xref: /linux/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/cpu/idle-states.yaml (revision c532de5a67a70f8533d495f8f2aaa9a0491c3ad0)
1# SPDX-License-Identifier: (GPL-2.0-only OR BSD-2-Clause)
2%YAML 1.2
3---
4$id: http://devicetree.org/schemas/cpu/idle-states.yaml#
5$schema: http://devicetree.org/meta-schemas/core.yaml#
6
7title: Idle states
8
9maintainers:
10  - Lorenzo Pieralisi <lorenzo.pieralisi@arm.com>
11  - Anup Patel <anup@brainfault.org>
12
13description: |+
14  ==========================================
15  1 - Introduction
16  ==========================================
17
18  ARM and RISC-V systems contain HW capable of managing power consumption
19  dynamically, where cores can be put in different low-power states (ranging
20  from simple wfi to power gating) according to OS PM policies. The CPU states
21  representing the range of dynamic idle states that a processor can enter at
22  run-time, can be specified through device tree bindings representing the
23  parameters required to enter/exit specific idle states on a given processor.
24
25  ==========================================
26  2 - ARM idle states
27  ==========================================
28
29  According to the Server Base System Architecture document (SBSA, [3]), the
30  power states an ARM CPU can be put into are identified by the following list:
31
32  - Running
33  - Idle_standby
34  - Idle_retention
35  - Sleep
36  - Off
37
38  The power states described in the SBSA document define the basic CPU states on
39  top of which ARM platforms implement power management schemes that allow an OS
40  PM implementation to put the processor in different idle states (which include
41  states listed above; "off" state is not an idle state since it does not have
42  wake-up capabilities, hence it is not considered in this document).
43
44  Idle state parameters (e.g. entry latency) are platform specific and need to
45  be characterized with bindings that provide the required information to OS PM
46  code so that it can build the required tables and use them at runtime.
47
48  The device tree binding definition for ARM idle states is the subject of this
49  document.
50
51  ==========================================
52  3 - RISC-V idle states
53  ==========================================
54
55  On RISC-V systems, the HARTs (or CPUs) [6] can be put in platform specific
56  suspend (or idle) states (ranging from simple WFI, power gating, etc). The
57  RISC-V SBI v0.3 (or higher) [7] hart state management extension provides a
58  standard mechanism for OS to request HART state transitions.
59
60  The platform specific suspend (or idle) states of a hart can be either
61  retentive or non-rententive in nature. A retentive suspend state will
62  preserve HART registers and CSR values for all privilege modes whereas
63  a non-retentive suspend state will not preserve HART registers and CSR
64  values.
65
66  ===========================================
67  4 - idle-states definitions
68  ===========================================
69
70  Idle states are characterized for a specific system through a set of
71  timing and energy related properties, that underline the HW behaviour
72  triggered upon idle states entry and exit.
73
74  The following diagram depicts the CPU execution phases and related timing
75  properties required to enter and exit an idle state:
76
77  ..__[EXEC]__|__[PREP]__|__[ENTRY]__|__[IDLE]__|__[EXIT]__|__[EXEC]__..
78              |          |           |          |          |
79
80              |<------ entry ------->|
81              |       latency        |
82                                                |<- exit ->|
83                                                |  latency |
84              |<-------- min-residency -------->|
85                         |<-------  wakeup-latency ------->|
86
87      Diagram 1: CPU idle state execution phases
88
89  EXEC:  Normal CPU execution.
90
91  PREP:  Preparation phase before committing the hardware to idle mode
92    like cache flushing. This is abortable on pending wake-up
93    event conditions. The abort latency is assumed to be negligible
94    (i.e. less than the ENTRY + EXIT duration). If aborted, CPU
95    goes back to EXEC. This phase is optional. If not abortable,
96    this should be included in the ENTRY phase instead.
97
98  ENTRY:  The hardware is committed to idle mode. This period must run
99    to completion up to IDLE before anything else can happen.
100
101  IDLE:  This is the actual energy-saving idle period. This may last
102    between 0 and infinite time, until a wake-up event occurs.
103
104  EXIT:  Period during which the CPU is brought back to operational
105    mode (EXEC).
106
107  entry-latency: Worst case latency required to enter the idle state. The
108  exit-latency may be guaranteed only after entry-latency has passed.
