On Thu, 2010-06-03 at 11:03 +0100, Alan Cox wrote: > > [mtg: ] This has been a pain point for the PM_QOS implementation. They change the constrain back and forth at the transaction level of the i2c driver. The pm_qos code really wasn't made to deal with such hot path use, as each such change triggers a re-computation of what the aggregate qos request is. > > That should be trivial in the usual case because 99% of the time you can > hot path > > the QoS entry changing is the latest one > there have been no other changes > If it is valid I can use the cached previous aggregate I cunningly > saved in the top QoS entry when I computed the new one > > (ie most of the time from the kernel side you have a QoS stack) It's not just the list based computation: that's trivial to fix, as you say ... the other problem is the notifier chain, because that's blocking and could be long. Could we invoke the notifier through a workqueue? It doesn't seem to have veto power, so it's pure notification, does it matter if the notice is delayed (as long as it's in order)? > > We've had a number of attempts at fixing this, but I think the proper fix is to bolt a "disable C-states > x" interface into cpu_idle that bypases pm_qos altogether. Or, perhaps add a new pm_qos API that does the equivalent operation, overriding whatever constraint is active. > > We need some of this anyway for deep power saving because there is > hardware which can't wake from soem states, which in turn means if that > device is active we need to be above the state in question. James -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-omap" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html