On Sat, Apr 13, 2024 at 09:31:47PM +0200, Konrad Dybcio wrote: > On 3.04.2024 10:45 AM, Odelu Kukatla wrote: > > > > > > On 3/27/2024 2:26 AM, Konrad Dybcio wrote: > >> On 25.03.2024 7:16 PM, Odelu Kukatla wrote: > >>> It adds QoS support for QNOC device and includes support for > >>> configuring priority, priority forward disable, urgency forwarding. > >>> This helps in priortizing the traffic originating from different > >>> interconnect masters at NoC(Network On Chip). > >>> > >>> Signed-off-by: Odelu Kukatla <quic_okukatla@xxxxxxxxxxx> > >>> --- > > [...] > > >>> @@ -70,6 +102,7 @@ struct qcom_icc_node { > >>> u64 max_peak[QCOM_ICC_NUM_BUCKETS]; > >>> struct qcom_icc_bcm *bcms[MAX_BCM_PER_NODE]; > >>> size_t num_bcms; > >>> + const struct qcom_icc_qosbox *qosbox; > >> > >> I believe I came up with a better approach for storing this.. see [1] > >> > >> Konrad > >> > >> [1] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-arm-msm/20240326-topic-rpm_icc_qos_cleanup-v1-4-357e736792be@xxxxxxxxxx/ Note that I replied to this patch series as well. Similar comments here for how that approach would apply to icc-rpmh. > >> > > > > I see in this series, QoS parameters are moved into struct qcom_icc_desc. > > Even though we program QoS at Provider/Bus level, it is property of the node/master connected to a Bus/NoC. > > I don't see how it could be the case, we're obviously telling the controller which > endpoints have priority over others, not telling nodes whether the data they > transfer can omit the queue. The QoS settings tune the priority of data coming out of a specific port on the NOC. The nodes are 1:1 with the ports. Yes, this does tell the NOC which ports have priority over others. But that's done by configuring each port's priority in their own port-specific QoS registers. > > > It will be easier later to know which master's QoS we are programming if we add in node data. > > Readability point of view, it might be good to keep QoS parameters in node data. > > I don't agree here either, with the current approach we've made countless mistakes > when converting the downstream data (I have already submitted some fixes with more > in flight), as there's tons of jumping around the code to find what goes where. I don't follow why keeping the port's own QoS settings in that port's struct results in more jumping around. It should do the opposite, in fact. If someone wants to know the QoS settings applied to the qhm_qup0 port, then they should be able to look directly in the qhm_qup0 struct. Otherwise, if it's placed elsewhere then they'd have to jump elsewhere to find what that logical qhm_qup0-related data is set to. If it *was* placed elsewhere, then we'd still need some logical way to map between that separate location and the node it's associated with. Which is a problem with your patch for cleaning up the icc-rpm QoS. In its current form, it's impossible to identify which QoS settings apply to which logical node (without detailed knowledge of the NOC register layout). Keeping this data with the node struct reduces the need for extra layers of mapping between the QoS settings and the node struct. It keeps all the port-related information all together in one place. I did like your earlier suggestion of using a compound literal to initialize the .qosbox pointers, such that we don't need a separate top-level variable defined for them. They're only ever referenced by a single node, so there's no need for them to be separate variables. But I don't see the logic in totally separating the QoS data from the port it's associated with. > > Konrad