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authorDaniel Lezcano <daniel.lezcano@linaro.org>2020-12-08 17:41:44 +0100
committerRafael J. Wysocki <rafael.j.wysocki@intel.com>2020-12-22 19:50:40 +0100
commita20d0ef97abf486a917aff066c457bdb930425af (patch)
treee20e02d173dbf2be2675cdcbd34252f466008ac8 /drivers/powercap/Makefile
parentf5ad1c747956d501516610ee7900f4a6d57ee2f5 (diff)
downloadlwn-a20d0ef97abf486a917aff066c457bdb930425af.tar.gz
lwn-a20d0ef97abf486a917aff066c457bdb930425af.zip
powercap/drivers/dtpm: Add API for dynamic thermal power management
On the embedded world, the complexity of the SoC leads to an increasing number of hotspots which need to be monitored and mitigated as a whole in order to prevent the temperature to go above the normative and legally stated 'skin temperature'. Another aspect is to sustain the performance for a given power budget, for example virtual reality where the user can feel dizziness if the GPU performance is capped while a big CPU is processing something else. Or reduce the battery charging because the dissipated power is too high compared with the power consumed by other devices. The userspace is the most adequate place to dynamically act on the different devices by limiting their power given an application profile: it has the knowledge of the platform. These userspace daemons are in charge of the Dynamic Thermal Power Management (DTPM). Nowadays, the dtpm daemons are abusing the thermal framework as they act on the cooling device state to force a specific and arbitrary state without taking care of the governor decisions. Given the closed loop of some governors that can confuse the logic or directly enter in a decision conflict. As the number of cooling device support is limited today to the CPU and the GPU, the dtpm daemons have little control on the power dissipation of the system. The out of tree solutions are hacking around here and there in the drivers, in the frameworks to have control on the devices. The common solution is to declare them as cooling devices. There is no unification of the power limitation unit, opaque states are used. This patch provides a way to create a hierarchy of constraints using the powercap framework. The devices which are registered as power limit-able devices are represented in this hierarchy as a tree. They are linked together with intermediate nodes which are just there to propagate the constraint to the children. The leaves of the tree are the real devices, the intermediate nodes are virtual, aggregating the children constraints and power characteristics. Each node have a weight on a 2^10 basis, in order to reflect the percentage of power distribution of the children's node. This percentage is used to dispatch the power limit to the children. The weight is computed against the max power of the siblings. This simple approach allows to do a fair distribution of the power limit. Signed-off-by: Daniel Lezcano <daniel.lezcano@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Lukasz Luba <lukasz.luba@arm.com> Tested-by: Lukasz Luba <lukasz.luba@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Rafael J. Wysocki <rafael.j.wysocki@intel.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'drivers/powercap/Makefile')
-rw-r--r--drivers/powercap/Makefile1
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/drivers/powercap/Makefile b/drivers/powercap/Makefile
index 7255c94ec61c..6482ac52054d 100644
--- a/drivers/powercap/Makefile
+++ b/drivers/powercap/Makefile
@@ -1,4 +1,5 @@
# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only
+obj-$(CONFIG_DTPM) += dtpm.o
obj-$(CONFIG_POWERCAP) += powercap_sys.o
obj-$(CONFIG_INTEL_RAPL_CORE) += intel_rapl_common.o
obj-$(CONFIG_INTEL_RAPL) += intel_rapl_msr.o