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2026-06-17perf machine: Propagate machine__init() error to callersArnaldo Carvalho de Melo
machine__init() always returns 0 even when memory allocation fails, because commit 81f981d7ec43ed93 ("perf machine: Free root_dir in machine__init() error path") introduced 'int err = -ENOMEM' and an error cleanup path but left the final 'return 0' instead of 'return err'. Fix by returning err, check the return value in __machine__new_host() which was ignoring it, and change machines__init() from void to int so it too can propagate the error to perf_session__new(), aslr_tool__init() and test callers. The error cleanup also used zfree(&machine->kmaps), but kmaps is a refcounted maps structure — use maps__zput() to properly drop the reference, matching machine__exit(). Move dsos__init() and threads__init() before the first fallible allocation (maps__new) so that machine__exit() is safe to call on any machine struct that machine__init() touched, even on early failure. Fixes: 81f981d7ec43ed93 ("perf machine: Free root_dir in machine__init() error path") Reported-by: sashiko-bot <sashiko-bot@kernel.org> Cc: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Assisted-by: Claude:claude-opus-4.6 Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-15perf test: Add inject ASLR testIan Rogers
Add a new shell test to verify the feature. The test covers: - Basic address remapping for user space samples. - Pipe mode coverage for piped into. - Callchain address remapping. - Consistency of output before and after injection. - Pipe mode report consistency. - Dropping of samples that leak ASLR info (physical addresses). - Kernel address remapping (utilizing a dedicated kernel-intensive VFS dd workload to guarantee continuous timer interrupts sampling flow inside kernel privilege states). - Kernel report consistency with address normalization. The test suite is hardened with global 'set -o pipefail' assertions to catch pipeline failures, stream-consuming awk processors to handle SIGPIPE signals, and a dedicated pipe output scenario validating raw 'perf inject -o -' stdout streams. Note on kernel DSO normalization in the test script: The test script deliberately normalizes all kernel DSOs to a generic [kernel] tag before diffing, as obfuscating physical kernel addresses forces perf report to occasionally shift samples between individual modules and [kernel.kallsyms] due to the lack of valid host module boundary maps. Note on ARM: Kernel-based ASLR test cases (test_kernel_aslr and test_kernel_report_aslr) are skipped on ARM architectures (aarch64 and arm*) to bypass high latency constraints (such as check_invariants() spending excessive execution time in maps__split_kallsyms() on debug builds) and symbolization inconsistencies. Assisted-by: Antigravity:gemini-3.1-pro Signed-off-by: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Tested-by: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Adrian Hunter <adrian.hunter@intel.com> Cc: Gabriel Marin <gmx@google.com> Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-11perf test: Compile named_threads workload with -O0James Clark
The work loop relies on the compiler not optimizing it away, although named_threads_work is not static for that reason, the compiler could still do it. Fix it by compiling without optimization. Also add -fno-inline for consistency and in case anyone wants to look at callstacks. Fixes: b5dd510be55e8670 ("perf test: Add named_threads workload") Closes: https://lore.kernel.org/all/20260609160001.2739E1F00893@smtp.kernel.org Reported-by: sashiko-bot <sashiko-bot@kernel.org> Reviewed-by: Leo Yan <leo.yan@arm.com> Signed-off-by: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-11perf test: Truncate printed test descriptions dynamically to avoid terminal ↵Ian Rogers
wrapping When test descriptions are extremely long (e.g., the truncated perf.data graceful handling test is 103 characters long), they wrap across terminal boundaries. Because the ANSI escape code to delete the line (PERF_COLOR_DELETE_LINE) only clears a single terminal line, visual wrapping leaves orphan wrapped lines on the screen, which results in the test description being printed multiple times. Resolve this by checking the terminal width (get_term_dimensions) and dynamically truncating the printed test description to fit within the available columns, leaving safety space for the prefix index and status suffix. Also, remove the width padding from the test suite headers which do not display inline status messages. This prevents their trailing colons from wrapping onto new lines on standard width terminals. Finally, avoid GCC 16's -Wformat-truncation warnings by delegating the description padding to pr_info's %-*s format specifier instead of padding within a temporary buffer, and clamp the truncation limit to the temporary buffer's size. JUnit XML output and the failure summary report still print the full, untruncated test descriptions. Assisted-by: Gemini-CLI:Google Gemini 3.1 Pro Signed-off-by: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Cc: Adrian Hunter <adrian.hunter@intel.com> Cc: Alexander Shishkin <alexander.shishkin@linux.intel.com> Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com> Cc: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-10perf tools: Fix uninitialized pathname on uncompressed fallback in ↵Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo
filename__decompress() filename__decompress() has an early return path for files that are not actually compressed. This path returns the fd from open() directly but never writes to the pathname output parameter, leaving the caller with an uninitialized buffer despite a successful return. Callers like dso__decompress_kmodule_path() pass pathname to decompress_kmodule() which uses it to set the decompressed file path. If pathname is uninitialized, subsequent operations on the path produce undefined behavior. Fix by setting pathname to an empty string on the uncompressed path. Callers already check for an empty pathname to distinguish temporary decompressed files (which need unlink) from the original file. Reported-by: sashiko-bot <sashiko-bot@kernel.org> Fixes: 7ac22b088afe26a4 ("perf tools: Add filename__decompress function") Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Assisted-by: Claude:claude-opus-4.6 Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-10perf test cs-etm: Move existing tests to coresight folderJames Clark
There is a subfolder for Coresight tests so might as well keep them all in here. Reviewed-by: Leo Yan <leo.yan@arm.com> Signed-off-by: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Amir Ayupov <aaupov@meta.com> Cc: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net> Cc: Mike Leach <mike.leach@arm.com> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Paschalis Mpeis <Paschalis.Mpeis@arm.com> Cc: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org> Cc: Suzuki Poulouse <suzuki.poulose@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-10perf test cs-etm: Speed up disassembly testJames Clark
