xref: /linux/Documentation/cpu-freq/cpu-drivers.rst (revision 4b99990cdf9560e8a071640baf19f312e6ae02f4)
1.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
2
3===============================================
4How to Implement a new CPUFreq Processor Driver
5===============================================
6
7Authors:
8
9
10	- Dominik Brodowski  <linux@brodo.de>
11	- Rafael J. Wysocki <rafael.j.wysocki@intel.com>
12	- Viresh Kumar <viresh.kumar@linaro.org>
13
14.. Contents
15
16   1.   What To Do?
17   1.1  Initialization
18   1.2  Per-CPU Initialization
19   1.3  verify
20   1.4  target/target_index or setpolicy?
21   1.5  target/target_index
22   1.6  setpolicy
23   1.7  get_intermediate and target_intermediate
24   2.   Frequency Table Helpers
25
26
27
281. What To Do?
29==============
30
31So, you just got a brand-new CPU / chipset with datasheets and want to
32add cpufreq support for this CPU / chipset? Great. Here are some hints
33on what is necessary:
34
35
361.1 Initialization
37------------------
38
39First of all, in an __initcall level 7 (module_init()) or later
40function check whether this kernel runs on the right CPU and the right
41chipset. If so, register a struct cpufreq_driver with the CPUfreq core
42using cpufreq_register_driver()
43
44What shall this struct cpufreq_driver contain?
45
46 .name - The name of this driver.
47
48 .init - A pointer to the per-policy initialization function.
49
50 .verify - A pointer to a "verification" function.
51
52 .setpolicy _or_ .fast_switch _or_ .target _or_ .target_index - See
53 below on the differences.
54
55And optionally
56
57 .flags - Hints for the cpufreq core.
58
59 .driver_data - cpufreq driver specific data.
60
61 .get_intermediate and target_intermediate - Used to switch to stable
62 frequency while changing CPU frequency.
63
64 .get - Returns current frequency of the CPU.
65
66 .bios_limit - Returns HW/BIOS max frequency limitations for the CPU.
67
68 .exit - A pointer to a per-policy cleanup function called during
69 CPU_POST_DEAD phase of cpu hotplug process.
70
71 .suspend - A pointer to a per-policy suspend function which is called
72 with interrupts disabled and _after_ the governor is stopped for the
73 policy.
74
75 .resume - A pointer to a per-policy resume function which is called
76 with interrupts disabled and _before_ the governor is started again.
77
78 .ready - A pointer to a per-policy ready function which is called after
79 the policy is fully initialized.
80
81 .attr - A pointer to a NULL-terminated list of "struct freq_attr" which
82 allow to export values to sysfs.
83
84 .boost_enabled - If set, boost frequencies are enabled.
85
86 .set_boost - A pointer to a per-policy function to enable/disable boost
87 frequencies.
88
89
901.2 Per-CPU Initialization
91--------------------------
92
93Whenever a new CPU is registered with the device model, or after the
94cpufreq driver registers itself, the per-policy initialization function
95cpufreq_driver.init is called if no cpufreq policy existed for the CPU.
96Note that the .init() and .exit() routines are called only once for the
97policy and not for each CPU managed by the policy. It takes a ``struct
98cpufreq_policy *policy`` as argument. What to do now?
99
100If necessary, activate the CPUfreq support on your CPU.
101
102Then, the driver must fill in the following values:
103
104+-----------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
105|policy->cpuinfo.min_freq _and_	    |					   |
106|policy->cpuinfo.max_freq	    | the minimum and maximum frequency	   |
107|				    | (in kHz) which is supported by	   |
108|				    | this CPU				   |
109+-----------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
110|policy->cpuinfo.transition_latency | the time it takes on this CPU to	   |
111|				    | switch between two frequencies in	   |
112|				    | nanoseconds                          |
113+-----------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
114|policy->cur			    | The current operating frequency of   |
115|				    | this CPU (if appropriate)		   |
116+-----------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
117|policy->min,			    | The min/max scaling frequency.       |
118|policy->max			    | If set by the driver in ->init(),    |
119|				    | used as the lower/upper bound for    |
120|				    | policy frequency QoS requests;       |
121|				    | otherwise, reflects the min/max      |
122|				    | frequency the driver can set         |
123+-----------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
124|policy->policy and, if necessary,  |					   |
125|policy->governor		    | must contain the "default policy" for|
126|				    | this CPU. A few moments later,       |
127|				    | cpufreq_driver.verify and either     |
128|				    | cpufreq_driver.setpolicy or          |
129|				    | cpufreq_driver.target/target_index is|
130|				    | called with these values.		   |
131+-----------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
132|policy->cpus			    | Update this with the masks of the	   |
133|				    | (online + offline) CPUs that do DVFS |
134|				    | along with this CPU (i.e.  that share|
135|				    | clock/voltage rails with it).	   |
136+-----------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
137
138For setting some of these values (cpuinfo.min[max]_freq, policy->min[max]), the
139frequency table helpers might be helpful. See the section 2 for more information
140on them.
141
142
1431.3 verify
144----------
145
146When the user decides a new policy (consisting of
147"policy,governor,min,max") shall be set, this policy must be validated
148so that incompatible values can be corrected. For verifying these
149values cpufreq_verify_within_limits(``struct cpufreq_policy *policy``,
150``unsigned int min_freq``, ``unsigned int max_freq``) function might be helpful.
151See section 2 for details on frequency table helpers.
152
153You need to make sure that at least one valid frequency (or operating
154range) is within policy->min and policy->max. If necessary, increase
155policy->max first, and only if this is no solution, decrease policy->min.
