Re: [RFC][PATCH 0/3] New thermal interface allowing IPA to get max power

From: Lukasz Luba
Date: Mon Feb 22 2021 - 07:12:02 EST


Hi Daniel,

On 2/22/21 10:22 AM, Daniel Lezcano wrote:

Hi Lukasz,

sorry for the delay, it took more time to finish my current work before
commenting these patches.

No worries, thank you looking at this.


On 26/01/2021 11:39, Lukasz Luba wrote:
Hi all,

This patch set tries to add the missing feature in the Intelligent Power
Allocation (IPA) governor which is: frequency limit set by user space.

It is unclear if we are talking about frequency limit of the dvfs device
by setting the hardware limit (min-max freq). If it is the case, then
that is an energy model change, and all user of the energy model must be
notified about this change. But I don't see why userspace wants to
change that.

If we just want to set a frequency limit, then that is what we are doing
with the DTPM framework via power numbers.

User can set max allowed frequency for a given device which has impact on
max allowed power. In current design there is no mechanism to figure this
out. IPA must know the maximum allowed power for every device. It is then
used for proper power split and divvy-up. When the user limit for max
frequency is not know, IPA assumes it is the highest possible frequency.
It causes wrong power split across the devices.

That is because the IPA introduced the power rebalancing between devices
belonging the same thermal zone, so the feature was very use case specific.

The DTPM is supposed to solve this by providing an unified uW unit to
act on the different power capable devices on a generic way.

Today DTPM is mapped to userspace using the powercap framework, but it
is considered to add kernel API to let other subsystem to act on it
directly. May be, you can add those and call them from IPA directly, so
the governor does power decision and ask the DTPM to do the changes.

Conceptually, that would be much more consistent and will remove
duplicated code IMO.

May be create a power_qos framework to unify the units ...

This new mechanism provides the max allowed frequency to the thermal
framework and then max allowed power to the IPA.
The implementation is done in this way because currently there is no way
to retrieve the limits from the PM QoS, without uncapping the local
thermal limit and reading the next value. It would be a heavy way of
doing these things, since it should be done every polling time (e.g. 50ms).

Also, the value stored in PM QoS can be different than the real OPP 'rate'
so still would need conversion into proper OPP for comparison with EM.
Furthermore, uncapping the device in thermal just to check the user freq
limit is not the safest way.
Thus, this simple implementation moves the calculation of the proper
frequency to the sysfs write code, since it's called less often. The value
is then used as-is in the thermal framework without any hassle.

Sounds like the DTPM is doing exactly that, no ?

As it's a RFC, it still misses the cpufreq sysfs implementation, but would
be addressed if all agree.
We are talking about power, frequency, in-kernel governor, userspace
having knowledge of max frequency limit to set power.

I'm a bit lost. What is the problem we want to solve here ?

May be I'm missing something. Is it possible to share a scenario where
the userspace acts on the devfreq and the IPA taking decision to
illustrate your proposal ?



Sure, here is the description of the configuration and scenario in which
the issue is present.
SoC with 2 CPU clusters (consuming 1W (little cluster) and 3W (big
cluster) at max freq, plenty of OPPs available),
1 GPU (at max consuming ~6W, a few of OPPs),

Scenario:
IPA is working because temperature crossed 1st threshold and tries to
control the system to 'converge' to 2nd temp threshold. It checks
the actors max possible power [1], gets the current power, calculates
current budget, split that budget and grants power across actors so
max allowed frequency is set via QoS.

The state2power() callback called at [1] with argument '0' would return
the power from EM for the highest OPP. This is fine in most cases. That
power information is used in line 359 and 364 during the split.

If the user-space (the aware middleware) wants to switch into different
power-performance mode e.g. power-saving, it writes into device sysfs
to limit max allowed freq. Then IPA does not know about it and makes
wrong decisions. It's an issue for GPUs (but CPUs also) which can
consume big power at higher freq. For example to limit this 6W into
3W, simple freq write via sysfs is enough, but IPA completely is not
aware of that (as you can see in the code).

The sysfs interface for GPU:
$ cat /sys/class/devfreq/<device>/available_frequencies
400000000 600000000 800000000 1000000000

$ echo 600000000 > /sys/class/devfreq/<device>/max_freq
$ cat /sys/class/devfreq/<device>/max_freq
600000000

IMHO is not an issue of IPA, because DTPM might suffer for this
missing 'user write' information as well. It's just missing
design feature, to provide that user information further to the
other frameworks or governors.

Regards,
Lukasz

[1] https://elixir.bootlin.com/linux/latest/source/drivers/thermal/gov_power_allocator.c#L458