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intel_pstate.rst (37021B)


      1.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
      2.. include:: <isonum.txt>
      3
      4===============================================
      5``intel_pstate`` CPU Performance Scaling Driver
      6===============================================
      7
      8:Copyright: |copy| 2017 Intel Corporation
      9
     10:Author: Rafael J. Wysocki <rafael.j.wysocki@intel.com>
     11
     12
     13General Information
     14===================
     15
     16``intel_pstate`` is a part of the
     17:doc:`CPU performance scaling subsystem <cpufreq>` in the Linux kernel
     18(``CPUFreq``).  It is a scaling driver for the Sandy Bridge and later
     19generations of Intel processors.  Note, however, that some of those processors
     20may not be supported.  [To understand ``intel_pstate`` it is necessary to know
     21how ``CPUFreq`` works in general, so this is the time to read
     22Documentation/admin-guide/pm/cpufreq.rst if you have not done that yet.]
     23
     24For the processors supported by ``intel_pstate``, the P-state concept is broader
     25than just an operating frequency or an operating performance point (see the
     26LinuxCon Europe 2015 presentation by Kristen Accardi [1]_ for more
     27information about that).  For this reason, the representation of P-states used
     28by ``intel_pstate`` internally follows the hardware specification (for details
     29refer to Intel Software Developer’s Manual [2]_).  However, the ``CPUFreq`` core
     30uses frequencies for identifying operating performance points of CPUs and
     31frequencies are involved in the user space interface exposed by it, so
     32``intel_pstate`` maps its internal representation of P-states to frequencies too
     33(fortunately, that mapping is unambiguous).  At the same time, it would not be
     34practical for ``intel_pstate`` to supply the ``CPUFreq`` core with a table of
     35available frequencies due to the possible size of it, so the driver does not do
     36that.  Some functionality of the core is limited by that.
     37
     38Since the hardware P-state selection interface used by ``intel_pstate`` is
     39available at the logical CPU level, the driver always works with individual
     40CPUs.  Consequently, if ``intel_pstate`` is in use, every ``CPUFreq`` policy
     41object corresponds to one logical CPU and ``CPUFreq`` policies are effectively
     42equivalent to CPUs.  In particular, this means that they become "inactive" every
     43time the corresponding CPU is taken offline and need to be re-initialized when
     44it goes back online.
     45
     46``intel_pstate`` is not modular, so it cannot be unloaded, which means that the
     47only way to pass early-configuration-time parameters to it is via the kernel
     48command line.  However, its configuration can be adjusted via ``sysfs`` to a
     49great extent.  In some configurations it even is possible to unregister it via
     50``sysfs`` which allows another ``CPUFreq`` scaling driver to be loaded and
     51registered (see `below <status_attr_>`_).
     52
     53
     54Operation Modes
     55===============
     56
     57``intel_pstate`` can operate in two different modes, active or passive.  In the
     58active mode, it uses its own internal performance scaling governor algorithm or
     59allows the hardware to do performance scaling by itself, while in the passive
     60mode it responds to requests made by a generic ``CPUFreq`` governor implementing
     61a certain performance scaling algorithm.  Which of them will be in effect
     62depends on what kernel command line options are used and on the capabilities of
     63the processor.
     64
     65Active Mode
     66-----------
     67
     68This is the default operation mode of ``intel_pstate`` for processors with
     69hardware-managed P-states (HWP) support.  If it works in this mode, the
     70``scaling_driver`` policy attribute in ``sysfs`` for all ``CPUFreq`` policies
     71contains the string "intel_pstate".
     72
     73In this mode the driver bypasses the scaling governors layer of ``CPUFreq`` and
     74provides its own scaling algorithms for P-state selection.  Those algorithms
     75can be applied to ``CPUFreq`` policies in the same way as generic scaling
     76governors (that is, through the ``scaling_governor`` policy attribute in
     77``sysfs``).  [Note that different P-state selection algorithms may be chosen for
     78different policies, but that is not recommended.]
     79
     80They are not generic scaling governors, but their names are the same as the
     81names of some of those governors.  Moreover, confusingly enough, they generally
     82do not work in the same way as the generic governors they share the names with.
     83For example, the ``powersave`` P-state selection algorithm provided by
     84``intel_pstate`` is not a counterpart of the generic ``powersave`` governor
     85(roughly, it corresponds to the ``schedutil`` and ``ondemand`` governors).
     86
     87There are two P-state selection algorithms provided by ``intel_pstate`` in the
     88active mode: ``powersave`` and ``performance``.  The way they both operate
     89depends on whether or not the hardware-managed P-states (HWP) feature has been
     90enabled in the processor and possibly on the processor model.
