Message ID | 20240125-rk-dts-additions-v1-4-5879275db36f@gmail.com (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
State | New, archived |
Headers | show |
Series | RK3588 and Rock 5B dts additions: thermal, OPP, rfkill and fan | expand |
Hi Alexey, Adding Viresh On 24/01/2024 21:30, Alexey Charkov wrote: > By default the CPUs on RK3588 start up in a conservative performance > mode. Add frequency and voltage mappings to the device tree to enable > dynamic scaling via cpufreq > > Signed-off-by: Alexey Charkov <alchark@gmail.com> > --- > arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi | 209 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ > 1 file changed, 209 insertions(+) > > diff --git a/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi b/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi > index 131b9eb21398..e605be531a0f 100644 > --- a/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi > +++ b/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi > @@ -97,6 +97,7 @@ cpu_l0: cpu@0 { > clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; > assigned-clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; > assigned-clock-rates = <816000000>; > + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster0_opp_table>; > cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; > i-cache-size = <32768>; > i-cache-line-size = <64>; > @@ -116,6 +117,7 @@ cpu_l1: cpu@100 { > enable-method = "psci"; > capacity-dmips-mhz = <530>; > clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; > + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster0_opp_table>; > cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; > i-cache-size = <32768>; > i-cache-line-size = <64>; > @@ -135,6 +137,7 @@ cpu_l2: cpu@200 { > enable-method = "psci"; > capacity-dmips-mhz = <530>; > clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; > + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster0_opp_table>; > cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; > i-cache-size = <32768>; > i-cache-line-size = <64>; > @@ -154,6 +157,7 @@ cpu_l3: cpu@300 { > enable-method = "psci"; > capacity-dmips-mhz = <530>; > clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; > + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster0_opp_table>; > cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; > i-cache-size = <32768>; > i-cache-line-size = <64>; > @@ -175,6 +179,7 @@ cpu_b0: cpu@400 { > clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB01>; > assigned-clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB01>; > assigned-clock-rates = <816000000>; > + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster1_opp_table>; > cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; > i-cache-size = <65536>; > i-cache-line-size = <64>; > @@ -194,6 +199,7 @@ cpu_b1: cpu@500 { > enable-method = "psci"; > capacity-dmips-mhz = <1024>; > clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB01>; > + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster1_opp_table>; > cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; > i-cache-size = <65536>; > i-cache-line-size = <64>; > @@ -215,6 +221,7 @@ cpu_b2: cpu@600 { > clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB23>; > assigned-clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB23>; > assigned-clock-rates = <816000000>; > + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster2_opp_table>; > cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; > i-cache-size = <65536>; > i-cache-line-size = <64>; > @@ -234,6 +241,7 @@ cpu_b3: cpu@700 { > enable-method = "psci"; > capacity-dmips-mhz = <1024>; > clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB23>; > + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster2_opp_table>; > cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; > i-cache-size = <65536>; > i-cache-line-size = <64>; > @@ -348,6 +356,207 @@ l3_cache: l3-cache { > }; > }; > > + cluster0_opp_table: opp-table-cluster0 { > + compatible = "operating-points-v2"; > + opp-shared; > + > + opp-408000000 { > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <408000000>; > + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 950000>; > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > + }; > + opp-600000000 { > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <600000000>; > + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 950000>; > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > + }; > + opp-816000000 { > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <816000000>; > + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 950000>; > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > + }; > + opp-1008000000 { > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1008000000>; > + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 950000>; > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > + }; It is not useful to introduce OPP with the same voltage. There is no gain in terms of energy efficiency as the compute capacity is linearly tied with power consumption (P=CxFxV²) in this case. For example, opp-408 consumes 2 bogoWatts and opp-816 consumes 4 bogoWatts (because of the same voltage). For a workload, opp-408 takes 10 sec and opp-816 takes 5 sec because it is twice faster. The energy consumption is: opp-408 = 10 x 2 = 20 BogoJoules opp-816 = 5 x 4 = 20 BogoJoules > + opp-1200000000 { > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1200000000>; > + opp-microvolt = <712500 712500 950000>; > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > + }; > + opp-1416000000 { > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1416000000>; > + opp-microvolt = <762500 762500 950000>; > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > + opp-suspend; > + }; > + opp-1608000000 { > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1608000000>; > + opp-microvolt = <850000 850000 950000>; > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > + }; > + opp-1800000000 { > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1800000000>; > + opp-microvolt = <950000 950000 950000>; > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > + }; > + }; > + > + cluster1_opp_table: opp-table-cluster1 { > + compatible = "operating-points-v2"; > + opp-shared; > + > + opp-408000000 { > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <408000000>; > + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 1000000>; > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > + opp-suspend; > + }; > + opp-600000000 { > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <600000000>; > + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 1000000>; > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > + }; > + opp-816000000 { > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <816000000>; > + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 1000000>; > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > + }; > + opp-1008000000 { > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1008000000>; > + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 1000000>; > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > + }; same comment > + opp-1200000000 { > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1200000000>; > + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 1000000>; > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > + }; > + opp-1416000000 { > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1416000000>; > + opp-microvolt = <725000 725000 1000000>; > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > + }; > + opp-1608000000 { > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1608000000>; > + opp-microvolt = <762500 762500 1000000>; > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > + }; > + opp-1800000000 { > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1800000000>; > + opp-microvolt = <850000 850000 1000000>; > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > + }; > + opp-2016000000 { > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <2016000000>; > + opp-microvolt = <925000 925000 1000000>; > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > + }; > + opp-2208000000 { > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <2208000000>; > + opp-microvolt = <987500 987500 1000000>; > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > + }; > + opp-2256000000 { > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <2256000000>; > + opp-microvolt = <1000000 1000000 1000000>; > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > + }; > + opp-2304000000 { > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <2304000000>; > + opp-microvolt = <1000000 1000000 1000000>; > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > + }; > + opp-2352000000 { > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <2352000000>; > + opp-microvolt = <1000000 1000000 1000000>; > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > + }; > + opp-2400000000 { > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <2400000000>; > + opp-microvolt = <1000000 1000000 1000000>; > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > + }; Same comment > + }; > + > + cluster2_opp_table: opp-table-cluster2 { > + compatible = "operating-points-v2"; > + opp-shared; > + > + opp-408000000 { > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <408000000>; > + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 1000000>; > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > + opp-suspend; > + }; > + opp-600000000 { > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <600000000>; > + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 1000000>; > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > + }; > + opp-816000000 { > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <816000000>; > + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 1000000>; > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > + }; > + opp-1008000000 { > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1008000000>; > + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 1000000>; > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > + }; > + opp-1200000000 { > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1200000000>; > + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 1000000>; > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > + }; > + opp-1416000000 { > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1416000000>; > + opp-microvolt = <725000 725000 1000000>; > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > + }; > + opp-1608000000 { > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1608000000>; > + opp-microvolt = <762500 762500 1000000>; > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > + }; > + opp-1800000000 { > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1800000000>; > + opp-microvolt = <850000 850000 1000000>; > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > + }; > + opp-2016000000 { > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <2016000000>; > + opp-microvolt = <925000 925000 1000000>; > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > + }; > + opp-2208000000 { > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <2208000000>; > + opp-microvolt = <987500 987500 1000000>; > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > + }; > + opp-2256000000 { > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <2256000000>; > + opp-microvolt = <1000000 1000000 1000000>; > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > + }; > + opp-2304000000 { > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <2304000000>; > + opp-microvolt = <1000000 1000000 1000000>; > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > + }; > + opp-2352000000 { > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <2352000000>; > + opp-microvolt = <1000000 1000000 1000000>; > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > + }; > + opp-2400000000 { > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <2400000000>; > + opp-microvolt = <1000000 1000000 1000000>; > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > + }; Same comment > + }; > + > firmware { > optee: optee { > compatible = "linaro,optee-tz"; >
On Thu, Jan 25, 2024 at 1:30 PM Daniel Lezcano <daniel.lezcano@linaro.org> wrote: > > > Hi Alexey, > > Adding Viresh > > On 24/01/2024 21:30, Alexey Charkov wrote: > > By default the CPUs on RK3588 start up in a conservative performance > > mode. Add frequency and voltage mappings to the device tree to enable > > dynamic scaling via cpufreq > > > > Signed-off-by: Alexey Charkov <alchark@gmail.com> > > --- > > arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi | 209 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ > > 1 file changed, 209 insertions(+) > > > > diff --git a/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi b/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi > > index 131b9eb21398..e605be531a0f 100644 > > --- a/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi > > +++ b/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi > > @@ -97,6 +97,7 @@ cpu_l0: cpu@0 { > > clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; > > assigned-clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; > > assigned-clock-rates = <816000000>; > > + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster0_opp_table>; > > cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; > > i-cache-size = <32768>; > > i-cache-line-size = <64>; > > @@ -116,6 +117,7 @@ cpu_l1: cpu@100 { > > enable-method = "psci"; > > capacity-dmips-mhz = <530>; > > clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; > > + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster0_opp_table>; > > cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; > > i-cache-size = <32768>; > > i-cache-line-size = <64>; > > @@ -135,6 +137,7 @@ cpu_l2: cpu@200 { > > enable-method = "psci"; > > capacity-dmips-mhz = <530>; > > clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; > > + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster0_opp_table>; > > cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; > > i-cache-size = <32768>; > > i-cache-line-size = <64>; > > @@ -154,6 +157,7 @@ cpu_l3: cpu@300 { > > enable-method = "psci"; > > capacity-dmips-mhz = <530>; > > clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; > > + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster0_opp_table>; > > cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; > > i-cache-size = <32768>; > > i-cache-line-size = <64>; > > @@ -175,6 +179,7 @@ cpu_b0: cpu@400 { > > clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB01>; > > assigned-clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB01>; > > assigned-clock-rates = <816000000>; > > + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster1_opp_table>; > > cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; > > i-cache-size = <65536>; > > i-cache-line-size = <64>; > > @@ -194,6 +199,7 @@ cpu_b1: cpu@500 { > > enable-method = "psci"; > > capacity-dmips-mhz = <1024>; > > clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB01>; > > + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster1_opp_table>; > > cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; > > i-cache-size = <65536>; > > i-cache-line-size = <64>; > > @@ -215,6 +221,7 @@ cpu_b2: cpu@600 { > > clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB23>; > > assigned-clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB23>; > > assigned-clock-rates = <816000000>; > > + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster2_opp_table>; > > cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; > > i-cache-size = <65536>; > > i-cache-line-size = <64>; > > @@ -234,6 +241,7 @@ cpu_b3: cpu@700 { > > enable-method = "psci"; > > capacity-dmips-mhz = <1024>; > > clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB23>; > > + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster2_opp_table>; > > cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; > > i-cache-size = <65536>; > > i-cache-line-size = <64>; > > @@ -348,6 +356,207 @@ l3_cache: l3-cache { > > }; > > }; > > > > + cluster0_opp_table: opp-table-cluster0 { > > + compatible = "operating-points-v2"; > > + opp-shared; > > + > > + opp-408000000 { > > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <408000000>; > > + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 950000>; > > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > > + }; > > + opp-600000000 { > > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <600000000>; > > + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 950000>; > > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > > + }; > > + opp-816000000 { > > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <816000000>; > > + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 950000>; > > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > > + }; > > + opp-1008000000 { > > + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1008000000>; > > + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 950000>; > > + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > > + }; > > It is not useful to introduce OPP with the same voltage. There is no > gain in terms of energy efficiency as the compute capacity is linearly > tied with power consumption (P=CxFxV²) in this case. > > For example, opp-408 consumes 2 bogoWatts and opp-816 consumes 4 > bogoWatts (because of the same voltage). > > For a workload, opp-408 takes 10 sec and opp-816 takes 5 sec because it > is twice faster. > > The energy consumption is: > > opp-408 = 10 x 2 = 20 BogoJoules > opp-816 = 5 x 4 = 20 BogoJoules I see, thank you. Will drop all "lower frequency - same voltage" instances and resubmit in the next iteration. Best regards, Alexey