109
110  min-residency: Minimum period, including preparation and entry, for a given
111  idle state to be worthwhile energywise.
112
113  wakeup-latency: Maximum delay between the signaling of a wake-up event and the
114  CPU being able to execute normal code again. If not specified, this is assumed
115  to be entry-latency + exit-latency.
116
117  These timing parameters can be used by an OS in different circumstances.
118
119  An idle CPU requires the expected min-residency time to select the most
120  appropriate idle state based on the expected expiry time of the next IRQ
121  (i.e. wake-up) that causes the CPU to return to the EXEC phase.
122
123  An operating system scheduler may need to compute the shortest wake-up delay
124  for CPUs in the system by detecting how long will it take to get a CPU out
125  of an idle state, e.g.:
126
127  wakeup-delay = exit-latency + max(entry-latency - (now - entry-timestamp), 0)
128
129  In other words, the scheduler can make its scheduling decision by selecting
130  (e.g. waking-up) the CPU with the shortest wake-up delay.
131  The wake-up delay must take into account the entry latency if that period
132  has not expired. The abortable nature of the PREP period can be ignored
133  if it cannot be relied upon (e.g. the PREP deadline may occur much sooner than
134  the worst case since it depends on the CPU operating conditions, i.e. caches
135  state).
136
137  An OS has to reliably probe the wakeup-latency since some devices can enforce
138  latency constraint guarantees to work properly, so the OS has to detect the
139  worst case wake-up latency it can incur if a CPU is allowed to enter an
140  idle state, and possibly to prevent that to guarantee reliable device
141  functioning.
142
143  The min-residency time parameter deserves further explanation since it is
144  expressed in time units but must factor in energy consumption coefficients.
145
146  The energy consumption of a cpu when it enters a power state can be roughly
147  characterised by the following graph:
148
149                 |
150                 |
151                 |
152             e   |
153             n   |                                      /---
154             e   |                               /------
155             r   |                        /------
156             g   |                  /-----
157             y   |           /------
158                 |       ----
159                 |      /|
160                 |     / |
161                 |    /  |
162                 |   /   |
163                 |  /    |
164                 | /     |
165                 |/      |
166            -----|-------+----------------------------------
167                0|       1                              time(ms)
168
169      Graph 1: Energy vs time example
170
171  The graph is split in two parts delimited by time 1ms on the X-axis.
172  The graph curve with X-axis values = { x | 0 < x < 1ms } has a steep slope
173  and denotes the energy costs incurred while entering and leaving the idle
174  state.
175  The graph curve in the area delimited by X-axis values = {x | x > 1ms } has
176  shallower slope and essentially represents the energy consumption of the idle
177  state.
178
179  min-residency is defined for a given idle state as the minimum expected
180  residency time for a state (inclusive of preparation and entry) after
181  which choosing that state become the most energy efficient option. A good
182  way to visualise this, is by taking the same graph above and comparing some
183  states energy consumptions plots.
184
185  For sake of simplicity, let's consider a system with two idle states IDLE1,
186  and IDLE2:
187
188            |
189            |
190            |
191            |                                                  /-- IDLE1
192         e  |                                              /---
193         n  |                                         /----
194         e  |                                     /---
195         r  |                                /-----/--------- IDLE2
196         g  |                    /-------/---------
197         y  |        ------------    /---|
198            |       /           /----    |
199            |      /        /---         |
200            |     /    /----             |
201            |    / /---                  |
202            |   ---                      |
203            |  /                         |
204            | /                          |
205            |/                           |                  time
206         ---/----------------------------+------------------------
207            |IDLE1-energy < IDLE2-energy | IDLE2-energy < IDLE1-energy
208                                         |
209                                  IDLE2-min-residency
210
211      Graph 2: idle states min-residency example
212
213  In graph 2 above, that takes into account idle states entry/exit energy
214  costs, it is clear that if the idle state residency time (i.e. time till next
215  wake-up IRQ) is less than IDLE2-min-residency, IDLE1 is the better idle state
216  choice energywise.
217
218  This is mainly down to the fact that IDLE1 entry/exit energy costs are lower
219  than IDLE2.
220
221  However, the lower power consumption (i.e. shallower energy curve slope) of
222  idle state IDLE2 implies that after a suitable time, IDLE2 becomes more energy
223  efficient.