     91
     92Which of the P-state selection algorithms is used by default depends on the
     93:c:macro:`CONFIG_CPU_FREQ_DEFAULT_GOV_PERFORMANCE` kernel configuration option.
     94Namely, if that option is set, the ``performance`` algorithm will be used by
     95default, and the other one will be used by default if it is not set.
     96
     97Active Mode With HWP
     98~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
     99
    100If the processor supports the HWP feature, it will be enabled during the
    101processor initialization and cannot be disabled after that.  It is possible
    102to avoid enabling it by passing the ``intel_pstate=no_hwp`` argument to the
    103kernel in the command line.
    104
    105If the HWP feature has been enabled, ``intel_pstate`` relies on the processor to
    106select P-states by itself, but still it can give hints to the processor's
    107internal P-state selection logic.  What those hints are depends on which P-state
    108selection algorithm has been applied to the given policy (or to the CPU it
    109corresponds to).
    110
    111Even though the P-state selection is carried out by the processor automatically,
    112``intel_pstate`` registers utilization update callbacks with the CPU scheduler
    113in this mode.  However, they are not used for running a P-state selection
    114algorithm, but for periodic updates of the current CPU frequency information to
    115be made available from the ``scaling_cur_freq`` policy attribute in ``sysfs``.
    116
    117HWP + ``performance``
    118.....................
    119
    120In this configuration ``intel_pstate`` will write 0 to the processor's
    121Energy-Performance Preference (EPP) knob (if supported) or its
    122Energy-Performance Bias (EPB) knob (otherwise), which means that the processor's
    123internal P-state selection logic is expected to focus entirely on performance.
    124
    125This will override the EPP/EPB setting coming from the ``sysfs`` interface
    126(see `Energy vs Performance Hints`_ below).  Moreover, any attempts to change
    127the EPP/EPB to a value different from 0 ("performance") via ``sysfs`` in this
    128configuration will be rejected.
    129
    130Also, in this configuration the range of P-states available to the processor's
    131internal P-state selection logic is always restricted to the upper boundary
    132(that is, the maximum P-state that the driver is allowed to use).
    133
    134HWP + ``powersave``
    135...................
    136
    137In this configuration ``intel_pstate`` will set the processor's
    138Energy-Performance Preference (EPP) knob (if supported) or its
    139Energy-Performance Bias (EPB) knob (otherwise) to whatever value it was
    140previously set to via ``sysfs`` (or whatever default value it was
    141set to by the platform firmware).  This usually causes the processor's
    142internal P-state selection logic to be less performance-focused.
    143
    144Active Mode Without HWP
    145~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    146
    147This operation mode is optional for processors that do not support the HWP
    148feature or when the ``intel_pstate=no_hwp`` argument is passed to the kernel in
    149the command line.  The active mode is used in those cases if the
    150``intel_pstate=active`` argument is passed to the kernel in the command line.
    151In this mode ``intel_pstate`` may refuse to work with processors that are not
    152recognized by it.  [Note that ``intel_pstate`` will never refuse to work with
    153any processor with the HWP feature enabled.]
    154
    155In this mode ``intel_pstate`` registers utilization update callbacks with the
    156CPU scheduler in order to run a P-state selection algorithm, either
    157``powersave`` or ``performance``, depending on the ``scaling_governor`` policy
    158setting in ``sysfs``.  The current CPU frequency information to be made
    159available from the ``scaling_cur_freq`` policy attribute in ``sysfs`` is
    160periodically updated by those utilization update callbacks too.
    161
    162``performance``
    163...............
    164
    165Without HWP, this P-state selection algorithm is always the same regardless of
    166the processor model and platform configuration.
    167
    168It selects the maximum P-state it is allowed to use, subject to limits set via
    169``sysfs``, every time the driver configuration for the given CPU is updated
    170(e.g. via ``sysfs``).
    171
    172This is the default P-state selection algorithm if the
    173:c:macro:`CONFIG_CPU_FREQ_DEFAULT_GOV_PERFORMANCE` kernel configuration option
    174is set.
    175
    176``powersave``
    177.............
    178
    179Without HWP, this P-state selection algorithm is similar to the algorithm
    180implemented by the generic ``schedutil`` scaling governor except that the
    181utilization metric used by it is based on numbers coming from feedback
    182registers of the CPU.  It generally selects P-states proportional to the
    183current CPU utilization.
    184
    185This algorithm is run by the driver's utilization update callback for the
    186given CPU when it is invoked by the CPU scheduler, but not more often than
    187every 10 ms.  Like in the ``performance`` case, the hardware configuration
    188is not touched if the new P-state turns out to be the same as the current
    189one.
