bits can be pseudo-locked the bits to be pseudo-locked needs to be
1052removed from the default resource group's schemata::
1053
1054  # cat info/L2/bit_usage
1055  0=SSSSSSSS;1=SSSSSSSS
1056  # echo 'L2:1=0xfc' > schemata
1057  # cat info/L2/bit_usage
1058  0=SSSSSSSS;1=SSSSSS00
1059
1060Create a new resource group that will be associated with the pseudo-locked
1061region, indicate that it will be used for a pseudo-locked region, and
1062configure the requested pseudo-locked region capacity bitmask::
1063
1064  # mkdir newlock
1065  # echo pseudo-locksetup > newlock/mode
1066  # echo 'L2:1=0x3' > newlock/schemata
1067
1068On success the resource group's mode will change to pseudo-locked, the
1069bit_usage will reflect the pseudo-locked region, and the character device
1070exposing the pseudo-locked region will exist::
1071
1072  # cat newlock/mode
1073  pseudo-locked
1074  # cat info/L2/bit_usage
1075  0=SSSSSSSS;1=SSSSSSPP
1076  # ls -l /dev/pseudo_lock/newlock
1077  crw------- 1 root root 243, 0 Apr  3 05:01 /dev/pseudo_lock/newlock
1078
1079::
1080
1081  /*
1082  * Example code to access one page of pseudo-locked cache region
1083  * from user space.
1084  */
1085  #define _GNU_SOURCE
1086  #include <fcntl.h>
1087  #include <sched.h>
1088  #include <stdio.h>
1089  #include <stdlib.h>
1090  #include <unistd.h>
1091  #include <sys/mman.h>
1092
1093  /*
1094  * It is required that the application runs with affinity to only
1095  * cores associated with the pseudo-locked region. Here the cpu
1096  * is hardcoded for convenience of example.
1097  */
1098  static int cpuid = 2;
1099
1100  int main(int argc, char *argv[])
1101  {
1102    cpu_set_t cpuset;
1103    long page_size;
1104    void *mapping;
1105    int dev_fd;
1106    int ret;
1107
1108    page_size = sysconf(_SC_PAGESIZE);
1109
1110    CPU_ZERO(&cpuset);
1111    CPU_SET(cpuid, &cpuset);
1112    ret = sched_setaffinity(0, sizeof(cpuset), &cpuset);
1113    if (ret < 0) {
1114      perror("sched_setaffinity");
1115      exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
1116    }
1117
1118    dev_fd = open("/dev/pseudo_lock/newlock", O_RDWR);
1119    if (dev_fd < 0) {
1120      perror("open");
1121      exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
1122    }
1123
1124    mapping = mmap(0, page_size, PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE, MAP_SHARED,
1125            dev_fd, 0);
1126    if (mapping == MAP_FAILED) {
1127      perror("mmap");
1128      close(dev_fd);
1129      exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
1130    }
1131
1132    /* Application interacts with pseudo-locked memory @mapping */
1133
1134    ret = munmap(mapping, page_size);
1135    if (ret < 0) {
1136      perror("munmap");
1137      close(dev_fd);
1138      exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
1139    }
1140
1141    close(dev_fd);
1142    exit(EXIT_SUCCESS);
1143  }
1144
1145Locking between applications
1146----------------------------
1147
1148Certain operations on the resctrl filesystem, composed of read/writes
1149to/from multiple files, must be atomic.
1150
1151As an example, the allocation of an exclusive reservation of L3 cache
1152involves:
1153
1154  1. Read the cbmmasks from each directory or the per-resource "bit_usage"
1155  2. Find a contiguous set of bits in the global CBM bitmask that is clear
1156     in any of the directory cbmmasks
1157  3. Create a new directory
1158  4. Set the bits found in step 2 to the new directory "schemata" file
1159
1160If two applications attempt to allocate space concurrently then they can
1161end up allocating the same bits so the reservations are shared instead of
1162exclusive.
