Looks like PAPI has very clean API and works just fine on Ubuntu 11.04.
Once it's installed, following app will do what I wanted:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <papi.h>
#define NUM_EVENTS 4
void matmul(const double *A, const double *B,
double *C, int m, int n, int p)
{
int i, j, k;
for (i = 0; i < m; ++i)
for (j = 0; j < p; ++j) {
double sum = 0;
for (k = 0; k < n; ++k)
sum += A[i*n + k] * B[k*p + j];
C[i*p + j] = sum;
}
}
int main(int /* argc */, char ** /* argv[] */)
{
const int size = 300;
double a[size][size];
double b[size][size];
double c[size][size];
int event[NUM_EVENTS] = {PAPI_TOT_INS, PAPI_TOT_CYC, PAPI_BR_MSP, PAPI_L1_DCM };
long long values[NUM_EVENTS];
/* Start counting events */
if (PAPI_start_counters(event, NUM_EVENTS) != PAPI_OK) {
fprintf(stderr, "PAPI_start_counters - FAILED
");
exit(1);
}
matmul((double *)a, (double *)b, (double *)c, size, size, size);
/* Read the counters */
if (PAPI_read_counters(values, NUM_EVENTS) != PAPI_OK) {
fprintf(stderr, "PAPI_read_counters - FAILED
");
exit(1);
}
printf("Total instructions: %lld
", values[0]);
printf("Total cycles: %lld
", values[1]);
printf("Instr per cycle: %2.3f
", (double)values[0] / (double) values[1]);
printf("Branches mispredicted: %lld
", values[2]);
printf("L1 Cache misses: %lld
", values[3]);
/* Stop counting events */
if (PAPI_stop_counters(values, NUM_EVENTS) != PAPI_OK) {
fprintf(stderr, "PAPI_stoped_counters - FAILED
");
exit(1);
}
return 0;
}
Tested this on Intel Q6600, it supports up to 4 performance events. Your processor may support more or less.
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