On 14/10/2020 17:24, Lukasz Luba wrote: [ ... ] > We have to update the EM doc about allowed abstract scale, which > implies EAS, IPA doc update with some information to the community that > these components can handle it. > > The script will just make developers life easier, but the current > documentation does not say anything about abstract scale. ... yes, because there is no consistency across the source of power numbers and no tools to ensure DT power numbers consistency, yet. >> In any case, if the DT is specifying real numbers, and SCMI abstract >> numbers or the opposite, obviously there is a conflict if we are using >> both. > > True, DT only allows real numbers (I have Rob's opinion regarding > patch 3/3). > > It's not that there is only SCMI which might use abstract scale. Qcom > already has it and other vendors will follow (not exposing real > numbers). They would register bogoWatts to EM because they know that EAS > can deal with both. So vendors are using bogoWatts, despite the documentation. By updating the documentation saying it supports the abstract values, that means every new framework, device with power values, will have to comply with that. How is it possible to add a device with power numbers if the existing ones are obfuscated ? With two subsystems using the energy model, evolving independently we can see there are conflicts. With more subsystems, that may become a source of confusion, especially with different contributors. I think the energy model should stick to milliwatts and keep the documentation unchanged regarding this. And vendors should take the responsibility of not sticking to the documentation. >> I suggest to fix the conflict first and provide the features to make the >> numbers more easy to share (like the script described above and/or the >> firmware file). >> >> Then with the right tools, everything can be documented. >> > > We cannot block one way of registration to EM when the other was used. > They might have correct and consistent numbers. What is the rational of using two firmware power information ? > It's up to the platform developers to choose the path: > - go with bogoWatts - if they are not allowed to expose sensitive > information, use em_dev_register_perf_domain() in drivers, not DT; > make sure everything that is needed works; check the doc, which > sub-systems can handle it or needs some tuning (patches 1/3 and 2/3 > try to help here); > - use milliWatts - easier; DT is allowed; help from the community in > reviews, possible results comparisons; both EM registration ways > might be used; > > We cannot force vendors/OEM engineers to store milliWatts in the > Energy Model if these values are protected by some NDA. If I am able to measure one real power value, (and I'm pretty sure it is quite possible), whatever which one, it is possible to deduce all the numbers with the linear scale. IMO that is a false debate. Anyway ... > Your proposed > way of providing data into EM from user-space firmware.bin IMHO also > falls into the same bucket. That information would be accessible in EM > debugfs and they would avoid it. I think you misunderstood my point. There is the SCMI and the DT. Because there are two sources where it is impossible to know if they are using the same units, we are stuck to ensure a consistency for the kernel. The platform should use: - the SCMI only (scaled or real) - the DT only (real) [ - the firmware file only (scaled or real) ] As it is not possible to know if they are scaled or real, there is no choice except making them mutually exclusive. >From my POV, it is not adequate to let SCMI power information co-exists with the DT power information if we know they can be with different units. I've just expressed my opinions: - vendors take responsibility of putting different units for the EM - Power numbers should come from the same source Up to Rafael to decide what to do with this documentation update. Thanks -- Daniel -- <http://www.linaro.org/> Linaro.org │ Open source software for ARM SoCs Follow Linaro: <http://www.facebook.com/pages/Linaro> Facebook | <http://twitter.com/#!/linaroorg> Twitter | <http://www.linaro.org/linaro-blog/> Blog