Re: [PATCH] drm/msm: Disable frequency clamping on a630

From: Akhil P Oommen
Date: Mon Aug 09 2021 - 10:52:50 EST


On 8/8/2021 10:22 PM, Rob Clark wrote:
On Sun, Aug 8, 2021 at 7:33 AM Caleb Connolly <caleb.connolly@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:



On 07/08/2021 21:04, Rob Clark wrote:
On Sat, Aug 7, 2021 at 12:21 PM Caleb Connolly
<caleb.connolly@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

Hi Rob, Akhil,

On 29/07/2021 21:53, Rob Clark wrote:
On Thu, Jul 29, 2021 at 1:28 PM Caleb Connolly
<caleb.connolly@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:



On 29/07/2021 21:24, Rob Clark wrote:
On Thu, Jul 29, 2021 at 1:06 PM Caleb Connolly
<caleb.connolly@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

Hi Rob,

I've done some more testing! It looks like before that patch ("drm/msm: Devfreq tuning") the GPU would never get above
the second frequency in the OPP table (342MHz) (at least, not in glxgears). With the patch applied it would more
aggressively jump up to the max frequency which seems to be unstable at the default regulator voltages.

*ohh*, yeah, ok, that would explain it

Hacking the pm8005 s1 regulator (which provides VDD_GFX) up to 0.988v (instead of the stock 0.516v) makes the GPU stable
at the higher frequencies.

Applying this patch reverts the behaviour, and the GPU never goes above 342MHz in glxgears, losing ~30% performance in
glxgear.

I think (?) that enabling CPR support would be the proper solution to this - that would ensure that the regulators run
at the voltage the hardware needs to be stable.

Is hacking the voltage higher (although ideally not quite that high) an acceptable short term solution until we have
CPR? Or would it be safer to just not make use of the higher frequencies on a630 for now?


tbh, I'm not sure about the regulator stuff and CPR.. Bjorn is already
on CC and I added sboyd, maybe one of them knows better.

In the short term, removing the higher problematic OPPs from dts might
be a better option than this patch (which I'm dropping), since there
is nothing stopping other workloads from hitting higher OPPs.
Oh yeah that sounds like a more sensible workaround than mine .

I'm slightly curious why I didn't have problems at higher OPPs on my
c630 laptop (sdm850)
Perhaps you won the sillicon lottery - iirc sdm850 is binned for higher clocks as is out of the factory.

Would it be best to drop the OPPs for all devices? Or just those affected? I guess it's possible another c630 might
crash where yours doesn't?

I've not heard any reports of similar issues from the handful of other
folks with c630's on #aarch64-laptops.. but I can't really say if that
is luck or not.
It looks like this affects at least the OnePlus 6 and PocoPhone F1, I've done some more poking and the following diff
seems to fix the stability issues completely, it seems the delay is required to let the update propagate.

This doesn't feel like the right fix, but hopefully it's enough to come up with a better solution than disabling the new
devfreq behaviour on a630.

diff --git a/drivers/gpu/drm/msm/adreno/a6xx_gmu.c b/drivers/gpu/drm/msm/adreno/a6xx_gmu.c
index d7cec7f0dde0..69e2a5e84dae 100644
--- a/drivers/gpu/drm/msm/adreno/a6xx_gmu.c
+++ b/drivers/gpu/drm/msm/adreno/a6xx_gmu.c
@@ -139,6 +139,10 @@ void a6xx_gmu_set_freq(struct msm_gpu *gpu, struct dev_pm_opp *opp)
return;
}

+ dev_pm_opp_set_opp(&gpu->pdev->dev, opp);
+
+ usleep_range(300, 500);
+


I am a bit confused. We don't define a power domain for gpu in dt, correct? Then what exactly set_opp do here? Do you think this usleep is what is helping here somehow to mask the issue?

I feel we should just leave the new dcvs feature (shall we call it NAP?) disabled for a630 (and 10ms devfreq interval), until this is root caused.

Hmm, this is going to be in the critical path on idle -> active
transition (ie. think response time to user-input).. so we defn don't
want to do this unconditionally..

If I understand the problem, we just want to limit how far we jump the
gpu freq in one go.. maybe deleting the lowest (and perhaps highest)
OPP would accomplish that? Could that be done in the board(s)'s
toplevel dts files?
That would be a workaround, however I'd really like to avoid limiting performance as a solution if I can help it,
especially as the fix might just be "set the opp first, wait for it to apply, then set the core clock".

Is there a sensible way to get a callback from the opp notify chain? Or from rpmh directly? Or is this solution really
not the right way to go?

It does seem a bit strange to me that we are telling GMU to change
freq before calling dev_pm_opp_set_opp().. if dev_pm_opp_set_opp() is
increasing voltage, it seems like you'd want to do that *before*
increasing freq (but reverse the order when decreasing freq).. But I'm
not an expert on the ways of the GMU.. maybe Akhil or Jordan knows
better how this is supposed to work.

For legacy gmu, we trigger DCVS using DCVS OOB which comes later in this function. But the order between regulator and clock which you mentioned is correct.


But the delay seems like papering something over, and I'm trying to go
in the other direction and reduce latency between user input and
pageflip..

BR,
-R


BR,
-R

gmu_write(gmu, REG_A6XX_GMU_DCVS_ACK_OPTION, 0);

gmu_write(gmu, REG_A6XX_GMU_DCVS_PERF_SETTING,
@@ -158,7 +162,6 @@ void a6xx_gmu_set_freq(struct msm_gpu *gpu, struct dev_pm_opp *opp)
if (ret)
dev_err(gmu->dev, "GMU set GPU frequency error: %d\n", ret);

- dev_pm_opp_set_opp(&gpu->pdev->dev, opp);
pm_runtime_put(gmu->dev);
}

Maybe just remove it for affected devices? But I'll defer to Bjorn.

BR,
-R


--
Kind Regards,
Caleb (they/them)

--
Kind Regards,
Caleb (they/them)