Message ID | 20200729151208.27737-1-lukasz.luba@arm.com (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
Headers | show |
Series | CPUFreq statistics retrieved by drivers | expand |
On 29-07-20, 16:12, Lukasz Luba wrote: > The existing CPUFreq framework does not tracks the statistics when the > 'fast switch' is used or when firmware changes the frequency independently > due to e.g. thermal reasons. However, the firmware might track the frequency > changes and expose this to the kernel. > > This patch set aims to introduce CPUfreq statistics gathered by firmware > and retrieved by CPUFreq driver. It would require a new API functions > in the CPUFreq, which allows to poke drivers to get these stats. > > The needed CPUFreq infrastructure is in patch 1/4, patch 2/4 extends > ARM SCMI protocol layer, patches 3/4, 4/4 modify ARM SCMI CPUFreq driver. Are you doing this for the fast switch case or because your platform actually runs at frequencies which may be different from what cpufreq core has requested ? I am also not sure what these tables should represent, what the cpufreq core has decided for the CPUs or the frequencies we actually run at, as these two can be very different for example if the hardware runs at frequencies which don't match exactly to what is there in the freq table. I believe these are rather to show what cpufreq and its governors are doing with the CPUs. Over that I would like the userspace stats to work exactly as the way they work right now, i.e. capture all transitions from one freq to other, not just time-in-state. Also resetting of the stats from userspace for example. All allocation and printing of the data must be done from stats core, the only thing which the driver would do at the end is updating the stats structure and nothing more. Instead of reading all stats from the firmware, it will be much easier if you can just get the information from the firmware whenever there is a frequency switch and then we can update the stats the way it is done right now. And that would be simple.
On Thu, Jul 30, 2020 at 02:23:33PM +0530, Viresh Kumar wrote: > On 29-07-20, 16:12, Lukasz Luba wrote: > > The existing CPUFreq framework does not tracks the statistics when the > > 'fast switch' is used or when firmware changes the frequency independently > > due to e.g. thermal reasons. However, the firmware might track the frequency > > changes and expose this to the kernel. > > > > This patch set aims to introduce CPUfreq statistics gathered by firmware > > and retrieved by CPUFreq driver. It would require a new API functions > > in the CPUFreq, which allows to poke drivers to get these stats. > > > > The needed CPUFreq infrastructure is in patch 1/4, patch 2/4 extends > > ARM SCMI protocol layer, patches 3/4, 4/4 modify ARM SCMI CPUFreq driver. > > Are you doing this for the fast switch case or because your platform > actually runs at frequencies which may be different from what cpufreq > core has requested ? > I think so. > I am also not sure what these tables should represent, what the > cpufreq core has decided for the CPUs or the frequencies we actually > run at, as these two can be very different for example if the hardware > runs at frequencies which don't match exactly to what is there in the > freq table. I believe these are rather to show what cpufreq and its > governors are doing with the CPUs. > Exactly, I raised similar point in internal discussion and asked Lukasz to take up the same on the list. I assume it was always what cpufreq requested rather than what was delivered. So will we break the userspace ABI if we change that is the main question. > Over that I would like the userspace stats to work exactly as the way > they work right now, i.e. capture all transitions from one freq to > other, not just time-in-state. Also resetting of the stats from > userspace for example. All allocation and printing of the data must be > done from stats core, the only thing which the driver would do at the > end is updating the stats structure and nothing more. Instead of > reading all stats from the firmware, it will be much easier if you can > just get the information from the firmware whenever there is a > frequency switch and then we can update the stats the way it is done > right now. And that would be simple. > Good point, but notifications may not be lightweight. If that is no good, alternatively, I suggested to keep these firmware stats in a separate debugfs. Thoughts ? -- Regards, Sudeep
