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authorGeert Uytterhoeven <Geert.Uytterhoeven@sonycom.com>2008-09-15 19:09:08 -0400
committerBenjamin Herrenschmidt <benh@kernel.crashing.org>2008-10-06 23:26:19 -0400
commit1b483a6a7b2998e9c98ad985d7494b9b725bd228 (patch)
treeaecb28df044545aacc2e03c309edab559ccb5abc /Documentation/powerpc
parenta880e7623397bcb44877b012cd65baa11ad1bbf8 (diff)
powerpc: Remove remains of /proc/ppc_htab
commit 14cf11af6cf608eb8c23e989ddb17a715ddce109 ("powerpc: Merge enough to start building in arch/powerpc.") unwired /proc/ppc_htab, and commit 917f0af9e5a9ceecf9e72537fabb501254ba321d ("powerpc: Remove arch/ppc and include/asm-ppc") removed the rest of the /proc/ppc_htab support, but there are still a few references left. Kill them for good. Signed-off-by: Geert Uytterhoeven <Geert.Uytterhoeven@sonycom.com> Signed-off-by: Benjamin Herrenschmidt <benh@kernel.crashing.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation/powerpc')
-rw-r--r--Documentation/powerpc/00-INDEX2
-rw-r--r--Documentation/powerpc/ppc_htab.txt118
2 files changed, 0 insertions, 120 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/powerpc/00-INDEX b/Documentation/powerpc/00-INDEX
index 29d839ce7327..2f31853899ca 100644
--- a/Documentation/powerpc/00-INDEX
+++ b/Documentation/powerpc/00-INDEX
@@ -18,8 +18,6 @@ mpc52xx.txt
18 - Linux 2.6.x on MPC52xx family 18 - Linux 2.6.x on MPC52xx family
19mpc52xx-device-tree-bindings.txt 19mpc52xx-device-tree-bindings.txt
20 - MPC5200 Device Tree Bindings 20 - MPC5200 Device Tree Bindings
21ppc_htab.txt
22 - info about the Linux/PPC /proc/ppc_htab entry
23smp.txt 21smp.txt
24 - use and state info about Linux/PPC on MP machines 22 - use and state info about Linux/PPC on MP machines
25sound.txt 23sound.txt
diff --git a/Documentation/powerpc/ppc_htab.txt b/Documentation/powerpc/ppc_htab.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 8b8c7df29fa9..000000000000
--- a/Documentation/powerpc/ppc_htab.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,118 +0,0 @@
1 Information about /proc/ppc_htab
2=====================================================================
3
4This document and the related code was written by me (Cort Dougan), please
5email me (cort@fsmlabs.com) if you have questions, comments or corrections.
6
7Last Change: 2.16.98
8
9This entry in the proc directory is readable by all users but only
10writable by root.
11
12The ppc_htab interface is a user level way of accessing the
13performance monitoring registers as well as providing information
14about the PTE hash table.
15
161. Reading
17
18 Reading this file will give you information about the memory management
19 hash table that serves as an extended tlb for page translation on the
20 powerpc. It will also give you information about performance measurement
21 specific to the cpu that you are using.
22
23 Explanation of the 604 Performance Monitoring Fields:
24 MMCR0 - the current value of the MMCR0 register
25 PMC1
26 PMC2 - the value of the performance counters and a
27 description of what events they are counting
28 which are based on MMCR0 bit settings.
29 Explanation of the PTE Hash Table fields:
30
31 Size - hash table size in Kb.
32 Buckets - number of buckets in the table.
33 Address - the virtual kernel address of the hash table base.
34 Entries - the number of ptes that can be stored in the hash table.
35 User/Kernel - how many pte's are in use by the kernel or user at that time.
36 Overflows - How many of the entries are in their secondary hash location.
37 Percent full - ratio of free pte entries to in use entries.
38 Reloads - Count of how many hash table misses have occurred
39 that were fixed with a reload from the linux tables.
40 Should always be 0 on 603 based machines.
41 Non-error Misses - Count of how many hash table misses have occurred
42 that were completed with the creation of a pte in the linux
43 tables with a call to do_page_fault().
44 Error Misses - Number of misses due to errors such as bad address
45 and permission violations. This includes kernel access of
46 bad user addresses that are fixed up by the trap handler.
47
48 Note that calculation of the data displayed from /proc/ppc_htab takes
49 a long time and spends a great deal of time in the kernel. It would
50 be quite hard on performance to read this file constantly. In time
51 there may be a counter in the kernel that allows successive reads from
52 this file only after a given amount of time has passed to reduce the
53 possibility of a user slowing the system by reading this file.
54
552. Writing
56
57 Writing to the ppc_htab allows you to change the characteristics of
58 the powerpc PTE hash table and setup performance monitoring.
59
60 Resizing the PTE hash table is not enabled right now due to many
61 complications with moving the hash table, rehashing the entries
62 and many many SMP issues that would have to be dealt with.
63
64 Write options to ppc_htab:
65
66 - To set the size of the hash table to 64Kb:
67
68 echo 'size 64' > /proc/ppc_htab
69
70 The size must be a multiple of 64 and must be greater than or equal to
71 64.
72
73 - To turn off performance monitoring:
74
75 echo 'off' > /proc/ppc_htab
76
77 - To reset the counters without changing what they're counting:
78
79 echo 'reset' > /proc/ppc_htab
80
81 Note that counting will continue after the reset if it is enabled.
82
83 - To count only events in user mode or only in kernel mode:
84
85 echo 'user' > /proc/ppc_htab
86 ...or...
87 echo 'kernel' > /proc/ppc_htab
88
89 Note that these two options are exclusive of one another and the
90 lack of either of these options counts user and kernel.
91 Using 'reset' and 'off' reset these flags.
92
93 - The 604 has 2 performance counters which can each count events from
94 a specific set of events. These sets are disjoint so it is not
95 possible to count _any_ combination of 2 events. One event can
96 be counted by PMC1 and one by PMC2.
97
98 To start counting a particular event use:
99
100 echo 'event' > /proc/ppc_htab
101
102 and choose from these events:
103
104 PMC1
105 ----
106 'ic miss' - instruction cache misses
107 'dtlb' - data tlb misses (not hash table misses)
108
109 PMC2
110 ----
111 'dc miss' - data cache misses
112 'itlb' - instruction tlb misses (not hash table misses)
113 'load miss time' - cycles to complete a load miss
114
1153. Bugs
116
117 The PMC1 and PMC2 counters can overflow and give no indication of that
118 in /proc/ppc_htab.