1163
1164To coordinate atomic operations on the resctrlfs and to avoid the problem
1165above, the following locking procedure is recommended:
1166
1167Locking is based on flock, which is available in libc and also as a shell
1168script command
1169
1170Write lock:
1171
1172 A) Take flock(LOCK_EX) on /sys/fs/resctrl
1173 B) Read/write the directory structure.
1174 C) funlock
1175
1176Read lock:
1177
1178 A) Take flock(LOCK_SH) on /sys/fs/resctrl
1179 B) If success read the directory structure.
1180 C) funlock
1181
1182Example with bash::
1183
1184  # Atomically read directory structure
1185  $ flock -s /sys/fs/resctrl/ find /sys/fs/resctrl
1186
1187  # Read directory contents and create new subdirectory
1188
1189  $ cat create-dir.sh
1190  find /sys/fs/resctrl/ > output.txt
1191  mask = function-of(output.txt)
1192  mkdir /sys/fs/resctrl/newres/
1193  echo mask > /sys/fs/resctrl/newres/schemata
1194
1195  $ flock /sys/fs/resctrl/ ./create-dir.sh
1196
1197Example with C::
1198
1199  /*
1200  * Example code do take advisory locks
1201  * before accessing resctrl filesystem
1202  */
1203  #include <sys/file.h>
1204  #include <stdlib.h>
1205
1206  void resctrl_take_shared_lock(int fd)
1207  {
1208    int ret;
1209
1210    /* take shared lock on resctrl filesystem */
1211    ret = flock(fd, LOCK_SH);
1212    if (ret) {
1213      perror("flock");
1214      exit(-1);
1215    }
1216  }
1217
1218  void resctrl_take_exclusive_lock(int fd)
1219  {
1220    int ret;
1221
1222    /* release lock on resctrl filesystem */
1223    ret = flock(fd, LOCK_EX);
1224    if (ret) {
1225      perror("flock");
1226      exit(-1);
1227    }
1228  }
1229
1230  void resctrl_release_lock(int fd)
1231  {
1232    int ret;
1233
1234    /* take shared lock on resctrl filesystem */
1235    ret = flock(fd, LOCK_UN);
1236    if (ret) {
1237      perror("flock");
1238      exit(-1);
1239    }
1240  }
1241
1242  void main(void)
1243  {
1244    int fd, ret;
1245
1246    fd = open("/sys/fs/resctrl", O_DIRECTORY);
1247    if (fd == -1) {
1248      perror("open");
1249      exit(-1);
1250    }
1251    resctrl_take_shared_lock(fd);
1252    /* code to read directory contents */
1253    resctrl_release_lock(fd);
1254
1255    resctrl_take_exclusive_lock(fd);
1256    /* code to read and write directory contents */
1257    resctrl_release_lock(fd);
1258  }
1259
1260Examples for RDT Monitoring along with allocation usage
1261=======================================================
1262Reading monitored data
1263----------------------
1264Reading an event file (for ex: mon_data/mon_L3_00/llc_occupancy) would
1265show the current snapshot of LLC occupancy of the corresponding MON
1266group or CTRL_MON group.
1267
1268
1269Example 1 (Monitor CTRL_MON group and subset of tasks in CTRL_MON group)
1270------------------------------------------------------------------------
1271On a two socket machine (one L3 cache per socket) with just four bits
1272for cache bit masks::
1273
1274  # mount -t resctrl resctrl /sys/fs/resctrl
1275  # cd /sys/fs/resctrl
1276  # mkdir p0 p1
1277  # echo "L3:0=3;1=c" > /sys/fs/resctrl/p0/schemata
1278  # echo "L3:0=3;1=3" > /sys/fs/resctrl/p1/schemata
1279  # echo 5678 > p1/tasks
1280  # echo 5679 > p1/tasks
1281
1282The default resource group is unmodified, so we have access to all parts
1283of all caches (its schemata file reads "L3:0=f;1=f").
1284
1285Tasks that are under the control of group "p0" may only allocate from the
1286"lower" 50% on cache ID 0, and the "upper" 50% of cache ID 1.
1287Tasks in group "p1" use the "lower" 50% of cache on both sockets.
1288
1289Create monitor groups and assign a subset of tasks to each monitor group.