We can use exit snapshot to limit the amount of trace to decode here too. Also each call to objdump is quite expensive on kcore so limit it to 2 samples instead of 30. We only want to see if there is no data at all. Reviewed-by: Leo Yan <leo.yan@arm.com> Signed-off-by: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Amir Ayupov <aaupov@meta.com> Cc: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net> Cc: Mike Leach <mike.leach@arm.com> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Paschalis Mpeis <Paschalis.Mpeis@arm.com> Cc: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org> Cc: Suzuki Poulouse <suzuki.poulose@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-10perf test cs-etm: Add all branch instructions to testJames Clark
If we reduce the number of samples searched to speed up the test, then there will be less chance of hitting one of these branches. Extend the regex to cover all branches so the test will always pass. Reviewed-by: Leo Yan <leo.yan@arm.com> Signed-off-by: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Amir Ayupov <aaupov@meta.com> Cc: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net> Cc: Mike Leach <mike.leach@arm.com> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Paschalis Mpeis <Paschalis.Mpeis@arm.com> Cc: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org> Cc: Suzuki Poulouse <suzuki.poulose@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-10perf test cs-etm: Make disassembly test use kcoreJames Clark
Hits in modules return empty disassembly with vmlinux as an input to objdump. Make the disassembly test more reliable by always using kcore. And update the comments to say that this is supported by the script. Signed-off-by: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Amir Ayupov <aaupov@meta.com> Cc: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net> Cc: Leo Yan <leo.yan@arm.com> Cc: Mike Leach <mike.leach@arm.com> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Paschalis Mpeis <Paschalis.Mpeis@arm.com> Cc: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org> Cc: Suzuki Poulouse <suzuki.poulose@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-10perf test cs-etm: Remove unused Coresight workloadsJames Clark
These are now unused and had various issues like not working with out of source builds and being slow to compile. Delete them. Signed-off-by: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Tested-by: Leo Yan <leo.yan@arm.com> Cc: Amir Ayupov <aaupov@meta.com> Cc: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net> Cc: Mike Leach <mike.leach@arm.com> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Paschalis Mpeis <Paschalis.Mpeis@arm.com> Cc: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org> Cc: Suzuki Poulouse <suzuki.poulose@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-10perf test cs-etm: Speed up basic testJames Clark
Like the name says, this should be the most basic test possible. Kernel recording is slow and already has coverage on the systemwide test. Perf report output also has coverage elsewhere. 'ls' also produces more trace than 'true'. We only want to test if the combination of recording options works at all, so fix all of these things to make it as fast as possible. Reviewed-by: Leo Yan <leo.yan@arm.com> Signed-off-by: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Amir Ayupov <aaupov@meta.com> Cc: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net> Cc: Mike Leach <mike.leach@arm.com> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Paschalis Mpeis <Paschalis.Mpeis@arm.com> Cc: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org> Cc: Suzuki Poulouse <suzuki.poulose@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-10perf test cs-etm: Reduce snapshot sizeJames Clark
The default buffer size for root is 4MB which is very slow to decode. We only need a few KB to verify that the dd process is hit so reduce the size to 128KB. Reviewed-by: Leo Yan <leo.yan@arm.com> Signed-off-by: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Amir Ayupov <aaupov@meta.com> Cc: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net> Cc: Mike Leach <mike.leach@arm.com> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Paschalis Mpeis <Paschalis.Mpeis@arm.com> Cc: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org> Cc: Suzuki Poulouse <suzuki.poulose@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-10perf test cs-etm: Skip if not rootJames Clark
Use the common idiom for skipping tests if not running as root, which is required for these tests. Signed-off-by: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Amir Ayupov <aaupov@meta.com> Cc: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net> Cc: Leo Yan <leo.yan@arm.com> Cc: Mike Leach <mike.leach@arm.com> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Paschalis Mpeis <Paschalis.Mpeis@arm.com> Cc: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org> Cc: Suzuki Poulouse <suzuki.poulose@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-10perf test cs-etm: Remove duplicate branch testsJames Clark
We already test branch output in perf script mode, but then retest it in Perf report mode. This is more of a test of Perf itself than Coresight because Perf uses the same samples to generate both outputs. Also we're already testing instruction output in Perf report mode. Remove this test for a speedup. On the systemwide test also remove the Perf report test because systemwide mode records a lot more data so running multiple tests on it has a big runtime impact. Reviewed-by: Leo Yan <leo.yan@arm.com> Signed-off-by: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Amir Ayupov <aaupov@meta.com> Cc: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net> Cc: Mike Leach <mike.leach@arm.com> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Paschalis Mpeis <Paschalis.Mpeis@arm.com> Cc: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org> Cc: Suzuki Poulouse <suzuki.poulose@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-10perf test cs-etm: Test decoding for concurrent threads testJames Clark
The thread_loop test only looks for context IDs in the raw trace. There's a lot more that can go wrong when decoding these, so replace it with a test that looks at the final output for matching thread names and symbols. In the future we might use timestamps and context switch events to track threads, so looking at context IDs in the raw trace wouldn't always work. Reviewed-by: Leo Yan <leo.yan@arm.com> Signed-off-by: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Tested-by: Leo Yan <leo.yan@arm.com> Cc: Amir Ayupov <aaupov@meta.com> Cc: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net> Cc: Mike Leach <mike.leach@arm.com> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Paschalis Mpeis <Paschalis.Mpeis@arm.com> Cc: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org> Cc: Suzuki Poulouse <suzuki.poulose@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-10perf test: Add named_threads workloadJames Clark