On 7/30/20 10:10 AM, Sudeep Holla wrote: > On Thu, Jul 30, 2020 at 02:23:33PM +0530, Viresh Kumar wrote: >> On 29-07-20, 16:12, Lukasz Luba wrote: >>> The existing CPUFreq framework does not tracks the statistics when the >>> 'fast switch' is used or when firmware changes the frequency independently >>> due to e.g. thermal reasons. However, the firmware might track the frequency >>> changes and expose this to the kernel. >>> >>> This patch set aims to introduce CPUfreq statistics gathered by firmware >>> and retrieved by CPUFreq driver. It would require a new API functions >>> in the CPUFreq, which allows to poke drivers to get these stats. >>> >>> The needed CPUFreq infrastructure is in patch 1/4, patch 2/4 extends >>> ARM SCMI protocol layer, patches 3/4, 4/4 modify ARM SCMI CPUFreq driver. >> >> Are you doing this for the fast switch case or because your platform >> actually runs at frequencies which may be different from what cpufreq >> core has requested ? >> > > I think so. For both cases, but fast switch is major and present. Thermal is not currently implemented in SCP FW, but might be in future. > >> I am also not sure what these tables should represent, what the >> cpufreq core has decided for the CPUs or the frequencies we actually >> run at, as these two can be very different for example if the hardware >> runs at frequencies which don't match exactly to what is there in the >> freq table. I believe these are rather to show what cpufreq and its >> governors are doing with the CPUs. >> > > Exactly, I raised similar point in internal discussion and asked Lukasz > to take up the same on the list. I assume it was always what cpufreq > requested rather than what was delivered. So will we break the userspace > ABI if we change that is the main question. Thank you for confirmation. If that is the mechanism for tracking what cpufreq governors are doing with the CPUs, then is clashes with presented data in FW memory, because firmware is the governor. > >> Over that I would like the userspace stats to work exactly as the way >> they work right now, i.e. capture all transitions from one freq to >> other, not just time-in-state. Also resetting of the stats from >> userspace for example. All allocation and printing of the data must be >> done from stats core, the only thing which the driver would do at the >> end is updating the stats structure and nothing more. Instead of >> reading all stats from the firmware, it will be much easier if you can >> just get the information from the firmware whenever there is a >> frequency switch and then we can update the stats the way it is done >> right now. And that would be simple. >> > > Good point, but notifications may not be lightweight. If that is no good, > alternatively, I suggested to keep these firmware stats in a separate > debugfs. Thoughts ? I agree that notifications might not be lightweight. Furthermore I think this still clashes with the assumption that cpufreq governor decisions are tracked in these statistics, not the firmware decision. In this case I think we would have to create debugfs. Sudeep do you think these debugfs should be exposed from the protocol layer: drivers/firmware/arm_scmi/perf.c or maybe from the cpufreq scmi driver? I would probably be safer to have it in the cpufreq driver because we have scmi_handle there. Regards, Lukasz
On Thu, Jul 30, 2020 at 10:36:51AM +0100, Lukasz Luba wrote: > > In this case I think we would have to create debugfs. > Sudeep do you think these debugfs should be exposed from the protocol > layer: > drivers/firmware/arm_scmi/perf.c I prefer above over cpufreq as we can support for all the devices not just cpus which avoids adding similar support elsewhere(mostly devfreq) > or maybe from the cpufreq scmi driver? I would probably be safer to have > it in the cpufreq driver because we have scmi_handle there. > Cristian was thinking if we can consolidate all such debugfs under one device may be and that should eliminate your handle restriction. I would like to see how that works out in implementation but I don't have any better suggestion ATM. -- Regards, Sudeep
On 30-07-20, 10:36, Lukasz Luba wrote: > On 7/30/20 10:10 AM, Sudeep Holla wrote: > > On Thu, Jul 30, 2020 at 02:23:33PM +0530, Viresh Kumar wrote: > > > On 29-07-20, 16:12, Lukasz Luba wrote: > > > > The existing CPUFreq framework does not tracks the statistics when the > > > > 'fast switch' is used or when firmware changes the frequency independently > > > > due to e.g. thermal reasons. However, the firmware might track the frequency > > > > changes and expose this to the kernel. > > > > > > > > This patch set aims to introduce CPUfreq statistics gathered by firmware > > > > and retrieved by CPUFreq driver. It would require a new API functions > > > > in the CPUFreq, which allows to poke drivers to get these stats. > > > > > > > > The needed CPUFreq infrastructure is in patch 1/4, patch 2/4 extends > > > > ARM SCMI protocol layer, patches 3/4, 4/4 modify ARM SCMI CPUFreq driver. > > > > > > Are you doing this for the fast switch case or because your platform > > > actually runs at frequencies which may be different from what cpufreq > > > core has requested ? > > > > > > > I think so. > > For both cases, but fast switch is major and present. Thermal is not > currently implemented in SCP FW, but might be in future. Okay, lets simplify things a bit and merge things slowly upstream