> > + if (dev->prepare) > > + dev->prepare(dev, data->predicted_us); > > > > I don't like the idea of passing predicted_us here. > the states and their updates should be independent of how long we > think we'll be idle; The power_usage value, total or average, would depend on how long the predicted idle period is. On our SoCs, a cpuidle state has three stages: entry stage, low power stage, and exit stage. Entry and exit stages consume more power than the low power stage but have fixed durations, irrespective how long the idle period is. As the predicted idle period changes, the entry and exit duration stay the same but the low power duration changes, resulting in different total or average power for the idle period. > Also I would like the cpuidle code, not the governor, to call this > prepare function. > The need to call ->prepare is governor independent.... I agree that it would be cleaner to call ->prepare from the cpuidle code. But if we need values calculated in the governor's select function, I'm not sure what is the best way to do that from cpuidle code. > + if (dev->compare_power) { > > I'm not a big fan of this as a flag; either we always do this, > which I > can understand, or we sort things, which is also fine with me. > Doing this condition like this.... not a fan. One of the concerns I have is backwards compatibility. As far as I know, none of the current cpuidle drivers use the power_usage field. If we always do compare_power, those drivers would break until someone with technical device knowledge update the drivers to specify power... I could derive fake power_usage numbers by default, using the cstate index position. That seems kind of hacky but it would remove the need for the compare_power flag and retain the current behavior when cpuidle drivers do not provide their own power numbers. ~Ai Employee of Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. is a member of Code Aurora Forum _______________________________________________ linux-pm mailing list linux-pm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.linux-foundation.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-pm