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- /*
- * pcc-cpufreq.txt - PCC interface documentation
- *
- * Copyright (C) 2009 Red Hat, Matthew Garrett <mjg@redhat.com>
- * Copyright (C) 2009 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P.
- * Nagananda Chumbalkar <nagananda.chumbalkar@hp.com>
- *
- * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- *
- * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
- * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
- * the Free Software Foundation; version 2 of the License.
- *
- * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
- * WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
- * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, GOOD TITLE or NON
- * INFRINGEMENT. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
- *
- * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along
- * with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc.,
- * 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
- *
- * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- */
- Processor Clocking Control Driver
- ---------------------------------
- Contents:
- ---------
- 1. Introduction
- 1.1 PCC interface
- 1.1.1 Get Average Frequency
- 1.1.2 Set Desired Frequency
- 1.2 Platforms affected
- 2. Driver and /sys details
- 2.1 scaling_available_frequencies
- 2.2 cpuinfo_transition_latency
- 2.3 cpuinfo_cur_freq
- 2.4 related_cpus
- 3. Caveats
- 1. Introduction:
- ----------------
- Processor Clocking Control (PCC) is an interface between the platform
- firmware and OSPM. It is a mechanism for coordinating processor
- performance (ie: frequency) between the platform firmware and the OS.
- The PCC driver (pcc-cpufreq) allows OSPM to take advantage of the PCC
- interface.
- OS utilizes the PCC interface to inform platform firmware what frequency the
- OS wants for a logical processor. The platform firmware attempts to achieve
- the requested frequency. If the request for the target frequency could not be
- satisfied by platform firmware, then it usually means that power budget
- conditions are in place, and "power capping" is taking place.
- 1.1 PCC interface:
- ------------------
- The complete PCC specification is available here:
- http://www.acpica.org/download/Processor-Clocking-Control-v1p0.pdf
- PCC relies on a shared memory region that provides a channel for communication
- between the OS and platform firmware. PCC also implements a "doorbell" that
- is used by the OS to inform the platform firmware that a command has been
- sent.
- The ACPI PCCH() method is used to discover the location of the PCC shared
- memory region. The shared memory region header contains the "command" and
- "status" interface. PCCH() also contains details on how to access the platform
- doorbell.
- The following commands are supported by the PCC interface:
- * Get Average Frequency
- * Set Desired Frequency
- The ACPI PCCP() method is implemented for each logical processor and is
- used to discover the offsets for the input and output buffers in the shared
- memory region.
- When PCC mode is enabled, the platform will not expose processor performance
- or throttle states (_PSS, _TSS and related ACPI objects) to OSPM. Therefore,
- the native P-state driver (such as acpi-cpufreq for Intel, powernow-k8 for
- AMD) will not load.
- However, OSPM remains in control of policy. The governor (eg: "ondemand")
- computes the required performance for each processor based on server workload.
- The PCC driver fills in the command interface, and the input buffer and
- communicates the request to the platform firmware. The platform firmware is
- responsible for delivering the requested performance.
- Each PCC command is "global" in scope and can affect all the logical CPUs in
- the system. Therefore, PCC is capable of performing "group" updates. With PCC
- the OS is capable of getting/setting the frequency of all the logical CPUs in
- the system with a single call to the BIOS.
- 1.1.1 Get Average Frequency:
- ----------------------------
- This command is used by the OSPM to query the running frequency of the
- processor since the last time this command was completed. The output buffer
- indicates the average unhalted frequency of the logical processor expressed as
- a percentage of the nominal (ie: maximum) CPU frequency. The output buffer
- also signifies if the CPU frequency is limited by a power budget condition.
- 1.1.2 Set Desired Frequency:
- ----------------------------
- This command is used by the OSPM to communicate to the platform firmware the
- desired frequency for a logical processor. The output buffer is currently
- ignored by OSPM. The next invocation of "Get Average Frequency" will inform
- OSPM if the desired frequency was achieved or not.
- 1.2 Platforms affected:
- -----------------------
- The PCC driver will load on any system where the platform firmware:
- * supports the PCC interface, and the associated PCCH() and PCCP() methods
- * assumes responsibility for managing the hardware clocking controls in order
- to deliver the requested processor performance
- Currently, certain HP ProLiant platforms implement the PCC interface. On those
- platforms PCC is the "default" choice.
- However, it is possible to disable this interface via a BIOS setting. In
- such an instance, as is also the case on platforms where the PCC interface
- is not implemented, the PCC driver will fail to load silently.
- 2. Driver and /sys details:
- ---------------------------
- When the driver loads, it merely prints the lowest and the highest CPU
- frequencies supported by the platform firmware.
- The PCC driver loads with a message such as:
- pcc-cpufreq: (v1.00.00) driver loaded with frequency limits: 1600 MHz, 2933
- MHz
- This means that the OPSM can request the CPU to run at any frequency in
- between the limits (1600 MHz, and 2933 MHz) specified in the message.
- Internally, there is no need for the driver to convert the "target" frequency
- to a corresponding P-state.
- The VERSION number for the driver will be of the format v.xy.ab.
- eg: 1.00.02
- ----- --
- | |
- | -- this will increase with bug fixes/enhancements to the driver
- |-- this is the version of the PCC specification the driver adheres to
- The following is a brief discussion on some of the fields exported via the
- /sys filesystem and how their values are affected by the PCC driver:
- 2.1 scaling_available_frequencies:
- ----------------------------------
- scaling_available_frequencies is not created in /sys. No intermediate
- frequencies need to be listed because the BIOS will try to achieve any
- frequency, within limits, requested by the governor. A frequency does not have
- to be strictly associated with a P-state.
- 2.2 cpuinfo_transition_latency:
- -------------------------------
- The cpuinfo_transition_latency field is 0. The PCC specification does
- not include a field to expose this value currently.
- 2.3 cpuinfo_cur_freq:
- ---------------------
- A) Often cpuinfo_cur_freq will show a value different than what is declared
- in the scaling_available_frequencies or scaling_cur_freq, or scaling_max_freq.
- This is due to "turbo boost" available on recent Intel processors. If certain
- conditions are met the BIOS can achieve a slightly higher speed than requested
- by OSPM. An example:
- scaling_cur_freq : 2933000
- cpuinfo_cur_freq : 3196000
- B) There is a round-off error associated with the cpuinfo_cur_freq value.
- Since the driver obtains the current frequency as a "percentage" (%) of the
- nominal frequency from the BIOS, sometimes, the values displayed by
- scaling_cur_freq and cpuinfo_cur_freq may not match. An example:
- scaling_cur_freq : 1600000
- cpuinfo_cur_freq : 1583000
- In this example, the nominal frequency is 2933 MHz. The driver obtains the
- current frequency, cpuinfo_cur_freq, as 54% of the nominal frequency:
- 54% of 2933 MHz = 1583 MHz
- Nominal frequency is the maximum frequency of the processor, and it usually
- corresponds to the frequency of the P0 P-state.
- 2.4 related_cpus:
- -----------------
- The related_cpus field is identical to affected_cpus.
- affected_cpus : 4
- related_cpus : 4
- Currently, the PCC driver does not evaluate _PSD. The platforms that support
- PCC do not implement SW_ALL. So OSPM doesn't need to perform any coordination
- to ensure that the same frequency is requested of all dependent CPUs.
- 3. Caveats:
- -----------
- The "cpufreq_stats" module in its present form cannot be loaded and
- expected to work with the PCC driver. Since the "cpufreq_stats" module
- provides information wrt each P-state, it is not applicable to the PCC driver.
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