and merge only what is required right now. IIUC, the only concern right now is to capture stats with fast switch ? Maybe we can do something else in that case and brainstorm a bit.. > > > I am also not sure what these tables should represent, what the > > > cpufreq core has decided for the CPUs or the frequencies we actually > > > run at, as these two can be very different for example if the hardware > > > runs at frequencies which don't match exactly to what is there in the > > > freq table. I believe these are rather to show what cpufreq and its > > > governors are doing with the CPUs. > > > > > > > Exactly, I raised similar point in internal discussion and asked Lukasz > > to take up the same on the list. I assume it was always what cpufreq > > requested rather than what was delivered. So will we break the userspace > > ABI if we change that is the main question. > > Thank you for confirmation. If that is the mechanism for tracking what > cpufreq governors are doing with the CPUs, then is clashes with > presented data in FW memory, because firmware is the governor. Why is firmware the governor here ? Aren't you talking about the simple fast switch case only ? Over that, I think this cpufreq stats information isn't parsed by any tool right now and tweaking it a bit won't hurt anyone (like if we start capturing things a bit differently). So we may not want to worry about breaking userspace ABI here, if what we are looking to do is the right thing to do. > > > Over that I would like the userspace stats to work exactly as the way > > > they work right now, i.e. capture all transitions from one freq to > > > other, not just time-in-state. Also resetting of the stats from > > > userspace for example. All allocation and printing of the data must be > > > done from stats core, the only thing which the driver would do at the > > > end is updating the stats structure and nothing more. Instead of > > > reading all stats from the firmware, it will be much easier if you can > > > just get the information from the firmware whenever there is a > > > frequency switch and then we can update the stats the way it is done > > > right now. And that would be simple. > > > > > > > Good point, but notifications may not be lightweight. If that is no good, > > alternatively, I suggested to keep these firmware stats in a separate > > debugfs. Thoughts ? > > I agree that notifications might not be lightweight. I am not sure what notifications are we talking about here. > Furthermore I think > this still clashes with the assumption that cpufreq governor decisions > are tracked in these statistics, not the firmware decision. > > In this case I think we would have to create debugfs. > Sudeep do you think these debugfs should be exposed from the protocol > layer: > drivers/firmware/arm_scmi/perf.c > or maybe from the cpufreq scmi driver? I would probably be safer to have > it in the cpufreq driver because we have scmi_handle there. For the CPUs it would be better if we can keep things in cpufreq only, lets see how we go about it.
On 8/4/20 6:35 AM, Viresh Kumar wrote: > On 30-07-20, 10:36, Lukasz Luba wrote: >> On 7/30/20 10:10 AM, Sudeep Holla wrote: >>> On Thu, Jul 30, 2020 at 02:23:33PM +0530, Viresh Kumar wrote: >>>> On 29-07-20, 16:12, Lukasz Luba wrote: >>>>> The existing CPUFreq framework does not tracks the statistics when the >>>>> 'fast switch' is used or when firmware changes the frequency independently >>>>> due to e.g. thermal reasons. However, the firmware might track the frequency >>>>> changes and expose this to the kernel. >>>>> >>>>> This patch set aims to introduce CPUfreq statistics gathered by firmware >>>>> and retrieved by CPUFreq driver. It would require a new API functions >>>>> in the CPUFreq, which allows to poke drivers to get these stats. >>>>> >>>>> The needed CPUFreq infrastructure is in patch 1/4, patch 2/4 extends >>>>> ARM SCMI protocol layer, patches 3/4, 4/4 modify ARM SCMI CPUFreq driver. >>>> >>>> Are you doing this for the fast switch case or because your platform >>>> actually runs at frequencies which may be different from what cpufreq >>>> core has requested ? >>>> >>> >>> I think so. >> >> For both cases, but fast switch is major and present. Thermal is not >> currently implemented in SCP FW, but might be in future. > > Okay, lets simplify things a bit and merge things slowly upstream and merge only > what is required right now. > > IIUC, the only concern right now is to capture stats with fast switch ? Maybe we > can do something else in that case and brainstorm a bit.. Correct, the fast switch is the only concern right now and not tracked. We could fill in that information with statistics data from firmware with a cpufreq driver help. I could make the if from patch 1/4 covering narrowed case, when fast switch is present, check for drivers stats. Something like: -----------8<------------------------------------------------------------ if (policy->fast_switch_enabled) if (policy->has_driver_stats) return cpufreq_stats_present_driver_data(policy, buf); else return 0; -------------->8---------------------------------------------------------- > >>>> I am also not sure what these tables should represent, what the >>>> cpufreq core has decided for the CPUs or the frequencies we actually >>>> run at, as these two can be very different for example if the hardware >>>> runs at frequencies which don't match exactly to what is there in the >>>> freq table. I believe these are rather to show what cpufreq and its >>>> governors are doing with the CPUs. >>>> >>> >>> Exactly, I raised similar point in internal discussion and asked Lukasz >>> to take up the same on the list. I assume it was always what cpufreq >>> requested rather than what was delivered. So will we break the userspace >>> ABI if we change that is the main question. >> >> Thank you for confirmation. If that is the mechanism for tracking what >> cpufreq governors are doing with the CPUs, then is clashes with >> presented data in FW memory, because firmware is the governor. > > Why is firmware the governor here ? Aren't you talking about the simple fast > switch case only ? I used a term 'governor' for the firmware because it makes the final set for the frequency. It (FW) should respect the frequency value set using the fast switch. I don't know how other firmware (e.g. Intel) treats this fast switch value or if they even expose FW stats, though. You can read about this statistics region in [1] at: 4.5.5 Performance domain statistics shared memory region > > Over that, I think this cpufreq stats information isn't parsed by any tool right > now and tweaking it a bit won't hurt anyone (like if we start capturing things a > bit differently). So we may not want to worry about breaking userspace ABI here, > if what we are looking to do is the right thing to do. So, there is some hope... IMHO it would be better to have this cpufreq stats in normal location, rather then in scmi debugfs. > >>>> Over that I would like the userspace stats to work exactly as the way >>>> they work right now, i.e. capture all transitions from one freq to >>>> other, not just time-in-state. Also resetting of the stats from >>>> userspace for example. All allocation and printing of the data must be >>>> done from stats core, the only thing which the driver would do at the >>>> end is updating the stats structure and nothing more. Instead of >>>> reading all stats from the firmware, it will be much easier if you can >>>> just get the information from the firmware whenever there is a >>>> frequency switch and then we can update the stats the way it is done >>>> right now. And that would be simple. >>>> >>> >>> Good point, but notifications may not be lightweight. If that is no good, >>> alternatively, I suggested to keep these firmware stats in a separate >>> debugfs. Thoughts ? >> >> I agree that notifications might not be lightweight. > > I am not sure what notifications are we talking about here. There is a notification mechanism described in the SCMI spec [1] at 4.5.4 Notifications. We were referring to that mechanism. > >> Furthermore I think >> this still clashes with the assumption that cpufreq governor decisions >> are tracked in these statistics, not the firmware decision. >> >> In this case I think we would have to create debugfs. >> Sudeep do you think these debugfs should be exposed from the protocol >> layer: >> drivers/firmware/arm_scmi/perf.c >> or maybe from the cpufreq scmi driver? I would probably be safer to have >> it in the cpufreq driver because we have scmi_handle there. > > For the CPUs it would be better if we can keep things in cpufreq only, lets see > how we go about it. > If that would be only ARM SCMI debugfs directory, then we would like to keep it in the scmi. We could re-use the code for devfreq (GPU) device, which is also exposed as performance domain. Thank you Viresh for your comments. Regards, Lukasz [1] https://static.docs.arm.com/den0056/b/DEN0056B_System_Control_and_Management_Interface_v2_0.pdf
On 04-08-20, 11:29, Lukasz Luba wrote: > On 8/4/20 6:35 AM, Viresh Kumar wrote: > > IIUC, the only concern right now is to capture stats with fast switch ? Maybe we > > can do something else in that case and brainstorm a bit.. > > Correct, the fast switch is the only concern right now and not tracked. We > could fill in that information with statistics data from firmware > with a cpufreq driver help. > > I could make the if from patch 1/4 covering narrowed case, when > fast switch is present, check for drivers stats. > Something like: > -----------8<------------------------------------------------------------ > if (policy->fast_switch_enabled) > if (policy->has_driver_stats) > return cpufreq_stats_present_driver_data(policy, buf); > else > return 0; > -------------->8---------------------------------------------------------- I don't think doing it with help of firmware