Hi Robin, On Wed, Jan 1, 2020 at 1:55 PM Robin Murphy <robin.murphy@xxxxxxx> wrote: > > On 2019-12-31 4:47 pm, Martin Blumenstingl wrote: > > Hi Robin, > > > > On Tue, Dec 31, 2019 at 5:40 PM Robin Murphy <robin.murphy@xxxxxxx> wrote: > >> > >> On 2019-12-31 2:17 pm, Martin Blumenstingl wrote: > >>> Hi Robin, > >>> > >>> On Mon, Dec 30, 2019 at 1:47 AM Robin Murphy <robin.murphy@xxxxxxx> wrote: > >>>> > >>>> On 2019-12-29 11:19 pm, Martin Blumenstingl wrote: > >>>>> Hi Robin, > >>>>> > >>>>> On Sun, Dec 29, 2019 at 11:58 PM Robin Murphy <robin.murphy@xxxxxxx> wrote: > >>>>>> > >>>>>> Hi Martin, > >>>>>> > >>>>>> On 2019-12-27 5:37 pm, Martin Blumenstingl wrote: > >>>>>>> Most platforms with a Mali-400 or Mali-450 GPU also have support for > >>>>>>> changing the GPU clock frequency. Add devfreq support so the GPU clock > >>>>>>> rate is updated based on the actual GPU usage when the > >>>>>>> "operating-points-v2" property is present in the board.dts. > >>>>>>> > >>>>>>> The actual devfreq code is taken from panfrost_devfreq.c and modified so > >>>>>>> it matches what the lima hardware needs: > >>>>>>> - a call to dev_pm_opp_set_clkname() during initialization because there > >>>>>>> are two clocks on Mali-4x0 IPs. "core" is the one that actually clocks > >>>>>>> the GPU so we need to control it using devfreq. > >>>>>>> - locking when reading or writing the devfreq statistics because (unlike > >>>>>>> than panfrost) we have multiple PP and GP IRQs which may finish jobs > >>>>>>> concurrently. > >>>>>> > >>>>>> I gave this a quick try on my RK3328, and the clock scaling indeed kicks > >>>>>> in nicely on the glmark2 scenes that struggle, however something appears > >>>>>> to be missing in terms of regulator association, as the appropriate OPP > >>>>>> voltages aren't reflected in the GPU supply (fortunately the initial > >>>>>> voltage seems close enough to that of the highest OPP not to cause major > >>>>>> problems, on my box at least). With panfrost on RK3399 I do see the > >>>>>> supply voltage scaling accordingly, but I don't know my way around > >>>>>> devfreq well enough to know what matters in the difference :/ > >>>>> first of all: thank you for trying this out! :-) > >>>>> > >>>>> does your kernel include commit 221bc77914cbcc ("drm/panfrost: Use > >>>>> generic code for devfreq") for your panfrost test? > >>>>> if I understand the devfreq API correct then I suspect with that > >>>>> commit panfrost also won't change the voltage anymore. > >>>> > >>>> Oh, you're quite right - I was already considering that change as > >>>> ancient history, but indeed it's only in 5.5-rc, while that board is > >>>> still on 5.4.y release kernels. No wonder I couldn't make sense of how > >>>> the (current) code could possibly be working :) > >>>> > >>>> I'll try the latest -rc kernel tomorrow to confirm (now that PCIe is > >>>> hopefully fixed), but I'm already fairly confident you've called it > >>>> correctly. > >>> I just tested it with the lima driver (by undervolting the GPU by > >>> 0.05V) and it seems that dev_pm_opp_set_regulators is really needed. > >>> I'll fix this in the next version of this patch and also submit a fix > >>> for panfrost (I won't be able to test that though, so help is > >>> appreciated in terms of testing :)) > >> > >> Yeah, I started hacking something up for panfrost yesterday, but at the > >> point of realising the core OPP code wants refactoring to actually > >> handle optional regulators without spewing errors, decided that was > >> crossing the line into "work" and thus could wait until next week :D > > I'm not sure what you mean, dev_pm_opp_set_regulators uses > > regulator_get_optional. > > doesn't that mean that it is optional already? > > Indeed it does call regulator_get_optional(), but it then goes on to > treat the absence of a supposedly-optional regulator as a hard failure. > It doesn't seem very useful having a nice abstracted interface if users > still end up have to dance around and duplicate half the parsing in > order to work out whether it's worth calling or not - far better IMO if > it could just successfully set/put zero regulators in the cases where > the OPPs are behind a firmware/mailbox DVFS interface rather than > explicit in-kernel clock/regulator control. thank you for the explanation I'll experience this case on newer Amlogic SoCs where regulators are hidden behind SCPI firmware. so far I have only tested the case without OPP-table on those SoCs. > That said, given that I think the current lima/panfrost users should all > be relatively simple with either 0 or 1 regulator, you could probably > just special-case -ENODEV and accept a spurious error message sometimes > for the sake of an immediate fix, then we can make general improvements > to the interface separately afterwards. OK, I'll be working on this next week again if you get to fix panfrost earlier then please Cc me so we don't duplicate work Martin _______________________________________________ dri-devel mailing list dri-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/dri-devel