[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH v4 10/11] x86/intel_pstate: support the use of intel_pstate in pmstat.c
On 09/09/2015 16:32, Jan Beulich wrote: >>> On 09.09.15 at 10:11, <wei.w.wang@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 24/07/2015 22:16, Jan Beulich wrote: >>>> On 25.06.15 at 13:17, <wei.w.wang@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> --- a/xen/drivers/acpi/pmstat.c >> +++ b/xen/drivers/acpi/pmstat.c >> --- a/xen/include/public/sysctl.h >> +++ b/xen/include/public/sysctl.h >> @@ -315,8 +315,18 @@ struct xen_get_cpufreq_para { >> uint32_t scaling_cur_freq; >> >> char scaling_governor[CPUFREQ_NAME_LEN]; >> - uint32_t scaling_max_freq; >> - uint32_t scaling_min_freq; >> + >> + union { >> + uint32_t freq; >> + uint32_t pct; >> + } scaling_max; >> + >> + union { >> + uint32_t freq; >> + uint32_t pct; >> + } scaling_min; > >>scaling_min and scaling_max should really be of the same type, so that > someone wanting to introduce helper functions >>or pointers to them can hand both interchangeably. > >>Also I'm starting to get tired of repeating that it is still unclear >>how a > consumer of the structure will know which of the >>two fields of the unions are applicable. > >> Probably we don't need a union here. I plan to simply change them to >> uint32_t scaling_max_perf; uint32_t scaling_max_perf; > >> Then it's up to the driver to put what kind of value to it. It's like >> we simply provide a drinking vessel, and it depends on the user to put >> water or milk into it. In our case, the intel_pstate driver assigns a >> percentage vale to it (in the "uint32_t" type), and the legacy driver >> assigns the absolute value to it (in the "uint32_t" type, too). >I don't see how this will solve the problem of the consumer not knowing what >kind of value it has to deal with. The consumer is inside the print_cpufreq_para() function. I have put the code below: + if (!strncmp(p_cpufreq->scaling_driver, + "intel_pstate", CPUFREQ_NAME_LEN) ) + { + printf("max_perf_pct : %d\n", p_cpufreq->scaling_max.pct); + printf("min_perf_pct : %d\n", p_cpufreq->scaling_min.pct); + printf("turbo_pct : %d\n", p_cpufreq->scaling_turbo_pct); + } + else + { + printf("scaling_avail_freq :"); + for ( i = 0; i < p_cpufreq->freq_num; i++ ) + if ( p_cpufreq->scaling_available_frequencies[i] == + p_cpufreq->scaling_cur_freq ) + printf(" *%d", p_cpufreq->scaling_available_frequencies[i]); + else + printf(" %d", p_cpufreq->scaling_available_frequencies[i]); + printf("\n"); + printf("scaling frequency : max [%u] min [%u] cur [%u]\n", + p_cpufreq->scaling_max.freq, + p_cpufreq->scaling_min.freq, + p_cpufreq->scaling_cur_freq); "p_cpufreq->scaling_driver" is the flag which distinguishes the usage of this "scaling_max_perf" field. Best, Wei _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xen.org/xen-devel
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