Add a workload that runs X threads that run a unique function named "named_threads_thread[x]" which performs a multiplication in a loop for Y loops. Each thread sets its name to "thread[x]". This can be used to test that processor trace decoding handles concurrent threads correctly and the correct symbols and thread names are assigned to samples. Signed-off-by: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Amir Ayupov <aaupov@meta.com> Cc: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net> Cc: Leo Yan <leo.yan@arm.com> Cc: Mike Leach <mike.leach@arm.com> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Paschalis Mpeis <Paschalis.Mpeis@arm.com> Cc: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org> Cc: Suzuki Poulouse <suzuki.poulose@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-10perf test cs-etm: Replace memcpy test with raw dump stress testJames Clark
Like asm_pure_loop, this memcpy test only checks that 10 of each of a few trace packet types occur after recording a lot of trace, which isn't more specific than other existing Coresight tests. Assume it was supposed to be a stress test for dumping and replace it with one that doesn't require a custom binary and checks for a specific amount of raw output. Don't bother checking for packets because the other tests that test decoding will catch issues with malformed data. This also adds coverage for exit snapshot mode which was missing. Signed-off-by: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Tested-by: Leo Yan <leo.yan@arm.com> Cc: Amir Ayupov <aaupov@meta.com> Cc: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net> Cc: Mike Leach <mike.leach@arm.com> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Paschalis Mpeis <Paschalis.Mpeis@arm.com> Cc: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org> Cc: Suzuki Poulouse <suzuki.poulose@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-10perf test cs-etm: Remove asm_pure_loop testJames Clark
It's not obvious what this test is for so remove it. It's not a stress test because it doesn't output lots of data and it's not a functional test because it only looks for raw trace output. It seems to imply that a program written in assembly influences whether trace would be generated by the CPU or not, but the CPU doesn't know what language the program is written in. We already have lots of Coresight tests that test the full pipeline including decoding, and in many more modes of operation than this one, so if no trace was collected they will already fail leaving this one redundant. Reviewed-by: Leo Yan <leo.yan@arm.com> Signed-off-by: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Amir Ayupov <aaupov@meta.com> Cc: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net> Cc: Mike Leach <mike.leach@arm.com> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Paschalis Mpeis <Paschalis.Mpeis@arm.com> Cc: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org> Cc: Suzuki Poulouse <suzuki.poulose@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-10perf test cs-etm: Replace unroll loop thread with deterministic decode testJames Clark
Testing a long sequence without branches seems like it would be better as a decoder unit test, and this test doesn't test decoding either, so it's not clear what bugs this is trying to catch. The new deterministic workload has somewhat long sequences when built unoptimized, and we can always increase them later if we want to. But now we test that decoding always gives the same result for the same sequence of code which we've never had before. Signed-off-by: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Tested-by: Leo Yan <leo.yan@arm.com> Cc: Amir Ayupov <aaupov@meta.com> Cc: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net> Cc: Mike Leach <mike.leach@arm.com> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Paschalis Mpeis <Paschalis.Mpeis@arm.com> Cc: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org> Cc: Suzuki Poulouse <suzuki.poulose@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-10perf test: Add deterministic workloadJames Clark
Add a workload that does the same thing every time for testing CPU trace decoding. Reviewed-by: Leo Yan <leo.yan@arm.com> Signed-off-by: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Amir Ayupov <aaupov@meta.com> Cc: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net> Cc: Mike Leach <mike.leach@arm.com> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Paschalis Mpeis <Paschalis.Mpeis@arm.com> Cc: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org> Cc: Suzuki Poulouse <suzuki.poulose@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-10perf test cs-etm: Test process attributionJames Clark
Run the context switch workload on one CPU and trace it to test that symbols are attributed to the correct process and that the attribution changes at the exact point that the context switch happened. Reviewed-by: Leo Yan <leo.yan@arm.com> Signed-off-by: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Amir Ayupov <aaupov@meta.com> Cc: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net> Cc: Mike Leach <mike.leach@arm.com> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Paschalis Mpeis <Paschalis.Mpeis@arm.com> Cc: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org> Cc: Suzuki Poulouse <suzuki.poulose@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-10perf test: Add a workload that forces context switchesJames Clark
This workload launches two processes that block when reading and writing to each other forcing the other process to be scheduled for each read/write pair. Signed-off-by: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Amir Ayupov <aaupov@meta.com> Cc: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net> Cc: Leo Yan <leo.yan@arm.com> Cc: Mike Leach <mike.leach@arm.com> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Paschalis Mpeis <Paschalis.Mpeis@arm.com> Cc: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org> Cc: Suzuki Poulouse <suzuki.poulose@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-10perf test: Add workload-ctl optionJames Clark