1290::
1291
1292  # cd /sys/fs/resctrl/p1/mon_groups
1293  # mkdir m11 m12
1294  # echo 5678 > m11/tasks
1295  # echo 5679 > m12/tasks
1296
1297fetch data (data shown in bytes)
1298::
1299
1300  # cat m11/mon_data/mon_L3_00/llc_occupancy
1301  16234000
1302  # cat m11/mon_data/mon_L3_01/llc_occupancy
1303  14789000
1304  # cat m12/mon_data/mon_L3_00/llc_occupancy
1305  16789000
1306
1307The parent ctrl_mon group shows the aggregated data.
1308::
1309
1310  # cat /sys/fs/resctrl/p1/mon_data/mon_l3_00/llc_occupancy
1311  31234000
1312
1313Example 2 (Monitor a task from its creation)
1314--------------------------------------------
1315On a two socket machine (one L3 cache per socket)::
1316
1317  # mount -t resctrl resctrl /sys/fs/resctrl
1318  # cd /sys/fs/resctrl
1319  # mkdir p0 p1
1320
1321An RMID is allocated to the group once its created and hence the <cmd>
1322below is monitored from its creation.
1323::
1324
1325  # echo $$ > /sys/fs/resctrl/p1/tasks
1326  # <cmd>
1327
1328Fetch the data::
1329
1330  # cat /sys/fs/resctrl/p1/mon_data/mon_l3_00/llc_occupancy
1331  31789000
1332
1333Example 3 (Monitor without CAT support or before creating CAT groups)
1334---------------------------------------------------------------------
1335
1336Assume a system like HSW has only CQM and no CAT support. In this case
1337the resctrl will still mount but cannot create CTRL_MON directories.
1338But user can create different MON groups within the root group thereby
1339able to monitor all tasks including kernel threads.
1340
1341This can also be used to profile jobs cache size footprint before being
1342able to allocate them to different allocation groups.
1343::
1344
1345  # mount -t resctrl resctrl /sys/fs/resctrl
1346  # cd /sys/fs/resctrl
1347  # mkdir mon_groups/m01
1348  # mkdir mon_groups/m02
1349
1350  # echo 3478 > /sys/fs/resctrl/mon_groups/m01/tasks
1351  # echo 2467 > /sys/fs/resctrl/mon_groups/m02/tasks
1352
1353Monitor the groups separately and also get per domain data. From the
1354below its apparent that the tasks are mostly doing work on
1355domain(socket) 0.
1356::
1357
1358  # cat /sys/fs/resctrl/mon_groups/m01/mon_L3_00/llc_occupancy
1359  31234000
1360  # cat /sys/fs/resctrl/mon_groups/m01/mon_L3_01/llc_occupancy
1361  34555
1362  # cat /sys/fs/resctrl/mon_groups/m02/mon_L3_00/llc_occupancy
1363  31234000
1364  # cat /sys/fs/resctrl/mon_groups/m02/mon_L3_01/llc_occupancy
1365  32789
1366
1367
1368Example 4 (Monitor real time tasks)
1369-----------------------------------
1370
1371A single socket system which has real time tasks running on cores 4-7
1372and non real time tasks on other cpus. We want to monitor the cache
1373occupancy of the real time threads on these cores.
1374::
1375
1376  # mount -t resctrl resctrl /sys/fs/resctrl
1377  # cd /sys/fs/resctrl
1378  # mkdir p1
1379
1380Move the cpus 4-7 over to p1::
1381
1382  # echo f0 > p1/cpus
1383
1384View the llc occupancy snapshot::
1385
1386  # cat /sys/fs/resctrl/p1/mon_data/mon_L3_00/llc_occupancy
1387  11234000
1388
1389Intel RDT Errata
1390================
1391
1392Intel MBM Counters May Report System Memory Bandwidth Incorrectly
1393-----------------------------------------------------------------
1394
1395Errata SKX99 for Skylake server and BDF102 for Broadwell server.
1396
1397Problem: Intel Memory Bandwidth Monitoring (MBM) counters track metrics
1398according to the assigned Resource Monitor ID (RMID) for that logical
1399core. The IA32_QM_CTR register (MSR 0xC8E), used to report these
1400metrics, may report incorrect system bandwidth for certain RMID values.