Hello Daniel, On 2024-01-25 10:30, Daniel Lezcano wrote: > On 24/01/2024 21:30, Alexey Charkov wrote: >> By default the CPUs on RK3588 start up in a conservative performance >> mode. Add frequency and voltage mappings to the device tree to enable >> dynamic scaling via cpufreq >> >> Signed-off-by: Alexey Charkov <alchark@gmail.com> >> --- >> arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi | 209 >> ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ >> 1 file changed, 209 insertions(+) >> >> diff --git a/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi >> b/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi >> index 131b9eb21398..e605be531a0f 100644 >> --- a/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi >> +++ b/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi >> @@ -97,6 +97,7 @@ cpu_l0: cpu@0 { >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; >> assigned-clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; >> assigned-clock-rates = <816000000>; >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster0_opp_table>; >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; >> i-cache-size = <32768>; >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; >> @@ -116,6 +117,7 @@ cpu_l1: cpu@100 { >> enable-method = "psci"; >> capacity-dmips-mhz = <530>; >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster0_opp_table>; >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; >> i-cache-size = <32768>; >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; >> @@ -135,6 +137,7 @@ cpu_l2: cpu@200 { >> enable-method = "psci"; >> capacity-dmips-mhz = <530>; >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster0_opp_table>; >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; >> i-cache-size = <32768>; >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; >> @@ -154,6 +157,7 @@ cpu_l3: cpu@300 { >> enable-method = "psci"; >> capacity-dmips-mhz = <530>; >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster0_opp_table>; >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; >> i-cache-size = <32768>; >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; >> @@ -175,6 +179,7 @@ cpu_b0: cpu@400 { >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB01>; >> assigned-clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB01>; >> assigned-clock-rates = <816000000>; >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster1_opp_table>; >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; >> i-cache-size = <65536>; >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; >> @@ -194,6 +199,7 @@ cpu_b1: cpu@500 { >> enable-method = "psci"; >> capacity-dmips-mhz = <1024>; >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB01>; >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster1_opp_table>; >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; >> i-cache-size = <65536>; >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; >> @@ -215,6 +221,7 @@ cpu_b2: cpu@600 { >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB23>; >> assigned-clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB23>; >> assigned-clock-rates = <816000000>; >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster2_opp_table>; >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; >> i-cache-size = <65536>; >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; >> @@ -234,6 +241,7 @@ cpu_b3: cpu@700 { >> enable-method = "psci"; >> capacity-dmips-mhz = <1024>; >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB23>; >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster2_opp_table>; >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; >> i-cache-size = <65536>; >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; >> @@ -348,6 +356,207 @@ l3_cache: l3-cache { >> }; >> }; >> + cluster0_opp_table: opp-table-cluster0 { >> + compatible = "operating-points-v2"; >> + opp-shared; >> + >> + opp-408000000 { >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <408000000>; >> + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 950000>; >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> + }; >> + opp-600000000 { >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <600000000>; >> + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 950000>; >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> + }; >> + opp-816000000 { >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <816000000>; >> + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 950000>; >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> + }; >> + opp-1008000000 { >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1008000000>; >> + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 950000>; >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> + }; > > It is not useful to introduce OPP with the same voltage. There is no > gain in terms of energy efficiency as the compute capacity is linearly > tied with power consumption (P=CxFxV²) in this case. > > For example, opp-408 consumes 2 bogoWatts and opp-816 consumes 4 > bogoWatts (because of the same voltage). > > For a workload, opp-408 takes 10 sec and opp-816 takes 5 sec because > it is twice faster. > > The energy consumption is: > > opp-408 = 10 x 2 = 20 BogoJoules > opp-816 = 5 x 4 = 20 BogoJoules I'd respectfully disagree that including multiple OPPs with the same voltage but different frequencies isn't useful. Please allow me to explain. See, the total amount of consumed energy is, in general, the same for such OPPs and the same CPU task(s), if we ignore the static leakage current and such stuff, which isn't important here. Though, the emphasis here is on "total", i.e. without taking into account the actual amount of time required for the exemplified CPU task(s) to complete. If the total amount of time is quite short, we aren't going to heat up the package and the board enough to hit the CPU thermal throttling; this approach is also sometimes referred to as "race to idle", which is actually quite effective for battery-powered mobile devices that tend to load their CPU cores in bursts, while remaining kind of inactive for the remaining time. However, if the CPU task(s) last long enough to actually saturate the thermal capacities of the package and the board or the device, we're getting into the CPU throttling territory, in which running the CPU cores slower, but still as fast as possible, may actually be beneficial for the overall CPU performance. By running the CPU cores slower, we're lowering the power and "spreading" the total energy consumption over time, i.e. we're making some time to allow the generated heat to dissipate into the surroundings. As we know, having more energy consumed by the SoC means more heat generated by the SoC, but the resulting temperature of the SoC depends on how fast the energy is consumed, which equals to how fast the CPUs run; of course, all that is valid under the reasonable assumption that the entire cooling setup, including the board surroundings, remains unchanged all the time. Having all that in mind, having a few OPPs with the same voltage but different frequencies can actually help us achieve better CPU performance. That way, throttling won't have to slow the CPUs more than it's actually needed to hit and maintain the desired thermal trip temperatures. >> + opp-1200000000 { >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1200000000>; >> + opp-microvolt = <712500 712500 950000>; >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> + }; >> + opp-1416000000 { >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1416000000>; >> + opp-microvolt = <762500 762500 950000>; >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> + opp-suspend; >> + }; >> + opp-1608000000 { >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1608000000>; >> + opp-microvolt = <850000 850000 950000>; >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> + }; >> + opp-1800000000 { >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1800000000>; >> + opp-microvolt = <950000 950000 950000>; >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> + }; >> + }; >> + >> + cluster1_opp_table: opp-table-cluster1 { >> + compatible = "operating-points-v2"; >> + opp-shared; >> + >> + opp-408000000 { >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <408000000>; >> + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 1000000>; >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> + opp-suspend; >> + }; >> + opp-600000000 { >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <600000000>; >> + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 1000000>; >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> + }; >> + opp-816000000 { >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <816000000>; >> + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 1000000>; >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> + }; >> + opp-1008000000 { >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1008000000>; >> + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 1000000>; >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> + }; > > same comment > >> + opp-1200000000 { >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1200000000>; >> + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 1000000>; >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> + }; >> + opp-1416000000 { >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1416000000>; >> + opp-microvolt = <725000 725000 1000000>; >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> + }; >> + opp-1608000000 { >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1608000000>; >> + opp-microvolt = <762500 762500 1000000>; >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> + }; >> + opp-1800000000 { >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1800000000>; >> + opp-microvolt = <850000 850000 1000000>; >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> + }; >> + opp-2016000000 { >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <2016000000>; >> + opp-microvolt = <925000 925000 1000000>; >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> + }; >> + opp-2208000000 { >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <2208000000>; >> + opp-microvolt = <987500 987500 1000000>; >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> + }; >> + opp-2256000000 { >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <2256000000>; >> + opp-microvolt = <1000000 1000000 1000000>; >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> + }; >> + opp-2304000000 { >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <2304000000>; >> + opp-microvolt = <1000000 1000000 1000000>; >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> + }; >> + opp-2352000000 { >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <2352000000>; >> + opp-microvolt = <1000000 1000000 1000000>; >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> + }; >> + opp-2400000000 { >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <2400000000>; >> + opp-microvolt = <1000000 1000000 1000000>; >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> + }; > > Same comment > >> + }; >> + >> + cluster2_opp_table: opp-table-cluster2 { >> + compatible = "operating-points-v2"; >> + opp-shared; >> + >> + opp-408000000 { >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <408000000>; >> + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 1000000>; >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> + opp-suspend; >> + }; >> + opp-600000000 { >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <600000000>; >> + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 1000000>; >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> + }; >> + opp-816000000 { >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <816000000>; >> + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 1000000>; >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> + }; >> + opp-1008000000 { >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1008000000>; >> + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 1000000>; >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> + }; >> + opp-1200000000 { >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1200000000>; >> + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 1000000>; >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> + }; >> + opp-1416000000 { >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1416000000>; >> + opp-microvolt = <725000 725000 1000000>; >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> + }; >> + opp-1608000000 { >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1608000000>; >> + opp-microvolt = <762500 762500 1000000>; >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> + }; >> + opp-1800000000 { >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1800000000>; >> + opp-microvolt = <850000 850000 1000000>; >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> + }; >> + opp-2016000000 { >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <2016000000>; >> + opp-microvolt = <925000 925000 1000000>; >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> + }; >> + opp-2208000000 { >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <2208000000>; >> + opp-microvolt = <987500 987500 1000000>; >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> + }; >> + opp-2256000000 { >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <2256000000>; >> + opp-microvolt = <1000000 1000000 1000000>; >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> + }; >> + opp-2304000000 { >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <2304000000>; >> + opp-microvolt = <1000000 1000000 1000000>; >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> + }; >> + opp-2352000000 { >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <2352000000>; >> + opp-microvolt = <1000000 1000000 1000000>; >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> + }; >> + opp-2400000000 { >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <2400000000>; >> + opp-microvolt = <1000000 1000000 1000000>; >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> + }; > > Same comment > >> + }; >> + >> firmware { >> optee: optee { >> compatible = "linaro,optee-tz"; >>
On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 10:32 AM Dragan Simic <dsimic@manjaro.org> wrote: > > Hello Daniel, > > On 2024-01-25 10:30, Daniel Lezcano wrote: > > On 24/01/2024 21:30, Alexey Charkov wrote: > >> By default the CPUs on RK3588 start up in a conservative performance > >> mode. Add frequency and voltage mappings to the device tree to enable > >> dynamic scaling via cpufreq > >> > >> Signed-off-by: Alexey Charkov <alchark@gmail.com> > >> --- > >> arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi | 209 > >> ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ > >> 1 file changed, 209 insertions(+) > >> > >> diff --git a/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi > >> b/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi > >> index 131b9eb21398..e605be531a0f 100644 > >> --- a/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi > >> +++ b/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi > >> @@ -97,6 +97,7 @@ cpu_l0: cpu@0 { > >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; > >> assigned-clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; > >> assigned-clock-rates = <816000000>; > >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster0_opp_table>; > >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; > >> i-cache-size = <32768>; > >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; > >> @@ -116,6 +117,7 @@ cpu_l1: cpu@100 { > >> enable-method = "psci"; > >> capacity-dmips-mhz = <530>; > >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; > >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster0_opp_table>; > >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; > >> i-cache-size = <32768>; > >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; > >> @@ -135,6 +137,7 @@ cpu_l2: cpu@200 { > >> enable-method = "psci"; > >> capacity-dmips-mhz = <530>; > >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; > >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster0_opp_table>; > >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; > >> i-cache-size = <32768>; > >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; > >> @@ -154,6 +157,7 @@ cpu_l3: cpu@300 { > >> enable-method = "psci"; > >> capacity-dmips-mhz = <530>; > >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; > >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster0_opp_table>; > >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; > >> i-cache-size = <32768>; > >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; > >> @@ -175,6 +179,7 @@ cpu_b0: cpu@400 { > >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB01>; > >> assigned-clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB01>; > >> assigned-clock-rates = <816000000>; > >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster1_opp_table>; > >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; > >> i-cache-size = <65536>; > >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; > >> @@ -194,6 +199,7 @@ cpu_b1: cpu@500 { > >> enable-method = "psci"; > >> capacity-dmips-mhz = <1024>; > >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB01>; > >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster1_opp_table>; > >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; > >> i-cache-size = <65536>; > >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; > >> @@ -215,6 +221,7 @@ cpu_b2: cpu@600 { > >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB23>; > >> assigned-clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB23>; > >> assigned-clock-rates = <816000000>; > >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster2_opp_table>; > >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; > >> i-cache-size = <65536>; > >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; > >> @@ -234,6 +241,7 @@ cpu_b3: cpu@700 { > >> enable-method = "psci"; > >> capacity-dmips-mhz = <1024>; > >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB23>; > >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster2_opp_table>; > >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; > >> i-cache-size = <65536>; > >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; > >> @@ -348,6 +356,207 @@ l3_cache: l3-cache { > >> }; > >> }; > >> + cluster0_opp_table: opp-table-cluster0 { > >> + compatible = "operating-points-v2"; > >> + opp-shared; > >> + > >> + opp-408000000 { > >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <408000000>; > >> + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 950000>; > >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > >> + }; > >> + opp-600000000 { > >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <600000000>; > >> + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 950000>; > >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > >> + }; > >> + opp-816000000 { > >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <816000000>; > >> + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 950000>; > >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > >> + }; > >> + opp-1008000000 { > >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1008000000>; > >> + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 950000>; > >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > >> + }; > > > > It is not useful to introduce OPP with the same voltage. There is no > > gain in terms of energy efficiency as the compute capacity is linearly > > tied with power consumption (P=CxFxV²) in this case. > > > > For example, opp-408 consumes 2 bogoWatts and opp-816 consumes 4 > > bogoWatts (because of the same voltage). > > > > For a workload, opp-408 takes 10 sec and opp-816 takes 5 sec because > > it is twice faster. > > > > The energy consumption is: > > > > opp-408 = 10 x 2 = 20 BogoJoules > > opp-816 = 5 x 4 = 20 BogoJoules > > I'd respectfully disagree that including multiple OPPs with the same > voltage > but different frequencies isn't useful. Please allow me to explain. > > See, the total amount of consumed energy is, in general, the same for > such > OPPs and the same CPU task(s), if we ignore the static leakage current > and > such stuff, which isn't important here. Though, the emphasis here is on > "total", i.e. without taking into account the actual amount of time > required > for the exemplified CPU task(s) to complete. If the total amount of > time > is quite short, we aren't going to heat up the package and the board > enough > to hit the CPU thermal throttling; this approach is also sometimes > referred > to as "race to idle", which is actually quite effective for > battery-powered > mobile devices that tend to load their CPU cores in bursts, while > remaining > kind of inactive for the remaining time. > > However, if the CPU task(s) last long enough to actually saturate the > thermal > capacities of the package and the board or the device, we're getting > into the > CPU throttling territory, in which running the CPU cores slower, but > still as > fast as possible, may actually be beneficial for the overall CPU > performance. > By running the CPU cores slower, we're lowering the power and > "spreading" the > total energy consumption over time, i.e. we're making some time to allow > the > generated heat to dissipate into the surroundings. As we know, having > more > energy consumed by the SoC means more heat generated by the SoC, but the > resulting temperature of the SoC depends on how fast the energy is > consumed, > which equals to how fast the CPUs run; of course, all that is valid > under > the reasonable assumption that the entire cooling setup, including the > board > surroundings, remains unchanged all the time. On the other hand, convective heat dissipation is approximately proportional to the temperature differential, therefore heating up the core to a higher temperature over a shorter period of time would let it dissipate the same joule amount faster. Given that total joules generated for a particular load are approximately the same for different frequencies as long as voltage remains the same (as Daniel pointed out), higher frequency seems to lead to better heat transfer to the environment for the same load. And also the task completes sooner, which is probably always good, ceteris paribus. Not sure how that all changes when throttling enters the game though :) Best regards, Alexey