is the right thing to do here then. For another platform we may not have a firmware which can help us, we need something in the opp core itself for that. Lemme see if I can do something about it. > > Why is firmware the governor here ? Aren't you talking about the simple fast > > switch case only ? > > I used a term 'governor' for the firmware because it makes the final > set for the frequency. It (FW) should respect the frequency value > set using the fast switch. I don't know how other firmware (e.g. Intel) > treats this fast switch value or if they even expose FW stats, though. For Intel I think, Linux is one of the entities that vote for deciding the frequency of the CPUs and the firmware (after taking all such factors into account) chooses a frequency by its own, which must be >= the frequency requested by Linux. > You can read about this statistics region in [1] at: > 4.5.5 Performance domain statistics shared memory region > > > > > Over that, I think this cpufreq stats information isn't parsed by any tool right > > now and tweaking it a bit won't hurt anyone (like if we start capturing things a > > bit differently). So we may not want to worry about breaking userspace ABI here, > > if what we are looking to do is the right thing to do. > > So, there is some hope... IMHO it would be better to have this cpufreq > stats in normal location, rather then in scmi debugfs. I agree. > > I am not sure what notifications are we talking about here. > > There is a notification mechanism described in the SCMI spec [1] at > 4.5.4 Notifications. > We were referring to that mechanism. Ahh, I see. All I was thinking was about the cpufreq specific notifiers :)
On 8/4/20 11:38 AM, Viresh Kumar wrote: > On 04-08-20, 11:29, Lukasz Luba wrote: >> On 8/4/20 6:35 AM, Viresh Kumar wrote: >>> IIUC, the only concern right now is to capture stats with fast switch ? Maybe we >>> can do something else in that case and brainstorm a bit.. >> >> Correct, the fast switch is the only concern right now and not tracked. We >> could fill in that information with statistics data from firmware >> with a cpufreq driver help. >> >> I could make the if from patch 1/4 covering narrowed case, when >> fast switch is present, check for drivers stats. >> Something like: >> -----------8<------------------------------------------------------------ >> if (policy->fast_switch_enabled) >> if (policy->has_driver_stats) >> return cpufreq_stats_present_driver_data(policy, buf); >> else >> return 0; >> -------------->8---------------------------------------------------------- > > I don't think doing it with help of firmware is the right thing to do > here then. For another platform we may not have a firmware which can > help us, we need something in the opp core itself for that. Lemme see > if I can do something about it. OK, great, I will wait then with this patch series v2 which would change into debugfs scmi only. Could you please add me on CC, I am very interested in. > >>> Why is firmware the governor here ? Aren't you talking about the simple fast >>> switch case only ? >> >> I used a term 'governor' for the firmware because it makes the final >> set for the frequency. It (FW) should respect the frequency value >> set using the fast switch. I don't know how other firmware (e.g. Intel) >> treats this fast switch value or if they even expose FW stats, though. > > For Intel I think, Linux is one of the entities that vote for deciding > the frequency of the CPUs and the firmware (after taking all such > factors into account) chooses a frequency by its own, which must be >= > the frequency requested by Linux. > >> You can read about this statistics region in [1] at: >> 4.5.5 Performance domain statistics shared memory region >> >>> >>> Over that, I think this cpufreq stats information isn't parsed by any tool right >>> now and tweaking it a bit won't hurt anyone (like if we start capturing things a >>> bit differently). So we may not want to worry about breaking userspace ABI here, >>> if what we are looking to do is the right thing to do. >> >> So, there is some hope... IMHO it would be better to have this cpufreq >> stats in normal location, rather then in scmi debugfs. > > I agree. > >>> I am not sure what notifications are we talking about here. >> >> There is a notification mechanism described in the SCMI spec [1] at >> 4.5.4 Notifications. >> We were referring to that mechanism. > > Ahh, I see. All I was thinking was about the cpufreq specific > notifiers :) >