Add a --workload-ctl=fifo:ctl-fifo[,ack-fifo] option for 'perf test -w'. When set, run_workload() opens the named FIFO, writes enable before invoking the builtin workload, writes disable before returning, and waits for ack responses when an ack FIFO is provided to ensure that the workload doesn't run until the events are enabled. This can be used to limit the scope of the recording to only the workload execution and avoid recording Perf setup and teardown code if Perf record is started with events disabled (-D 1). Assisted-by: Codex:GPT-5.5 Signed-off-by: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Amir Ayupov <aaupov@meta.com> Cc: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net> Cc: Leo Yan <leo.yan@arm.com> Cc: Mike Leach <mike.leach@arm.com> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Paschalis Mpeis <Paschalis.Mpeis@arm.com> Cc: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org> Cc: Suzuki Poulouse <suzuki.poulose@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-04perf data ctf: replace libbabeltrace with babeltrace2-ctf-writerMichael Jeanson
The 1.x branch of Babeltrace has been superseded by 2.x in 2020 and has been unmaintained since 2022, efforts have started to remove it from popular distributions. Babeltrace 2.x offers a very similar 'ctf-writer' library that can be used with minimal changes for the '--to-ctf' feature and has been packaged since Debian 11 and Fedora 32. This patch replaces the 'libbabeltrace' build feature with 'babeltrace2-ctf-writer' using pkgconfig detection, adjusts the naming of the public headers and applies minor API cleanups. There is no changes to the output ctf traces, the ctf-writer API still implements version 1.8 of the CTF specification that can be read by either Babeltrace 1 / 2 or any CTF compliant reader. Also remove some ifdefs in the cli option parsing to allow printing the helpful error message with '--to-ctf' when built without babeltrace2. Reviewed-by: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Signed-off-by: Michael Jeanson <mjeanson@efficios.com> Cc: Adrian Hunter <adrian.hunter@intel.com> Cc: Alexander Shishkin <alexander.shishkin@linux.intel.com> Cc: Derek Foreman <derek.foreman@collabora.com> Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com> Cc: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Mark Rutland <mark.rutland@arm.com> Cc: Mathieu Desnoyers <mathieu.desnoyers@efficios.com> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-04perf lock contention: Allow 'mmap_lock' in -L/--lock-filterNamhyung Kim
The -L/--lock-filter option is to specify target locks by name or address. It's basically for global locks where name or address is known and fixed. But 'mmap_lock' is a per-process lock so it cannot be used for the -L option. $ sudo perf lock con -ab -L mmap_lock ignore unknown symbol: mmap_lock libbpf: map 'addr_filter': failed to create: -EINVAL libbpf: failed to load BPF skeleton 'lock_contention_bpf': -EINVAL Failed to load lock-contention BPF skeleton lock contention BPF setup failed However, it's still a common source of contention especially in a large process so we want to use it for the -L/--lock-filter option. As there is check_lock_type() to check mmap_lock at runtime, let's used it to filter mmap_locks as a special case. Of course, this only works with -b/--use-bpf option. $ sudo perf lock con -b -L mmap_lock -- perf bench mem mmap -f demand -t 2 # Running 'mem/mmap' benchmark: # function 'demand' (Demand loaded mmap()) # Copying 1MB bytes ... 2.679184 GB/sec/thread ( +- 1.78% ) contended total wait max wait avg wait type caller 1 15.22 us 15.22 us 15.22 us rwsem:W __vm_munmap+0x7e 1 7.72 us 7.72 us 7.72 us rwsem:R lock_mm_and_find_vma+0x97 Signed-off-by: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Adrian Hunter <adrian.hunter@intel.com> Cc: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org> Cc: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> Cc: Suchit Karunakaran <suchitkarunakaran@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-04perf test: Remove /usr/bin/cc dependency from Intel PT shell testIan Rogers
In test_intel_pt.sh, the test script compiled two external C programs at runtime using /usr/bin/cc (a thread loop workload and a JIT self- modifying workload). Relying on external C compilers inside shell tests frequently causes failures in continuous integration environments. Create a built-in 'jitdump' workload and switch test_intel_pt.sh to use 'perf test -w thloop' and 'perf test -w jitdump'. Also add multi- architecture compatibility without external C compiler dependencies, the workload instruction arrays dynamically encode CHK_BYTE into opcodes across x86, ARM32, ARM64, RISC-V, PowerPC, MIPS, LoongArch, and s390x. Some minor include fixes for util/jitdump.h. Assisted-by: Gemini-CLI:Google Gemini 3 Signed-off-by: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Tested-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com> Cc: Adrian Hunter <adrian.hunter@intel.com> Cc: Alexander Shishkin <alexander.shishkin@linux.intel.com> Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com> Cc: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-04perf test: Add shell test to validate JUnit XML reporting outputIan Rogers
Add a shell test script (test_test_junit_output.sh) to execute perf test with the -j/--junit option and validate that the generated test report complies perfectly with standard XML formatting using Python's ElementTree XML parser. Assisted-by: Gemini-CLI:Google Gemini 3 Signed-off-by: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Tested-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com> Cc: Adrian Hunter <adrian.hunter@intel.com> Cc: Alexander Shishkin <alexander.shishkin@linux.intel.com> Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com> Cc: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-04perf test: Add -j/--junit option for JUnit XML test reportsIan Rogers
Add a -j/--junit command line option to generate standard JUnit XML format test reports. The generated file defaults to 'test.xml' if no filename is specified, but allows users to override the path (e.g. -jmytest.xml). The XML report captures individual test suite and subtest execution latency, alongside XML-escaped failure logs and skip reasons, while preserving the full multi-process concurrency speed of parallel test execution. Assisted-by: Gemini-CLI:Google Gemini 3 Signed-off-by: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Tested-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com> Cc: Adrian Hunter <adrian.hunter@intel.com> Cc: Alexander Shishkin <alexander.shishkin@linux.intel.com> Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com> Cc: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20260602174129.3192312-15-irogers@google.com Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-04perf test: Split monolithic 'util' test suite into sub-testsIan Rogers
Refactor the monolithic 'util' test suite into distinct 'String replacement' and 'BLAKE2s hash' sub-tests using the struct test_case framework. This improves test reporting granularity and is used in a subsequent perf test for JUnit XML test result reporting. Assisted-by: Gemini-CLI:Google Gemini 3 Signed-off-by: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Tested-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com> Cc: Adrian Hunter <adrian.hunter@intel.com> Cc: Alexander Shishkin <alexander.shishkin@linux.intel.com> Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com> Cc: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-04perf test: Skip shebang and SPDX comments in shell test descriptionsIan Rogers