Hello Alexey, On 2024-01-26 07:44, Alexey Charkov wrote: > On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 10:32 AM Dragan Simic <dsimic@manjaro.org> > wrote: >> On 2024-01-25 10:30, Daniel Lezcano wrote: >> > On 24/01/2024 21:30, Alexey Charkov wrote: >> >> By default the CPUs on RK3588 start up in a conservative performance >> >> mode. Add frequency and voltage mappings to the device tree to enable >> >> dynamic scaling via cpufreq >> >> >> >> Signed-off-by: Alexey Charkov <alchark@gmail.com> >> >> --- >> >> arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi | 209 >> >> ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ >> >> 1 file changed, 209 insertions(+) >> >> >> >> diff --git a/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi >> >> b/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi >> >> index 131b9eb21398..e605be531a0f 100644 >> >> --- a/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi >> >> +++ b/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi >> >> @@ -97,6 +97,7 @@ cpu_l0: cpu@0 { >> >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; >> >> assigned-clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; >> >> assigned-clock-rates = <816000000>; >> >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster0_opp_table>; >> >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; >> >> i-cache-size = <32768>; >> >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; >> >> @@ -116,6 +117,7 @@ cpu_l1: cpu@100 { >> >> enable-method = "psci"; >> >> capacity-dmips-mhz = <530>; >> >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; >> >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster0_opp_table>; >> >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; >> >> i-cache-size = <32768>; >> >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; >> >> @@ -135,6 +137,7 @@ cpu_l2: cpu@200 { >> >> enable-method = "psci"; >> >> capacity-dmips-mhz = <530>; >> >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; >> >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster0_opp_table>; >> >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; >> >> i-cache-size = <32768>; >> >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; >> >> @@ -154,6 +157,7 @@ cpu_l3: cpu@300 { >> >> enable-method = "psci"; >> >> capacity-dmips-mhz = <530>; >> >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; >> >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster0_opp_table>; >> >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; >> >> i-cache-size = <32768>; >> >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; >> >> @@ -175,6 +179,7 @@ cpu_b0: cpu@400 { >> >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB01>; >> >> assigned-clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB01>; >> >> assigned-clock-rates = <816000000>; >> >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster1_opp_table>; >> >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; >> >> i-cache-size = <65536>; >> >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; >> >> @@ -194,6 +199,7 @@ cpu_b1: cpu@500 { >> >> enable-method = "psci"; >> >> capacity-dmips-mhz = <1024>; >> >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB01>; >> >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster1_opp_table>; >> >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; >> >> i-cache-size = <65536>; >> >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; >> >> @@ -215,6 +221,7 @@ cpu_b2: cpu@600 { >> >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB23>; >> >> assigned-clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB23>; >> >> assigned-clock-rates = <816000000>; >> >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster2_opp_table>; >> >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; >> >> i-cache-size = <65536>; >> >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; >> >> @@ -234,6 +241,7 @@ cpu_b3: cpu@700 { >> >> enable-method = "psci"; >> >> capacity-dmips-mhz = <1024>; >> >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB23>; >> >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster2_opp_table>; >> >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; >> >> i-cache-size = <65536>; >> >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; >> >> @@ -348,6 +356,207 @@ l3_cache: l3-cache { >> >> }; >> >> }; >> >> + cluster0_opp_table: opp-table-cluster0 { >> >> + compatible = "operating-points-v2"; >> >> + opp-shared; >> >> + >> >> + opp-408000000 { >> >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <408000000>; >> >> + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 950000>; >> >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> >> + }; >> >> + opp-600000000 { >> >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <600000000>; >> >> + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 950000>; >> >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> >> + }; >> >> + opp-816000000 { >> >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <816000000>; >> >> + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 950000>; >> >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> >> + }; >> >> + opp-1008000000 { >> >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1008000000>; >> >> + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 950000>; >> >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> >> + }; >> > >> > It is not useful to introduce OPP with the same voltage. There is no >> > gain in terms of energy efficiency as the compute capacity is linearly >> > tied with power consumption (P=CxFxV²) in this case. >> > >> > For example, opp-408 consumes 2 bogoWatts and opp-816 consumes 4 >> > bogoWatts (because of the same voltage). >> > >> > For a workload, opp-408 takes 10 sec and opp-816 takes 5 sec because >> > it is twice faster. >> > >> > The energy consumption is: >> > >> > opp-408 = 10 x 2 = 20 BogoJoules >> > opp-816 = 5 x 4 = 20 BogoJoules >> >> I'd respectfully disagree that including multiple OPPs with the same >> voltage >> but different frequencies isn't useful. Please allow me to explain. >> >> See, the total amount of consumed energy is, in general, the same for >> such >> OPPs and the same CPU task(s), if we ignore the static leakage current >> and >> such stuff, which isn't important here. Though, the emphasis here is >> on >> "total", i.e. without taking into account the actual amount of time >> required >> for the exemplified CPU task(s) to complete. If the total amount of >> time >> is quite short, we aren't going to heat up the package and the board >> enough >> to hit the CPU thermal throttling; this approach is also sometimes >> referred >> to as "race to idle", which is actually quite effective for >> battery-powered >> mobile devices that tend to load their CPU cores in bursts, while >> remaining >> kind of inactive for the remaining time. >> >> However, if the CPU task(s) last long enough to actually saturate the >> thermal >> capacities of the package and the board or the device, we're getting >> into the >> CPU throttling territory, in which running the CPU cores slower, but >> still as >> fast as possible, may actually be beneficial for the overall CPU >> performance. >> By running the CPU cores slower, we're lowering the power and >> "spreading" the >> total energy consumption over time, i.e. we're making some time to >> allow >> the >> generated heat to dissipate into the surroundings. As we know, having >> more >> energy consumed by the SoC means more heat generated by the SoC, but >> the >> resulting temperature of the SoC depends on how fast the energy is >> consumed, >> which equals to how fast the CPUs run; of course, all that is valid >> under >> the reasonable assumption that the entire cooling setup, including the >> board >> surroundings, remains unchanged all the time. > > On the other hand, convective heat dissipation is approximately > proportional to the temperature differential, therefore heating up the > core to a higher temperature over a shorter period of time would let > it dissipate the same joule amount faster. Given that total joules Let me point out that the emphasis is again on "shorter period". :) Yes, when the CPU load is bursty, having multiple same-voltage OPPs almost surely won't help us at all, as I already noted. However, the things will surely change when the CPU cores are loaded for longer amounts of time and, as a result, the defined thermal trips are reached, because the cooling system gets saturated. > generated for a particular load are approximately the same for > different frequencies as long as voltage remains the same (as Daniel > pointed out), higher frequency seems to lead to better heat transfer > to the environment for the same load. And also the task completes > sooner, which is probably always good, ceteris paribus. > > Not sure how that all changes when throttling enters the game though :) As I already noted above, the things are quite different when the CPU load isn't bursty. Once the cooling setup is saturated, the heat no longer gets transferred effectively to the surroundings, while the CPU cores keep producing the heat, which cannot continue indefinitely. As a result, the CPU cores need to run slower and "spread" the total amount of joules over time, but they still should run as fast as possible. Another option is to introduce active cooling, which also comes with its own set of limits, but the initial assumption is that the cooling setup remains unchanged. In the end, if all that weren't the case, we wouldn't need CPU thermal throttling at all, or not as much. :)
On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 11:05 AM Dragan Simic <dsimic@manjaro.org> wrote: > > Hello Alexey, > > On 2024-01-26 07:44, Alexey Charkov wrote: > > On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 10:32 AM Dragan Simic <dsimic@manjaro.org> > > wrote: > >> On 2024-01-25 10:30, Daniel Lezcano wrote: > >> > On 24/01/2024 21:30, Alexey Charkov wrote: > >> >> By default the CPUs on RK3588 start up in a conservative performance > >> >> mode. Add frequency and voltage mappings to the device tree to enable > >> >> dynamic scaling via cpufreq > >> >> > >> >> Signed-off-by: Alexey Charkov <alchark@gmail.com> > >> >> --- > >> >> arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi | 209 > >> >> ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ > >> >> 1 file changed, 209 insertions(+) > >> >> > >> >> diff --git a/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi > >> >> b/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi > >> >> index 131b9eb21398..e605be531a0f 100644 > >> >> --- a/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi > >> >> +++ b/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi > >> >> @@ -97,6 +97,7 @@ cpu_l0: cpu@0 { > >> >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; > >> >> assigned-clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; > >> >> assigned-clock-rates = <816000000>; > >> >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster0_opp_table>; > >> >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; > >> >> i-cache-size = <32768>; > >> >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; > >> >> @@ -116,6 +117,7 @@ cpu_l1: cpu@100 { > >> >> enable-method = "psci"; > >> >> capacity-dmips-mhz = <530>; > >> >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; > >> >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster0_opp_table>; > >> >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; > >> >> i-cache-size = <32768>; > >> >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; > >> >> @@ -135,6 +137,7 @@ cpu_l2: cpu@200 { > >> >> enable-method = "psci"; > >> >> capacity-dmips-mhz = <530>; > >> >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; > >> >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster0_opp_table>; > >> >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; > >> >> i-cache-size = <32768>; > >> >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; > >> >> @@ -154,6 +157,7 @@ cpu_l3: cpu@300 { > >> >> enable-method = "psci"; > >> >> capacity-dmips-mhz = <530>; > >> >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; > >> >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster0_opp_table>; > >> >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; > >> >> i-cache-size = <32768>; > >> >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; > >> >> @@ -175,6 +179,7 @@ cpu_b0: cpu@400 { > >> >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB01>; > >> >> assigned-clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB01>; > >> >> assigned-clock-rates = <816000000>; > >> >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster1_opp_table>; > >> >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; > >> >> i-cache-size = <65536>; > >> >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; > >> >> @@ -194,6 +199,7 @@ cpu_b1: cpu@500 { > >> >> enable-method = "psci"; > >> >> capacity-dmips-mhz = <1024>; > >> >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB01>; > >> >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster1_opp_table>; > >> >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; > >> >> i-cache-size = <65536>; > >> >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; > >> >> @@ -215,6 +221,7 @@ cpu_b2: cpu@600 { > >> >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB23>; > >> >> assigned-clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB23>; > >> >> assigned-clock-rates = <816000000>; > >> >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster2_opp_table>; > >> >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; > >> >> i-cache-size = <65536>; > >> >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; > >> >> @@ -234,6 +241,7 @@ cpu_b3: cpu@700 { > >> >> enable-method = "psci"; > >> >> capacity-dmips-mhz = <1024>; > >> >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB23>; > >> >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster2_opp_table>; > >> >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; > >> >> i-cache-size = <65536>; > >> >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; > >> >> @@ -348,6 +356,207 @@ l3_cache: l3-cache { > >> >> }; > >> >> }; > >> >> + cluster0_opp_table: opp-table-cluster0 { > >> >> + compatible = "operating-points-v2"; > >> >> + opp-shared; > >> >> + > >> >> + opp-408000000 { > >> >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <408000000>; > >> >> + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 950000>; > >> >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > >> >> + }; > >> >> + opp-600000000 { > >> >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <600000000>; > >> >> + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 950000>; > >> >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > >> >> + }; > >> >> + opp-816000000 { > >> >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <816000000>; > >> >> + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 950000>; > >> >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > >> >> + }; > >> >> + opp-1008000000 { > >> >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1008000000>; > >> >> + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 950000>; > >> >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; > >> >> + }; > >> > > >> > It is not useful to introduce OPP with the same voltage. There is no > >> > gain in terms of energy efficiency as the compute capacity is linearly > >> > tied with power consumption (P=CxFxV²) in this case. > >> > > >> > For example, opp-408 consumes 2 bogoWatts and opp-816 consumes 4 > >> > bogoWatts (because of the same voltage). > >> > > >> > For a workload, opp-408 takes 10 sec and opp-816 takes 5 sec because > >> > it is twice faster. > >> > > >> > The energy consumption is: > >> > > >> > opp-408 = 10 x 2 = 20 BogoJoules > >> > opp-816 = 5 x 4 = 20 BogoJoules > >> > >> I'd respectfully disagree that including multiple OPPs with the same > >> voltage > >> but different frequencies isn't useful. Please allow me to explain. > >> > >> See, the total amount of consumed energy is, in general, the same for > >> such > >> OPPs and the same CPU task(s), if we ignore the static leakage current > >> and > >> such stuff, which isn't important here. Though, the emphasis here is > >> on > >> "total", i.e. without taking into account the actual amount of time > >> required > >> for the exemplified CPU task(s) to complete. If the total amount of > >> time > >> is quite short, we aren't going to heat up the package and the board > >> enough > >> to hit the CPU thermal throttling; this approach is also sometimes > >> referred > >> to as "race to idle", which is actually quite effective for > >> battery-powered > >> mobile devices that tend to load their CPU cores in bursts, while > >> remaining > >> kind of inactive for the remaining time. > >> > >> However, if the CPU task(s) last long enough to actually saturate the > >> thermal > >> capacities of the package and the board or the device, we're getting > >> into the > >> CPU throttling territory, in which running the CPU cores slower, but > >> still as > >> fast as possible, may actually be beneficial for the overall CPU > >> performance. > >> By running the CPU cores slower, we're lowering the power and > >> "spreading" the > >> total energy consumption over time, i.e. we're making some time to > >> allow > >> the > >> generated heat to dissipate into the surroundings. As we know, having > >> more > >> energy consumed by the SoC means more heat generated by the SoC, but > >> the > >> resulting temperature of the SoC depends on how fast the energy is > >> consumed, > >> which equals to how fast the CPUs run; of course, all that is valid > >> under > >> the reasonable assumption that the entire cooling setup, including the > >> board > >> surroundings, remains unchanged all the time. > > > > On the other hand, convective heat dissipation is approximately > > proportional to the temperature differential, therefore heating up the > > core to a higher temperature over a shorter period of time would let > > it dissipate the same joule amount faster. Given that total joules > > Let me point out that the emphasis is again on "shorter period". :) > Yes, when the CPU load is bursty, having multiple same-voltage OPPs > almost surely won't help us at all, as I already noted. However, > the things will surely change when the CPU cores are loaded for > longer amounts of time and, as a result, the defined thermal trips > are reached, because the cooling system gets saturated. > > > generated for a particular load are approximately the same for > > different frequencies as long as voltage remains the same (as Daniel > > pointed out), higher frequency seems to lead to better heat transfer > > to the environment for the same load. And also the task completes > > sooner, which is probably always good, ceteris paribus. > > > > Not sure how that all changes when throttling enters the game though :) > > As I already noted above, the things are quite different when the CPU > load isn't bursty. Once the cooling setup is saturated, the heat no > longer gets transferred effectively to the surroundings, while the CPU > cores keep producing the heat, which cannot continue indefinitely. As > a result, the CPU cores need to run slower and "spread" the total amount > of joules over time, but they still should run as fast as possible. Wouldn't in this "non-bursty" case the total thermal production be driven by how fast the system generates tasks, which is independent of the thermal and frequency state? If joules per task are constant (under steady state load), then it shouldn't matter whether they are generated in short bursts or in a slower continuous flow - as long as the time to dissipate the heat is longer than the time between tasks at the high frequency state, in which case we are back to the "bursty" scenario > Another option is to introduce active cooling, which also comes with > its own set of limits, but the initial assumption is that the cooling > setup remains unchanged. > > In the end, if all that weren't the case, we wouldn't need CPU thermal > throttling at all, or not as much. :) Throttling would also lower the voltage at some point, which cools it down much faster! Best regards, Alexey
