On Tue, Dec 15, 2015 at 06:10:03PM +0000, Mark Rutland wrote: > On Tue, Dec 15, 2015 at 05:45:16PM +0000, Mark Brown wrote: > > > I'm not sure I follow w.r.t. "inherently less information", unless you > > > mean trying to debug without access to that DTB? > > If what the kernel knows about the system is that it's got a bunch of > > cores with numbers assigned to them then all it's really got is those > > numbers. If something changes that causes problems for some systems > > (eg, because the numbers have been picked poorly but in a way that > > happened to work well with the old code) that's not a lot to go on, the > > more we know about the system the more likely it is that we'll be able > > to adjust the assumptions in whatever new thing we do that causes > > problems for any particular systems where we run into trouble. > Regardless of where the numbers live (DT or kernel), all we have are > numbers. I can see that changing the in-kernel numbers would be possible > when modifyign the DT is not, but I don't see how that gives you more > information. It's mainly the modifying the DT case - you're not dealing with some external misguided number selection method you'd never thought of and you're not forcing some third party to redo benchmarks or adjust DTs they may not want to adjust. You're also able to readjust the numbers based on feedback if you need to rather than having to adapt algorithms to handle particular number selections, the algorithm and number selection are done together rather than separately.
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