When extracting shell test descriptions in tests-scripts.c, the parser skipped the first line assuming it was the shebang (#!/bin/sh) and then read the first comment line on line 2 as the test description. However, checkpatch.pl expects shell scripts to declare their SPDX license identifier on line 2 (# SPDX-License-Identifier: ...). This caused the test harness to extract the SPDX license string as the test description. Refactor shell_test__description to use io__getline, skipping both shebang and SPDX comment lines. This allows shell tests to include standard SPDX headers without breaking test suite description extraction. Assisted-by: Gemini-CLI:Google Gemini 3 Signed-off-by: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Tested-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com> Cc: Adrian Hunter <adrian.hunter@intel.com> Cc: Alexander Shishkin <alexander.shishkin@linux.intel.com> Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com> Cc: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-04perf test: Fix subtest status alignment for multi-digit indexesIan Rogers
When running perf test, the status column (: Ok) became misaligned when subtest indexes reached 2 or 3 digits (e.g. 9.100 vs 9.9 vs 10.1). This occurred because the subtest description field width (subw) was statically fixed to width - 2, assuming all subtest index prefixes were exactly 7 characters wide. Dynamically calculate subw based on the exact character length of the test suite and subtest index prefix. This ensures the status column is perfectly aligned vertically across all test outputs regardless of subtest index digit count. Assisted-by: Gemini-CLI:Google Gemini 3 Signed-off-by: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Tested-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com> Cc: Adrian Hunter <adrian.hunter@intel.com> Cc: Alexander Shishkin <alexander.shishkin@linux.intel.com> Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com> Cc: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-04perf test: Add summary reportingIan Rogers
Currently, when running test suites (perf test), users must scroll through hundreds of lines of console output to manually tally the number of passed, skipped, or failed test cases. Introduce an automated, global execution summary printed at the absolute tail of the test run: 1. Track counts mid-flight inside the print_test_result() accumulator, clearly separating pass counts into standalone main tests vs. individual subtests (where num_test_cases > 1). 2. Accumulate the precise descriptions of all failed test cases directly into a global string buffer, formatted with their suite indices (e.g., 3.1: Parse event definition strings) for effortless cross-referencing. 3. Define a summary printer function print_tests_summary() that emits a colored outline of the final pass, skip, and fail totals, followed by the explicit list of failed tests. 4. Invoke the summary printer right before freeing the test array at the absolute tail of __cmd_test(), guaranteeing that the summary is successfully printed even if an internal emergency signal cleanup occurs or if the user interrupts the run early. Example output: ``` $ sudo perf test -v 1: vmlinux symtab matches kallsyms : Skip 2: Detect openat syscall event : Ok 3: Detect openat syscall event on all cpus : Ok ... 163: perf trace summary : Ok === Test Summary === Passed main tests : 123 Passed subtests : 145 Skipped tests : 22 Failed tests : 6 List of failed tests: 92: perf kvm tests 95: kernel lock contention analysis test 120: perf metrics value validation 124: Check branch stack sampling 143: perftool-testsuite_probe 158: test Intel TPEBS counting mode ``` Assisted-by: Gemini-CLI:Google Gemini 3 Signed-off-by: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Cc: Adrian Hunter <adrian.hunter@intel.com> Cc: Alexander Shishkin <alexander.shishkin@linux.intel.com> Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com> Cc: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-04perf test: Show snippet failure output for verbose=1Ian Rogers
Currently, when running tests in verbose mode (-v), if a test case fails, the entire raw standard error buffer is dumped to stderr via fprintf(stderr, "%s", child->err_output.buf). For tests that generate massive amounts of debugging or logging output before dying, this results in multi-page terminal dumps where highly critical diagnostic keywords (error, fail, segv) are easily lost. Implement a smart, bounded snippet string processor to improve failure triaging: 1. Introduce a configurable quota limit static unsigned int failure_snippet_lines = 10; accessible via a new command-line option --failure-snippet-lines <N>. 2. Parse the raw error buffer dynamically into lines and run a three-pass extraction algorithm: - Pass 0: Always select the very first line of the log as an initial outline marker. - Pass 1: Scan forward from the top of the log to pick up to N lines that contain case-insensitive failure keywords (error, fail, segv, abort) to isolate the root cause. Automatically pull in the immediate subsequent line as highly-prioritized context. Allow adjacent matching lines to overlap without dropping context by evaluating keywords for all lines (e.g. when "Failed to report" is followed by "Error:"). - Pass 2: If quota remains, scan backward from the absolute tail of the log to capture trailing crash or abort context. 3. Output the selected lines in their original chronological order, inserting a clear ... separator between non-contiguous line jumps. 4. Wrap matched failure keywords dynamically in bold red (PERF_COLOR_RED) to immediately draw the eye to failures. 5. Invoke the smart processor purely when verbose == 1 && ret == TEST_FAIL in both finish_test and finish_tests_parallel, leaving raw full-output dumping completely untouched when running highly verbose (-vv). Assisted-by: Gemini-CLI:Google Gemini 3 Signed-off-by: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Cc: Adrian Hunter <adrian.hunter@intel.com> Cc: Alexander Shishkin <alexander.shishkin@linux.intel.com> Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com> Cc: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-04perf test: Refactor parallel poll loop to drain all pipes simultaneouslyIan Rogers
