Re: [PATCH 0/7] cpufreq: Call transition notifier only once for each policy
From: Viresh Kumar
Date: Thu Mar 14 2019 - 06:16:14 EST
On 14-03-19, 10:28, Rafael J. Wysocki wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 14, 2019 at 7:43 AM Viresh Kumar <viresh.kumar@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >
> > Currently we call the cpufreq transition notifiers once for each CPU of
> > the policy->cpus cpumask, which isn't that efficient.
>
> Why isn't it efficient?
>
> Transitions are per-policy anyway, so if something needs to be done
> for each CPU in the policy, it doesn't matter too much which part of
> the code carries out the iteration.
Even if per-cpu iteration has to be done at some place, we are
avoiding function calls here and the code/locking in the notifier
layer as well. Will get more such info into changelog.
> I guess some notifiers need to know what other CPUs there are in the
> policy? If so, then why?
You mean about the offline CPUs? I mentioned the rationale in 1/7. It
is to avoid bugs where we may end up using a stale value if the CPUs
are offlined/onlined regularly.
> > This patchset tries to simplify that by adding another field in struct cpufreq_freqs,
> > cpus, so the callback has all the information available with a single
> > call for each policy.
>
> Well, you can argue that the core is simplified by it somewhat, but
> the notifiers aren't. They actually get more complex, conceptually
> too, because they now need to worry about offline vs online CPUs etc.
24 different parts of the kernel register for transition notifiers and
only 5 required update here, the other 19 don't need to do per-cpu
stuff and they also get benefited by this work. Those routines will
get called only once now, instead of once per every CPU of the policy.
> Also I wonder why you decided to pass a cpumask in freqs instead of
> just passing a policy pointer. If you change things from per-CPU to
> per-policy, passing the whole policy seems more natural.
I did that because they don't need to use the other fields of the
policy today and that doesn't look likely in near future as well.
I can do that if you want, but not sure why more information should be
provided than required.
--
viresh