156
157
1581.4 target or target_index or setpolicy or fast_switch?
159-------------------------------------------------------
160
161Most cpufreq drivers or even most cpu frequency scaling algorithms
162only allow the CPU frequency to be set to predefined fixed values. For
163these, you use the ->target(), ->target_index() or ->fast_switch()
164callbacks.
165
166Some cpufreq capable processors switch the frequency between certain
167limits on their own. These shall use the ->setpolicy() callback.
168
169
1701.5. target/target_index
171------------------------
172
173The target_index call has two arguments: ``struct cpufreq_policy *policy``,
174and ``unsigned int`` index (into the exposed frequency table).
175
176The CPUfreq driver must set the new frequency when called here. The
177actual frequency must be determined by freq_table[index].frequency.
178
179It should always restore to earlier frequency (i.e. policy->restore_freq) in
180case of errors, even if we switched to intermediate frequency earlier.
181
182Deprecated
183----------
184The target call has three arguments: ``struct cpufreq_policy *policy``,
185unsigned int target_frequency, unsigned int relation.
186
187The CPUfreq driver must set the new frequency when called here. The
188actual frequency must be determined using the following rules:
189
190- keep close to "target_freq"
191- policy->min <= new_freq <= policy->max (THIS MUST BE VALID!!!)
192- if relation==CPUFREQ_REL_L, try to select a new_freq higher than or equal
193  target_freq. ("L for lowest, but no lower than")
194- if relation==CPUFREQ_REL_H, try to select a new_freq lower than or equal
195  target_freq. ("H for highest, but no higher than")
196
197Here again the frequency table helper might assist you - see section 2
198for details.
199
2001.6. fast_switch
201----------------
202
203This function is used for frequency switching from scheduler's context.
204Not all drivers are expected to implement it, as sleeping from within
205this callback isn't allowed. This callback must be highly optimized to
206do switching as fast as possible.
207
208This function has two arguments: ``struct cpufreq_policy *policy`` and
209``unsigned int target_frequency``.
210
211
2121.7 setpolicy
213-------------
214
215The setpolicy call only takes a ``struct cpufreq_policy *policy`` as
216argument. You need to set the lower limit of the in-processor or
217in-chipset dynamic frequency switching to policy->min, the upper limit
218to policy->max, and -if supported- select a performance-oriented
219setting when policy->policy is CPUFREQ_POLICY_PERFORMANCE, and a
220powersaving-oriented setting when CPUFREQ_POLICY_POWERSAVE. Also check
221the reference implementation in drivers/cpufreq/longrun.c
222
2231.8 get_intermediate and target_intermediate
224--------------------------------------------
225
226Only for drivers with target_index() and CPUFREQ_ASYNC_NOTIFICATION unset.
227
228get_intermediate should return a stable intermediate frequency platform wants to
229switch to, and target_intermediate() should set CPU to that frequency, before
230jumping to the frequency corresponding to 'index'. Core will take care of
231sending notifications and driver doesn't have to handle them in
232target_intermediate() or target_index().
233
234Drivers can return '0' from get_intermediate() in case they don't wish to switch
235to intermediate frequency for some target frequency. In that case core will
236directly call ->target_index().
237
238NOTE: ->target_index() should restore to policy->restore_freq in case of
239failures as core would send notifications for that.
240
241
2422. Frequency Table Helpers
243==========================
244
245As most cpufreq processors only allow for being set to a few specific
246frequencies, a "frequency table" with some functions might assist in
247some work of the processor driver. Such a "frequency table" consists of
248an array of struct cpufreq_frequency_table entries, with driver specific
249values in "driver_data", the corresponding frequency in "frequency" and
250flags set. At the end of the table, you need to add a
251cpufreq_frequency_table entry with frequency set to CPUFREQ_TABLE_END.
252And if you want to skip one entry in the table, set the frequency to
253CPUFREQ_ENTRY_INVALID. The entries don't need to be in sorted in any
254particular order, but if they are cpufreq core will do DVFS a bit
255quickly for them as search for best match is faster.
256
257The cpufreq table is verified automatically by the core if the policy contains a
258valid pointer in its policy->freq_table field.
259
260cpufreq_frequency_table_verify() assures that at least one valid
261frequency is within policy->min and policy->max, and all other criteria
262are met. This is helpful for the ->verify call.
263
264cpufreq_frequency_table_target() is the corresponding frequency table
265helper for the ->target stage. Just pass the values to this function,
266and this function returns the of the frequency table entry which
267contains the frequency the CPU shall be set to.
268
269The following macros can be used as iterators over cpufreq_frequency_table:
270
271cpufreq_for_each_entry(pos, table) - iterates over all entries of frequency
272table.
273
274cpufreq_for_each_valid_entry(pos, table) - iterates over all entries,
275excluding CPUFREQ_ENTRY_INVALID frequencies.
276Use arguments "pos" - a ``cpufreq_frequency_table *`` as a loop cursor and
277"table" - the ``cpufreq_frequency_table *`` you want to iterate over.
278
279For example::
280
281	struct cpufreq_frequency_table *pos, *driver_freq_table;
282
283	cpufreq_for_each_entry(pos, driver_freq_table) {
284		/* Do something with pos */
285		pos->frequency = ...
286	}
287
288If you need to work with the position of pos within driver_freq_table,
289do not subtract the pointers, as it is quite costly. Instead, use the
290macros cpufreq_for_each_entry_idx() and cpufreq_for_each_valid_entry_idx().
291