On 2024-01-26 08:30, Alexey Charkov wrote: > On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 11:05 AM Dragan Simic <dsimic@manjaro.org> > wrote: >> On 2024-01-26 07:44, Alexey Charkov wrote: >> > On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 10:32 AM Dragan Simic <dsimic@manjaro.org> >> > wrote: >> >> On 2024-01-25 10:30, Daniel Lezcano wrote: >> >> > On 24/01/2024 21:30, Alexey Charkov wrote: >> >> >> By default the CPUs on RK3588 start up in a conservative performance >> >> >> mode. Add frequency and voltage mappings to the device tree to enable >> >> >> dynamic scaling via cpufreq >> >> >> >> >> >> Signed-off-by: Alexey Charkov <alchark@gmail.com> >> >> >> --- >> >> >> arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi | 209 >> >> >> ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ >> >> >> 1 file changed, 209 insertions(+) >> >> >> >> >> >> diff --git a/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi >> >> >> b/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi >> >> >> index 131b9eb21398..e605be531a0f 100644 >> >> >> --- a/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi >> >> >> +++ b/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi >> >> >> @@ -97,6 +97,7 @@ cpu_l0: cpu@0 { >> >> >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; >> >> >> assigned-clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; >> >> >> assigned-clock-rates = <816000000>; >> >> >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster0_opp_table>; >> >> >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; >> >> >> i-cache-size = <32768>; >> >> >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; >> >> >> @@ -116,6 +117,7 @@ cpu_l1: cpu@100 { >> >> >> enable-method = "psci"; >> >> >> capacity-dmips-mhz = <530>; >> >> >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; >> >> >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster0_opp_table>; >> >> >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; >> >> >> i-cache-size = <32768>; >> >> >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; >> >> >> @@ -135,6 +137,7 @@ cpu_l2: cpu@200 { >> >> >> enable-method = "psci"; >> >> >> capacity-dmips-mhz = <530>; >> >> >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; >> >> >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster0_opp_table>; >> >> >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; >> >> >> i-cache-size = <32768>; >> >> >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; >> >> >> @@ -154,6 +157,7 @@ cpu_l3: cpu@300 { >> >> >> enable-method = "psci"; >> >> >> capacity-dmips-mhz = <530>; >> >> >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; >> >> >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster0_opp_table>; >> >> >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; >> >> >> i-cache-size = <32768>; >> >> >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; >> >> >> @@ -175,6 +179,7 @@ cpu_b0: cpu@400 { >> >> >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB01>; >> >> >> assigned-clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB01>; >> >> >> assigned-clock-rates = <816000000>; >> >> >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster1_opp_table>; >> >> >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; >> >> >> i-cache-size = <65536>; >> >> >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; >> >> >> @@ -194,6 +199,7 @@ cpu_b1: cpu@500 { >> >> >> enable-method = "psci"; >> >> >> capacity-dmips-mhz = <1024>; >> >> >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB01>; >> >> >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster1_opp_table>; >> >> >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; >> >> >> i-cache-size = <65536>; >> >> >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; >> >> >> @@ -215,6 +221,7 @@ cpu_b2: cpu@600 { >> >> >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB23>; >> >> >> assigned-clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB23>; >> >> >> assigned-clock-rates = <816000000>; >> >> >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster2_opp_table>; >> >> >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; >> >> >> i-cache-size = <65536>; >> >> >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; >> >> >> @@ -234,6 +241,7 @@ cpu_b3: cpu@700 { >> >> >> enable-method = "psci"; >> >> >> capacity-dmips-mhz = <1024>; >> >> >> clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB23>; >> >> >> + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster2_opp_table>; >> >> >> cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; >> >> >> i-cache-size = <65536>; >> >> >> i-cache-line-size = <64>; >> >> >> @@ -348,6 +356,207 @@ l3_cache: l3-cache { >> >> >> }; >> >> >> }; >> >> >> + cluster0_opp_table: opp-table-cluster0 { >> >> >> + compatible = "operating-points-v2"; >> >> >> + opp-shared; >> >> >> + >> >> >> + opp-408000000 { >> >> >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <408000000>; >> >> >> + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 950000>; >> >> >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> >> >> + }; >> >> >> + opp-600000000 { >> >> >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <600000000>; >> >> >> + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 950000>; >> >> >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> >> >> + }; >> >> >> + opp-816000000 { >> >> >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <816000000>; >> >> >> + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 950000>; >> >> >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> >> >> + }; >> >> >> + opp-1008000000 { >> >> >> + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1008000000>; >> >> >> + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 950000>; >> >> >> + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; >> >> >> + }; >> >> > >> >> > It is not useful to introduce OPP with the same voltage. There is no >> >> > gain in terms of energy efficiency as the compute capacity is linearly >> >> > tied with power consumption (P=CxFxV²) in this case. >> >> > >> >> > For example, opp-408 consumes 2 bogoWatts and opp-816 consumes 4 >> >> > bogoWatts (because of the same voltage). >> >> > >> >> > For a workload, opp-408 takes 10 sec and opp-816 takes 5 sec because >> >> > it is twice faster. >> >> > >> >> > The energy consumption is: >> >> > >> >> > opp-408 = 10 x 2 = 20 BogoJoules >> >> > opp-816 = 5 x 4 = 20 BogoJoules >> >> >> >> I'd respectfully disagree that including multiple OPPs with the same >> >> voltage >> >> but different frequencies isn't useful. Please allow me to explain. >> >> >> >> See, the total amount of consumed energy is, in general, the same for >> >> such >> >> OPPs and the same CPU task(s), if we ignore the static leakage current >> >> and >> >> such stuff, which isn't important here. Though, the emphasis here is >> >> on >> >> "total", i.e. without taking into account the actual amount of time >> >> required >> >> for the exemplified CPU task(s) to complete. If the total amount of >> >> time >> >> is quite short, we aren't going to heat up the package and the board >> >> enough >> >> to hit the CPU thermal throttling; this approach is also sometimes >> >> referred >> >> to as "race to idle", which is actually quite effective for >> >> battery-powered >> >> mobile devices that tend to load their CPU cores in bursts, while >> >> remaining >> >> kind of inactive for the remaining time. >> >> >> >> However, if the CPU task(s) last long enough to actually saturate the >> >> thermal >> >> capacities of the package and the board or the device, we're getting >> >> into the >> >> CPU throttling territory, in which running the CPU cores slower, but >> >> still as >> >> fast as possible, may actually be beneficial for the overall CPU >> >> performance. >> >> By running the CPU cores slower, we're lowering the power and >> >> "spreading" the >> >> total energy consumption over time, i.e. we're making some time to >> >> allow >> >> the >> >> generated heat to dissipate into the surroundings. As we know, having >> >> more >> >> energy consumed by the SoC means more heat generated by the SoC, but >> >> the >> >> resulting temperature of the SoC depends on how fast the energy is >> >> consumed, >> >> which equals to how fast the CPUs run; of course, all that is valid >> >> under >> >> the reasonable assumption that the entire cooling setup, including the >> >> board >> >> surroundings, remains unchanged all the time. >> > >> > On the other hand, convective heat dissipation is approximately >> > proportional to the temperature differential, therefore heating up the >> > core to a higher temperature over a shorter period of time would let >> > it dissipate the same joule amount faster. Given that total joules >> >> Let me point out that the emphasis is again on "shorter period". :) >> Yes, when the CPU load is bursty, having multiple same-voltage OPPs >> almost surely won't help us at all, as I already noted. However, >> the things will surely change when the CPU cores are loaded for >> longer amounts of time and, as a result, the defined thermal trips >> are reached, because the cooling system gets saturated. >> >> > generated for a particular load are approximately the same for >> > different frequencies as long as voltage remains the same (as Daniel >> > pointed out), higher frequency seems to lead to better heat transfer >> > to the environment for the same load. And also the task completes >> > sooner, which is probably always good, ceteris paribus. >> > >> > Not sure how that all changes when throttling enters the game though :) >> >> As I already noted above, the things are quite different when the CPU >> load isn't bursty. Once the cooling setup is saturated, the heat no >> longer gets transferred effectively to the surroundings, while the CPU >> cores keep producing the heat, which cannot continue indefinitely. As >> a result, the CPU cores need to run slower and "spread" the total >> amount >> of joules over time, but they still should run as fast as possible. > > Wouldn't in this "non-bursty" case the total thermal production be > driven by how fast the system generates tasks, which is independent of > the thermal and frequency state? If joules per task are constant > (under steady state load), then it shouldn't matter whether they are > generated in short bursts or in a slower continuous flow - as long as > the time to dissipate the heat is longer than the time between tasks > at the high frequency state, in which case we are back to the "bursty" > scenario. You're right, if there's enough time for the generated heat to dissipate, between scheduled CPU tasks, there should be no significant OPP dips, and how bursty (or not) the CPU load is shouldn't matter much. Actually, if you agree, exactly this might be our definition of bursty CPU load. The things change when there isn't enough time. >> Another option is to introduce active cooling, which also comes with >> its own set of limits, but the initial assumption is that the cooling >> setup remains unchanged. >> >> In the end, if all that weren't the case, we wouldn't need CPU thermal >> throttling at all, or not as much. :) > > Throttling would also lower the voltage at some point, which cools it > down much faster! Of course, but the key is not to cool (and slow down) the CPU cores too much, but just enough to stay within the available thermal envelope, which is where the same-voltage, lower-frequency OPPs should shine. When the CPU load isn't bursty but steady and high, we don't race to idle, but run a marathon instead, so to speak. :)
On 26/01/2024 08:49, Dragan Simic wrote: > On 2024-01-26 08:30, Alexey Charkov wrote: >> On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 11:05 AM Dragan Simic <dsimic@manjaro.org> wrote: >>> On 2024-01-26 07:44, Alexey Charkov wrote: >>> > On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 10:32 AM Dragan Simic <dsimic@manjaro.org> >>> > wrote: >>> >> On 2024-01-25 10:30, Daniel Lezcano wrote: >>> >> > On 24/01/2024 21:30, Alexey Charkov wrote: >>> >> >> By default the CPUs on RK3588 start up in a conservative >>> performance >>> >> >> mode. Add frequency and voltage mappings to the device tree to >>> enable [ ... ] >> Throttling would also lower the voltage at some point, which cools it >> down much faster! > > Of course, but the key is not to cool (and slow down) the CPU cores too > much, but just enough to stay within the available thermal envelope, > which is where the same-voltage, lower-frequency OPPs should shine. That implies the resulting power is sustainable which I doubt it is the case. The voltage scaling makes the cooling effect efficient not the frequency. For example: opp5 = opp(2GHz, 1V) => 2 BogoWatt opp4 = opp(1.9GHz, 1V) => 1.9 BogoWatt opp3 = opp(1.8GHz, 0.9V) => 1.458 BogoWatt [ other states but we focus on these 3 ] opp5->opp4 => -5% compute capacity, -5% power, ratio=1 opp4->opp3 => -5% compute capacity, -23.1% power, ratio=21,6 opp5->opp3 => -10% compute capacity, -27.1% power, ratio=36.9 In burst operation (no thermal throttling), opp4 is pointless we agree on that. IMO the following will happen: in burst operation with thermal throttling we hit the trip point and then the step wise governor reduces opp5 -> opp4. We have slight power reduction but the temperature does not decrease, so at the next iteration, it is throttle at opp3. And at the end we have opp4 <-> opp3 back and forth instead of opp5 <-> opp3. It is probable we end up with an equivalent frequency average (or compute capacity avg). opp4 <-> opp3 (longer duration in states, less transitions) opp5 <-> opp3 (shorter duration in states, more transitions) Some platforms had their higher OPPs with the same voltage and they failed to cool down the CPU in the long run. Anyway, there is only one way to check it out :) Alexey, is it possible to compare the compute duration for 'dhrystone' with these voltage OPP and without ? (with a period of cool down between the test in order to start at the same thermal condition) ? > When the CPU load isn't bursty but steady and high, we don't race to > idle, but run a marathon instead, so to speak. :)
On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 4:56 PM Daniel Lezcano <daniel.lezcano@linaro.org> wrote: > > On 26/01/2024 08:49, Dragan Simic wrote: > > On 2024-01-26 08:30, Alexey Charkov wrote: > >> On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 11:05 AM Dragan Simic <dsimic@manjaro.org> wrote: > >>> On 2024-01-26 07:44, Alexey Charkov wrote: > >>> > On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 10:32 AM Dragan Simic <dsimic@manjaro.org> > >>> > wrote: > >>> >> On 2024-01-25 10:30, Daniel Lezcano wrote: > >>> >> > On 24/01/2024 21:30, Alexey Charkov wrote: > >>> >> >> By default the CPUs on RK3588 start up in a conservative > >>> performance > >>> >> >> mode. Add frequency and voltage mappings to the device tree to > >>> enable > > [ ... ] > > >> Throttling would also lower the voltage at some point, which cools it > >> down much faster! > > > > Of course, but the key is not to cool (and slow down) the CPU cores too > > much, but just enough to stay within the available thermal envelope, > > which is where the same-voltage, lower-frequency OPPs should shine. > > That implies the resulting power is sustainable which I doubt it is the > case. > > The voltage scaling makes the cooling effect efficient not the frequency. > > For example: > opp5 = opp(2GHz, 1V) => 2 BogoWatt > opp4 = opp(1.9GHz, 1V) => 1.9 BogoWatt > opp3 = opp(1.8GHz, 0.9V) => 1.458 BogoWatt > [ other states but we focus on these 3 ] > > opp5->opp4 => -5% compute capacity, -5% power, ratio=1 > opp4->opp3 => -5% compute capacity, -23.1% power, ratio=21,6 > > opp5->opp3 => -10% compute capacity, -27.1% power, ratio=36.9 > > In burst operation (no thermal throttling), opp4 is pointless we agree > on that. > > IMO the following will happen: in burst operation with thermal > throttling we hit the trip point and then the step wise governor reduces > opp5 -> opp4. We have slight power reduction but the temperature does > not decrease, so at the next iteration, it is throttle at opp3. And at > the end we have opp4 <-> opp3 back and forth instead of opp5 <-> opp3. > > It is probable we end up with an equivalent frequency average (or > compute capacity avg). > > opp4 <-> opp3 (longer duration in states, less transitions) > opp5 <-> opp3 (shorter duration in states, more transitions) > > Some platforms had their higher OPPs with the same voltage and they > failed to cool down the CPU in the long run. > > Anyway, there is only one way to check it out :) > > Alexey, is it possible to compare the compute duration for 'dhrystone' > with these voltage OPP and without ? (with a period of cool down between > the test in order to start at the same thermal condition) ? Sure, let me try that - would be interesting to see the results. In my previous tinkering there were cases when the system stayed at 2.35GHz for all big cores for non-trivial time (using the step-wise thermal governor), and that's an example of "same voltage, lower frequency". Other times though it throttled one cluster down to 1.8GHz and kept the other at 2.4GHz, and was also stationary at those parameters for extended time. This probably indicates that both of those states use sustainable power in my cooling setup. Note though that I still have that tiny heatsink installed (even though I disable the fan during tests), and in this setup the temperature drops from 85C to around 70C in a matter of seconds as soon as the load stops. And if I enable the fan then it balances the temperature at the control setpoint of 55C using less than full fan speed with 8 threads of dhrystone running for extended time (and the PWM value chosen by the step-wise governor stabilizes at 240 out of 255). Looks like my prior assessment that "the fan is not super mighty vs. the total thermal output" was wrong after all, despite its modest size :) Best regards, Alexey
On 2024-01-26 13:56, Daniel Lezcano wrote: > On 26/01/2024 08:49, Dragan Simic wrote: >> On 2024-01-26 08:30, Alexey Charkov wrote: >>> On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 11:05 AM Dragan Simic <dsimic@manjaro.org> >>> wrote: >>>> On 2024-01-26 07:44, Alexey Charkov wrote: >>>> > On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 10:32 AM Dragan Simic <dsimic@manjaro.org> >>>> > wrote: >>>> >> On 2024-01-25 10:30, Daniel Lezcano wrote: >>>> >> > On 24/01/2024 21:30, Alexey Charkov wrote: >>>> >> >> By default the CPUs on RK3588 start up in a conservative performance >>>> >> >> mode. Add frequency and voltage mappings to the device tree to enable > > [ ... ] > >>> Throttling would also lower the voltage at some point, which cools it >>> down much faster! >> >> Of course, but the key is not to cool (and slow down) the CPU cores >> too >> much, but just enough to stay within the available thermal envelope, >> which is where the same-voltage, lower-frequency OPPs should shine. > > That implies the resulting power is sustainable which I doubt it is the > case. Hmm, why wouldn't it be sustainable? Would you elaborate a bit, please? I mean, there are so many factors that can't be known for sure in advance, so providing additional CPU throttling granularity can only be helpful. > The voltage scaling makes the cooling effect efficient not the > frequency. > > For example: > opp5 = opp(2GHz, 1V) => 2 BogoWatt > opp4 = opp(1.9GHz, 1V) => 1.9 BogoWatt > opp3 = opp(1.8GHz, 0.9V) => 1.458 BogoWatt > [ other states but we focus on these 3 ] > > opp5->opp4 => -5% compute capacity, -5% power, ratio=1 > opp4->opp3 => -5% compute capacity, -23.1% power, ratio=21,6 > > opp5->opp3 => -10% compute capacity, -27.1% power, ratio=36.9 > > In burst operation (no thermal throttling), opp4 is pointless we agree > on that. Well, if there's no thermal throtting at all, the opp3 is also not needed. In an unlikely scenario like that, the opp5 is all we need. > IMO the following will happen: in burst operation with thermal > throttling we hit the trip point and then the step wise governor > reduces opp5 -> opp4. We have slight power reduction but the > temperature does not decrease, so at the next iteration, it is > throttle at opp3. And at the end we have opp4 <-> opp3 back and forth > instead of opp5 <-> opp3. Why should the temperature not decrease when switching from the opp5 to the opp4? See, we can't assume or know in advance that reducing the power consumption by 5% wouldn't do anything; 5% is actually quite a lot. If that would do absolutely nothing, then something else would probably be wrong or not as expected. Also, for some workloads it might be better to have rather frequent transitions between the opp4 and the opp3, instead of staying at the opp3 for longer priods of time. Running 100 MHz faster can be quite significant, especially on two CPU cores. > It is probable we end up with an equivalent frequency average (or > compute capacity avg). > > opp4 <-> opp3 (longer duration in states, less transitions) > opp5 <-> opp3 (shorter duration in states, more transitions) > > Some platforms had their higher OPPs with the same voltage and they > failed to cool down the CPU in the long run. > > Anyway, there is only one way to check it out :) > > Alexey, is it possible to compare the compute duration for 'dhrystone' > with these voltage OPP and without ? (with a period of cool down > between the test in order to start at the same thermal condition) ? I agree that testing and recording as much data as possible is the best approach. However, quite frankly, we should run more different tests, not only one synthetic test.
