| Venkatesh Pallipadi | 21e3024 | 2005-05-25 14:43:56 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1 |  | 
 | 2 |      CPU frequency and voltage scaling statictics in the Linux(TM) kernel | 
 | 3 |  | 
 | 4 |  | 
 | 5 |              L i n u x    c p u f r e q - s t a t s   d r i v e r | 
 | 6 |  | 
 | 7 |                        - information for users - | 
 | 8 |  | 
 | 9 |  | 
 | 10 |              Venkatesh Pallipadi <venkatesh.pallipadi@intel.com> | 
 | 11 |  | 
 | 12 | Contents | 
 | 13 | 1. Introduction | 
 | 14 | 2. Statistics Provided (with example) | 
 | 15 | 3. Configuring cpufreq-stats | 
 | 16 |  | 
 | 17 |  | 
 | 18 | 1. Introduction | 
 | 19 |  | 
 | 20 | cpufreq-stats is a driver that provices CPU frequency statistics for each CPU. | 
 | 21 | This statistics is provided in /sysfs as a bunch of read_only interfaces. This | 
 | 22 | interface (when configured) will appear in a seperate directory under cpufreq | 
 | 23 | in /sysfs (<sysfs root>/devices/system/cpu/cpuX/cpufreq/stats/) for each CPU. | 
 | 24 | Various statistics will form read_only files under this directory. | 
 | 25 |  | 
 | 26 | This driver is designed to be independent of any particular cpufreq_driver | 
 | 27 | that may be running on your CPU. So, it will work with any cpufreq_driver. | 
 | 28 |  | 
 | 29 |  | 
 | 30 | 2. Statistics Provided (with example) | 
 | 31 |  | 
 | 32 | cpufreq stats provides following statistics (explained in detail below). | 
 | 33 | -  time_in_state | 
 | 34 | -  total_trans | 
 | 35 | -  trans_table | 
 | 36 |  | 
 | 37 | All the statistics will be from the time the stats driver has been inserted  | 
 | 38 | to the time when a read of a particular statistic is done. Obviously, stats  | 
| Tobias Klauser | d533f67 | 2005-09-10 00:26:46 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 39 | driver will not have any information about the frequency transitions before | 
| Venkatesh Pallipadi | 21e3024 | 2005-05-25 14:43:56 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 40 | the stats driver insertion. | 
 | 41 |  | 
 | 42 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | 
 | 43 | <mysystem>:/sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/stats # ls -l | 
 | 44 | total 0 | 
 | 45 | drwxr-xr-x  2 root root    0 May 14 16:06 . | 
 | 46 | drwxr-xr-x  3 root root    0 May 14 15:58 .. | 
 | 47 | -r--r--r--  1 root root 4096 May 14 16:06 time_in_state | 
 | 48 | -r--r--r--  1 root root 4096 May 14 16:06 total_trans | 
 | 49 | -r--r--r--  1 root root 4096 May 14 16:06 trans_table | 
 | 50 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | 
 | 51 |  | 
 | 52 | -  time_in_state | 
 | 53 | This gives the amount of time spent in each of the frequencies supported by | 
 | 54 | this CPU. The cat output will have "<frequency> <time>" pair in each line, which | 
 | 55 | will mean this CPU spent <time> usertime units of time at <frequency>. Output | 
 | 56 | will have one line for each of the supported freuencies. usertime units here  | 
 | 57 | is 10mS (similar to other time exported in /proc). | 
 | 58 |  | 
 | 59 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | 
 | 60 | <mysystem>:/sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/stats # cat time_in_state  | 
 | 61 | 3600000 2089 | 
 | 62 | 3400000 136 | 
 | 63 | 3200000 34 | 
 | 64 | 3000000 67 | 
 | 65 | 2800000 172488 | 
 | 66 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | 
 | 67 |  | 
 | 68 |  | 
 | 69 | -  total_trans | 
 | 70 | This gives the total number of frequency transitions on this CPU. The cat  | 
 | 71 | output will have a single count which is the total number of frequency | 
 | 72 | transitions. | 
 | 73 |  | 
 | 74 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | 
 | 75 | <mysystem>:/sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/stats # cat total_trans | 
 | 76 | 20 | 
 | 77 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | 
 | 78 |  | 
 | 79 | -  trans_table | 
 | 80 | This will give a fine grained information about all the CPU frequency | 
 | 81 | transitions. The cat output here is a two dimensional matrix, where an entry | 
 | 82 | <i,j> (row i, column j) represents the count of number of transitions from  | 
 | 83 | Freq_i to Freq_j. Freq_i is in descending order with increasing rows and  | 
 | 84 | Freq_j is in descending order with increasing columns. The output here also  | 
 | 85 | contains the actual freq values for each row and column for better readability. | 
 | 86 |  | 
 | 87 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | 
 | 88 | <mysystem>:/sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/stats # cat trans_table | 
 | 89 |    From  :    To | 
 | 90 |          :   3600000   3400000   3200000   3000000   2800000  | 
 | 91 |   3600000:         0         5         0         0         0  | 
 | 92 |   3400000:         4         0         2         0         0  | 
 | 93 |   3200000:         0         1         0         2         0  | 
 | 94 |   3000000:         0         0         1         0         3  | 
 | 95 |   2800000:         0         0         0         2         0  | 
 | 96 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | 
 | 97 |  | 
 | 98 |  | 
 | 99 | 3. Configuring cpufreq-stats | 
 | 100 |  | 
 | 101 | To configure cpufreq-stats in your kernel | 
 | 102 | Config Main Menu | 
 | 103 | 	Power management options (ACPI, APM)  ---> | 
 | 104 | 		CPU Frequency scaling  ---> | 
 | 105 | 			[*] CPU Frequency scaling | 
 | 106 | 			<*>   CPU frequency translation statistics  | 
 | 107 | 			[*]     CPU frequency translation statistics details | 
 | 108 |  | 
 | 109 |  | 
 | 110 | "CPU Frequency scaling" (CONFIG_CPU_FREQ) should be enabled to configure | 
 | 111 | cpufreq-stats. | 
 | 112 |  | 
 | 113 | "CPU frequency translation statistics" (CONFIG_CPU_FREQ_STAT) provides the | 
 | 114 | basic statistics which includes time_in_state and total_trans. | 
 | 115 |  | 
 | 116 | "CPU frequency translation statistics details" (CONFIG_CPU_FREQ_STAT_DETAILS) | 
 | 117 | provides fine grained cpufreq stats by trans_table. The reason for having a | 
 | 118 | seperate config option for trans_table is: | 
 | 119 | - trans_table goes against the traditional /sysfs rule of one value per | 
 | 120 |   interface. It provides a whole bunch of value in a 2 dimensional matrix | 
 | 121 |   form. | 
 | 122 |  | 
 | 123 | Once these two options are enabled and your CPU supports cpufrequency, you | 
 | 124 | will be able to see the CPU frequency statistics in /sysfs. | 
 | 125 |  | 
 | 126 |  | 
 | 127 |  | 
 | 128 |  |