Re: [PATCH v3 0/4] Clarify abstract scale usage for power values in Energy Model, EAS and IPA

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On 10/29/20 3:39 PM, Doug Anderson wrote:
Hi,

On Thu, Oct 29, 2020 at 5:37 AM Lukasz Luba <lukasz.luba@xxxxxxx> wrote:

On 10/20/20 1:15 AM, Doug Anderson wrote:
Hi,

On Mon, Oct 19, 2020 at 7:06 AM Lukasz Luba <lukasz.luba@xxxxxxx> wrote:

Hi all,

The Energy Model supports power values expressed in an abstract scale.
This has an impact on Intelligent Power Allocation (IPA) and should be
documented properly. Kernel sub-systems like EAS, IPA and DTPM
(new comming PowerCap framework) would use the new flag to capture
potential miss-configuration where the devices have registered different
power scales, thus cannot operate together.

There was a discussion below v2 of this patch series, which might help
you to get context of these changes [2].

The agreed approach is to have the DT as a source of power values expressed
always in milli-Watts and the only way to submit with abstract scale values
is via the em_dev_register_perf_domain() API.

Changes:
v3:
- added boolean flag to struct em_perf_domain and registration function
    indicating if EM holds real power values in milli-Watts (suggested by
    Daniel and aggreed with Quentin)
- updated documentation regarding this new flag
- dropped DT binding change for 'sustainable-power'
- added more maintainers on CC (due to patch 1/4 touching different things)
v2 [2]:
- updated sustainable power section in IPA documentation
- updated DT binding for the 'sustainable-power'
v1 [1]:
- simple documenation update with new 'abstract scale' in EAS, EM, IPA

Regards,
Lukasz Luba

[1] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-doc/20200929121610.16060-1-lukasz.luba@xxxxxxx/
[2] https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20201002114426.31277-1-lukasz.luba@xxxxxxx/

Lukasz Luba (4):
    PM / EM: Add a flag indicating units of power values in Energy Model
    docs: Clarify abstract scale usage for power values in Energy Model
    PM / EM: update the comments related to power scale
    docs: power: Update Energy Model with new flag indicating power scale

   .../driver-api/thermal/power_allocator.rst    | 13 +++++++-
   Documentation/power/energy-model.rst          | 30 +++++++++++++++----
   Documentation/scheduler/sched-energy.rst      |  5 ++++
   drivers/cpufreq/scmi-cpufreq.c                |  3 +-
   drivers/opp/of.c                              |  2 +-
   include/linux/energy_model.h                  | 20 ++++++++-----
   kernel/power/energy_model.c                   | 26 ++++++++++++++--
   7 files changed, 81 insertions(+), 18 deletions(-)

While I don't feel like I have enough skin in the game to make any
demands, I'm definitely not a huge fan of this series still.  I am a
fan of documenting reality, but (to me) trying to mix stuff like this
is just going to be adding needless complexity.  From where I'm
standing, it's a lot more of a pain to specify these types of numbers
in the firmware than it is to specify them in the device tree.  They

When you have SCMI, you receive power values from FW directly, not using
DT.

are harder to customize per board, harder to spin, and harder to
specify constraints for everything in the system (all heat generators,
all cooling devices, etc).  ...and since we already have a way to
specify this type of thing in the device tree and that's super easy
for people to do, we're going to end up with weird mixes / matches of
numbers coming from different locations and now we've got to figure
out which numbers we can use when and which to ignore.  Ick.

This is not that bad as you described. When you have SCMI and FW
all your perf domains should be aligned to the same scale.
In example, you have 4 little CPU, 3 big CPUs, 1 super big CPU,
1 GPU, 1 DSP. For all of them the SCMI get_power callback should return
consistent values. You don't have to specify anything else or rev-eng.
Then a client like EAS would use those values from CPUs to estimate
energy and this works fine. Another client: IPA, which would use
all of them and also works fine.

I guess I'm confused.  When using SCMI and FW, are there already code
paths to get the board-specific "sustainable-power" from SCMI and FW?

I know that "sustainable-power" is not truly necessary.  IIRC some of
the code assumes that the lowest power state of all components must be
sustainable and uses that.  However, though this makes the code work,
it's far from ideal.  I don't want to accept a mediocre solution here.

As you said, sustainable power would be estimated when it is not coming
from DT. Currently it would be done based on lowest allowed OPPs. I am
trying to address this by marking OPP as sustainable [1]. The estimation would be more accurate (and also the derived coefficients).


In any case, I'm saying that even if "sustainable-power" can come from
firmware, it's not as ideal of a place for it to live.  Maybe my
experience on Chromebooks is different from the rest of upstream, but
it's generally quite easy to adjust the device tree for a board and
much harder to convince firmware folks to put a board-specific table
of values.

The sysfs (which is there) is even easier for this adjustment than DT.



In my opinion the only way to allow for mixing and matching the
bogoWatts and real Watts would be to actually have units and the
ability to provide a conversion factor somewhere.  Presumably that
might give you a chance of mixing and matching if someone wants to
provide some stuff in device tree and get other stuff from the
firmware.  Heck, I guess you could even magically figure out a
conversion factor if someone provides device tree numbers for
something that was already registered in SCMI, assuming all the SCMI
numbers are consistent with each other...

What you demand here is another code path, just to support revers
engineered power values for SCMI devices, which are stored in DT.
Then the SCMI protocol code and drivers should take them into account
and abandon standard implementation and use these values to provide
'hacked' power numbers to EM. Am I right?
It is not going to happen.

Quite honestly, all I want to be able to do is to provide a
board-specific "sustainable-power" and have it match with the
power-coefficients.  Thus:

* If device tree accepted abstract scale, we'd be done and I'd shut
up.  ...but Rob has made it quite clear that this is a no-go.

* If it was super easy to add all these values into firmware for a
board and we could totally remove these from the device tree, I'd
grumble a bit about firmware being a terrible place for this but at
least we'd have a solution and we'd be done and I'd shut up.  NOTE: I
don't know ATF terribly well, but I'd guess that this needs to go
there?  Presumably part of this is convincing firmware folks to add
this board-specific value there...

The SCMI spec that we are talking supports 'sustained performance'
level for each performance domain. You can check doc [2] table 11
for the definition. In SCMI there is no concept of 'sustainable-power'
which would substitute the missing DT value. But we can estimate it
more accurately based on sustainable OPP.
You can check how I am going to feed that FW value into the OPP in patch
4/4 of [3]. I am also working on improved estimation patch set v4 for
IPA (some description of an issue in v2 [4], latest v3 is here [5]),
which is using the proposed sustainable OPP concept (Viresh mentioned
he would like to see the user of that).

As you can see, I am not going to leave you with this issue ;)

Regards,
Lukasz


[1] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-pm/20201028140847.1018-1-lukasz.luba@xxxxxxx/
[2] https://developer.arm.com/documentation/den0056/b
[3] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-pm/20201028140847.1018-5-lukasz.luba@xxxxxxx/ [4] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-pm/5f682bbb-b250-49e6-dbb7-aea522a58595@xxxxxxx/
[5] https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20201009135850.14727-1-lukasz.luba@xxxxxxx/


-Doug




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