224
225  The time at which IDLE2 becomes more energy efficient than IDLE1 (and other
226  shallower states in a system with multiple idle states) is defined
227  IDLE2-min-residency and corresponds to the time when energy consumption of
228  IDLE1 and IDLE2 states breaks even.
229
230  The definitions provided in this section underpin the idle states
231  properties specification that is the subject of the following sections.
232
233  ===========================================
234  5 - idle-states node
235  ===========================================
236
237  The processor idle states are defined within the idle-states node, which is
238  a direct child of the cpus node [1] and provides a container where the
239  processor idle states, defined as device tree nodes, are listed.
240
241  On ARM systems, it is a container of processor idle states nodes. If the
242  system does not provide CPU power management capabilities, or the processor
243  just supports idle_standby, an idle-states node is not required.
244
245  ===========================================
246  6 - Qualcomm specific STATES
247  ===========================================
248
249  Idle states have different enter/exit latency and residency values.
250  The idle states supported by the QCOM SoC are defined as -
251
252    * Standby
253    * Retention
254    * Standalone Power Collapse (Standalone PC or SPC)
255    * Power Collapse (PC)
256
257  Standby: Standby does a little more in addition to architectural clock gating.
258  When the WFI instruction is executed the ARM core would gate its internal
259  clocks. In addition to gating the clocks, QCOM cpus use this instruction as a
260  trigger to execute the SPM state machine. The SPM state machine waits for the
261  interrupt to trigger the core back in to active. This triggers the cache
262  hierarchy to enter standby states, when all cpus are idle. An interrupt brings
263  the SPM state machine out of its wait, the next step is to ensure that the
264  cache hierarchy is also out of standby, and then the cpu is allowed to resume
265  execution. This state is defined as a generic ARM WFI state by the ARM cpuidle
266  driver and is not defined in the DT. The SPM state machine should be
267  configured to execute this state by default and after executing every other
268  state below.
269
270  Retention: Retention is a low power state where the core is clock gated and
271  the memory and the registers associated with the core are retained. The
272  voltage may be reduced to the minimum value needed to keep the processor
273  registers active. The SPM should be configured to execute the retention
274  sequence and would wait for interrupt, before restoring the cpu to execution
275  state. Retention may have a slightly higher latency than Standby.
276
277  Standalone PC: A cpu can power down and warmboot if there is a sufficient time
278  between the time it enters idle and the next known wake up. SPC mode is used
279  to indicate a core entering a power down state without consulting any other
280  cpu or the system resources. This helps save power only on that core.  The SPM
281  sequence for this idle state is programmed to power down the supply to the
282  core, wait for the interrupt, restore power to the core, and ensure the
283  system state including cache hierarchy is ready before allowing core to
284  resume. Applying power and resetting the core causes the core to warmboot
285  back into Elevation Level (EL) which trampolines the control back to the
286  kernel. Entering a power down state for the cpu, needs to be done by trapping
287  into a EL. Failing to do so, would result in a crash enforced by the warm boot
288  code in the EL for the SoC. On SoCs with write-back L1 cache, the cache has to
289  be flushed in s/w, before powering down the core.
290
291  Power Collapse: This state is similar to the SPC mode, but distinguishes
292  itself in that the cpu acknowledges and permits the SoC to enter deeper sleep
293  modes. In a hierarchical power domain SoC, this means L2 and other caches can
294  be flushed, system bus, clocks - lowered, and SoC main XO clock gated and
295  voltages reduced, provided all cpus enter this state.  Since the span of low
296  power modes possible at this state is vast, the exit latency and the residency
297  of this low power mode would be considered high even though at a cpu level,
298  this essentially is cpu power down. The SPM in this state also may handshake
299  with the Resource power manager (RPM) processor in the SoC to indicate a
300  complete application processor subsystem shut down.
