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- System Trace Module
- ===================
- System Trace Module (STM) is a device described in MIPI STP specs as
- STP trace stream generator. STP (System Trace Protocol) is a trace
- protocol multiplexing data from multiple trace sources, each one of
- which is assigned a unique pair of master and channel. While some of
- these masters and channels are statically allocated to certain
- hardware trace sources, others are available to software. Software
- trace sources are usually free to pick for themselves any
- master/channel combination from this pool.
- On the receiving end of this STP stream (the decoder side), trace
- sources can only be identified by master/channel combination, so in
- order for the decoder to be able to make sense of the trace that
- involves multiple trace sources, it needs to be able to map those
- master/channel pairs to the trace sources that it understands.
- For instance, it is helpful to know that syslog messages come on
- master 7 channel 15, while arbitrary user applications can use masters
- 48 to 63 and channels 0 to 127.
- To solve this mapping problem, stm class provides a policy management
- mechanism via configfs, that allows defining rules that map string
- identifiers to ranges of masters and channels. If these rules (policy)
- are consistent with what decoder expects, it will be able to properly
- process the trace data.
- This policy is a tree structure containing rules (policy_node) that
- have a name (string identifier) and a range of masters and channels
- associated with it, located in "stp-policy" subsystem directory in
- configfs. The topmost directory's name (the policy) is formatted as
- the STM device name to which this policy applies and and arbitrary
- string identifier separated by a stop. From the examle above, a rule
- may look like this:
- $ ls /config/stp-policy/dummy_stm.my-policy/user
- channels masters
- $ cat /config/stp-policy/dummy_stm.my-policy/user/masters
- 48 63
- $ cat /config/stp-policy/dummy_stm.my-policy/user/channels
- 0 127
- which means that the master allocation pool for this rule consists of
- masters 48 through 63 and channel allocation pool has channels 0
- through 127 in it. Now, any producer (trace source) identifying itself
- with "user" identification string will be allocated a master and
- channel from within these ranges.
- These rules can be nested, for example, one can define a rule "dummy"
- under "user" directory from the example above and this new rule will
- be used for trace sources with the id string of "user/dummy".
- Trace sources have to open the stm class device's node and write their
- trace data into its file descriptor. In order to identify themselves
- to the policy, they need to do a STP_POLICY_ID_SET ioctl on this file
- descriptor providing their id string. Otherwise, they will be
- automatically allocated a master/channel pair upon first write to this
- file descriptor according to the "default" rule of the policy, if such
- exists.
- Some STM devices may allow direct mapping of the channel mmio regions
- to userspace for zero-copy writing. One mappable page (in terms of
- mmu) will usually contain multiple channels' mmios, so the user will
- need to allocate that many channels to themselves (via the
- aforementioned ioctl() call) to be able to do this. That is, if your
- stm device's channel mmio region is 64 bytes and hardware page size is
- 4096 bytes, after a successful STP_POLICY_ID_SET ioctl() call with
- width==64, you should be able to mmap() one page on this file
- descriptor and obtain direct access to an mmio region for 64 channels.
- For kernel-based trace sources, there is "stm_source" device
- class. Devices of this class can be connected and disconnected to/from
- stm devices at runtime via a sysfs attribute.
- Examples of STM devices are Intel(R) Trace Hub [1] and Coresight STM
- [2].
- [1] https://software.intel.com/sites/default/files/managed/d3/3c/intel-th-developer-manual.pdf
- [2] http://infocenter.arm.com/help/index.jsp?topic=/com.arm.doc.ddi0444b/index.html
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