On 7/31/2020 8:56 AM, Sudeep Holla wrote: > On Thu, Jul 30, 2020 at 10:36:51AM +0100, Lukasz Luba wrote: >> >> In this case I think we would have to create debugfs. >> Sudeep do you think these debugfs should be exposed from the protocol >> layer: >> drivers/firmware/arm_scmi/perf.c > > I prefer above over cpufreq as we can support for all the devices not > just cpus which avoids adding similar support elsewhere(mostly devfreq) > >> or maybe from the cpufreq scmi driver? I would probably be safer to have >> it in the cpufreq driver because we have scmi_handle there. >> > > Cristian was thinking if we can consolidate all such debugfs under one > device may be and that should eliminate your handle restriction. I would > like to see how that works out in implementation but I don't have any > better suggestion ATM. debugfs is not enabled in production kernels, and especially not with Android kernels, so sticking those in sysfs like the existing cpufreq subsystem statistics may be a better choice.
On 7/29/2020 8:12 AM, Lukasz Luba wrote: > Hi all, > > The existing CPUFreq framework does not tracks the statistics when the > 'fast switch' is used or when firmware changes the frequency independently > due to e.g. thermal reasons. However, the firmware might track the frequency > changes and expose this to the kernel. Or the firmware might have changed the CPU frequency in response to a request from the secure world for instance. > > This patch set aims to introduce CPUfreq statistics gathered by firmware > and retrieved by CPUFreq driver. It would require a new API functions > in the CPUFreq, which allows to poke drivers to get these stats. From a debugging perspective, it would be helpful if the firmware maintained statistics were exposed as a super-set of the Linux cpufreq statistics and aggregated into them such that you could view the normal world vs. secure world residency of a given frequency point. This would help because a lot of times, Linux requests freq X, but the secure world requires freq Y (with X >= Y) and people do not really understand why the resulting power usage is higher for instance. What are your thoughts on this?
On 8/4/20 6:27 PM, Florian Fainelli wrote: > > > On 7/29/2020 8:12 AM, Lukasz Luba wrote: >> Hi all, >> >> The existing CPUFreq framework does not tracks the statistics when the >> 'fast switch' is used or when firmware changes the frequency independently >> due to e.g. thermal reasons. However, the firmware might track the frequency >> changes and expose this to the kernel. > > Or the firmware might have changed the CPU frequency in response to a > request from the secure world for instance. Possible > >> >> This patch set aims to introduce CPUfreq statistics gathered by firmware >> and retrieved by CPUFreq driver. It would require a new API functions >> in the CPUFreq, which allows to poke drivers to get these stats. > > From a debugging perspective, it would be helpful if the firmware > maintained statistics were exposed as a super-set of the Linux cpufreq > statistics and aggregated into them such that you could view the normal > world vs. secure world residency of a given frequency point. This would > help because a lot of times, Linux requests freq X, but the secure world > requires freq Y (with X >= Y) and people do not really understand why > the resulting power usage is higher for instance. > > What are your thoughts on this? > I know that Viresh is going to develop patches and improve these cpufreq stats framework. Maybe he also had this 'aggregation' in mind. I will leave it him. Thank you for your feedback. Regards, Lukasz
On Tue, Aug 04, 2020 at 10:19:23AM -0700, Florian Fainelli wrote: > > > On 7/31/2020 8:56 AM, Sudeep Holla wrote: > > On Thu, Jul 30, 2020 at 10:36:51AM +0100, Lukasz Luba wrote: > >> > >> In this case I think we would have to create debugfs. > >> Sudeep do you think these debugfs should be exposed from the protocol > >> layer: > >> drivers/firmware/arm_scmi/perf.c > > > > I prefer above over cpufreq as we can support for all the devices not > > just cpus which avoids adding similar support elsewhere(mostly devfreq) > > > >> or maybe from the cpufreq scmi driver? I would probably be safer to have > >> it in the cpufreq driver because we have scmi_handle there. > >> > > > > Cristian was thinking if we can consolidate all such debugfs under one > > device may be and that should eliminate your handle restriction. I would > > like to see how that works out in implementation but I don't have any > > better suggestion ATM. > > debugfs is not enabled in production kernels, and especially not with > Android kernels, so sticking those in sysfs like the existing cpufreq > subsystem statistics may be a better choice. Fair enough. I was suggesting that only if we can't push this into existing sysfs support. If we can, then we need not worry about it. If not, I don't want a user ABI just for SCMI for this firmware stats, I would rather keep it in debugfs for debug purposes. This will be useless once we start seeing AMU in the hardware and hence I was pushing for debugfs. -- Regards, Sudeep
On 05-08-20, 12:04, Lukasz Luba wrote: > I know that Viresh is going to develop patches and improve these > cpufreq stats framework. Maybe he also had this 'aggregation' in mind. > I will leave it him. I am only going to look at cpufreq's view of stats independently from the firmware.