On 2024-01-26 14:44, Alexey Charkov wrote: > On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 4:56 PM Daniel Lezcano > <daniel.lezcano@linaro.org> wrote: >> On 26/01/2024 08:49, Dragan Simic wrote: >> > On 2024-01-26 08:30, Alexey Charkov wrote: >> >> On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 11:05 AM Dragan Simic <dsimic@manjaro.org> wrote: >> >>> On 2024-01-26 07:44, Alexey Charkov wrote: >> >>> > On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 10:32 AM Dragan Simic <dsimic@manjaro.org> >> >>> > wrote: >> >>> >> On 2024-01-25 10:30, Daniel Lezcano wrote: >> >>> >> > On 24/01/2024 21:30, Alexey Charkov wrote: >> >>> >> >> By default the CPUs on RK3588 start up in a conservative >> >>> performance >> >>> >> >> mode. Add frequency and voltage mappings to the device tree to >> >>> enable >> >> [ ... ] >> >> >> Throttling would also lower the voltage at some point, which cools it >> >> down much faster! >> > >> > Of course, but the key is not to cool (and slow down) the CPU cores too >> > much, but just enough to stay within the available thermal envelope, >> > which is where the same-voltage, lower-frequency OPPs should shine. >> >> That implies the resulting power is sustainable which I doubt it is >> the >> case. >> >> The voltage scaling makes the cooling effect efficient not the >> frequency. >> >> For example: >> opp5 = opp(2GHz, 1V) => 2 BogoWatt >> opp4 = opp(1.9GHz, 1V) => 1.9 BogoWatt >> opp3 = opp(1.8GHz, 0.9V) => 1.458 BogoWatt >> [ other states but we focus on these 3 ] >> >> opp5->opp4 => -5% compute capacity, -5% power, ratio=1 >> opp4->opp3 => -5% compute capacity, -23.1% power, ratio=21,6 >> >> opp5->opp3 => -10% compute capacity, -27.1% power, ratio=36.9 >> >> In burst operation (no thermal throttling), opp4 is pointless we agree >> on that. >> >> IMO the following will happen: in burst operation with thermal >> throttling we hit the trip point and then the step wise governor >> reduces >> opp5 -> opp4. We have slight power reduction but the temperature does >> not decrease, so at the next iteration, it is throttle at opp3. And at >> the end we have opp4 <-> opp3 back and forth instead of opp5 <-> opp3. >> >> It is probable we end up with an equivalent frequency average (or >> compute capacity avg). >> >> opp4 <-> opp3 (longer duration in states, less transitions) >> opp5 <-> opp3 (shorter duration in states, more transitions) >> >> Some platforms had their higher OPPs with the same voltage and they >> failed to cool down the CPU in the long run. >> >> Anyway, there is only one way to check it out :) >> >> Alexey, is it possible to compare the compute duration for 'dhrystone' >> with these voltage OPP and without ? (with a period of cool down >> between >> the test in order to start at the same thermal condition) ? > > Sure, let me try that - would be interesting to see the results. In my > previous tinkering there were cases when the system stayed at 2.35GHz > for all big cores for non-trivial time (using the step-wise thermal > governor), and that's an example of "same voltage, lower frequency". > Other times though it throttled one cluster down to 1.8GHz and kept > the other at 2.4GHz, and was also stationary at those parameters for > extended time. This probably indicates that both of those states use > sustainable power in my cooling setup. IMHO, there are simply too many factors at play, including different possible cooling setups, so providing additional CPU throttling granularity can only be helpful. Of course, testing and recording data is the way to move forward, but I think we should use a few different tests. > Note though that I still have that tiny heatsink installed (even > though I disable the fan during tests), and in this setup the > temperature drops from 85C to around 70C in a matter of seconds as > soon as the load stops. And if I enable the fan then it balances the > temperature at the control setpoint of 55C using less than full fan > speed with 8 threads of dhrystone running for extended time (and the > PWM value chosen by the step-wise governor stabilizes at 240 out of > 255). Looks like my prior assessment that "the fan is not super mighty > vs. the total thermal output" was wrong after all, despite its modest > size :) Quite frankly, I wouldn't dare to run an RK3588 (or an RK3399) with absolutely no heatsink attached, so I think your minimal cooling setup (i.e. with the fan disconnected) is fine.
On Sat, Jan 27, 2024 at 12:33 AM Dragan Simic <dsimic@manjaro.org> wrote: > > On 2024-01-26 14:44, Alexey Charkov wrote: > > On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 4:56 PM Daniel Lezcano > > <daniel.lezcano@linaro.org> wrote: > >> On 26/01/2024 08:49, Dragan Simic wrote: > >> > On 2024-01-26 08:30, Alexey Charkov wrote: > >> >> On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 11:05 AM Dragan Simic <dsimic@manjaro.org> wrote: > >> >>> On 2024-01-26 07:44, Alexey Charkov wrote: > >> >>> > On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 10:32 AM Dragan Simic <dsimic@manjaro.org> > >> >>> > wrote: > >> >>> >> On 2024-01-25 10:30, Daniel Lezcano wrote: > >> >>> >> > On 24/01/2024 21:30, Alexey Charkov wrote: > >> >>> >> >> By default the CPUs on RK3588 start up in a conservative > >> >>> performance > >> >>> >> >> mode. Add frequency and voltage mappings to the device tree to > >> >>> enable > >> > >> [ ... ] > >> > >> >> Throttling would also lower the voltage at some point, which cools it > >> >> down much faster! > >> > > >> > Of course, but the key is not to cool (and slow down) the CPU cores too > >> > much, but just enough to stay within the available thermal envelope, > >> > which is where the same-voltage, lower-frequency OPPs should shine. > >> > >> That implies the resulting power is sustainable which I doubt it is > >> the > >> case. > >> > >> The voltage scaling makes the cooling effect efficient not the > >> frequency. > >> > >> For example: > >> opp5 = opp(2GHz, 1V) => 2 BogoWatt > >> opp4 = opp(1.9GHz, 1V) => 1.9 BogoWatt > >> opp3 = opp(1.8GHz, 0.9V) => 1.458 BogoWatt > >> [ other states but we focus on these 3 ] > >> > >> opp5->opp4 => -5% compute capacity, -5% power, ratio=1 > >> opp4->opp3 => -5% compute capacity, -23.1% power, ratio=21,6 > >> > >> opp5->opp3 => -10% compute capacity, -27.1% power, ratio=36.9 > >> > >> In burst operation (no thermal throttling), opp4 is pointless we agree > >> on that. > >> > >> IMO the following will happen: in burst operation with thermal > >> throttling we hit the trip point and then the step wise governor > >> reduces > >> opp5 -> opp4. We have slight power reduction but the temperature does > >> not decrease, so at the next iteration, it is throttle at opp3. And at > >> the end we have opp4 <-> opp3 back and forth instead of opp5 <-> opp3. > >> > >> It is probable we end up with an equivalent frequency average (or > >> compute capacity avg). > >> > >> opp4 <-> opp3 (longer duration in states, less transitions) > >> opp5 <-> opp3 (shorter duration in states, more transitions) > >> > >> Some platforms had their higher OPPs with the same voltage and they > >> failed to cool down the CPU in the long run. > >> > >> Anyway, there is only one way to check it out :) > >> > >> Alexey, is it possible to compare the compute duration for 'dhrystone' > >> with these voltage OPP and without ? (with a period of cool down > >> between > >> the test in order to start at the same thermal condition) ? > > > > Sure, let me try that - would be interesting to see the results. In my > > previous tinkering there were cases when the system stayed at 2.35GHz > > for all big cores for non-trivial time (using the step-wise thermal > > governor), and that's an example of "same voltage, lower frequency". > > Other times though it throttled one cluster down to 1.8GHz and kept > > the other at 2.4GHz, and was also stationary at those parameters for > > extended time. This probably indicates that both of those states use > > sustainable power in my cooling setup. > > IMHO, there are simply too many factors at play, including different > possible cooling setups, so providing additional CPU throttling > granularity can only be helpful. Of course, testing and recording > data is the way to move forward, but I think we should use a few > different tests. Soooo, benchmarking these turned out a bit trickier than I had hoped for. Apparently, dhrystone uses an unsigned int rather than an unsigned long for the loops count (or something of that sort), which means that I can't get it to run enough loops to heat up my chip from a stable idle state to the throttling state (due to counter wraparound). So I ended up with a couple of crutches, namely: - run dhrystone continuously on 6 out of 8 cores to make the chip warm enough (`taskset -c 0-5 ./dhrystone -t 6 -r 6000` - note that on my machine cores 6-7 are usually the first ones to get throttled, due to whatever thermal peculiarities) - wait for the temperature to stabilize (which happens at 79.5C) - then run timed dhrystone on the remaining 2 out of 6 cores (big ones) to see how throttling with different OPP tables affects overall performance. In the end, here's what I got with the 'original' OPP table (including "same voltage - different frequencies" states): alchark@rock-5b ~ $ taskset -c 6-7 ./dhrystone -t 2 -l 4000000000 duration: 0 seconds number of threads: 2 number of loops: 4000000000000000 delay between starting threads: 0 seconds Dhrystone(1.1) time for 1233977344 passes = 29.7 This machine benchmarks at 41481539 dhrystones/second 23609 DMIPS Dhrystone(1.1) time for 1233977344 passes = 29.8 This machine benchmarks at 41476618 dhrystones/second 23606 DMIPS Total dhrystone run time: 30.864492 seconds. And here's what I got with the 'reduced' OPP table (keeping only the highest frequency state for each voltage): alchark@rock-5b ~ $ taskset -c 6-7 ./dhrystone -t 2 -l 4000000000 duration: 0 seconds number of threads: 2 number of loops: 4000000000000000 delay between starting threads: 0 seconds Dhrystone(1.1) time for 1233977344 passes = 30.9 This machine benchmarks at 39968549 dhrystones/second 22748 DMIPS Dhrystone(1.1) time for 1233977344 passes = 31.0 This machine benchmarks at 39817431 dhrystones/second 22662 DMIPS Total dhrystone run time: 31.995136 seconds. Bottomline: removing the lower-frequency OPPs led to a 3.8% drop in performance in this setup. This is probably far from a reliable estimate, but I guess it indeed indicates that having lower-frequency states might be beneficial in some load scenarios. Note though that several seconds after hitting the throttling threshold cores 6-7 were oscillating between 1.608GHz and 1.8GHz in both runs, which implies that the whole difference in performance was due to different speed of initial throttling (i.e. it might be a peculiarity of the step-wise thermal governor operation when it has to go through more cooling states to reach the "steady-state" one). Given that both 1.608GHz and 1.8GHz have no lower-frequency same-voltage siblings in either of the OPP tables, it implies that under prolonged constant load there should be no performance difference at all. Best regards, Alexey
On 2024-01-27 20:41, Alexey Charkov wrote: > On Sat, Jan 27, 2024 at 12:33 AM Dragan Simic <dsimic@manjaro.org> > wrote: >> On 2024-01-26 14:44, Alexey Charkov wrote: >> > On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 4:56 PM Daniel Lezcano <daniel.lezcano@linaro.org> wrote: >> >> On 26/01/2024 08:49, Dragan Simic wrote: >> >> > On 2024-01-26 08:30, Alexey Charkov wrote: >> >> >> On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 11:05 AM Dragan Simic <dsimic@manjaro.org> wrote: >> >> >>> On 2024-01-26 07:44, Alexey Charkov wrote: >> >> >>> > On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 10:32 AM Dragan Simic <dsimic@manjaro.org> wrote: >> >> >>> >> On 2024-01-25 10:30, Daniel Lezcano wrote: >> >> >> Throttling would also lower the voltage at some point, which cools it >> >> >> down much faster! >> >> > >> >> > Of course, but the key is not to cool (and slow down) the CPU cores too >> >> > much, but just enough to stay within the available thermal envelope, >> >> > which is where the same-voltage, lower-frequency OPPs should shine. >> >> >> >> That implies the resulting power is sustainable which I doubt it is >> >> the >> >> case. >> >> >> >> The voltage scaling makes the cooling effect efficient not the >> >> frequency. >> >> >> >> For example: >> >> opp5 = opp(2GHz, 1V) => 2 BogoWatt >> >> opp4 = opp(1.9GHz, 1V) => 1.9 BogoWatt >> >> opp3 = opp(1.8GHz, 0.9V) => 1.458 BogoWatt >> >> [ other states but we focus on these 3 ] >> >> >> >> opp5->opp4 => -5% compute capacity, -5% power, ratio=1 >> >> opp4->opp3 => -5% compute capacity, -23.1% power, ratio=21,6 >> >> >> >> opp5->opp3 => -10% compute capacity, -27.1% power, ratio=36.9 >> >> >> >> In burst operation (no thermal throttling), opp4 is pointless we agree >> >> on that. >> >> >> >> IMO the following will happen: in burst operation with thermal >> >> throttling we hit the trip point and then the step wise governor >> >> reduces >> >> opp5 -> opp4. We have slight power reduction but the temperature does >> >> not decrease, so at the next iteration, it is throttle at opp3. And at >> >> the end we have opp4 <-> opp3 back and forth instead of opp5 <-> opp3. >> >> >> >> It is probable we end up with an equivalent frequency average (or >> >> compute capacity avg). >> >> >> >> opp4 <-> opp3 (longer duration in states, less transitions) >> >> opp5 <-> opp3 (shorter duration in states, more transitions) >> >> >> >> Some platforms had their higher OPPs with the same voltage and they >> >> failed to cool down the CPU in the long run. >> >> >> >> Anyway, there is only one way to check it out :) >> >> >> >> Alexey, is it possible to compare the compute duration for 'dhrystone' >> >> with these voltage OPP and without ? (with a period of cool down >> >> between >> >> the test in order to start at the same thermal condition) ? >> > >> > Sure, let me try that - would be interesting to see the results. In my >> > previous tinkering there were cases when the system stayed at 2.35GHz >> > for all big cores for non-trivial time (using the step-wise thermal >> > governor), and that's an example of "same voltage, lower frequency". >> > Other times though it throttled one cluster down to 1.8GHz and kept >> > the other at 2.4GHz, and was also stationary at those parameters for >> > extended time. This probably indicates that both of those states use >> > sustainable power in my cooling setup. >> >> IMHO, there are simply too many factors at play, including different >> possible cooling setups, so providing additional CPU throttling >> granularity can only be helpful. Of course, testing and recording >> data is the way to move forward, but I think we should use a few >> different tests. > > Soooo, benchmarking these turned out a bit trickier than I had hoped > for. Apparently, dhrystone uses an unsigned int rather than an > unsigned long for the loops count (or something of that sort), which > means that I can't get it to run enough loops to heat up my chip from > a stable idle state to the throttling state (due to counter > wraparound). So I ended up with a couple of crutches, namely: Huh, it seems that recent SBCs may have become a bit too fast for it, which is great. :) Thank you for the benchmarking. > - run dhrystone continuously on 6 out of 8 cores to make the chip > warm enough (`taskset -c 0-5 ./dhrystone -t 6 -r 6000` - note that on > my machine cores 6-7 are usually the first ones to get throttled, due > to whatever thermal peculiarities) > - wait for the temperature to stabilize (which happens at 79.5C) > - then run timed dhrystone on the remaining 2 out of 6 cores (big > ones) to see how throttling with different OPP tables affects overall > performance. Just checking, running the test on just two CPU cores was enough to keep the package temperature at around 80 oC? > In the end, here's what I got with the 'original' OPP table (including > "same voltage - different frequencies" states): > alchark@rock-5b ~ $ taskset -c 6-7 ./dhrystone -t 2 -l 4000000000 > duration: 0 seconds > number of threads: 2 > number of loops: 4000000000000000 > delay between starting threads: 0 seconds > > Dhrystone(1.1) time for 1233977344 passes = 29.7 > This machine benchmarks at 41481539 dhrystones/second > 23609 DMIPS > Dhrystone(1.1) time for 1233977344 passes = 29.8 > This machine benchmarks at 41476618 dhrystones/second > 23606 DMIPS > > Total dhrystone run time: 30.864492 seconds. > > And here's what I got with the 'reduced' OPP table (keeping only the > highest frequency state for each voltage): > alchark@rock-5b ~ $ taskset -c 6-7 ./dhrystone -t 2 -l 4000000000 > duration: 0 seconds > number of threads: 2 > number of loops: 4000000000000000 > delay between starting threads: 0 seconds > > Dhrystone(1.1) time for 1233977344 passes = 30.9 > This machine benchmarks at 39968549 dhrystones/second > 22748 DMIPS > Dhrystone(1.1) time for 1233977344 passes = 31.0 > This machine benchmarks at 39817431 dhrystones/second > 22662 DMIPS > > Total dhrystone run time: 31.995136 seconds. > > Bottomline: removing the lower-frequency OPPs led to a 3.8% drop in > performance in this setup. This is probably far from a reliable > estimate, but I guess it indeed indicates that having lower-frequency > states might be beneficial in some load scenarios. Measuring a difference of about 4% may be attributed to some unknown inaccuracy or test deviation, but again, a performance improvement of about 4% that comes free of charge is nothing to be sneezed at, IMHO. > Note though that several seconds after hitting the throttling > threshold cores 6-7 were oscillating between 1.608GHz and 1.8GHz in > both runs, which implies that the whole difference in performance was > due to different speed of initial throttling (i.e. it might be a > peculiarity of the step-wise thermal governor operation when it has to > go through more cooling states to reach the "steady-state" one). Given > that both 1.608GHz and 1.8GHz have no lower-frequency same-voltage > siblings in either of the OPP tables, it implies that under prolonged > constant load there should be no performance difference at all. ... all that with one possible cooling setup, and with one synthetic test. We simply can't know in advance how would a different cooling setup on the same or on a different board behave, if you agree.
