Re: [PATCH 2/2] cpufreq: ondemand: Eliminate the deadband effect

From: Stratos Karafotis
Date: Fri Jul 11 2014 - 15:37:13 EST


On 11/07/2014 09:34 ÎÎ, Pavel Machek wrote:
> On Fri 2014-07-11 20:29:57, Stratos Karafotis wrote:
>> Hi Pavel!
>>
>> On 11/07/2014 07:57 ÎÎ, Pavel Machek wrote:
>>> Hi!
>>>
>>>> Tested on Intel i7-3770 CPU @ 3.40GHz and on ARM quad core 1500MHz Krait
>>>> (Android smartphone).
>>>> Benchmarks on Intel i7 shows a performance improvement on low and medium
>>>> work loads with lower power consumption. Specifics:
>>>>
>>>> Phoronix Linux Kernel Compilation 3.1:
>>>> Time: -0.40%, energy: -0.07%
>>>> Phoronix Apache:
>>>> Time: -4.98%, energy: -2.35%
>>>> Phoronix FFMPEG:
>>>> Time: -6.29%, energy: -4.02%
>>>
>>> Hmm. Intel i7 should be race-to-idle machine. So basically rule like
>>> if (load > 0) go to max frequency else go to lowest frequency would do
>>> the right thing in your test, right?
>>
>> I don't think that "if (load > 0) go to max" will work even on i7.
>> For low load this will have impact on energy consumption.
>
> Are you sure? CPU frequency should not matter on idle CPU.

Even on a totally idle CPU there will be a small impact because of leakage
current (thanks to Dirk Brandewie for this info).

This simple test on a nearly idle system shows this:

[root@albert cpufreq]# for CPUFREQ in /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu*/cpufreq/scaling_governor; do [ -f $CPUFREQ ] || continue; echo -n performance > $CPUFREQ; done
[root@albert cpufreq]# /home/stratosk/kernels/linux-pm/tools/power/x86/turbostat/turbostat -J sleep 20
Core CPU Avg_MHz %Busy Bzy_MHz TSC_MHz SMI CPU%c1 CPU%c3 CPU%c6 CPU%c7 CoreTmp PkgTmp Pkg%pc2 Pkg%pc3 Pkg%pc6 Pkg%pc7 Pkg_J Cor_J GFX_J time
- - 2 0.06 2712 3392 0 0.30 0.00 99.63 0.00 34 34 8.09 0.00 81.94 0.00 380.41 14.51 1.64 20.00
0 0 0 0.02 1891 3392 0 0.09 0.00 99.88 0.00 34 34 8.09 0.00 81.94 0.00 380.41 14.51 1.64 20.00
0 4 1 0.04 3006 3392 0 0.07
1 1 1 0.04 2501 3392 0 0.62 0.00 99.33 0.00 34
1 5 0 0.01 2346 3392 0 0.66
2 2 0 0.01 1996 3392 0 0.44 0.00 99.55 0.00 34
2 6 4 0.18 2278 3392 0 0.26
3 3 5 0.15 3449 3392 0 0.07 0.01 99.77 0.00 34
3 7 0 0.01 1839 3392 0 0.21
20.000899 sec
[root@albert cpufreq]# ^C
[root@albert cpufreq]# for CPUFREQ in /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu*/cpufreq/scaling_governor; do [ -f $CPUFREQ ] || continue; echo -n ondemand > $CPUFREQ; done
[root@albert cpufreq]# /home/stratosk/kernels/linux-pm/tools/power/x86/turbostat/turbostat -J sleep 20
Core CPU Avg_MHz %Busy Bzy_MHz TSC_MHz SMI CPU%c1 CPU%c3 CPU%c6 CPU%c7 CoreTmp PkgTmp Pkg%pc2 Pkg%pc3 Pkg%pc6 Pkg%pc7 Pkg_J Cor_J GFX_J time
- - 2 0.09 1693 3392 0 0.35 0.01 99.55 0.00 35 36 8.33 0.00 84.31 0.00 377.68 12.23 1.15 20.00
0 0 1 0.08 1603 3392 0 0.13 0.00 99.79 0.00 35 36 8.33 0.00 84.31 0.00 377.68 12.23 1.15 20.00
0 4 1 0.08 1646 3392 0 0.13
1 1 1 0.06 1647 3392 0 0.66 0.00 99.28 0.00 35
1 5 0 0.01 1611 3392 0 0.71
2 2 0 0.02 1617 3392 0 0.50 0.02 99.46 0.00 35
2 6 4 0.22 1764 3392 0 0.30
3 3 4 0.25 1701 3392 0 0.07 0.00 99.68 0.00 35
3 7 0 0.01 1602 3392 0 0.31
20.001580 sec


So, for low loads the impact will be higher.
This is the reason that the intel_pstate driver don't use 'performance'
and try to request a low P state when there is no load.

> (Can you try to modify your code and rerun for example the apache
> test?)

Yes, I can do the apache test if the above example is not enough.

>>> So... should we do that, or do we need better benchmark?
>>
>> I'm sorry. I'm not sure I understood exactly what do you mean by "better
>> benchmark".
>
> I believe that any increase of frequency in frequency will make the
> benchmarks you qouted better (on i7). Actually, you can probably just
> select performance governor...?

Maybe in benchmarks where the CPU load is high. But definitely not, in mp3
decoding and idle system test.

The point is, as you mentioned, more tests and of course on other CPUs.
Unfortunately, I can test only on i7 and krait as mentioned in changelog.
I will happily run any test you would like for more info.


Thanks,
Stratos
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