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Manual Pages for UNIX Operating System command usage for man cpc_shared_rele

CPU Performance Counters Library Functions cpc_shared_open(3CPC)

NAME

cpc_shared_open, cpc_shared_bind_event,

cpc_shared_take_sample, cpc_shared_rele, cpc_shared_close -

use CPU performance counters on processors

SYNOPSIS

cc [ flag... ] file... -lcpc [ library... ]

#include

int cpc_shared_open(void);

int cpc_shared_bind_event(int fd, cpc_event_t *event, int flags);

int cpc_shared_take_sample(int fd, cpc_event_t *event);

int cpc_shared_rele(int fd);

void cpc_shared_close(int fd);

DESCRIPTION

The cpc_shared_open() function allows the caller to access

the hardware counters in such a way that the performance of the currently bound CPU can be measured. The function returns a file descriptor if successful. Only one such open can be active at a time on any CPU.

The cpc_shared_bind_event(), cpc_shared_take_sample(), and

cpc_shared_rele() functions are directly analogous to the

corresponding cpc_bind_event(), cpc_take_sample(), and

cpc_rele() functions described on the

cpc_bind_event(3CPC)manual page, except that they operate on

the counters of a particular processor.

USAGE

If a thread wishes to access the counters using this inter-

face, it must do so using a thread bound to an lwp, (see the

THR_BOUND flag to thr_create(3C)), that has in turn bound

itself to a processor using processor_bind(2).

Unlike the cpc_bind_event(3CPC) family of functions, no

counter context is attached to those lwps, so the perfor-

mance counter samples from the processors reflects the

system-wide usage, instead of per-lwp usage.

SunOS 5.11 Last change: 28 Mar 2005 1

CPU Performance Counters Library Functions cpc_shared_open(3CPC)

The first successful invocation of cpc_shared_open() will

immediately invalidate all existing performance counter con-

text on the system, and prevent all subsequent attempts to bind counter context to lwps from succeeding anywhere on the

system until the last caller invokes cpc_shared_close().

This is because it is impossible to simultaneously use the

counters to accurately measure per-lwp and system-wide

events, so there is an exclusive interlock between these uses.

Access to the shared counters is mediated by file permis-

sions on a cpc pseudo device. Only a user with the

{PRIV_SYS_CONFIG} privilege is allowed to access the shared

device. This control prevents use of the counters on a per-

lwp basis to other users.

The CPC_BIND_LWP_INHERIT and CPC_BIND_EMT_OVF flags are

invalid for the shared interface.

RETURN VALUES

On success, the functions (except for cpc_shared_close())

return 0. On failure, the functions return -1 and set errno

to indicate the reason.

ERRORS

EACCES The caller does not have appropriate privilege to

access the CPU performance counters system-wide.

EAGAIN For cpc_shared_open(), this value implies that

the counters on the bound cpu are busy because

they are already being used to measure system-

wide events by some other caller. EAGAIN Otherwise, this return value implies that the counters are not available because the thread has been unbound from the processor it was bound to at open time. Robust programs should be coded to expect this behavior, and should invoke

cpc_shared_close(), before retrying the opera-

tion. EINVAL The counters cannot be accessed on the current CPU because the calling thread is not bound to

that CPU using processor_bind(2).

SunOS 5.11 Last change: 28 Mar 2005 2

CPU Performance Counters Library Functions cpc_shared_open(3CPC)

ENOTSUP The caller has attempted an operation that is illegal or not supported on the current platform. ENXIO The current machine either has no performance counters, or has been configured to disallow

access to them system-wide.

ATTRIBUTES

See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attri-

butes:

____________________________________________________________

| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |

|_____________________________|_____________________________|

| MT-Level | MT-Safe |

|_____________________________|_____________________________|

| Interface Stability | Obsolete |

|_____________________________|_____________________________|

SEE ALSO

processor_bind(2), cpc(3CPC), cpc_bind_cpu(3CPC),

cpc_bind_event(3CPC), cpc_set_sample(3CPC),

cpc_unbind(3CPC), libcpc(3LIB), thr_create(3C), attri-

butes(5) NOTES

The cpc_shared_open(), cpc_shared_bind_event(),

cpc_shared_take_sample(), cpc_shared_rele(), and

cpc_shared_close() functions exist for binary compatibility

only. Source containing these functions will not compile. These functions are obsolete and might be removed in a

future release. Applications should use cpc_bind_cpu(3CPC),

cpc_set_sample(3CPC), and cpc_unbind(3CPC) instead.

SunOS 5.11 Last change: 28 Mar 2005 3




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