Hi Alexey, On 27/01/2024 20:41, Alexey Charkov wrote: > On Sat, Jan 27, 2024 at 12:33 AM Dragan Simic <dsimic@manjaro.org> wrote: >> >> On 2024-01-26 14:44, Alexey Charkov wrote: >>> On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 4:56 PM Daniel Lezcano >>> <daniel.lezcano@linaro.org> wrote: >>>> On 26/01/2024 08:49, Dragan Simic wrote: >>>>> On 2024-01-26 08:30, Alexey Charkov wrote: >>>>>> On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 11:05 AM Dragan Simic <dsimic@manjaro.org> wrote: >>>>>>> On 2024-01-26 07:44, Alexey Charkov wrote: >>>>>>>> On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 10:32 AM Dragan Simic <dsimic@manjaro.org> >>>>>>>> wrote: >>>>>>>>> On 2024-01-25 10:30, Daniel Lezcano wrote: >>>>>>>>>> On 24/01/2024 21:30, Alexey Charkov wrote: >>>>>>>>>>> By default the CPUs on RK3588 start up in a conservative >>>>>>> performance >>>>>>>>>>> mode. Add frequency and voltage mappings to the device tree to >>>>>>> enable >>>> >>>> [ ... ] >>>> >>>>>> Throttling would also lower the voltage at some point, which cools it >>>>>> down much faster! >>>>> >>>>> Of course, but the key is not to cool (and slow down) the CPU cores too >>>>> much, but just enough to stay within the available thermal envelope, >>>>> which is where the same-voltage, lower-frequency OPPs should shine. >>>> >>>> That implies the resulting power is sustainable which I doubt it is >>>> the >>>> case. >>>> >>>> The voltage scaling makes the cooling effect efficient not the >>>> frequency. >>>> >>>> For example: >>>> opp5 = opp(2GHz, 1V) => 2 BogoWatt >>>> opp4 = opp(1.9GHz, 1V) => 1.9 BogoWatt >>>> opp3 = opp(1.8GHz, 0.9V) => 1.458 BogoWatt >>>> [ other states but we focus on these 3 ] >>>> >>>> opp5->opp4 => -5% compute capacity, -5% power, ratio=1 >>>> opp4->opp3 => -5% compute capacity, -23.1% power, ratio=21,6 >>>> >>>> opp5->opp3 => -10% compute capacity, -27.1% power, ratio=36.9 >>>> >>>> In burst operation (no thermal throttling), opp4 is pointless we agree >>>> on that. >>>> >>>> IMO the following will happen: in burst operation with thermal >>>> throttling we hit the trip point and then the step wise governor >>>> reduces >>>> opp5 -> opp4. We have slight power reduction but the temperature does >>>> not decrease, so at the next iteration, it is throttle at opp3. And at >>>> the end we have opp4 <-> opp3 back and forth instead of opp5 <-> opp3. >>>> >>>> It is probable we end up with an equivalent frequency average (or >>>> compute capacity avg). >>>> >>>> opp4 <-> opp3 (longer duration in states, less transitions) >>>> opp5 <-> opp3 (shorter duration in states, more transitions) >>>> >>>> Some platforms had their higher OPPs with the same voltage and they >>>> failed to cool down the CPU in the long run. >>>> >>>> Anyway, there is only one way to check it out :) >>>> >>>> Alexey, is it possible to compare the compute duration for 'dhrystone' >>>> with these voltage OPP and without ? (with a period of cool down >>>> between >>>> the test in order to start at the same thermal condition) ? >>> >>> Sure, let me try that - would be interesting to see the results. In my >>> previous tinkering there were cases when the system stayed at 2.35GHz >>> for all big cores for non-trivial time (using the step-wise thermal >>> governor), and that's an example of "same voltage, lower frequency". >>> Other times though it throttled one cluster down to 1.8GHz and kept >>> the other at 2.4GHz, and was also stationary at those parameters for >>> extended time. This probably indicates that both of those states use >>> sustainable power in my cooling setup. >> >> IMHO, there are simply too many factors at play, including different >> possible cooling setups, so providing additional CPU throttling >> granularity can only be helpful. Of course, testing and recording >> data is the way to move forward, but I think we should use a few >> different tests. > > Soooo, benchmarking these turned out a bit trickier than I had hoped > for. Apparently, dhrystone uses an unsigned int rather than an > unsigned long for the loops count (or something of that sort), which > means that I can't get it to run enough loops to heat up my chip from > a stable idle state to the throttling state (due to counter > wraparound). So I ended up with a couple of crutches, namely: > - run dhrystone continuously on 6 out of 8 cores to make the chip > warm enough (`taskset -c 0-5 ./dhrystone -t 6 -r 6000` - note that on > my machine cores 6-7 are usually the first ones to get throttled, due > to whatever thermal peculiarities) > - wait for the temperature to stabilize (which happens at 79.5C) > - then run timed dhrystone on the remaining 2 out of 6 cores (big > ones) to see how throttling with different OPP tables affects overall > performance. Thanks for taking the time to test. > In the end, here's what I got with the 'original' OPP table (including > "same voltage - different frequencies" states): > alchark@rock-5b ~ $ taskset -c 6-7 ./dhrystone -t 2 -l 4000000000 > duration: 0 seconds > number of threads: 2 > number of loops: 4000000000000000 > delay between starting threads: 0 seconds > > Dhrystone(1.1) time for 1233977344 passes = 29.7 > This machine benchmarks at 41481539 dhrystones/second > 23609 DMIPS > Dhrystone(1.1) time for 1233977344 passes = 29.8 > This machine benchmarks at 41476618 dhrystones/second > 23606 DMIPS > > Total dhrystone run time: 30.864492 seconds. > > And here's what I got with the 'reduced' OPP table (keeping only the > highest frequency state for each voltage): > alchark@rock-5b ~ $ taskset -c 6-7 ./dhrystone -t 2 -l 4000000000 > duration: 0 seconds > number of threads: 2 > number of loops: 4000000000000000 > delay between starting threads: 0 seconds > > Dhrystone(1.1) time for 1233977344 passes = 30.9 > This machine benchmarks at 39968549 dhrystones/second > 22748 DMIPS > Dhrystone(1.1) time for 1233977344 passes = 31.0 > This machine benchmarks at 39817431 dhrystones/second > 22662 DMIPS > > Total dhrystone run time: 31.995136 seconds. > > Bottomline: removing the lower-frequency OPPs led to a 3.8% drop in > performance in this setup. This is probably far from a reliable > estimate, but I guess it indeed indicates that having lower-frequency > states might be beneficial in some load scenarios. What is the duration between these two tests? I would be curious if it is repeatable by inverting the setup (reduced OPP table and then original OPP table). BTW: I used -l 10000 for a ~30 seconds workload more or less on the rk3399, may be -l 20000 will be ok for the rk3588.
On Sun, Jan 28, 2024 at 7:35 AM Dragan Simic <dsimic@manjaro.org> wrote: > > On 2024-01-27 20:41, Alexey Charkov wrote: > > On Sat, Jan 27, 2024 at 12:33 AM Dragan Simic <dsimic@manjaro.org> > > wrote: > >> On 2024-01-26 14:44, Alexey Charkov wrote: > >> > On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 4:56 PM Daniel Lezcano <daniel.lezcano@linaro.org> wrote: > >> >> On 26/01/2024 08:49, Dragan Simic wrote: > >> >> > On 2024-01-26 08:30, Alexey Charkov wrote: > >> >> >> On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 11:05 AM Dragan Simic <dsimic@manjaro.org> wrote: > >> >> >>> On 2024-01-26 07:44, Alexey Charkov wrote: > >> >> >>> > On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 10:32 AM Dragan Simic <dsimic@manjaro.org> wrote: > >> >> >>> >> On 2024-01-25 10:30, Daniel Lezcano wrote: > >> >> >> Throttling would also lower the voltage at some point, which cools it > >> >> >> down much faster! > >> >> > > >> >> > Of course, but the key is not to cool (and slow down) the CPU cores too > >> >> > much, but just enough to stay within the available thermal envelope, > >> >> > which is where the same-voltage, lower-frequency OPPs should shine. > >> >> > >> >> That implies the resulting power is sustainable which I doubt it is > >> >> the > >> >> case. > >> >> > >> >> The voltage scaling makes the cooling effect efficient not the > >> >> frequency. > >> >> > >> >> For example: > >> >> opp5 = opp(2GHz, 1V) => 2 BogoWatt > >> >> opp4 = opp(1.9GHz, 1V) => 1.9 BogoWatt > >> >> opp3 = opp(1.8GHz, 0.9V) => 1.458 BogoWatt > >> >> [ other states but we focus on these 3 ] > >> >> > >> >> opp5->opp4 => -5% compute capacity, -5% power, ratio=1 > >> >> opp4->opp3 => -5% compute capacity, -23.1% power, ratio=21,6 > >> >> > >> >> opp5->opp3 => -10% compute capacity, -27.1% power, ratio=36.9 > >> >> > >> >> In burst operation (no thermal throttling), opp4 is pointless we agree > >> >> on that. > >> >> > >> >> IMO the following will happen: in burst operation with thermal > >> >> throttling we hit the trip point and then the step wise governor > >> >> reduces > >> >> opp5 -> opp4. We have slight power reduction but the temperature does > >> >> not decrease, so at the next iteration, it is throttle at opp3. And at > >> >> the end we have opp4 <-> opp3 back and forth instead of opp5 <-> opp3. > >> >> > >> >> It is probable we end up with an equivalent frequency average (or > >> >> compute capacity avg). > >> >> > >> >> opp4 <-> opp3 (longer duration in states, less transitions) > >> >> opp5 <-> opp3 (shorter duration in states, more transitions) > >> >> > >> >> Some platforms had their higher OPPs with the same voltage and they > >> >> failed to cool down the CPU in the long run. > >> >> > >> >> Anyway, there is only one way to check it out :) > >> >> > >> >> Alexey, is it possible to compare the compute duration for 'dhrystone' > >> >> with these voltage OPP and without ? (with a period of cool down > >> >> between > >> >> the test in order to start at the same thermal condition) ? > >> > > >> > Sure, let me try that - would be interesting to see the results. In my > >> > previous tinkering there were cases when the system stayed at 2.35GHz > >> > for all big cores for non-trivial time (using the step-wise thermal > >> > governor), and that's an example of "same voltage, lower frequency". > >> > Other times though it throttled one cluster down to 1.8GHz and kept > >> > the other at 2.4GHz, and was also stationary at those parameters for > >> > extended time. This probably indicates that both of those states use > >> > sustainable power in my cooling setup. > >> > >> IMHO, there are simply too many factors at play, including different > >> possible cooling setups, so providing additional CPU throttling > >> granularity can only be helpful. Of course, testing and recording > >> data is the way to move forward, but I think we should use a few > >> different tests. > > > > Soooo, benchmarking these turned out a bit trickier than I had hoped > > for. Apparently, dhrystone uses an unsigned int rather than an > > unsigned long for the loops count (or something of that sort), which > > means that I can't get it to run enough loops to heat up my chip from > > a stable idle state to the throttling state (due to counter > > wraparound). So I ended up with a couple of crutches, namely: > > Huh, it seems that recent SBCs may have become a bit too fast for it, > which is great. :) Thank you for the benchmarking. > > > - run dhrystone continuously on 6 out of 8 cores to make the chip > > warm enough (`taskset -c 0-5 ./dhrystone -t 6 -r 6000` - note that on > > my machine cores 6-7 are usually the first ones to get throttled, due > > to whatever thermal peculiarities) > > - wait for the temperature to stabilize (which happens at 79.5C) > > - then run timed dhrystone on the remaining 2 out of 6 cores (big > > ones) to see how throttling with different OPP tables affects overall > > performance. > > Just checking, running the test on just two CPU cores was enough to > keep the package temperature at around 80 oC? No, not even remotely. I kept the continuous 6 dhrystone threads running on all the other cores (`taskset -c 0-5 ./dhrystone -t 6 -r 6000`) to let it reach the throttling temperature. This adds further imprecision to the benchmark of course, because the governor might choose to throttle some of the cores that do not participate in the timed benchmarking run, and thus lend some thermal headroom to the latter. That didn't seem to happen from my naked-eye observation via `watch "cpupower -c 0,4,6 frequency-info | grep current"`, although I admit that I didn't record more granular logs of frequency states, and some quick transitions to lower frequencies could also have happened on the other cores. Don't think it's a major influence though, because a quick transition back and forth shouldn't have contributed much to the thermal output. > > In the end, here's what I got with the 'original' OPP table (including > > "same voltage - different frequencies" states): > > alchark@rock-5b ~ $ taskset -c 6-7 ./dhrystone -t 2 -l 4000000000 > > duration: 0 seconds > > number of threads: 2 > > number of loops: 4000000000000000 > > delay between starting threads: 0 seconds > > > > Dhrystone(1.1) time for 1233977344 passes = 29.7 > > This machine benchmarks at 41481539 dhrystones/second > > 23609 DMIPS > > Dhrystone(1.1) time for 1233977344 passes = 29.8 > > This machine benchmarks at 41476618 dhrystones/second > > 23606 DMIPS > > > > Total dhrystone run time: 30.864492 seconds. > > > > And here's what I got with the 'reduced' OPP table (keeping only the > > highest frequency state for each voltage): > > alchark@rock-5b ~ $ taskset -c 6-7 ./dhrystone -t 2 -l 4000000000 > > duration: 0 seconds > > number of threads: 2 > > number of loops: 4000000000000000 > > delay between starting threads: 0 seconds > > > > Dhrystone(1.1) time for 1233977344 passes = 30.9 > > This machine benchmarks at 39968549 dhrystones/second > > 22748 DMIPS > > Dhrystone(1.1) time for 1233977344 passes = 31.0 > > This machine benchmarks at 39817431 dhrystones/second > > 22662 DMIPS > > > > Total dhrystone run time: 31.995136 seconds. > > > > Bottomline: removing the lower-frequency OPPs led to a 3.8% drop in > > performance in this setup. This is probably far from a reliable > > estimate, but I guess it indeed indicates that having lower-frequency > > states might be beneficial in some load scenarios. > > Measuring a difference of about 4% may be attributed to some unknown > inaccuracy or test deviation, but again, a performance improvement of > about 4% that comes free of charge is nothing to be sneezed at, IMHO. True :) > > Note though that several seconds after hitting the throttling > > threshold cores 6-7 were oscillating between 1.608GHz and 1.8GHz in > > both runs, which implies that the whole difference in performance was > > due to different speed of initial throttling (i.e. it might be a > > peculiarity of the step-wise thermal governor operation when it has to > > go through more cooling states to reach the "steady-state" one). Given > > that both 1.608GHz and 1.8GHz have no lower-frequency same-voltage > > siblings in either of the OPP tables, it implies that under prolonged > > constant load there should be no performance difference at all. > > ... all that with one possible cooling setup, and with one synthetic > test. We simply can't know in advance how would a different cooling > setup on the same or on a different board behave, if you agree. Of course. My only concern is whether we might be somewhat deceiving ourselves by that benchmarked performance boost: after all, it's also entirely possible that by going through multiple intermediate frequency states, the step-wise governor simply didn't cool the core just enough over some fraction of the benchmarking run, which we would have observed in a detailed temperature log as a higher peak temperature and longer residence above the throttling threshold temperature (and that would be the case if intermediate frequency states were "unsustainable" as Daniel pointed out, which they probably were given that the throttling didn't stop at any of them). Attributing a performance increase in this case to a benefit from additional intermediate OPPs is not fully fair, because then we can also simply move the throttling threshold higher. And it would be super tricky to separate the effects from greater system throughput at intermediate frequency states vs. greater effective thermal budget we allow the governor to use before it even considers throttling. Best regards, Alexey