    190
    191This is the default P-state selection algorithm if the
    192:c:macro:`CONFIG_CPU_FREQ_DEFAULT_GOV_PERFORMANCE` kernel configuration option
    193is not set.
    194
    195Passive Mode
    196------------
    197
    198This is the default operation mode of ``intel_pstate`` for processors without
    199hardware-managed P-states (HWP) support.  It is always used if the
    200``intel_pstate=passive`` argument is passed to the kernel in the command line
    201regardless of whether or not the given processor supports HWP.  [Note that the
    202``intel_pstate=no_hwp`` setting causes the driver to start in the passive mode
    203if it is not combined with ``intel_pstate=active``.]  Like in the active mode
    204without HWP support, in this mode ``intel_pstate`` may refuse to work with
    205processors that are not recognized by it if HWP is prevented from being enabled
    206through the kernel command line.
    207
    208If the driver works in this mode, the ``scaling_driver`` policy attribute in
    209``sysfs`` for all ``CPUFreq`` policies contains the string "intel_cpufreq".
    210Then, the driver behaves like a regular ``CPUFreq`` scaling driver.  That is,
    211it is invoked by generic scaling governors when necessary to talk to the
    212hardware in order to change the P-state of a CPU (in particular, the
    213``schedutil`` governor can invoke it directly from scheduler context).
    214
    215While in this mode, ``intel_pstate`` can be used with all of the (generic)
    216scaling governors listed by the ``scaling_available_governors`` policy attribute
    217in ``sysfs`` (and the P-state selection algorithms described above are not
    218used).  Then, it is responsible for the configuration of policy objects
    219corresponding to CPUs and provides the ``CPUFreq`` core (and the scaling
    220governors attached to the policy objects) with accurate information on the
    221maximum and minimum operating frequencies supported by the hardware (including
    222the so-called "turbo" frequency ranges).  In other words, in the passive mode
    223the entire range of available P-states is exposed by ``intel_pstate`` to the
    224``CPUFreq`` core.  However, in this mode the driver does not register
    225utilization update callbacks with the CPU scheduler and the ``scaling_cur_freq``
    226information comes from the ``CPUFreq`` core (and is the last frequency selected
    227by the current scaling governor for the given policy).
    228
    229
    230.. _turbo:
    231
    232Turbo P-states Support
    233======================
    234
    235In the majority of cases, the entire range of P-states available to
    236``intel_pstate`` can be divided into two sub-ranges that correspond to
    237different types of processor behavior, above and below a boundary that
    238will be referred to as the "turbo threshold" in what follows.
    239
    240The P-states above the turbo threshold are referred to as "turbo P-states" and
    241the whole sub-range of P-states they belong to is referred to as the "turbo
    242range".  These names are related to the Turbo Boost technology allowing a
    243multicore processor to opportunistically increase the P-state of one or more
    244cores if there is enough power to do that and if that is not going to cause the
    245thermal envelope of the processor package to be exceeded.
    246
    247Specifically, if software sets the P-state of a CPU core within the turbo range
    248(that is, above the turbo threshold), the processor is permitted to take over
    249performance scaling control for that core and put it into turbo P-states of its
    250choice going forward.  However, that permission is interpreted differently by
    251different processor generations.  Namely, the Sandy Bridge generation of
    252processors will never use any P-states above the last one set by software for
    253the given core, even if it is within the turbo range, whereas all of the later
    254processor generations will take it as a license to use any P-states from the
    255turbo range, even above the one set by software.  In other words, on those
    256processors setting any P-state from the turbo range will enable the processor
    257to put the given core into all turbo P-states up to and including the maximum
    258supported one as it sees fit.
    259
    260One important property of turbo P-states is that they are not sustainable.  More
    261precisely, there is no guarantee that any CPUs will be able to stay in any of
    262those states indefinitely, because the power distribution within the processor
    263package may change over time  or the thermal envelope it was designed for might
    264be exceeded if a turbo P-state was used for too long.
    265
    266In turn, the P-states below the turbo threshold generally are sustainable.  In
    267fact, if one of them is set by software, the processor is not expected to change
    268it to a lower one unless in a thermal stress or a power limit violation
    269situation (a higher P-state may still be used if it is set for another CPU in
    270the same package at the same time, for example).
    271
    272Some processors allow multiple cores to be in turbo P-states at the same time,
    273but the maximum P-state that can be set for them generally depends on the number
    274of cores running concurrently.  The maximum turbo P-state that can be set for 3
    275cores at the same time usually is lower than the analogous maximum P-state for
    2762 cores, which in turn usually is lower than the maximum turbo P-state that can
    277be set for 1 core.  The one-core maximum turbo P-state is thus the maximum
    278supported one overall.