When running tests in parallel with verbose output (-v), child processes write to pipes. If a test produces significant output (e.g. Granite Rapids metric parsing printing hundreds of lines), it fills the 64KB pipe buffer and blocks. Previously, the parent harness (finish_test) only polled the pipe of the current test waiting to be printed. Other children blocked indefinitely until the parent reached them, severely sequentializing execution. Address this by implementing finish_tests_parallel() to poll and drain output pipes from all running children simultaneously into per-child buffers, employing safe strbuf_addstr string operations alongside thorough variable orderings for strict ISO C90 compliance. Reaping occurs out of order as children finish, while final result printing remains strictly in order. This drops parallel verbose execution time for the PMU events suite from ~35 seconds down to ~5.9 seconds. Assisted-by: Gemini-CLI:Google Gemini 3 Signed-off-by: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Cc: Adrian Hunter <adrian.hunter@intel.com> Cc: Alexander Shishkin <alexander.shishkin@linux.intel.com> Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com> Cc: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-04perf test pmu-events: A sub-test per metric tableIan Rogers
Break apart the slow "Parsing of PMU event table metrics" tests into one pair of tests (real and fake PMU) per metric table found, storing the specific table pointer in priv data. Implement setup_pmu_events_suite() to dynamically allocate and populate these test cases. Split static parser tests out into a separate test__parsing_fake_static() test case. Update test__parsing() and test__parsing_fake() to retrieve the specific table from priv data and test only that table, maintaining fallback compatibility if priv is NULL. Running these individual tests in parallel significantly reduces overall test execution time. Assisted-by: Gemini-CLI:Google Gemini 3 Signed-off-by: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Cc: Adrian Hunter <adrian.hunter@intel.com> Cc: Alexander Shishkin <alexander.shishkin@linux.intel.com> Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com> Cc: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-04perf test: Support dynamic test suites with setup callback and private dataIan Rogers
Add void *priv to struct test_case to allow passing per-test context. Add int (*setup)(struct test_suite *) to struct test_suite to allow dynamic generation of test cases. Update build_suites() to invoke the setup callback for each suite if present, ensuring dynamic cases are available before listing or running. Assisted-by: Gemini-CLI:Google Gemini 3 Signed-off-by: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Cc: Adrian Hunter <adrian.hunter@intel.com> Cc: Alexander Shishkin <alexander.shishkin@linux.intel.com> Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com> Cc: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-04perf test: Drain pipe after child finishes to avoid losing outputIan Rogers
When running tests in parallel, the parent process reads output from the child's pipe. However, it might exit the loop as soon as the child is detected as finished, potentially missing data that arrived in the pipe just after the last poll or before the loop terminated. Address this by draining the pipe after the main loop in finish_test. Assisted-by: Gemini-CLI:Google Gemini 3 Signed-off-by: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Cc: Adrian Hunter <adrian.hunter@intel.com> Cc: Alexander Shishkin <alexander.shishkin@linux.intel.com> Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com> Cc: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-03perf symbol: Add setters for bitfields sharing a byte to avoid concurrent ↵Ian Rogers
update issues A problem with putting bitfields into struct symbol is that other bits in the symbol could be updated concurrently and only one update to the underlying storage unit happen, leading to lost updates. To avoid this, use atomics to atomically read or set part of 16-bits of flags in the symbol. Add accessors to simplify this. The idle value has 3 values in preparation for a later change that will lazily update it. Assisted-by: Gemini:gemini-3.1-pro-preview Signed-off-by: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Acked-by: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Alexander Gordeev <agordeev@linux.ibm.com> Cc: Heiko Carstens <hca@linux.ibm.com> Cc: Honglei Wang <jameshongleiwang@126.com> Cc: Jan Polensky <japo@linux.ibm.com> Cc: Sumanth Korikkar <sumanthk@linux.ibm.com> Cc: Thomas Richter <tmricht@linux.ibm.com> Cc: Vasily Gorbik <gor@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-03perf tests topology: Switch env->arch use to env->e_machineIan Rogers
Some arch string comparisons weren't normalized. Avoid potential issues with normalized names vs uname values by swtiching to using the e_machine. Signed-off-by: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Acked-by: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Alexander Gordeev <agordeev@linux.ibm.com> Cc: Heiko Carstens <hca@linux.ibm.com> Cc: Honglei Wang <jameshongleiwang@126.com> Cc: Jan Polensky <japo@linux.ibm.com> Cc: Sumanth Korikkar <sumanthk@linux.ibm.com> Cc: Thomas Richter <tmricht@linux.ibm.com> Cc: Vasily Gorbik <gor@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-06-03perf test: Add file offset diagnostic test for corrupted perf.dataArnaldo Carvalho de Melo
Add a shell test that verifies the file_offset diagnostic messages work correctly when perf encounters corrupted events. The test corrupts a MMAP2 event's size field in a recorded perf.data file, then checks that perf report produces warning messages that include both the file offset (e.g. "at offset 0x2738:") and the event type name with numeric id (e.g. "MMAP2 (10)"). This exercises the diagnostic improvements from the file_offset series, which retrofitted all skip/stop/error messages to include the position and type of the problematic event. Reviewed-by: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Assisted-by: Claude:claude-opus-4.6 Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-05-29perf arm-spe: Don't warn about the discard bit if it doesn't existJames Clark
Opening an SPE event shows a warning that doesn't concern the user: $ perf record -e arm_spe Unknown/empty format name: discard Perf only wants to know if the discard bit is set for configuring the event, not in response to anything the user has done. Fix it by adding another helper that returns if a config bit exists without warning. We should probably keep the warning in evsel__get_config_val() to avoid having every caller having to do it, and most format bits should never be missing. Add a test for the new helper. Rename the parent test function to be more generic rather than adding a new one as it requires a lot of boilerplate. Reviewed-by: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Reviewed-by: Leo Yan <leo.yan@arm.com> Signed-off-by: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Adrian Hunter <adrian.hunter@intel.com> Cc: Alexander Shishkin <alexander.shishkin@linux.intel.com> Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: John Garry <john.g.garry@oracle.com> Cc: Leo Yan <leo.yan@linux.dev> Cc: Mark Rutland <mark.rutland@arm.com> Cc: Mike Leach <mike.leach@linaro.org> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> Cc: Will Deacon <will@kernel.org> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-05-29perf test: Make leafloop workload immune to compiler optionsJames Clark