301
302  ===========================================
303  7 - References
304  ===========================================
305
306  [1] ARM Linux Kernel documentation - CPUs bindings
307      Documentation/devicetree/bindings/arm/cpus.yaml
308
309  [2] ARM Linux Kernel documentation - PSCI bindings
310      Documentation/devicetree/bindings/arm/psci.yaml
311
312  [3] ARM Server Base System Architecture (SBSA)
313      http://infocenter.arm.com/help/index.jsp
314
315  [4] ARM Architecture Reference Manuals
316      http://infocenter.arm.com/help/index.jsp
317
318  [5] ARM Linux Kernel documentation - Booting AArch64 Linux
319      Documentation/arch/arm64/booting.rst
320
321  [6] RISC-V Linux Kernel documentation - CPUs bindings
322      Documentation/devicetree/bindings/riscv/cpus.yaml
323
324  [7] RISC-V Supervisor Binary Interface (SBI)
325      http://github.com/riscv/riscv-sbi-doc/riscv-sbi.adoc
326
327properties:
328  $nodename:
329    const: idle-states
330
331  entry-method:
332    description: |
333      Usage and definition depend on ARM architecture version.
334
335      On ARM v8 64-bit this property is required.
336      On ARM 32-bit systems this property is optional
337
338      This assumes that the "enable-method" property is set to "psci" in the cpu
339      node[5] that is responsible for setting up CPU idle management in the OS
340      implementation.
341    const: psci
342
343patternProperties:
344  "^(cpu|cluster)-":
345    type: object
346    description: |
347      Each state node represents an idle state description and must be defined
348      as follows.
349
350      The idle state entered by executing the wfi instruction (idle_standby
351      SBSA,[3][4]) is considered standard on all ARM and RISC-V platforms and
352      therefore must not be listed.
353
354      In addition to the properties listed above, a state node may require
355      additional properties specific to the entry-method defined in the
356      idle-states node. Please refer to the entry-method bindings
357      documentation for properties definitions.
358
359    properties:
360      compatible:
361        oneOf:
362          - items:
363              - enum:
364                  - qcom,idle-state-ret
365                  - qcom,idle-state-spc
366                  - qcom,idle-state-pc
367              - const: arm,idle-state
368          - enum:
369              - arm,idle-state
370              - riscv,idle-state
371
372      arm,psci-suspend-param:
373        $ref: /schemas/types.yaml#/definitions/uint32
374        description: |
375          power_state parameter to pass to the ARM PSCI suspend call.
376
377          Device tree nodes that require usage of PSCI CPU_SUSPEND function
378          (i.e. idle states node with entry-method property is set to "psci")
379          must specify this property.
380
381      riscv,sbi-suspend-param:
382        $ref: /schemas/types.yaml#/definitions/uint32
383        description: |
384          suspend_type parameter to pass to the RISC-V SBI HSM suspend call.
385
386          This property is required in idle state nodes of device tree meant
387          for RISC-V systems. For more details on the suspend_type parameter
388          refer the SBI specification v0.3 (or higher) [7].
389
390      local-timer-stop:
391        description:
392          If present the CPU local timer control logic is
393             lost on state entry, otherwise it is retained.
394        type: boolean
395
396      entry-latency-us:
397        description:
398          Worst case latency in microseconds required to enter the idle state.
399
400      exit-latency-us:
401        description:
402          Worst case latency in microseconds required to exit the idle state.
403          The exit-latency-us duration may be guaranteed only after
404          entry-latency-us has passed.
405
406      min-residency-us:
407        description:
408          Minimum residency duration in microseconds, inclusive of preparation
409          and entry, for this idle state to be considered worthwhile energy wise
410          (refer to section 2 of this document for a complete description).
411
412      wakeup-latency-us:
413        description: |
414          Maximum delay between the signaling of a wake-up event and the CPU
415          being able to execute normal code again. If omitted, this is assumed
416          to be equal to:
417
418            entry-latency-us + exit-latency-us
419
420          It is important to supply this value on systems where the duration of
421          PREP phase (see diagram 1, section 2) is non-neglibigle. In such
422          systems entry-latency-us + exit-latency-us will exceed
423          wakeup-latency-us by this duration.