On Sun, Jan 28, 2024 at 7:06 PM Daniel Lezcano <daniel.lezcano@linaro.org> wrote: > > > Hi Alexey, Hi Daniel, > On 27/01/2024 20:41, Alexey Charkov wrote: > > On Sat, Jan 27, 2024 at 12:33 AM Dragan Simic <dsimic@manjaro.org> wrote: > >> > >> On 2024-01-26 14:44, Alexey Charkov wrote: > >>> On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 4:56 PM Daniel Lezcano > >>> <daniel.lezcano@linaro.org> wrote: > >>>> On 26/01/2024 08:49, Dragan Simic wrote: > >>>>> On 2024-01-26 08:30, Alexey Charkov wrote: > >>>>>> On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 11:05 AM Dragan Simic <dsimic@manjaro.org> wrote: > >>>>>>> On 2024-01-26 07:44, Alexey Charkov wrote: > >>>>>>>> On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 10:32 AM Dragan Simic <dsimic@manjaro.org> > >>>>>>>> wrote: > >>>>>>>>> On 2024-01-25 10:30, Daniel Lezcano wrote: > >>>>>>>>>> On 24/01/2024 21:30, Alexey Charkov wrote: > >>>>>>>>>>> By default the CPUs on RK3588 start up in a conservative > >>>>>>> performance > >>>>>>>>>>> mode. Add frequency and voltage mappings to the device tree to > >>>>>>> enable > >>>> > >>>> [ ... ] > >>>> > >>>>>> Throttling would also lower the voltage at some point, which cools it > >>>>>> down much faster! > >>>>> > >>>>> Of course, but the key is not to cool (and slow down) the CPU cores too > >>>>> much, but just enough to stay within the available thermal envelope, > >>>>> which is where the same-voltage, lower-frequency OPPs should shine. > >>>> > >>>> That implies the resulting power is sustainable which I doubt it is > >>>> the > >>>> case. > >>>> > >>>> The voltage scaling makes the cooling effect efficient not the > >>>> frequency. > >>>> > >>>> For example: > >>>> opp5 = opp(2GHz, 1V) => 2 BogoWatt > >>>> opp4 = opp(1.9GHz, 1V) => 1.9 BogoWatt > >>>> opp3 = opp(1.8GHz, 0.9V) => 1.458 BogoWatt > >>>> [ other states but we focus on these 3 ] > >>>> > >>>> opp5->opp4 => -5% compute capacity, -5% power, ratio=1 > >>>> opp4->opp3 => -5% compute capacity, -23.1% power, ratio=21,6 > >>>> > >>>> opp5->opp3 => -10% compute capacity, -27.1% power, ratio=36.9 > >>>> > >>>> In burst operation (no thermal throttling), opp4 is pointless we agree > >>>> on that. > >>>> > >>>> IMO the following will happen: in burst operation with thermal > >>>> throttling we hit the trip point and then the step wise governor > >>>> reduces > >>>> opp5 -> opp4. We have slight power reduction but the temperature does > >>>> not decrease, so at the next iteration, it is throttle at opp3. And at > >>>> the end we have opp4 <-> opp3 back and forth instead of opp5 <-> opp3. > >>>> > >>>> It is probable we end up with an equivalent frequency average (or > >>>> compute capacity avg). > >>>> > >>>> opp4 <-> opp3 (longer duration in states, less transitions) > >>>> opp5 <-> opp3 (shorter duration in states, more transitions) > >>>> > >>>> Some platforms had their higher OPPs with the same voltage and they > >>>> failed to cool down the CPU in the long run. > >>>> > >>>> Anyway, there is only one way to check it out :) > >>>> > >>>> Alexey, is it possible to compare the compute duration for 'dhrystone' > >>>> with these voltage OPP and without ? (with a period of cool down > >>>> between > >>>> the test in order to start at the same thermal condition) ? > >>> > >>> Sure, let me try that - would be interesting to see the results. In my > >>> previous tinkering there were cases when the system stayed at 2.35GHz > >>> for all big cores for non-trivial time (using the step-wise thermal > >>> governor), and that's an example of "same voltage, lower frequency". > >>> Other times though it throttled one cluster down to 1.8GHz and kept > >>> the other at 2.4GHz, and was also stationary at those parameters for > >>> extended time. This probably indicates that both of those states use > >>> sustainable power in my cooling setup. > >> > >> IMHO, there are simply too many factors at play, including different > >> possible cooling setups, so providing additional CPU throttling > >> granularity can only be helpful. Of course, testing and recording > >> data is the way to move forward, but I think we should use a few > >> different tests. > > > > Soooo, benchmarking these turned out a bit trickier than I had hoped > > for. Apparently, dhrystone uses an unsigned int rather than an > > unsigned long for the loops count (or something of that sort), which > > means that I can't get it to run enough loops to heat up my chip from > > a stable idle state to the throttling state (due to counter > > wraparound). So I ended up with a couple of crutches, namely: > > - run dhrystone continuously on 6 out of 8 cores to make the chip > > warm enough (`taskset -c 0-5 ./dhrystone -t 6 -r 6000` - note that on > > my machine cores 6-7 are usually the first ones to get throttled, due > > to whatever thermal peculiarities) > > - wait for the temperature to stabilize (which happens at 79.5C) > > - then run timed dhrystone on the remaining 2 out of 6 cores (big > > ones) to see how throttling with different OPP tables affects overall > > performance. > > Thanks for taking the time to test. > > > In the end, here's what I got with the 'original' OPP table (including > > "same voltage - different frequencies" states): > > alchark@rock-5b ~ $ taskset -c 6-7 ./dhrystone -t 2 -l 4000000000 > > duration: 0 seconds > > number of threads: 2 > > number of loops: 4000000000000000 > > delay between starting threads: 0 seconds > > > > Dhrystone(1.1) time for 1233977344 passes = 29.7 > > This machine benchmarks at 41481539 dhrystones/second > > 23609 DMIPS > > Dhrystone(1.1) time for 1233977344 passes = 29.8 > > This machine benchmarks at 41476618 dhrystones/second > > 23606 DMIPS > > > > Total dhrystone run time: 30.864492 seconds. > > > > And here's what I got with the 'reduced' OPP table (keeping only the > > highest frequency state for each voltage): > > alchark@rock-5b ~ $ taskset -c 6-7 ./dhrystone -t 2 -l 4000000000 > > duration: 0 seconds > > number of threads: 2 > > number of loops: 4000000000000000 > > delay between starting threads: 0 seconds > > > > Dhrystone(1.1) time for 1233977344 passes = 30.9 > > This machine benchmarks at 39968549 dhrystones/second > > 22748 DMIPS > > Dhrystone(1.1) time for 1233977344 passes = 31.0 > > This machine benchmarks at 39817431 dhrystones/second > > 22662 DMIPS > > > > Total dhrystone run time: 31.995136 seconds. > > > > Bottomline: removing the lower-frequency OPPs led to a 3.8% drop in > > performance in this setup. This is probably far from a reliable > > estimate, but I guess it indeed indicates that having lower-frequency > > states might be beneficial in some load scenarios. > > What is the duration between these two tests? Several hours and a couple of reboots. I did the first one, recorded the results and the temperatures, then rebuilt the dtb the next day, rebooted with it and did everything again with the other OPP table. > I would be curious if it is repeatable by inverting the setup (reduced > OPP table and then original OPP table). Frankly, I can't see how ordering could have mattered, given that I let the system cool down completely, and also rebooted it to use a different dtb, so there shouldn't have been any caching effects. Maybe there is some outside randomness in the results though - perhaps 5-10 repetitions in each case would have been more statistically meaningful. But then again to make it statistically meaningful I'd have to peg the other (non-benchmarked) cores to a static OPP to ensure the thermal governor doesn't play with them when not asked to - and it all starts to sound like a rabbit hole :) > BTW: I used -l 10000 for a ~30 seconds workload more or less on the > rk3399, may be -l 20000 will be ok for the rk3588. -l 20000 with two threads also gives me about ~30 seconds runtime... While -l 200000 completed in 25 seconds *facepalm* Best regards, Alexey
On 2024-01-28 20:14, Alexey Charkov wrote: > On Sun, Jan 28, 2024 at 7:35 AM Dragan Simic <dsimic@manjaro.org> > wrote: >> On 2024-01-27 20:41, Alexey Charkov wrote: >> > On Sat, Jan 27, 2024 at 12:33 AM Dragan Simic <dsimic@manjaro.org> wrote: >> >> On 2024-01-26 14:44, Alexey Charkov wrote: >> >> > On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 4:56 PM Daniel Lezcano <daniel.lezcano@linaro.org> wrote: >> >> >> On 26/01/2024 08:49, Dragan Simic wrote: >> >> >> > On 2024-01-26 08:30, Alexey Charkov wrote: >> >> >> >> On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 11:05 AM Dragan Simic <dsimic@manjaro.org> wrote: >> >> >> >>> On 2024-01-26 07:44, Alexey Charkov wrote: >> >> >> >>> > On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 10:32 AM Dragan Simic <dsimic@manjaro.org> wrote: >> >> >> >>> >> On 2024-01-25 10:30, Daniel Lezcano wrote: >> >> >> >> Throttling would also lower the voltage at some point, which cools it >> >> >> >> down much faster! >> >> >> > >> >> >> > Of course, but the key is not to cool (and slow down) the CPU cores too >> >> >> > much, but just enough to stay within the available thermal envelope, >> >> >> > which is where the same-voltage, lower-frequency OPPs should shine. >> >> >> >> >> >> That implies the resulting power is sustainable which I doubt it is >> >> >> the >> >> >> case. >> >> >> >> >> >> The voltage scaling makes the cooling effect efficient not the >> >> >> frequency. >> >> >> >> >> >> For example: >> >> >> opp5 = opp(2GHz, 1V) => 2 BogoWatt >> >> >> opp4 = opp(1.9GHz, 1V) => 1.9 BogoWatt >> >> >> opp3 = opp(1.8GHz, 0.9V) => 1.458 BogoWatt >> >> >> [ other states but we focus on these 3 ] >> >> >> >> >> >> opp5->opp4 => -5% compute capacity, -5% power, ratio=1 >> >> >> opp4->opp3 => -5% compute capacity, -23.1% power, ratio=21,6 >> >> >> >> >> >> opp5->opp3 => -10% compute capacity, -27.1% power, ratio=36.9 >> >> >> >> >> >> In burst operation (no thermal throttling), opp4 is pointless we agree >> >> >> on that. >> >> >> >> >> >> IMO the following will happen: in burst operation with thermal >> >> >> throttling we hit the trip point and then the step wise governor >> >> >> reduces >> >> >> opp5 -> opp4. We have slight power reduction but the temperature does >> >> >> not decrease, so at the next iteration, it is throttle at opp3. And at >> >> >> the end we have opp4 <-> opp3 back and forth instead of opp5 <-> opp3. >> >> >> >> >> >> It is probable we end up with an equivalent frequency average (or >> >> >> compute capacity avg). >> >> >> >> >> >> opp4 <-> opp3 (longer duration in states, less transitions) >> >> >> opp5 <-> opp3 (shorter duration in states, more transitions) >> >> >> >> >> >> Some platforms had their higher OPPs with the same voltage and they >> >> >> failed to cool down the CPU in the long run. >> >> >> >> >> >> Anyway, there is only one way to check it out :) >> >> >> >> >> >> Alexey, is it possible to compare the compute duration for 'dhrystone' >> >> >> with these voltage OPP and without ? (with a period of cool down >> >> >> between >> >> >> the test in order to start at the same thermal condition) ? >> >> > >> >> > Sure, let me try that - would be interesting to see the results. In my >> >> > previous tinkering there were cases when the system stayed at 2.35GHz >> >> > for all big cores for non-trivial time (using the step-wise thermal >> >> > governor), and that's an example of "same voltage, lower frequency". >> >> > Other times though it throttled one cluster down to 1.8GHz and kept >> >> > the other at 2.4GHz, and was also stationary at those parameters for >> >> > extended time. This probably indicates that both of those states use >> >> > sustainable power in my cooling setup. >> >> >> >> IMHO, there are simply too many factors at play, including different >> >> possible cooling setups, so providing additional CPU throttling >> >> granularity can only be helpful. Of course, testing and recording >> >> data is the way to move forward, but I think we should use a few >> >> different tests. >> > >> > Soooo, benchmarking these turned out a bit trickier than I had hoped >> > for. Apparently, dhrystone uses an unsigned int rather than an >> > unsigned long for the loops count (or something of that sort), which >> > means that I can't get it to run enough loops to heat up my chip from >> > a stable idle state to the throttling state (due to counter >> > wraparound). So I ended up with a couple of crutches, namely: >> >> Huh, it seems that recent SBCs may have become a bit too fast for it, >> which is great. :) Thank you for the benchmarking. >> >> > - run dhrystone continuously on 6 out of 8 cores to make the chip >> > warm enough (`taskset -c 0-5 ./dhrystone -t 6 -r 6000` - note that on >> > my machine cores 6-7 are usually the first ones to get throttled, due >> > to whatever thermal peculiarities) >> > - wait for the temperature to stabilize (which happens at 79.5C) >> > - then run timed dhrystone on the remaining 2 out of 6 cores (big >> > ones) to see how throttling with different OPP tables affects overall >> > performance. >> >> Just checking, running the test on just two CPU cores was enough to >> keep the package temperature at around 80 oC? > > No, not even remotely. > > I kept the continuous 6 dhrystone threads running on all the other > cores (`taskset -c 0-5 ./dhrystone -t 6 -r 6000`) to let it reach the > throttling temperature. This adds further imprecision to the benchmark > of course, because the governor might choose to throttle some of the > cores that do not participate in the timed benchmarking run, and thus > lend some thermal headroom to the latter. That didn't seem to happen > from my naked-eye observation via `watch "cpupower -c 0,4,6 > frequency-info | grep current"`, although I admit that I didn't record > more granular logs of frequency states, and some quick transitions to > lower frequencies could also have happened on the other cores. Don't > think it's a major influence though, because a quick transition back > and forth shouldn't have contributed much to the thermal output. Thank you for the clarification! You're right, that might have introduced some inaccuracy into the test results, and it also made the tests kind of hardly repeatable. On the other hand, that way the synthetic CPU test feels a bit more like some real-world CPU load, in which multiple resource-hungry tasks usually compete for the CPU cores and the thermal budget. Though, as we know repeatability is the key for a scientific approach, but it also usually contradicts with simulating real-world loads that are of rather random nature. Well, testing is hard. :) I'll think a bit more about all this, and I'll come back with an update. Maybe I'll also be able to join the testing. >> > In the end, here's what I got with the 'original' OPP table (including >> > "same voltage - different frequencies" states): >> > alchark@rock-5b ~ $ taskset -c 6-7 ./dhrystone -t 2 -l 4000000000 >> > duration: 0 seconds >> > number of threads: 2 >> > number of loops: 4000000000000000 >> > delay between starting threads: 0 seconds >> > >> > Dhrystone(1.1) time for 1233977344 passes = 29.7 >> > This machine benchmarks at 41481539 dhrystones/second >> > 23609 DMIPS >> > Dhrystone(1.1) time for 1233977344 passes = 29.8 >> > This machine benchmarks at 41476618 dhrystones/second >> > 23606 DMIPS >> > >> > Total dhrystone run time: 30.864492 seconds. >> > >> > And here's what I got with the 'reduced' OPP table (keeping only the >> > highest frequency state for each voltage): >> > alchark@rock-5b ~ $ taskset -c 6-7 ./dhrystone -t 2 -l 4000000000 >> > duration: 0 seconds >> > number of threads: 2 >> > number of loops: 4000000000000000 >> > delay between starting threads: 0 seconds >> > >> > Dhrystone(1.1) time for 1233977344 passes = 30.9 >> > This machine benchmarks at 39968549 dhrystones/second >> > 22748 DMIPS >> > Dhrystone(1.1) time for 1233977344 passes = 31.0 >> > This machine benchmarks at 39817431 dhrystones/second >> > 22662 DMIPS >> > >> > Total dhrystone run time: 31.995136 seconds. >> > >> > Bottomline: removing the lower-frequency OPPs led to a 