Since the leafloop test program was moved into the main Perf binary as a workload, it inherited the same compiler options as Perf. In this case the -fstack-protector option broke the assumption that simple leaf frames don't have a stack frame on Arm. This causes test_arm_callgraph_fp.sh to pass even if the stack isn't augmented with the link register, making the test useless. Fix it by rewriting the leaf function in assembly seeing as it's so simple. Adding -fno-stack-protector would also work, but wouldn't be robust against other future compiler option additions. The local variables and 'a' variable were never needed so remove them to simplify. Reviewed-by: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Assisted-by: GitHub-Copilot:GPT-5.5 Signed-off-by: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Adrian Hunter <adrian.hunter@intel.com> Cc: Alexander Shishkin <alexander.shishkin@linux.intel.com> Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Mark Rutland <mark.rutland@arm.com> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-05-29perf test: Add truncated perf.data robustness testArnaldo Carvalho de Melo
Add a shell test that verifies perf report handles truncated perf.data files gracefully — exiting with an error code rather than crashing with SIGSEGV or SIGABRT. The test records a simple workload, then truncates the resulting perf.data at four offsets that exercise different parsing stages: 8 bytes — file header magic only 64 bytes — partial file header (attr section incomplete) 256 bytes — into the first events (partial event headers) 75% size — mid-stream truncation (partial event data) For each truncation, perf report is run and the exit code is checked: - Exit code 0 (success) fails the test — a truncated file should never parse without error. - Crash signals are detected portably via kill -l, which maps the signal number to a name on the running system. This handles architectures where signal numbers differ (e.g. SIGBUS is 7 on x86/ARM but 10 on MIPS/SPARC). Core-dump and fatal signals (KILL, ILL, ABRT, BUS, FPE, SEGV, TRAP, SYS) fail the test. - Higher exit codes (200+) are perf's own negative-errno returns (e.g. -EINVAL = 234) and are expected. This exercises the bounds checking, minimum-size validation, and error propagation added by the preceding patches in this series. Testing it: root@number:~# perf test truncat 84: Test that perf report handles truncated perf.data gracefully (no crash, no segfault — clean error exit).: Ok root@number:~# perf test -vv truncat 84: Test that perf report handles truncated perf.data gracefully (no crash, no segfault — clean error exit).: --- start --- test child forked, pid 62890 ---- end(0) ---- 84: Test that perf report handles truncated perf.data gracefully (no crash, no segfault — clean error exit).: Ok root@number:~# Changes in v2: - Add SIGKILL to the list of fatal signals so OOM kills from resource exhaustion bugs are detected (Reported-by: sashiko-bot@kernel.org) Reviewed-by: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Cc: Adrian Hunter <adrian.hunter@intel.com> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Assisted-by: Claude:claude-opus-4.6-1m [ Fixed the SPDX on the line where 'perf test' expects the test description, reviewed by Ian Rogers ] Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-05-29perf session: Validate HEADER_ATTR attr.size before swappingArnaldo Carvalho de Melo
Harden PERF_RECORD_HEADER_ATTR handling against crafted perf.data: - Validate attr.size: must be >= PERF_ATTR_SIZE_VER0, a multiple of sizeof(u64), and fit within the event payload. - Copy only min(attr.size, sizeof(struct perf_event_attr)) bytes into a local attr, zeroing the rest so legacy files don't leak adjacent event data into new fields. - Keep the original attr.size so perf_event__synthesize_attr() uses it for both allocation and ID-array placement. Fix perf_event__synthesize_attr() to use attr->size (not the compiled sizeof) for event allocation and layout, so perf inject correctly re-synthesizes attrs from files recorded by a different perf version. Without this, the ID array destination pointer (computed via perf_record_header_attr_id()) would be inconsistent with the allocation when attr->size differs from sizeof. Also fix the parse-no-sample-id-all test to set attr.size, which is now validated, and improve error handling in read_attr() for short reads and invalid attr sizes. Handle ABI0 pipe/inject events where attr.size is 0: use a local attr_size variable set to PERF_ATTR_SIZE_VER0 for both the bounded copy and ID array position, instead of writing back to the event. Native-endian files may be MAP_SHARED (read-only mmap), so writing to the event buffer would SIGSEGV. The swap path handles ABI0 in perf_event__attr_swap() which writes to the MAP_PRIVATE copy. header.size alignment is now validated centrally in perf_session__process_event() (see "Add minimum event size and alignment validation"). Reported-by: sashiko-bot@kernel.org # Running on a local machine Reviewed-by: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Cc: Adrian Hunter <adrian.hunter@intel.com> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Assisted-by: Claude:claude-opus-4.6-1m Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-05-28perf tests hwmon_pmu: Use PRIu64 + (uint64_t) cast for a __u64 field to work ↵Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo
more widely While testing perf with an updated Debian experimental cross compiler (gcc version 14.2.0 (Debian 14.2.0-13)) this started failing: In file included from tests/hwmon_pmu.c:12: tests/hwmon_pmu.c: In function 'do_test': tests/hwmon_pmu.c:199:34: error: format '%lld' expects argument of type 'long long int', but argument 7 has type '__u64' {aka 'long unsigned int'} [-Werror=format=] 199 | pr_debug("FAILED %s:%d Unexpected config for '%s', %lld != %ld\n", | ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ /git/perf-7.1.0-rc5/tools/perf/util/debug.h:20:21: note: in definition of macro 'pr_fmt' 20 | #define pr_fmt(fmt) fmt | ^~~ tests/hwmon_pmu.c:199:25: note: in expansion of macro 'pr_debug' 199 | pr_debug("FAILED %s:%d Unexpected config for '%s', %lld != %ld\n", | ^~~~~~~~ tests/hwmon_pmu.c:199:79: note: format string is defined here 199 | pr_debug("FAILED %s:%d Unexpected config for '%s', %lld != %ld\n", | ~~~^ | | | long long int | %ld LD /tmp/build/perf/util/intel-pt-decoder/perf-util-in.o The usual make that %lld a PRIu64 (since arg7 is evsel->core.attr.config, which is a __u64) but then on Fedora 44 (gcc version 16.1.1 20260515 (Red Hat 16.1.1-2)) it ends up with: In file included from tests/hwmon_pmu.c:13: tests/hwmon_pmu.c: In function ‘do_test’: tests/hwmon_pmu.c:200:34: error: format ‘%lu’ expects argument of type ‘long unsigned int’, but argument 7 has type ‘__u64’ {aka ‘long long unsigned int’} [-Werror=format=] 200 | pr_debug("FAILED %s:%d Unexpected config for '%s', %" PRIu64 " != %ld\n", | ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ /home/acme/git/perf-tools-next2/tools/perf/util/debug.h:20:21: note: in definition of macro ‘pr_fmt’ 20 | #define pr_fmt(fmt) fmt | ^~~ tests/hwmon_pmu.c:200:25: note: in expansion of macro ‘pr_debug’ 200 | pr_debug("FAILED %s:%d Unexpected config for '%s', %" PRIu64 " != %ld\n", | ^~~~~~~~ cc1: all warnings being treated as errors So the way to satisfy both compilers is to also add a (u64) cast to arg7. Cc: Adrian Hunter <adrian.hunter@intel.com> Cc: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Cc: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-05-27perf tests: Sort includes and add missed explicit dependenciesIan Rogers
