On Thursday 07 Jun 2018 at 18:04:19 (+0200), Juri Lelli wrote: > On 07/06/18 16:19, Quentin Perret wrote: > > On Thursday 07 Jun 2018 at 16:44:09 (+0200), Juri Lelli wrote: > > > > + if (!fd->cs_table) > > > > + goto free_fd; > > > > + > > > > + /* Copy the span of the frequency domain */ > > > > + cpumask_copy(&fd->cpus, span); > > > > + > > > > + /* Build the list of capacity states for this freq domain */ > > > > + for (i = 0, freq = 0; i < nr_states; i++, freq++) { > > > ^ ^ > > > The fact that this relies on active_power() to use ceil OPP for a given > > > freq might deserve a comment. Also, is this behaviour of active_power() > > > standardized? > > > > Right, this can get confusing pretty quickly. There is a comment in > > include/linux/energy_model.h where the expected behaviour of > > active_power is explained, but a reminder above this function shouldn't > > hurt. > > Mmm, not sure if you could actually check that returned freq values are > actually consistent with the assumption (just in case one didn't do > homework).
Right, that's a good point. I'll add checks on the parameters modified by active_power(). Monotonically increasing freq, monotonically increasing power as well I guess, something along those lines. > > > > +{ > > > > + struct em_cs_table *old_table, *new_table; > > > > + struct em_freq_domain *fd; > > > > + unsigned long flags; > > > > + int nr_states, cpu; > > > > + > > > > + read_lock_irqsave(&em_data_lock, flags); > > > > > > Don't you need write_lock_ here, since you are going to exchange the > > > em tables? > > > > This lock protects the per_cpu() variable itself. Here we only read > > pointers from that per_cpu variable, and we modify one attribute in > > the pointed structure. We don't modify the per_cpu table itself. Does > > that make sense ? > > So, I don't seem to understand what protects the rcu_assign_pointer(s) > below (as in > https://elixir.bootlin.com/linux/latest/source/Documentation/RCU/whatisRCU.txt#L395). Sigh, that's not right :( I take back my previous message, the write lock _is_ needed. Thanks for pointing that out ... Thanks, Quentin