424
425      idle-state-name:
426        $ref: /schemas/types.yaml#/definitions/string
427        description:
428          A string used as a descriptive name for the idle state.
429
430    additionalProperties: false
431
432    required:
433      - compatible
434      - entry-latency-us
435      - exit-latency-us
436      - min-residency-us
437
438additionalProperties: false
439
440examples:
441  - |
442
443    cpus {
444        #size-cells = <0>;
445        #address-cells = <2>;
446
447        cpu@0 {
448            device_type = "cpu";
449            compatible = "arm,cortex-a57";
450            reg = <0x0 0x0>;
451            enable-method = "psci";
452            cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_RETENTION_0_0>, <&CPU_SLEEP_0_0>,
453                    <&CLUSTER_RETENTION_0>, <&CLUSTER_SLEEP_0>;
454        };
455
456        cpu@1 {
457            device_type = "cpu";
458            compatible = "arm,cortex-a57";
459            reg = <0x0 0x1>;
460            enable-method = "psci";
461            cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_RETENTION_0_0>, <&CPU_SLEEP_0_0>,
462                    <&CLUSTER_RETENTION_0>, <&CLUSTER_SLEEP_0>;
463        };
464
465        cpu@100 {
466            device_type = "cpu";
467            compatible = "arm,cortex-a57";
468            reg = <0x0 0x100>;
469            enable-method = "psci";
470            cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_RETENTION_0_0>, <&CPU_SLEEP_0_0>,
471                    <&CLUSTER_RETENTION_0>, <&CLUSTER_SLEEP_0>;
472        };
473
474        cpu@101 {
475            device_type = "cpu";
476            compatible = "arm,cortex-a57";
477            reg = <0x0 0x101>;
478            enable-method = "psci";
479            cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_RETENTION_0_0>, <&CPU_SLEEP_0_0>,
480                    <&CLUSTER_RETENTION_0>, <&CLUSTER_SLEEP_0>;
481        };
482
483        cpu@10000 {
484            device_type = "cpu";
485            compatible = "arm,cortex-a57";
486            reg = <0x0 0x10000>;
487            enable-method = "psci";
488            cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_RETENTION_0_0>, <&CPU_SLEEP_0_0>,
489                    <&CLUSTER_RETENTION_0>, <&CLUSTER_SLEEP_0>;
490        };
491
492        cpu@10001 {
493            device_type = "cpu";
494            compatible = "arm,cortex-a57";
495            reg = <0x0 0x10001>;
496            enable-method = "psci";
497            cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_RETENTION_0_0>, <&CPU_SLEEP_0_0>,
498                    <&CLUSTER_RETENTION_0>, <&CLUSTER_SLEEP_0>;
499        };
500
501        cpu@10100 {
502            device_type = "cpu";
503            compatible = "arm,cortex-a57";
504            reg = <0x0 0x10100>;
505            enable-method = "psci";
506            cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_RETENTION_0_0>, <&CPU_SLEEP_0_0>,
507                    <&CLUSTER_RETENTION_0>, <&CLUSTER_SLEEP_0>;
508        };
509
510        cpu@10101 {
511            device_type = "cpu";
512            compatible = "arm,cortex-a57";
513            reg = <0x0 0x10101>;
514            enable-method = "psci";
515            cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_RETENTION_0_0>, <&CPU_SLEEP_0_0>,
516                    <&CLUSTER_RETENTION_0>, <&CLUSTER_SLEEP_0>;
517        };
518
519        cpu@100000000 {
520            device_type = "cpu";
521            compatible = "arm,cortex-a53";
522            reg = <0x1 0x0>;
523            enable-method = "psci";
524            cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_RETENTION_1_0>, <&CPU_SLEEP_1_0>,
525                    <&CLUSTER_RETENTION_1>, <&CLUSTER_SLEEP_1>;
526        };
527
528        cpu@100000001 {
529            device_type = "cpu";
530            compatible = "arm,cortex-a53";
531            reg = <0x1 0x1>;
532            enable-method = "psci";
533            cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_RETENTION_1_0>, <&CPU_SLEEP_1_0>,
534                    <&CLUSTER_RETENTION_1>, <&CLUSTER_SLEEP_1>;
535        };
536
537        cpu@100000100 {
538            device_type = "cpu";
539            compatible = "arm,cortex-a53";
540            reg = <0x1 0x100>;
541            enable-method = "psci";
542            cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_RETENTION_1_0>, <&CPU_SLEEP_1_0>,