Fix missing #includes found while cleaning the evsel/evlist header files. Sort the remaining header files for consistency with the rest of the code. Signed-off-by: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Acked-by: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Adrian Hunter <adrian.hunter@intel.com> Cc: Alice Rogers <alice.mei.rogers@gmail.com> Cc: Dapeng Mi <dapeng1.mi@linux.intel.com> Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com> Cc: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Leo Yan <leo.yan@linux.dev> Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> Cc: Thomas Richter <tmricht@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-05-25perf test: Add stat metrics --for-each-cgroup testIan Rogers
Add a new shell test `stat_metrics_cgrp.sh` to verify metric reporting with `--for-each-cgroup`, both with and without `--bpf-counters`. The test: - Checks if system-wide monitoring is supported (skips if not). - Finds cgroups to test. - Runs `perf stat` with `insn_per_cycle` metric and verifies that the metric is reported for each cgroup. - Dynamically pairs and verifies instructions and cycles counts to avoid false failures on idle cgroups. - Tests both standard mode and BPF counters mode (if supported). Assisted-by: Antigravity:gemini-3-flash Signed-off-by: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Cc: Adrian Hunter <adrian.hunter@intel.com> Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com> Cc: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> Cc: Svilen Kanev <skanev@google.com> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-05-22perf tests: Add test for stat delay option with duration_timeIan Rogers
Add a new test case `test_stat_delay` to `stat.sh` to verify that `duration_time` correctly excludes the delay period when using the delay option (-D). The test runs `perf stat -D 1000 -e duration_time sleep 2` and verifies that `duration_time` is ~1s (excluding the 1s delay), not ~2s. Assisted-by: Antigravity:gemini-3-flash Signed-off-by: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Cc: Adrian Hunter <adrian.hunter@intel.com> Cc: Francesco Nigro <nigro.fra@gmail.com> Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com> Cc: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> Cc: Thomas Richter <tmricht@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-05-22perf test ibs: Skip privilege test on Zen6 and newer platformsRavi Bangoria
IBS on pre-Zen6 platforms lacked a hardware privilege filter, so the kernel enabled swfilt=1. Zen6 and newer platforms provides privilege filtering via the RIP[63] bit, making swfilt redundant. Skip the perf unit test that assumes IBS has no hardware-assisted privilege filter on Zen6 and newer platforms. swfilt is ignored by kernel on platforms that support RIP[63] bit filter i.e. all amd-ibs-swfilt.sh tests will test hardware assisted privilege filter. Without the patch on Zen6: # sudo ./perf test -vv 77 77: AMD IBS software filtering: --- start --- test child forked, pid 30813 check availability of IBS swfilt run perf record with modifier and swfilt [FAIL] IBS PMU should not accept exclude_kernel ---- end(-1) ---- 77: AMD IBS software filtering : FAILED! With the patch: # ./perf test -vv 77 77: AMD IBS software filtering: --- start --- test child forked, pid 30903 check availability of IBS swfilt run perf record with modifier and swfilt [ perf record: Woken up 2 times to write data ] [ perf record: Captured and wrote 0.000 MB /dev/null ] [ perf record: Woken up 3 times to write data ] [ perf record: Captured and wrote 0.000 MB /dev/null ] [ perf record: Woken up 3 times to write data ] [ perf record: Captured and wrote 0.000 MB /dev/null ] [ perf record: Woken up 1 times to write data ] [ perf record: Captured and wrote 0.000 MB /dev/null ] check number of samples with swfilt [ perf record: Woken up 4 times to write data ] [ perf record: Captured and wrote 0.051 MB - ] [ perf record: Woken up 4 times to write data ] [ perf record: Captured and wrote 0.063 MB - ] ---- end(0) ---- 77: AMD IBS software filtering : Ok Signed-off-by: Ravi Bangoria <ravi.bangoria@amd.com> Acked-by: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Ananth Narayan <ananth.narayan@amd.com> Cc: Dapeng Mi <dapeng1.mi@linux.intel.com> Cc: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com> Cc: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Manali Shukla <manali.shukla@amd.com> Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> Cc: Sandipan Das <sandipan.das@amd.com> Cc: Santosh Shukla <santosh.shukla@amd.com> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>
2026-05-20perf tests: Add test for uncore event sortingIan Rogers
Add a test for uncore event sorting matching multiple PMUs. Uncore PMUs may have a common prefix, like the PMUs uncore_imc_free_running_0 and uncore_imc_free_running_1 have a prefix of uncore_imc_free_running. Parsing an event group like "{data_read,data_write}" for those PMUs should result with two groups: "{uncore_imc_free_running_0/data_read/,uncore_imc_free_running_0/data_write/}, {uncore_imc_free_running_1/data_read/,uncore_imc_free_running_1/data_write/}" which means the evsels need resorting as when initially parsed the evsels are ordered with mixed PMUs: "{uncore_imc_free_running_0/data_read/,uncore_imc_free_running_1/data_read/, uncore_imc_free_running_0/data_write/,uncore_imc_free_running_1/data_write/}". Signed-off-by: Ian Rogers <irogers@google.com> Tested-by: Zide Chen <zide.chen@intel.com> Cc: Adrian Hunter <adrian.hunter@intel.com> Cc: Alexander Shishkin <alexander.shishkin@linux.intel.com> Cc: Collin Funk <collin.funk1@gmail.com> Cc: Dmitrii Dolgov <9erthalion6@gmail.com> Cc: German Gomez <german.gomez@arm.com> Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com> Cc: James Clark <james.clark@linaro.org> Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org> Cc: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@kernel.org> Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com>