PM: EM: Update Energy Model with new flag indicating power scale

Update description and meaning of a new flag, which indicates the type of
power scale used for a registered Energy Model (EM) device.

Reviewed-by: Quentin Perret <qperret@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Lukasz Luba <lukasz.luba@arm.com>
Signed-off-by: Rafael J. Wysocki <rafael.j.wysocki@intel.com>
This commit is contained in:
Lukasz Luba 2020-11-03 09:06:00 +00:00 committed by Rafael J. Wysocki
parent f2c90b12e7
commit b56a352c0d

View File

@ -30,6 +30,8 @@ These subsystems are more interested in estimation of power used in the past,
thus the real milli-Watts might be needed. An example of these requirements can
be found in the Intelligent Power Allocation in
Documentation/driver-api/thermal/power_allocator.rst.
Kernel subsystems might implement automatic detection to check whether EM
registered devices have inconsistent scale (based on EM internal flag).
Important thing to keep in mind is that when the power values are expressed in
an 'abstract scale' deriving real energy in milli-Joules would not be possible.
@ -86,7 +88,7 @@ Drivers are expected to register performance domains into the EM framework by
calling the following API::
int em_dev_register_perf_domain(struct device *dev, unsigned int nr_states,
struct em_data_callback *cb, cpumask_t *cpus);
struct em_data_callback *cb, cpumask_t *cpus, bool milliwatts);
Drivers must provide a callback function returning <frequency, power> tuples
for each performance state. The callback function provided by the driver is free
@ -94,6 +96,10 @@ to fetch data from any relevant location (DT, firmware, ...), and by any mean
deemed necessary. Only for CPU devices, drivers must specify the CPUs of the
performance domains using cpumask. For other devices than CPUs the last
argument must be set to NULL.
The last argument 'milliwatts' is important to set with correct value. Kernel
subsystems which use EM might rely on this flag to check if all EM devices use
the same scale. If there are different scales, these subsystems might decide
to: return warning/error, stop working or panic.
See Section 3. for an example of driver implementing this
callback, and kernel/power/energy_model.c for further documentation on this
API.
@ -169,7 +175,8 @@ EM framework::
37 nr_opp = foo_get_nr_opp(policy);
38
39 /* And register the new performance domain */
40 em_dev_register_perf_domain(cpu_dev, nr_opp, &em_cb, policy->cpus);
41
42 return 0;
43 }
40 em_dev_register_perf_domain(cpu_dev, nr_opp, &em_cb, policy->cpus,
41 true);
42
43 return 0;
44 }