    279
    280The maximum supported turbo P-state, the turbo threshold (the maximum supported
    281non-turbo P-state) and the minimum supported P-state are specific to the
    282processor model and can be determined by reading the processor's model-specific
    283registers (MSRs).  Moreover, some processors support the Configurable TDP
    284(Thermal Design Power) feature and, when that feature is enabled, the turbo
    285threshold effectively becomes a configurable value that can be set by the
    286platform firmware.
    287
    288Unlike ``_PSS`` objects in the ACPI tables, ``intel_pstate`` always exposes
    289the entire range of available P-states, including the whole turbo range, to the
    290``CPUFreq`` core and (in the passive mode) to generic scaling governors.  This
    291generally causes turbo P-states to be set more often when ``intel_pstate`` is
    292used relative to ACPI-based CPU performance scaling (see `below <acpi-cpufreq_>`_
    293for more information).
    294
    295Moreover, since ``intel_pstate`` always knows what the real turbo threshold is
    296(even if the Configurable TDP feature is enabled in the processor), its
    297``no_turbo`` attribute in ``sysfs`` (described `below <no_turbo_attr_>`_) should
    298work as expected in all cases (that is, if set to disable turbo P-states, it
    299always should prevent ``intel_pstate`` from using them).
    300
    301
    302Processor Support
    303=================
    304
    305To handle a given processor ``intel_pstate`` requires a number of different
    306pieces of information on it to be known, including:
    307
    308 * The minimum supported P-state.
    309
    310 * The maximum supported `non-turbo P-state <turbo_>`_.
    311
    312 * Whether or not turbo P-states are supported at all.
    313
    314 * The maximum supported `one-core turbo P-state <turbo_>`_ (if turbo P-states
    315   are supported).
    316
    317 * The scaling formula to translate the driver's internal representation
    318   of P-states into frequencies and the other way around.
    319
    320Generally, ways to obtain that information are specific to the processor model
    321or family.  Although it often is possible to obtain all of it from the processor
    322itself (using model-specific registers), there are cases in which hardware
    323manuals need to be consulted to get to it too.
    324
    325For this reason, there is a list of supported processors in ``intel_pstate`` and
    326the driver initialization will fail if the detected processor is not in that
    327list, unless it supports the HWP feature.  [The interface to obtain all of the
    328information listed above is the same for all of the processors supporting the
    329HWP feature, which is why ``intel_pstate`` works with all of them.]
    330
    331
    332User Space Interface in ``sysfs``
    333=================================
    334
    335Global Attributes
    336-----------------
    337
    338``intel_pstate`` exposes several global attributes (files) in ``sysfs`` to
    339control its functionality at the system level.  They are located in the
    340``/sys/devices/system/cpu/intel_pstate/`` directory and affect all CPUs.
    341
    342Some of them are not present if the ``intel_pstate=per_cpu_perf_limits``
    343argument is passed to the kernel in the command line.
    344
    345``max_perf_pct``
    346	Maximum P-state the driver is allowed to set in percent of the
    347	maximum supported performance level (the highest supported `turbo
    348	P-state <turbo_>`_).
    349
    350	This attribute will not be exposed if the
    351	``intel_pstate=per_cpu_perf_limits`` argument is present in the kernel
    352	command line.
    353
    354``min_perf_pct``
    355	Minimum P-state the driver is allowed to set in percent of the
    356	maximum supported performance level (the highest supported `turbo
    357	P-state <turbo_>`_).
    358
    359	This attribute will not be exposed if the
    360	``intel_pstate=per_cpu_perf_limits`` argument is present in the kernel
    361	command line.
    362
    363``num_pstates``
    364	Number of P-states supported by the processor (between 0 and 255
    365	inclusive) including both turbo and non-turbo P-states (see
    366	`Turbo P-states Support`_).
    367
    368	This attribute is present only if the value exposed by it is the same
    369	for all of the CPUs in the system.
    370
    371	The value of this attribute is not affected by the ``no_turbo``
    372	setting described `below <no_turbo_attr_>`_.
    373
    374	This attribute is read-only.
    375
    376``turbo_pct``
    377	Ratio of the `turbo range <turbo_>`_ size to the size of the entire
    378	range of supported P-states, in percent.
    379
    380	This attribute is present only if the value exposed by it is the same
    381	for all of the CPUs in the system.
    382
    383	This attribute is read-only.
    384
    385.. _no_turbo_attr:
    386
    387``no_turbo``
    388	If set (equal to 1), the driver is not allowed to set any turbo P-states
    389	(see `Turbo P-states Support`_).  If unset (equal to 0, which is the
    390	default), turbo P-states can be set by the driver.
