* Dave Hansen <dave@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> [2011-06-29 10:59:02]: > On Wed, 2011-06-29 at 23:12 +0530, Ankita Garg wrote: > > 4. The kernel must have a mechanism to maintain utilization > > statistics pertaining to a piece of hardware, so that it can > > trigger the hardware to power it off > > Having statistics like this would certainly be nice, but how important > _is_ it? Is it really a show-stopper? There's some stuff today, like > the NPT/EPT support in KVM where we don't even have visibility in to > when a given page is referenced. > > It's also going to be a pain to track kernel references. On x86, our > kernel linear mapping uses 1GB pages when it can, and those are greater > than the 512MB granularity that we've been talking about here. It's > even larger on powerpc. I'm also pretty sure we don't even _look_ at > the referenced bits in the kernel page tables. We'll definitely need > some infrastructure to do that. Utilization is all about allocated vs free and at most 'type of allocation'. We are not looking at actual reference rates from page tables. A free or unallocated page is not going to be referenced. > > 5. Being able to group these pieces of hardware for purpose of > > higher savings. > > Do you really mean group, or do you mean "turn as many off as possible"? Grouping based on hardware topology could help save more power at higher granularity. In most cases just turning as many off as possible will work. But the design should allow grouping based on certain rules or hierarchies. --Vaidy _______________________________________________ linux-pm mailing list linux-pm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.linux-foundation.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-pm