[PATCH 2/2] ARM: EXYNOS: add cpuidle-exynos.max_states kernel parameter

Daniel Lezcano daniel.lezcano at linaro.org
Mon Sep 2 11:52:15 EDT 2013


On 09/02/2013 04:43 PM, Bartlomiej Zolnierkiewicz wrote:
> On Monday, September 02, 2013 04:24:23 PM Daniel Lezcano wrote:
>> On 09/02/2013 03:48 PM, Bartlomiej Zolnierkiewicz wrote:
>>> On Monday, September 02, 2013 03:18:51 PM Daniel Lezcano wrote:
>>>> On 09/02/2013 11:41 AM, Bartlomiej Zolnierkiewicz wrote:
>>>>> On Monday, September 02, 2013 10:54:17 AM Daniel Lezcano wrote:
>>>>>> On 08/30/2013 12:21 PM, Bartlomiej Zolnierkiewicz wrote:
>>>>>>> Add "cpuidle-exynos.max_states=" parameter to allow user to specify
>>>>>>> the maximum of allowed CPU idle states for ARM EXYNOS cpuidle driver.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> This change is needed because C1 state (AFTR mode) is often not able
>>>>>>> to work properly due to incompatibility with some bootloader versions.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Usage examples:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> "cpuidle-exynos.max_states=1" disables C1 state (AFTR mode).
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> "cpuidle-exynos.max_states=0" disables the driver completely.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Signed-off-by: Bartlomiej Zolnierkiewicz <b.zolnierkie at samsung.com>
>>>>>>> Signed-off-by: Kyungmin Park <kyungmin.park at samsung.com>
>>>>>>> Cc: Tomasz Figa <t.figa at samsung.com>
>>>>>>> Cc: Amit Daniel Kachhap <amit.daniel at samsung.com>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> There is a max_cstate option for acpi and intel idle. There is also the
>>>>>> cpuidle.off=1 option. As the semantic is the same, I think adding a
>>>>>> common cpuidle option usable for all the drivers is better.
>>>>>
>>>>> I thought about making the option common for all cpuidle drivers first
>>>>> but due to support for multiple cpuidle drivers on one machine (i.e.
>>>>> big.LITTLE), per-driver option looked like a better approach.
>>>>>
>>>>> Should I make the option common and not worry about multiple drivers on
>>>>> one machine support?
>>>>
>>>> Mmh, that's a good point.
>>>>
>>>> I am not in favor of multiple options spread across the different
>>>> drivers. Furthermore the max_cstate is used in the intel platform to
>>>> 'discover' what states the firmware supports which is not the case of
>>>> the cpuidle ARM drivers (except new PSCI based). This option does not
>>>> really fits well here.
>>>>
>>>> There is the kernel parameter 'cpuidle.off', so disabling the driver is ok.
>>>>
>>>> You converted the cpuidle driver to a platform driver. Isn't possible to
>>>> pass information in the platform data field at boot time to tell AFTR is
>>>> not supported and then act on the 'disabled' field of this state ?
>>>
>>> It might be possible but I don't know where the source of this data would
>>> be, platform specific kernel parameter? It sounds just like moving the code
>>> around and adding superfluous platform->driver code because the similar
>>> kernel parameter to disable just AFTR can be added in cpuidle-exynos driver
>>> as well.
>>
>> It is to prevent to add a new kernel parameter (with the documentation)
>> for a single driver which has a bogus idle state. If that could be
>> handled internally that would be cleaner.
> 
> If I believed that it could be handled internally I wouldn't be trying to
> add a kernel parameter to handle it.. Would I? ;)
> 
>> Can you shortly describe what happens with the bootloader and AFTR ?
> 
> AFTR just doesn't work with the custom U-Boot version that we are using
> (attempts to go into AFTR mode result in lockup) and using the upstream
> version of U-Boot is not an option since it doesn't support the hardware
> that we are using AFAIK. I also don't know exactly why it doesn't work
> (I just suspect that it reuses INFORM registers for some other purposes).

You want to add a kernel option as a work around for a bug in U-Boot ?

IMO, you should drop the hot potato to the u-boot guys :)

>> I guess you are not interested in cpuidle.off=1 because you want cpuidle
>> statistics for WFI, right ?
> 
> Right. :)



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