543                    <&CLUSTER_RETENTION_1>, <&CLUSTER_SLEEP_1>;
544        };
545
546        cpu@100000101 {
547            device_type = "cpu";
548            compatible = "arm,cortex-a53";
549            reg = <0x1 0x101>;
550            enable-method = "psci";
551            cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_RETENTION_1_0>, <&CPU_SLEEP_1_0>,
552                    <&CLUSTER_RETENTION_1>, <&CLUSTER_SLEEP_1>;
553        };
554
555        cpu@100010000 {
556            device_type = "cpu";
557            compatible = "arm,cortex-a53";
558            reg = <0x1 0x10000>;
559            enable-method = "psci";
560            cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_RETENTION_1_0>, <&CPU_SLEEP_1_0>,
561                    <&CLUSTER_RETENTION_1>, <&CLUSTER_SLEEP_1>;
562        };
563
564        cpu@100010001 {
565            device_type = "cpu";
566            compatible = "arm,cortex-a53";
567            reg = <0x1 0x10001>;
568            enable-method = "psci";
569            cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_RETENTION_1_0>, <&CPU_SLEEP_1_0>,
570                    <&CLUSTER_RETENTION_1>, <&CLUSTER_SLEEP_1>;
571        };
572
573        cpu@100010100 {
574            device_type = "cpu";
575            compatible = "arm,cortex-a53";
576            reg = <0x1 0x10100>;
577            enable-method = "psci";
578            cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_RETENTION_1_0>, <&CPU_SLEEP_1_0>,
579                    <&CLUSTER_RETENTION_1>, <&CLUSTER_SLEEP_1>;
580        };
581
582        cpu@100010101 {
583            device_type = "cpu";
584            compatible = "arm,cortex-a53";
585            reg = <0x1 0x10101>;
586            enable-method = "psci";
587            cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_RETENTION_1_0>, <&CPU_SLEEP_1_0>,
588                    <&CLUSTER_RETENTION_1>, <&CLUSTER_SLEEP_1>;
589        };
590
591        idle-states {
592            entry-method = "psci";
593
594            CPU_RETENTION_0_0: cpu-retention-0-0 {
595                compatible = "arm,idle-state";
596                arm,psci-suspend-param = <0x0010000>;
597                entry-latency-us = <20>;
598                exit-latency-us = <40>;
599                min-residency-us = <80>;
600            };
601
602            CLUSTER_RETENTION_0: cluster-retention-0 {
603                compatible = "arm,idle-state";
604                local-timer-stop;
605                arm,psci-suspend-param = <0x1010000>;
606                entry-latency-us = <50>;
607                exit-latency-us = <100>;
608                min-residency-us = <250>;
609                wakeup-latency-us = <130>;
610            };
611
612            CPU_SLEEP_0_0: cpu-sleep-0-0 {
613                compatible = "arm,idle-state";
614                local-timer-stop;
615                arm,psci-suspend-param = <0x0010000>;
616                entry-latency-us = <250>;
617                exit-latency-us = <500>;
618                min-residency-us = <950>;
619            };
620
621            CLUSTER_SLEEP_0: cluster-sleep-0 {
622                compatible = "arm,idle-state";
623                local-timer-stop;
624                arm,psci-suspend-param = <0x1010000>;
625                entry-latency-us = <600>;
626                exit-latency-us = <1100>;
627                min-residency-us = <2700>;
628                wakeup-latency-us = <1500>;
629            };
630
631            CPU_RETENTION_1_0: cpu-retention-1-0 {
632                compatible = "arm,idle-state";
633                arm,psci-suspend-param = <0x0010000>;
634                entry-latency-us = <20>;
635                exit-latency-us = <40>;
636                min-residency-us = <90>;
637            };
638
639            CLUSTER_RETENTION_1: cluster-retention-1 {
640                compatible = "arm,idle-state";
641                local-timer-stop;
642                arm,psci-suspend-param = <0x1010000>;
643                entry-latency-us = <50>;
644                exit-latency-us = <100>;
645                min-residency-us = <270>;
646                wakeup-latency-us = <100>;
647            };
648
649            CPU_SLEEP_1_0: cpu-sleep-1-0 {
650                compatible = "arm,idle-state";
651                local-timer-stop;
652                arm,psci-suspend-param = <0x0010000>;
653                entry-latency-us = <70>;