    391	[Note that ``intel_pstate`` does not support the general ``boost``
    392	attribute (supported by some other scaling drivers) which is replaced
    393	by this one.]
    394
    395	This attribute does not affect the maximum supported frequency value
    396	supplied to the ``CPUFreq`` core and exposed via the policy interface,
    397	but it affects the maximum possible value of per-policy P-state	limits
    398	(see `Interpretation of Policy Attributes`_ below for details).
    399
    400``hwp_dynamic_boost``
    401	This attribute is only present if ``intel_pstate`` works in the
    402	`active mode with the HWP feature enabled <Active Mode With HWP_>`_ in
    403	the processor.  If set (equal to 1), it causes the minimum P-state limit
    404	to be increased dynamically for a short time whenever a task previously
    405	waiting on I/O is selected to run on a given logical CPU (the purpose
    406	of this mechanism is to improve performance).
    407
    408	This setting has no effect on logical CPUs whose minimum P-state limit
    409	is directly set to the highest non-turbo P-state or above it.
    410
    411.. _status_attr:
    412
    413``status``
    414	Operation mode of the driver: "active", "passive" or "off".
    415
    416	"active"
    417		The driver is functional and in the `active mode
    418		<Active Mode_>`_.
    419
    420	"passive"
    421		The driver is functional and in the `passive mode
    422		<Passive Mode_>`_.
    423
    424	"off"
    425		The driver is not functional (it is not registered as a scaling
    426		driver with the ``CPUFreq`` core).
    427
    428	This attribute can be written to in order to change the driver's
    429	operation mode or to unregister it.  The string written to it must be
    430	one of the possible values of it and, if successful, the write will
    431	cause the driver to switch over to the operation mode represented by
    432	that string - or to be unregistered in the "off" case.  [Actually,
    433	switching over from the active mode to the passive mode or the other
    434	way around causes the driver to be unregistered and registered again
    435	with a different set of callbacks, so all of its settings (the global
    436	as well as the per-policy ones) are then reset to their default
    437	values, possibly depending on the target operation mode.]
    438
    439``energy_efficiency``
    440	This attribute is only present on platforms with CPUs matching the Kaby
    441	Lake or Coffee Lake desktop CPU model. By default, energy-efficiency
    442	optimizations are disabled on these CPU models if HWP is enabled.
    443	Enabling energy-efficiency optimizations may limit maximum operating
    444	frequency with or without the HWP feature.  With HWP enabled, the
    445	optimizations are done only in the turbo frequency range.  Without it,
    446	they are done in the entire available frequency range.  Setting this
    447	attribute to "1" enables the energy-efficiency optimizations and setting
    448	to "0" disables them.
    449
    450Interpretation of Policy Attributes
    451-----------------------------------
    452
    453The interpretation of some ``CPUFreq`` policy attributes described in
    454Documentation/admin-guide/pm/cpufreq.rst is special with ``intel_pstate``
    455as the current scaling driver and it generally depends on the driver's
    456`operation mode <Operation Modes_>`_.
    457
    458First of all, the values of the ``cpuinfo_max_freq``, ``cpuinfo_min_freq`` and
    459``scaling_cur_freq`` attributes are produced by applying a processor-specific
    460multiplier to the internal P-state representation used by ``intel_pstate``.
    461Also, the values of the ``scaling_max_freq`` and ``scaling_min_freq``
    462attributes are capped by the frequency corresponding to the maximum P-state that
    463the driver is allowed to set.
    464
    465If the ``no_turbo`` `global attribute <no_turbo_attr_>`_ is set, the driver is
    466not allowed to use turbo P-states, so the maximum value of ``scaling_max_freq``
    467and ``scaling_min_freq`` is limited to the maximum non-turbo P-state frequency.
    468Accordingly, setting ``no_turbo`` causes ``scaling_max_freq`` and
    469``scaling_min_freq`` to go down to that value if they were above it before.
    470However, the old values of ``scaling_max_freq`` and ``scaling_min_freq`` will be
    471restored after unsetting ``no_turbo``, unless these attributes have been written
    472to after ``no_turbo`` was set.
    473
    474If ``no_turbo`` is not set, the maximum possible value of ``scaling_max_freq``
    475and ``scaling_min_freq`` corresponds to the maximum supported turbo P-state,
    476which also is the value of ``cpuinfo_max_freq`` in either case.
    477
    478Next, the following policy attributes have special meaning if
    479``intel_pstate`` works in the `active mode <Active Mode_>`_:
    480
    481``scaling_available_governors``
    482	List of P-state selection algorithms provided by ``intel_pstate``.
    483
    484``scaling_governor``
    485	P-state selection algorithm provided by ``intel_pstate`` currently in
    486	use with the given policy.