3.8% drop in >> > performance in this setup. This is probably far from a reliable >> > estimate, but I guess it indeed indicates that having lower-frequency >> > states might be beneficial in some load scenarios. >> >> Measuring a difference of about 4% may be attributed to some unknown >> inaccuracy or test deviation, but again, a performance improvement of >> about 4% that comes free of charge is nothing to be sneezed at, IMHO. > > True :) > >> > Note though that several seconds after hitting the throttling >> > threshold cores 6-7 were oscillating between 1.608GHz and 1.8GHz in >> > both runs, which implies that the whole difference in performance was >> > due to different speed of initial throttling (i.e. it might be a >> > peculiarity of the step-wise thermal governor operation when it has to >> > go through more cooling states to reach the "steady-state" one). Given >> > that both 1.608GHz and 1.8GHz have no lower-frequency same-voltage >> > siblings in either of the OPP tables, it implies that under prolonged >> > constant load there should be no performance difference at all. >> >> ... all that with one possible cooling setup, and with one synthetic >> test. We simply can't know in advance how would a different cooling >> setup on the same or on a different board behave, if you agree. > > Of course. My only concern is whether we might be somewhat deceiving > ourselves by that benchmarked performance boost: after all, it's also > entirely possible that by going through multiple intermediate > frequency states, the step-wise governor simply didn't cool the core > just enough over some fraction of the benchmarking run, which we would > have observed in a detailed temperature log as a higher peak > temperature and longer residence above the throttling threshold > temperature (and that would be the case if intermediate frequency > states were "unsustainable" as Daniel pointed out, which they probably > were given that the throttling didn't stop at any of them). Well, the observed CPU frequency scaling didn't stop at any particular OPP for an extended period of time, if I'm not mistaken? That's even more not to be expected under any kind of unpredictable real-world CPU load, if you agree. > Attributing a performance increase in this case to a benefit from > additional intermediate OPPs is not fully fair, because then we can > also simply move the throttling threshold higher. And it would be > super tricky to separate the effects from greater system throughput at > intermediate frequency states vs. greater effective thermal budget we > allow the governor to use before it even considers throttling. I'd agree that drawing such conclusions (or the conclusions from the opposite end of the spectrum) wouldn't be exactly fair at this point. Though, IMHO it's important that the test results observed so far weren't worse with the additional same-voltage, lower-frequency OPPs. In other words, all I ever said, basically, is that having more granular OPPs should be helpful at best, and not harmful at worst. How helpful is very hard to predict, because it depends on all kinds of things.
Hello Alexey, On 2024-01-29 01:09, Dragan Simic wrote: > On 2024-01-28 20:14, Alexey Charkov wrote: >> On Sun, Jan 28, 2024 at 7:35 AM Dragan Simic <dsimic@manjaro.org> >> wrote: >>> Just checking, running the test on just two CPU cores was enough to >>> keep the package temperature at around 80 oC? >> >> No, not even remotely. >> >> I kept the continuous 6 dhrystone threads running on all the other >> cores (`taskset -c 0-5 ./dhrystone -t 6 -r 6000`) to let it reach the >> throttling temperature. This adds further imprecision to the benchmark >> of course, because the governor might choose to throttle some of the >> cores that do not participate in the timed benchmarking run, and thus >> lend some thermal headroom to the latter. That didn't seem to happen >> from my naked-eye observation via `watch "cpupower -c 0,4,6 >> frequency-info | grep current"`, although I admit that I didn't record >> more granular logs of frequency states, and some quick transitions to >> lower frequencies could also have happened on the other cores. Don't >> think it's a major influence though, because a quick transition back >> and forth shouldn't have contributed much to the thermal output. > > Thank you for the clarification! > > You're right, that might have introduced some inaccuracy into the test > results, and it also made the tests kind of hardly repeatable. On the > other hand, that way the synthetic CPU test feels a bit more like some > real-world CPU load, in which multiple resource-hungry tasks usually > compete for the CPU cores and the thermal budget. > > Though, as we know repeatability is the key for a scientific approach, > but it also usually contradicts with simulating real-world loads that > are of rather random nature. Well, testing is hard. :) > > I'll think a bit more about all this, and I'll come back with an > update. > Maybe I'll also be able to join the testing. Good news! :) Thanks to Radxa, I'll be able to do the testing on my side, perhaps in about a week or two. If you agree, it might be the best to wait for those test results as well; of course, I'll keep thinking about some kind of a test suite in the meantime, which we should be able to use on other boards as well.
diff --git a/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi b/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi index 131b9eb21398..e605be531a0f 100644 --- a/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi +++ b/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi @@ -97,6 +97,7 @@ cpu_l0: cpu@0 { clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; assigned-clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; assigned-clock-rates = <816000000>; + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster0_opp_table>; cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; i-cache-size = <32768>; i-cache-line-size = <64>; @@ -116,6 +117,7 @@ cpu_l1: cpu@100 { enable-method = "psci"; capacity-dmips-mhz = <530>; clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster0_opp_table>; cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; i-cache-size = <32768>; i-cache-line-size = <64>; @@ -135,6 +137,7 @@ cpu_l2: cpu@200 { enable-method = "psci"; capacity-dmips-mhz = <530>; clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster0_opp_table>; cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; i-cache-size = <32768>; i-cache-line-size = <64>; @@ -154,6 +157,7 @@ cpu_l3: cpu@300 { enable-method = "psci"; capacity-dmips-mhz = <530>; clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUL>; + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster0_opp_table>; cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; i-cache-size = <32768>; i-cache-line-size = <64>; @@ -175,6 +179,7 @@ cpu_b0: cpu@400 { clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB01>; assigned-clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB01>; assigned-clock-rates = <816000000>; + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster1_opp_table>; cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; i-cache-size = <65536>; i-cache-line-size = <64>; @@ -194,6 +199,7 @@ cpu_b1: cpu@500 { enable-method = "psci"; capacity-dmips-mhz = <1024>; clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB01>; + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster1_opp_table>; cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; i-cache-size = <65536>; i-cache-line-size = <64>; @@ -215,6 +221,7 @@ cpu_b2: cpu@600 { clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB23>; assigned-clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB23>; assigned-clock-rates = <816000000>; + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster2_opp_table>; cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; i-cache-size = <65536>; i-cache-line-size = <64>; @@ -234,6 +241,7 @@ cpu_b3: cpu@700 { enable-method = "psci"; capacity-dmips-mhz = <1024>; clocks = <&scmi_clk SCMI_CLK_CPUB23>; + operating-points-v2 = <&cluster2_opp_table>; cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_SLEEP>; i-cache-size = <65536>; i-cache-line-size = <64>; @@ -348,6 +356,207 @@ l3_cache: l3-cache { }; }; + cluster0_opp_table: opp-table-cluster0 { + compatible = "operating-points-v2"; + opp-shared; + + opp-408000000 { + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <408000000>; + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 950000>; + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; + }; + opp-600000000 { + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <600000000>; + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 950000>; + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; + }; + opp-816000000 { + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <816000000>; + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 950000>; + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; + }; + opp-1008000000 { + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1008000000>; + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 950000>; + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; + }; + opp-1200000000 { + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1200000000>; + opp-microvolt = <712500 712500 950000>; + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; + }; + opp-1416000000 { + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1416000000>; + opp-microvolt = <762500 762500 950000>; + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; + opp-suspend; + }; + opp-1608000000 { + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1608000000>; + opp-microvolt = <850000 850000 950000>; + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; + }; + opp-1800000000 { + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1800000000>; + opp-microvolt = <950000 950000 950000>; + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; + }; + }; + + cluster1_opp_table: opp-table-cluster1 { + compatible = "operating-points-v2"; + opp-shared; + + opp-408000000 { + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <408000000>; + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 1000000>; + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; + opp-suspend; + }; + opp-600000000 { + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <600000000>; + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 1000000>; + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; + }; + opp-816000000 { + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <816000000>; + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 1000000>; + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; + }; + opp-1008000000 { + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1008000000>; + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 1000000>; + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; + }; + opp-1200000000 { + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1200000000>; + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 1000000>; + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; + }; + opp-1416000000 { + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1416000000>; + opp-microvolt = <725000 725000 1000000>; + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; + }; + opp-1608000000 { + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1608000000>; + opp-microvolt = <762500 762500 1000000>; + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; + }; + opp-1800000000 { + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1800000000>; + opp-microvolt = <850000 850000 1000000>; + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; + }; + opp-2016000000 { + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <2016000000>; + opp-microvolt = <925000 925000 1000000>; + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; + }; + opp-2208000000 { + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <2208000000>; + opp-microvolt = <987500 987500 1000000>; + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; + }; + opp-2256000000 { + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <2256000000>; + opp-microvolt = <1000000 1000000 1000000>; + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; + }; + opp-2304000000 { + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <2304000000>; + opp-microvolt = <1000000 1000000 1000000>; + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; + }; + opp-2352000000 { + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <2352000000>; + opp-microvolt = <1000000 1000000 1000000>; + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; + }; + opp-2400000000 { + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <2400000000>; + opp-microvolt = <1000000 1000000 1000000>; + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; + }; + }; + + cluster2_opp_table: opp-table-cluster2 { + compatible = "operating-points-v2"; + opp-shared; + + opp-408000000 { + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <408000000>; + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 1000000>; + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; + opp-suspend; + }; + opp-600000000 { + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <600000000>; + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 1000000>; + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; + }; + opp-816000000 { + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <816000000>; + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 1000000>; + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; + }; + opp-1008000000 { + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1008000000>; + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 1000000>; + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; + }; + opp-1200000000 { + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1200000000>; + opp-microvolt = <675000 675000 1000000>; + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; + }; + opp-1416000000 { + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1416000000>; + opp-microvolt = <725000 725000 1000000>; + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; + }; + opp-1608000000 { + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1608000000>; + opp-microvolt = <762500 762500 1000000>; + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; + }; + opp-1800000000 { + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <1800000000>; + opp-microvolt = <850000 850000 1000000>; + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; + }; + opp-2016000000 { + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <2016000000>; + opp-microvolt = <925000 925000 1000000>; + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; + }; + opp-2208000000 { + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <2208000000>; + opp-microvolt = <987500 987500 1000000>; + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; + }; + opp-2256000000 { + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <2256000000>; + opp-microvolt = <1000000 1000000 1000000>; + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; + }; + opp-2304000000 { + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <2304000000>; + opp-microvolt = <1000000 1000000 1000000>; + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; + }; + opp-2352000000 { + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <2352000000>; + opp-microvolt = <1000000 1000000 1000000>; + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; + }; + opp-2400000000 { + opp-hz = /bits/ 64 <2400000000>; + opp-microvolt = <1000000 1000000 1000000>; + clock-latency-ns = <40000>; + }; + }; + firmware { optee: optee { compatible = "linaro,optee-tz";
By default the CPUs on RK3588 start up in a conservative performance mode. Add frequency and voltage mappings to the device tree to enable dynamic scaling via cpufreq Signed-off-by: Alexey Charkov <alchark@gmail.com> --- arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi | 209 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 209 insertions(+)