654                exit-latency-us = <100>;
655                min-residency-us = <300>;
656                wakeup-latency-us = <150>;
657            };
658
659            CLUSTER_SLEEP_1: cluster-sleep-1 {
660                compatible = "arm,idle-state";
661                local-timer-stop;
662                arm,psci-suspend-param = <0x1010000>;
663                entry-latency-us = <500>;
664                exit-latency-us = <1200>;
665                min-residency-us = <3500>;
666                wakeup-latency-us = <1300>;
667            };
668        };
669    };
670
671  - |
672    // Example 2 (ARM 32-bit, 8-cpu system, two clusters):
673
674    cpus {
675        #size-cells = <0>;
676        #address-cells = <1>;
677
678        cpu@0 {
679            device_type = "cpu";
680            compatible = "arm,cortex-a15";
681            reg = <0x0>;
682            cpu-idle-states = <&cpu_sleep_0_0>, <&cluster_sleep_0>;
683        };
684
685        cpu@1 {
686            device_type = "cpu";
687            compatible = "arm,cortex-a15";
688            reg = <0x1>;
689            cpu-idle-states = <&cpu_sleep_0_0>, <&cluster_sleep_0>;
690        };
691
692        cpu@2 {
693            device_type = "cpu";
694            compatible = "arm,cortex-a15";
695            reg = <0x2>;
696            cpu-idle-states = <&cpu_sleep_0_0>, <&cluster_sleep_0>;
697        };
698
699        cpu@3 {
700            device_type = "cpu";
701            compatible = "arm,cortex-a15";
702            reg = <0x3>;
703            cpu-idle-states = <&cpu_sleep_0_0>, <&cluster_sleep_0>;
704        };
705
706        cpu@100 {
707            device_type = "cpu";
708            compatible = "arm,cortex-a7";
709            reg = <0x100>;
710            cpu-idle-states = <&cpu_sleep_1_0>, <&cluster_sleep_1>;
711        };
712
713        cpu@101 {
714            device_type = "cpu";
715            compatible = "arm,cortex-a7";
716            reg = <0x101>;
717            cpu-idle-states = <&cpu_sleep_1_0>, <&cluster_sleep_1>;
718        };
719
720        cpu@102 {
721            device_type = "cpu";
722            compatible = "arm,cortex-a7";
723            reg = <0x102>;
724            cpu-idle-states = <&cpu_sleep_1_0>, <&cluster_sleep_1>;
725        };
726
727        cpu@103 {
728            device_type = "cpu";
729            compatible = "arm,cortex-a7";
730            reg = <0x103>;
731            cpu-idle-states = <&cpu_sleep_1_0>, <&cluster_sleep_1>;
732        };
733
734        idle-states {
735            cpu_sleep_0_0: cpu-sleep-0-0 {
736                compatible = "arm,idle-state";
737                local-timer-stop;
738                entry-latency-us = <200>;
739                exit-latency-us = <100>;
740                min-residency-us = <400>;
741                wakeup-latency-us = <250>;
742            };
743
744            cluster_sleep_0: cluster-sleep-0 {
745                compatible = "arm,idle-state";
746                local-timer-stop;
747                entry-latency-us = <500>;
748                exit-latency-us = <1500>;
749                min-residency-us = <2500>;
750                wakeup-latency-us = <1700>;
751            };
752
753            cpu_sleep_1_0: cpu-sleep-1-0 {
754                compatible = "arm,idle-state";
755                local-timer-stop;
756                entry-latency-us = <300>;
757                exit-latency-us = <500>;
758                min-residency-us = <900>;
759                wakeup-latency-us = <600>;
760            };
761
762            cluster_sleep_1: cluster-sleep-1 {
763                compatible = "arm,idle-state";
764                local-timer-stop;
765                entry-latency-us = <800>;
766                exit-latency-us = <2000>;
767                min-residency-us = <6500>;
768                wakeup-latency-us = <2300>;
769            };
770        };
771    };
772
773  - |
774    // Example 3 (RISC-V 64-bit, 4-cpu systems, two clusters):
775
776    cpus {
777        #size-cells = <0>;
778        #address-cells = <1>;
779
780        cpu@0 {
781            device_type = "cpu";
782            compatible = "riscv";
783            reg = <0x0>;
784            riscv,isa = "rv64imafdc";
785            mmu-type = "riscv,sv48";
786            cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_RET_0_0>, <&CPU_NONRET_0_0>,
787                            <&CLUSTER_RET_0>, <&CLUSTER_NONRET_0>;
788
789            cpu_intc0: interrupt-controller {