    487
    488``scaling_cur_freq``
    489	Frequency of the average P-state of the CPU represented by the given
    490	policy for the time interval between the last two invocations of the
    491	driver's utilization update callback by the CPU scheduler for that CPU.
    492
    493One more policy attribute is present if the HWP feature is enabled in the
    494processor:
    495
    496``base_frequency``
    497	Shows the base frequency of the CPU. Any frequency above this will be
    498	in the turbo frequency range.
    499
    500The meaning of these attributes in the `passive mode <Passive Mode_>`_ is the
    501same as for other scaling drivers.
    502
    503Additionally, the value of the ``scaling_driver`` attribute for ``intel_pstate``
    504depends on the operation mode of the driver.  Namely, it is either
    505"intel_pstate" (in the `active mode <Active Mode_>`_) or "intel_cpufreq" (in the
    506`passive mode <Passive Mode_>`_).
    507
    508Coordination of P-State Limits
    509------------------------------
    510
    511``intel_pstate`` allows P-state limits to be set in two ways: with the help of
    512the ``max_perf_pct`` and ``min_perf_pct`` `global attributes
    513<Global Attributes_>`_ or via the ``scaling_max_freq`` and ``scaling_min_freq``
    514``CPUFreq`` policy attributes.  The coordination between those limits is based
    515on the following rules, regardless of the current operation mode of the driver:
    516
    517 1. All CPUs are affected by the global limits (that is, none of them can be
    518    requested to run faster than the global maximum and none of them can be
    519    requested to run slower than the global minimum).
    520
    521 2. Each individual CPU is affected by its own per-policy limits (that is, it
    522    cannot be requested to run faster than its own per-policy maximum and it
    523    cannot be requested to run slower than its own per-policy minimum). The
    524    effective performance depends on whether the platform supports per core
    525    P-states, hyper-threading is enabled and on current performance requests
    526    from other CPUs. When platform doesn't support per core P-states, the
    527    effective performance can be more than the policy limits set on a CPU, if
    528    other CPUs are requesting higher performance at that moment. Even with per
    529    core P-states support, when hyper-threading is enabled, if the sibling CPU
    530    is requesting higher performance, the other siblings will get higher
    531    performance than their policy limits.
    532
    533 3. The global and per-policy limits can be set independently.
    534
    535In the `active mode with the HWP feature enabled <Active Mode With HWP_>`_, the
    536resulting effective values are written into hardware registers whenever the
    537limits change in order to request its internal P-state selection logic to always
    538set P-states within these limits.  Otherwise, the limits are taken into account
    539by scaling governors (in the `passive mode <Passive Mode_>`_) and by the driver
    540every time before setting a new P-state for a CPU.
    541
    542Additionally, if the ``intel_pstate=per_cpu_perf_limits`` command line argument
    543is passed to the kernel, ``max_perf_pct`` and ``min_perf_pct`` are not exposed
    544at all and the only way to set the limits is by using the policy attributes.
    545
    546
    547Energy vs Performance Hints
    548---------------------------
    549
    550If the hardware-managed P-states (HWP) is enabled in the processor, additional
    551attributes, intended to allow user space to help ``intel_pstate`` to adjust the
    552processor's internal P-state selection logic by focusing it on performance or on
    553energy-efficiency, or somewhere between the two extremes, are present in every
    554``CPUFreq`` policy directory in ``sysfs``.  They are :
    555
    556``energy_performance_preference``
    557	Current value of the energy vs performance hint for the given policy
    558	(or the CPU represented by it).
    559
    560	The hint can be changed by writing to this attribute.
    561
    562``energy_performance_available_preferences``
    563	List of strings that can be written to the
    564	``energy_performance_preference`` attribute.
    565
    566	They represent different energy vs performance hints and should be
    567	self-explanatory, except that ``default`` represents whatever hint
    568	value was set by the platform firmware.
    569
    570Strings written to the ``energy_performance_preference`` attribute are
    571internally translated to integer values written to the processor's
    572Energy-Performance Preference (EPP) knob (if supported) or its
    573Energy-Performance Bias (EPB) knob. It is also possible to write a positive
    574integer value between 0 to 255, if the EPP feature is present. If the EPP
    575feature is not present, writing integer value to this attribute is not
    576supported. In this case, user can use the
    577"/sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu*/power/energy_perf_bias" interface.
    578
    579[Note that tasks may by migrated from one CPU to another by the scheduler's
    580load-balancing algorithm and if different energy vs performance hints are
    581set for those CPUs, that may lead to undesirable outcomes.  To avoid such
    582issues it is better to set the same energy vs performance hint for all CPUs
    583or to pin every task potentially sensitive to them to a specific CPU.]
