Re: [RFC] Documentation: Add documentation for new performance_profile sysfs class

From: Bastien Nocera
Date: Wed Oct 07 2020 - 12:43:11 EST


On Wed, 2020-10-07 at 15:58 +0000, Limonciello, Mario wrote:
>  
> > On Mon, 2020-10-05 at 12:58 +0000, Limonciello, Mario wrote:
> > > > On modern systems CPU/GPU/... performance is often dynamically
> > > > configurable
> > > > in the form of e.g. variable clock-speeds and TPD. The
> > > > performance
> > > > is often
> > > > automatically adjusted to the load by some automatic-mechanism
> > > > (which may
> > > > very well live outside the kernel).
> > > >
> > > > These auto performance-adjustment mechanisms often can be
> > > > configured with
> > > > one of several performance-profiles, with either a bias towards
> > > > low-power
> > > > consumption (and cool and quiet) or towards performance (and
> > > > higher
> > > > power
> > > > consumption and thermals).
> > > >
> > > > Introduce a new performance_profile class/sysfs API which
> > > > offers a
> > > > generic
> > > > API for selecting the performance-profile of these automatic-
> > > > mechanisms.
> > > >
> > >
> > > If introducing an API for this - let me ask the question, why
> > > even let each
> > > driver offer a class interface and userspace need to change
> > > "each" driver's
> > > performance setting?
> > >
> > > I would think that you could just offer something kernel-wide
> > > like
> > > /sys/power/performance-profile
> > >
> > > Userspace can read and write to a single file.  All drivers can
> > > get notified
> > > on this sysfs file changing.
> > >
> > > The systems that react in firmware (such as the two that prompted
> > > this discussion) can change at that time.  It leaves the
> > > possibility for a
> > > more open kernel implementation that can do the same thing though
> > > too by
> > > directly modifying device registers instead of ACPI devices.
> >
> > The problem, as I've mentioned in previous discussions we had about
> > this, is that, as you've seen in replies to this mail, this would
> > suddenly be making the kernel apply policy.
> >
> > There's going to be pushback as soon as policy is enacted in the
> > kernel, and you take away the different knobs for individual
> > components
> > (or you can control them centrally as well as individually). As
> > much as
> > I hate the quantity of knobs[1], I don't think that trying to
> > reduce
> > the number of knobs in the kernel is a good use of our time, and
> > easier
> > to enact, coordinated with design targets, in user-space.
> >
> > Unless you can think of a way to implement this kernel wide setting
> > without adding one more exponent on the number of possibilities for
> > the
> > testing matrix, I'll +1 Hans' original API.
> >
> Actually I offered two proposals in my reply.  So are you NAKing
> both?

No, this is only about the first portion of the email, which I quoted.
And I'm not NAK'ing it, but I don't see how it can work without being
antithetical to what kernel "users" expect, or what the folks consuming
those interfaces (presumably us both) would expect to be able to test
and maintain.

> The other one suggested to use the same firmware attributes class
> being
> introduced by the new Dell driver (
> https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/11818343/)
> since this is actually a knob to a specific firmware setting.

This seemed to me like an implementation detail (eg. the same metadata
is being exported, but in a different way), and I don't feel strongly
about it either way.