On Fri, Nov 22, 2024 at 09:37:47AM +0100, Johan Hovold wrote:
On Thu, Nov 14, 2024 at 09:52:12AM +0530, Sibi Sankar wrote:
On 11/8/24 20:44, Johan Hovold wrote:
On Wed, Nov 06, 2024 at 01:55:33PM +0100, Johan Hovold wrote:
Second, after loading the protocol and client drivers manually (in that
order, shouldn't the client driver pull in the protocol?), I got:
scmi_module: Loaded SCMI Vendor Protocol 0x80 - Qualcomm 20000
arm-scmi arm-scmi.0.auto: QCOM Generic Vendor Version 1.0
scmi-qcom-generic-ext-memlat scmi_dev.5: error -EOPNOTSUPP: failed to configure common events
scmi-qcom-generic-ext-memlat scmi_dev.5: probe with driver scmi-qcom-generic-ext-memlat failed with error -95
which seems to suggest that the firmware on my CRD does not support this
feature. Is that the way this should be interpreted? And does that mean
that non of the commercial laptops supports this either?
Yeah, hopefully Sibi can shed some light on this. I'm using the DT
patch (5/5) from this series, which according to the commit message is
supposed to enable bus scaling on the x1e80100 platform. So I guess
something is missing in my firmware.
Nah, it's probably just because of the algo string used.
The past few series used caps MEMLAT string instead of
memlat to pass the tuneables, looks like all the laptops
havn't really switched to it yet. Will revert back to
using to lower case memlat so that all devices are
supported. Thanks for trying the series out!
I have a Lenovo ThinkPad T14s set up now so I gave this series a spin
there too, and there I do *not* see the above mentioned -EOPNOSUPP error
and the memlat driver probes successfully.
On the other hand, this series seems to have no effect on a kernel
compilation benchmark. Is that expected?
Hijacking this thread to rant about state of firmware implementation on
this platform that gives me zero confidence in merging any of these without
examining each of the interface details in depth and at lengths.
Also I see the standard protocol like PERF seem to have so many issues which
adds to my no confidence. I can't comment on that thread for specific reasons.
I will briefly mention my suspicion here. This Lenovo ThinkPad T14s being
primarily targeting other OS using ACPI might have just implemented what is
required for ACPI CPPC which conveniently doesn't have to discover lot of
fastchannel details since they are supplied in the tables straight away.
But that also would mean it could be not fully compliant to SCMI spec.
Either we need to run some compliance test suite(which again may need more
work as it is unfortunately make platform specific - referring to [1])
or use the raw interface in the kernel and throw /dev/random at it and see
how well it can cope up.
--
Regards,
Sudeep
[1] https://gitlab.arm.com/tests/scmi-tests (Not so great and needs platform
specific vectors to check compliance)