    584
    585.. _acpi-cpufreq:
    586
    587``intel_pstate`` vs ``acpi-cpufreq``
    588====================================
    589
    590On the majority of systems supported by ``intel_pstate``, the ACPI tables
    591provided by the platform firmware contain ``_PSS`` objects returning information
    592that can be used for CPU performance scaling (refer to the ACPI specification
    593[3]_ for details on the ``_PSS`` objects and the format of the information
    594returned by them).
    595
    596The information returned by the ACPI ``_PSS`` objects is used by the
    597``acpi-cpufreq`` scaling driver.  On systems supported by ``intel_pstate``
    598the ``acpi-cpufreq`` driver uses the same hardware CPU performance scaling
    599interface, but the set of P-states it can use is limited by the ``_PSS``
    600output.
    601
    602On those systems each ``_PSS`` object returns a list of P-states supported by
    603the corresponding CPU which basically is a subset of the P-states range that can
    604be used by ``intel_pstate`` on the same system, with one exception: the whole
    605`turbo range <turbo_>`_ is represented by one item in it (the topmost one).  By
    606convention, the frequency returned by ``_PSS`` for that item is greater by 1 MHz
    607than the frequency of the highest non-turbo P-state listed by it, but the
    608corresponding P-state representation (following the hardware specification)
    609returned for it matches the maximum supported turbo P-state (or is the
    610special value 255 meaning essentially "go as high as you can get").
    611
    612The list of P-states returned by ``_PSS`` is reflected by the table of
    613available frequencies supplied by ``acpi-cpufreq`` to the ``CPUFreq`` core and
    614scaling governors and the minimum and maximum supported frequencies reported by
    615it come from that list as well.  In particular, given the special representation
    616of the turbo range described above, this means that the maximum supported
    617frequency reported by ``acpi-cpufreq`` is higher by 1 MHz than the frequency
    618of the highest supported non-turbo P-state listed by ``_PSS`` which, of course,
    619affects decisions made by the scaling governors, except for ``powersave`` and
    620``performance``.
    621
    622For example, if a given governor attempts to select a frequency proportional to
    623estimated CPU load and maps the load of 100% to the maximum supported frequency
    624(possibly multiplied by a constant), then it will tend to choose P-states below
    625the turbo threshold if ``acpi-cpufreq`` is used as the scaling driver, because
    626in that case the turbo range corresponds to a small fraction of the frequency
    627band it can use (1 MHz vs 1 GHz or more).  In consequence, it will only go to
    628the turbo range for the highest loads and the other loads above 50% that might
    629benefit from running at turbo frequencies will be given non-turbo P-states
    630instead.
    631
    632One more issue related to that may appear on systems supporting the
    633`Configurable TDP feature <turbo_>`_ allowing the platform firmware to set the
    634turbo threshold.  Namely, if that is not coordinated with the lists of P-states
    635returned by ``_PSS`` properly, there may be more than one item corresponding to
    636a turbo P-state in those lists and there may be a problem with avoiding the
    637turbo range (if desirable or necessary).  Usually, to avoid using turbo
    638P-states overall, ``acpi-cpufreq`` simply avoids using the topmost state listed
    639by ``_PSS``, but that is not sufficient when there are other turbo P-states in
    640the list returned by it.
    641
    642Apart from the above, ``acpi-cpufreq`` works like ``intel_pstate`` in the
    643`passive mode <Passive Mode_>`_, except that the number of P-states it can set
    644is limited to the ones listed by the ACPI ``_PSS`` objects.
    645
    646
    647Kernel Command Line Options for ``intel_pstate``
    648================================================
    649
    650Several kernel command line options can be used to pass early-configuration-time
    651parameters to ``intel_pstate`` in order to enforce specific behavior of it.  All
    652of them have to be prepended with the ``intel_pstate=`` prefix.
    653
    654``disable``
    655	Do not register ``intel_pstate`` as the scaling driver even if the
    656	processor is supported by it.
    657
    658``active``
    659	Register ``intel_pstate`` in the `active mode <Active Mode_>`_ to start
    660	with.
    661
    662``passive``
    663	Register ``intel_pstate`` in the `passive mode <Passive Mode_>`_ to
    664	start with.
    665
    666``force``
    667	Register ``intel_pstate`` as the scaling driver instead of
    668	``acpi-cpufreq`` even if the latter is preferred on the given system.
    669
    670	This may prevent some platform features (such as thermal controls and
    671	power capping) that rely on the availability of ACPI P-states
    672	information from functioning as expected, so it should be used with
    673	caution.