On Wed, Aug 05, 2020 at 06:34:36PM +0530, Viresh Kumar wrote: > On 05-08-20, 12:04, Lukasz Luba wrote: > > I know that Viresh is going to develop patches and improve these > > cpufreq stats framework. Maybe he also had this 'aggregation' in mind. > > I will leave it him. > > I am only going to look at cpufreq's view of stats independently from > the firmware. > +1, I agree with that. Kernel must avoid any logic to aggregate or interpret the data in a generic way. The userspace tools can manage that especially if this tend to be platform specific. -- Regards, Sudeep
On 8/5/2020 9:03 AM, Sudeep Holla wrote: > On Wed, Aug 05, 2020 at 06:34:36PM +0530, Viresh Kumar wrote: >> On 05-08-20, 12:04, Lukasz Luba wrote: >>> I know that Viresh is going to develop patches and improve these >>> cpufreq stats framework. Maybe he also had this 'aggregation' in mind. >>> I will leave it him. >> >> I am only going to look at cpufreq's view of stats independently from >> the firmware. >> > > +1, I agree with that. Kernel must avoid any logic to aggregate or > interpret the data in a generic way. The userspace tools can manage that > especially if this tend to be platform specific. We can probably standardize on how to expose the firmware maintained statistics such that these tools do not have to widely vary from platform to platform, right?
On Wed, Aug 05, 2020 at 10:33:02AM -0700, Florian Fainelli wrote: > > > On 8/5/2020 9:03 AM, Sudeep Holla wrote: > > On Wed, Aug 05, 2020 at 06:34:36PM +0530, Viresh Kumar wrote: > >> On 05-08-20, 12:04, Lukasz Luba wrote: > >>> I know that Viresh is going to develop patches and improve these > >>> cpufreq stats framework. Maybe he also had this 'aggregation' in mind. > >>> I will leave it him. > >> > >> I am only going to look at cpufreq's view of stats independently from > >> the firmware. > >> > > > > +1, I agree with that. Kernel must avoid any logic to aggregate or > > interpret the data in a generic way. The userspace tools can manage that > > especially if this tend to be platform specific. > > We can probably standardize on how to expose the firmware maintained > statistics such that these tools do not have to widely vary from > platform to platform, right? Ofcourse. I just don't want any logic that interpret/analyse the stats comparing with the in-kernel stats or otherwise. -- Regards, Sudeep
On 04-08-20, 11:44, Lukasz Luba wrote: > On 8/4/20 11:38 AM, Viresh Kumar wrote: > > I don't think doing it with help of firmware is the right thing to do > > here then. For another platform we may not have a firmware which can > > help us, we need something in the opp core itself for that. Lemme see > > if I can do something about it. > > OK, great, I will wait then with this patch series v2 which would change > into debugfs scmi only. Could you please add me on CC, I am very > interested in. Here is an attempt. http://lore.kernel.org/lkml/cover.1599031227.git.viresh.kumar@linaro.org