On Tuesday, January 17, 2012, Antti P Miettinen wrote: > "Rafael J. Wysocki" <rjw@xxxxxxx> writes: > > If that hasn't been clear enough so far, I'm still not convinced that using > > PM QoS for that is a good idea. > > > > First off, frequency as a unit of throughput is questionable to say the least, > > because it isn't portable from one system to another. Moreover, even on a > > given system it isn't particularly clear what the exact correspondence > > between frequency and throughput actually is. > > > > Second, it's not particularly clear what the meaning of the "min" frequency > > is supposed to be in terms of throughput. > > > > Moreover, you make cpufreq export user_policy.min and user_policy.max > > regardless of the new PM QoS parameters, so it looks like you could use those > > new attributes to set the min/max as well. > > > > Thanks, > > Rafael > > Thanks - yes - I've understood you are not convinced :-) > > Is there any reason why the mapping from application oriented > performance requirement metric to hardware oriented performance setting > metric would need to be inside kernel? As I've said (and Mark Gross > seems to agree) the performance requirements are likely to be system > specific and probably obtained via trial and error or some kind of > adaptive iteration. Wouldn't it be better to leave this complexity > outside PM QoS core or even outside kernel if possible? If I understand you correctly, you want to have an iterface for specifying min and max frequencies from user space. I can understand that. At least I can see some use cases for that. Now, the question is if using the PM QoS framework is the right way to do that. > The change to cpufreq core just adds two read-only files to be able to > inspect user_policy.min/max in addition to the currently enforced > policy->min/max. Yes - there has been the possibility of using the sysfs > min for setting a frequency floor but this is problematic when there are > multiple clients. You'd need some kind of arbitration and book keeping > to set/restore the minimum. And PM QoS provides exactly this mechanism. Just as I suspected. :-) OK, so what's your anticipated usage model of this? > I think the kernel needs to be extended to handle more PM constraints > and PM QoS is the closest thing I know for this kind of > functionality. However, I'm open to suggestions about alternative > approaches. I think we need e.g. more than just min/max "reduction > operators". Ideas, anyone? I first need to know who those multiple clients are going to be. Thanks, Rafael _______________________________________________ linux-pm mailing list linux-pm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-pm