The SYSCTL_NODE macro defines a list that stores all child-elements of
that node. If there's no SYSCTL_DECL macro anywhere else, there's no
reason why it shouldn't be static.
At present the cpufreq sysctl handler for current level setting would
allocate and deallocate a temporary buffer of 24KB even to handle a
read-only query. This puts unnecessary load on memory subsystem when
current level is checked frequently, e.g. when the likes of powerd
and system monitoring software are running.
Change the strategy to allocating a long-lived buffer for handling the
requests.
Reviewed by: njl
MFC after: 2 weeks
CPU, if available. This is meant to solve the issue of cpufreq misreporting
speeds on CPUs that boot in a reduced power mode and have only relative
speed control.
On HyperThreading CPUs logical cores have same frequency, so setting it
on any core will change the other's one. In most cases first request
to the second core will be the "set" request, done after setting frequency
of the first core. In such case second CPU will obtain throttled frequency
of the first core as it's max_mhz making cpufreq broken due to different
frequency sets.
method:
- If the last of the child cpufreq drivers returns an error while trying to
fetch its list of supported frequencies but an earlier driver found the
requested frequency, don't return an error to the caller.
- If all of the child cpufreq drivers fail and the attempt to match the
frequency based on 'cpu_est_clockrate()' fails, return ENXIO rather than
returning success and returning a frequency of CPUFREQ_VAL_UNKNOWN.
MFC after: 3 days
PR: kern/121433
Reported by: Eugene Grosbein eugen ! kuzbass dot ru
other. The first one survives, the rest are removed. So far, it appears
only some acpi_perf(4) BIOS tables have these invalid states, but address
this in the core to be sure to handle other potential driver data.
PR: kern/114722
Tested by: stefan.lambrev / moneybookers.com
MFC after: 3 days
to change the freq before the other CPUs are active. The current code
always attempts to change all CPUs to match each other, and the requisite
sched_bind() call won't work before APs are launched.
have caused a hang, but we got lucky with the available multi-CPU states
on actual hardware.
Submitted by: Bjorn Koenig <bkoenig / alpha-tierchen.de>
Approved by: re
MFC after: 3 days
- Use thread_lock() rather than sched_lock for per-thread scheduling
sychronization.
- Use the per-process spinlock rather than the sched_lock for per-process
scheduling synchronization.
Tested by: kris, current@
Tested on: i386, amd64, ULE, 4BSD, libthr, libkse, PREEMPTION, etc.
Discussed with: kris, attilio, kmacy, jhb, julian, bde (small parts each)
cpufreq_pre_change is called before the change, giving each driver a chance
to revoke the change. cpufreq_post_change provides the results of the
change (success or failure). cpufreq_levels_changed gives the unit number
of the cpufreq device whose number of available levels has changed. Hook
in all the drivers I could find that needed it.
* TSC: update TSC frequency value. When the available levels change, take the
highest possible level and notify the timecounter set_cputicker() of that
freq. This gets rid of the "calcru: runtime went backwards" messages.
* identcpu: updates the sysctl hw.clockrate value
* Profiling: if profiling is active when the clock changes, let the user
know the results may be inaccurate.
Reviewed by: bde, phk
MFC after: 1 month
1. Walk the absolute list in reverse to prefer duplicated levels that have
a lower absolute setting, i.e. 800 Mhz/50% is better than 1600 Mhz/25% even
though both have the same actual frequency. This also removes the need to
check for already-modified levels since by definition, those will be added
later in the sorted list.
2. Compare the absolute settings for derived levels and don't use the new
level if it's higher. For example, a level of 800 Mhz/75% is preferable to
1600 Mhz/25% even though the latter has a lower total frequency.
This work is based on a patch from the submitter but reworked by myself.
Submitted by: Tijl Coosemans (tijl/ulyssis.org)
debug.cpufreq.lowest tunable and sysctl. Some systems seem to have problems
with the lowest frequencies so setting this prevents them from being
available or used.
driver. This used to be handled by cpufreq_drv_settings() but it's
useful to get the type/flags separately from getting the settings.
(For example, you don't have to pass an array of cf_setting just to find
the driver type.)
Use this new method in our in-tree drivers to detect reliably if acpi_perf
is present and owns the hardware. This simplifies logic in drivers as well
as fixing a bug introduced in my last commit where too many drivers attached.
the rate for the 100% state once. Afterwards, use that value for deriving
states. This should fix the problem where the calibrated frequency was
different once a switch was done, giving a different set of levels each
time. Also, properly search for the right cpufreqX device when detaching.
override the current freq level temporarily and restore it when the
higher priority condition is past. Note that only the first overridden
value is saved. Callers pass NULL to CPUFREQ_SET to restore the saved
level. Priorities are not yet used so this commit should have no effect.
are not added to the list(s) of available settings. However, other drivers
can call the CPUFREQ_DRV_SETTINGS() method on those devices directly to
get info about available settings.
Update the acpi_perf(4) driver to use this flag in the presence of
"functional fixed hardware." Thus, future drivers like Powernow can
query acpi_perf for platform info but perform frequency transitions
themselves.
on dev.cpu.0 will affect all of the CPUs together. In the future,
independent control will be supported but this is good enough for now.
Check that the timecounter isn't TSC before switching (from Colin Percival.)
frequency as a percentage of the base rate and do not change the base
rate directly. The cpufreq framework combines these with absolute drivers
to produce synthesized levels made of one or more settings.