    674
    675	This option does not work with processors that are not supported by
    676	``intel_pstate`` and on platforms where the ``pcc-cpufreq`` scaling
    677	driver is used instead of ``acpi-cpufreq``.
    678
    679``no_hwp``
    680	Do not enable the hardware-managed P-states (HWP) feature even if it is
    681	supported by the processor.
    682
    683``hwp_only``
    684	Register ``intel_pstate`` as the scaling driver only if the
    685	hardware-managed P-states (HWP) feature is supported by the processor.
    686
    687``support_acpi_ppc``
    688	Take ACPI ``_PPC`` performance limits into account.
    689
    690	If the preferred power management profile in the FADT (Fixed ACPI
    691	Description Table) is set to "Enterprise Server" or "Performance
    692	Server", the ACPI ``_PPC`` limits are taken into account by default
    693	and this option has no effect.
    694
    695``per_cpu_perf_limits``
    696	Use per-logical-CPU P-State limits (see `Coordination of P-state
    697	Limits`_ for details).
    698
    699
    700Diagnostics and Tuning
    701======================
    702
    703Trace Events
    704------------
    705
    706There are two static trace events that can be used for ``intel_pstate``
    707diagnostics.  One of them is the ``cpu_frequency`` trace event generally used
    708by ``CPUFreq``, and the other one is the ``pstate_sample`` trace event specific
    709to ``intel_pstate``.  Both of them are triggered by ``intel_pstate`` only if
    710it works in the `active mode <Active Mode_>`_.
    711
    712The following sequence of shell commands can be used to enable them and see
    713their output (if the kernel is generally configured to support event tracing)::
    714
    715 # cd /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/
    716 # echo 1 > events/power/pstate_sample/enable
    717 # echo 1 > events/power/cpu_frequency/enable
    718 # cat trace
    719 gnome-terminal--4510  [001] ..s.  1177.680733: pstate_sample: core_busy=107 scaled=94 from=26 to=26 mperf=1143818 aperf=1230607 tsc=29838618 freq=2474476
    720 cat-5235  [002] ..s.  1177.681723: cpu_frequency: state=2900000 cpu_id=2
    721
    722If ``intel_pstate`` works in the `passive mode <Passive Mode_>`_, the
    723``cpu_frequency`` trace event will be triggered either by the ``schedutil``
    724scaling governor (for the policies it is attached to), or by the ``CPUFreq``
    725core (for the policies with other scaling governors).
    726
    727``ftrace``
    728----------
    729
    730The ``ftrace`` interface can be used for low-level diagnostics of
    731``intel_pstate``.  For example, to check how often the function to set a
    732P-state is called, the ``ftrace`` filter can be set to
    733:c:func:`intel_pstate_set_pstate`::
    734
    735 # cd /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/
    736 # cat available_filter_functions | grep -i pstate
    737 intel_pstate_set_pstate
    738 intel_pstate_cpu_init
    739 ...
    740 # echo intel_pstate_set_pstate > set_ftrace_filter
    741 # echo function > current_tracer
    742 # cat trace | head -15
    743 # tracer: function
    744 #
    745 # entries-in-buffer/entries-written: 80/80   #P:4
    746 #
    747 #                              _-----=> irqs-off
    748 #                             / _----=> need-resched
    749 #                            | / _---=> hardirq/softirq
    750 #                            || / _--=> preempt-depth
    751 #                            ||| /     delay
    752 #           TASK-PID   CPU#  ||||    TIMESTAMP  FUNCTION
    753 #              | |       |   ||||       |         |
    754             Xorg-3129  [000] ..s.  2537.644844: intel_pstate_set_pstate <-intel_pstate_timer_func
    755  gnome-terminal--4510  [002] ..s.  2537.649844: intel_pstate_set_pstate <-intel_pstate_timer_func
    756      gnome-shell-3409  [001] ..s.  2537.650850: intel_pstate_set_pstate <-intel_pstate_timer_func
    757           <idle>-0     [000] ..s.  2537.654843: intel_pstate_set_pstate <-intel_pstate_timer_func
    758
    759
    760References
    761==========
    762
    763.. [1] Kristen Accardi, *Balancing Power and Performance in the Linux Kernel*,
    764       https://events.static.linuxfound.org/sites/events/files/slides/LinuxConEurope_2015.pdf
    765
    766.. [2] *Intel® 64 and IA-32 Architectures Software Developer’s Manual Volume 3: System Programming Guide*,
    767       https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/architecture-and-technology/64-ia-32-architectures-software-developer-system-programming-manual-325384.html
    768
    769.. [3] *Advanced Configuration and Power Interface Specification*,
    770       https://uefi.org/sites/default/files/resources/ACPI_6_3_final_Jan30.pdf