1401
1402Implication: Due to the errata, system memory bandwidth may not match
1403what is reported.
1404
1405Workaround: MBM total and local readings are corrected according to the
1406following correction factor table:
1407
1408+---------------+---------------+---------------+-----------------+
1409|core count	|rmid count	|rmid threshold	|correction factor|
1410+---------------+---------------+---------------+-----------------+
1411|1		|8		|0		|1.000000	  |
1412+---------------+---------------+---------------+-----------------+
1413|2		|16		|0		|1.000000	  |
1414+---------------+---------------+---------------+-----------------+
1415|3		|24		|15		|0.969650	  |
1416+---------------+---------------+---------------+-----------------+
1417|4		|32		|0		|1.000000	  |
1418+---------------+---------------+---------------+-----------------+
1419|6		|48		|31		|0.969650	  |
1420+---------------+---------------+---------------+-----------------+
1421|7		|56		|47		|1.142857	  |
1422+---------------+---------------+---------------+-----------------+
1423|8		|64		|0		|1.000000	  |
1424+---------------+---------------+---------------+-----------------+
1425|9		|72		|63		|1.185115	  |
1426+---------------+---------------+---------------+-----------------+
1427|10		|80		|63		|1.066553	  |
1428+---------------+---------------+---------------+-----------------+
1429|11		|88		|79		|1.454545	  |
1430+---------------+---------------+---------------+-----------------+
1431|12		|96		|0		|1.000000	  |
1432+---------------+---------------+---------------+-----------------+
1433|13		|104		|95		|1.230769	  |
1434+---------------+---------------+---------------+-----------------+
1435|14		|112		|95		|1.142857	  |
1436+---------------+---------------+---------------+-----------------+
1437|15		|120		|95		|1.066667	  |
1438+---------------+---------------+---------------+-----------------+
1439|16		|128		|0		|1.000000	  |
1440+---------------+---------------+---------------+-----------------+
1441|17		|136		|127		|1.254863	  |
1442+---------------+---------------+---------------+-----------------+
1443|18		|144		|127		|1.185255	  |
1444+---------------+---------------+---------------+-----------------+
1445|19		|152		|0		|1.000000	  |
1446+---------------+---------------+---------------+-----------------+
1447|20		|160		|127		|1.066667	  |
1448+---------------+---------------+---------------+-----------------+
1449|21		|168		|0		|1.000000	  |
1450+---------------+---------------+---------------+-----------------+
1451|22		|176		|159		|1.454334	  |
1452+---------------+---------------+---------------+-----------------+
1453|23		|184		|0		|1.000000	  |
1454+---------------+---------------+---------------+-----------------+
1455|24		|192		|127		|0.969744	  |
1456+---------------+---------------+---------------+-----------------+
1457|25		|200		|191		|1.280246	  |
1458+---------------+---------------+---------------+-----------------+
1459|26		|208		|191		|1.230921	  |
1460+---------------+---------------+---------------+-----------------+
1461|27		|216		|0		|1.000000	  |
1462+---------------+---------------+---------------+-----------------+
1463|28		|224		|191		|1.143118	  |
1464+---------------+---------------+---------------+-----------------+
1465
1466If rmid > rmid threshold, MBM total and local values should be multiplied
1467by the correction factor.
1468
1469See:
1470
14711. Erratum SKX99 in Intel Xeon Processor Scalable Family Specification Update:
1472http://web.archive.org/web/20200716124958/https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/processors/xeon/scalable/xeon-scalable-spec-update.html
1473
14742. Erratum BDF102 in Intel Xeon E5-2600 v4 Processor Product Family Specification Update:
1475http://web.archive.org/web/20191125200531/https://www.intel.com/content/dam/www/public/us/en/documents/specification-updates/xeon-e5-v4-spec-update.pdf
1476
14773. The errata in Intel Resource Director Technology (Intel RDT) on 2nd Generation Intel Xeon Scalable Processors Reference Manual:
1478https://software.intel.com/content/www/us/en/develop/articles/intel-resource-director-technology-rdt-reference-manual.html
1479
1480for further information.
1481