790                #interrupt-cells = <1>;
791                compatible = "riscv,cpu-intc";
792                interrupt-controller;
793            };
794        };
795
796        cpu@1 {
797            device_type = "cpu";
798            compatible = "riscv";
799            reg = <0x1>;
800            riscv,isa = "rv64imafdc";
801            mmu-type = "riscv,sv48";
802            cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_RET_0_0>, <&CPU_NONRET_0_0>,
803                            <&CLUSTER_RET_0>, <&CLUSTER_NONRET_0>;
804
805            cpu_intc1: interrupt-controller {
806                #interrupt-cells = <1>;
807                compatible = "riscv,cpu-intc";
808                interrupt-controller;
809            };
810        };
811
812        cpu@10 {
813            device_type = "cpu";
814            compatible = "riscv";
815            reg = <0x10>;
816            riscv,isa = "rv64imafdc";
817            mmu-type = "riscv,sv48";
818            cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_RET_1_0>, <&CPU_NONRET_1_0>,
819                            <&CLUSTER_RET_1>, <&CLUSTER_NONRET_1>;
820
821            cpu_intc10: interrupt-controller {
822                #interrupt-cells = <1>;
823                compatible = "riscv,cpu-intc";
824                interrupt-controller;
825            };
826        };
827
828        cpu@11 {
829            device_type = "cpu";
830            compatible = "riscv";
831            reg = <0x11>;
832            riscv,isa = "rv64imafdc";
833            mmu-type = "riscv,sv48";
834            cpu-idle-states = <&CPU_RET_1_0>, <&CPU_NONRET_1_0>,
835                            <&CLUSTER_RET_1>, <&CLUSTER_NONRET_1>;
836
837            cpu_intc11: interrupt-controller {
838                #interrupt-cells = <1>;
839                compatible = "riscv,cpu-intc";
840                interrupt-controller;
841            };
842        };
843
844        idle-states {
845            CPU_RET_0_0: cpu-retentive-0-0 {
846                compatible = "riscv,idle-state";
847                riscv,sbi-suspend-param = <0x10000000>;
848                entry-latency-us = <20>;
849                exit-latency-us = <40>;
850                min-residency-us = <80>;
851            };
852
853            CPU_NONRET_0_0: cpu-nonretentive-0-0 {
854                compatible = "riscv,idle-state";
855                riscv,sbi-suspend-param = <0x90000000>;
856                entry-latency-us = <250>;
857                exit-latency-us = <500>;
858                min-residency-us = <950>;
859            };
860
861            CLUSTER_RET_0: cluster-retentive-0 {
862                compatible = "riscv,idle-state";
863                riscv,sbi-suspend-param = <0x11000000>;
864                local-timer-stop;
865                entry-latency-us = <50>;
866                exit-latency-us = <100>;
867                min-residency-us = <250>;
868                wakeup-latency-us = <130>;
869            };
870
871            CLUSTER_NONRET_0: cluster-nonretentive-0 {
872                compatible = "riscv,idle-state";
873                riscv,sbi-suspend-param = <0x91000000>;
874                local-timer-stop;
875                entry-latency-us = <600>;
876                exit-latency-us = <1100>;
877                min-residency-us = <2700>;
878                wakeup-latency-us = <1500>;
879            };
880
881            CPU_RET_1_0: cpu-retentive-1-0 {
882                compatible = "riscv,idle-state";
883                riscv,sbi-suspend-param = <0x10000010>;
884                entry-latency-us = <20>;
885                exit-latency-us = <40>;
886                min-residency-us = <80>;
887            };
888
889            CPU_NONRET_1_0: cpu-nonretentive-1-0 {
890                compatible = "riscv,idle-state";
891                riscv,sbi-suspend-param = <0x90000010>;
892                entry-latency-us = <250>;
893                exit-latency-us = <500>;
894                min-residency-us = <950>;
895            };
896
897            CLUSTER_RET_1: cluster-retentive-1 {
898                compatible = "riscv,idle-state";
899                riscv,sbi-suspend-param = <0x11000010>;
900                local-timer-stop;
901                entry-latency-us = <50>;
902                exit-latency-us = <100>;
903                min-residency-us = <250>;
904                wakeup-latency-us = <130>;
905            };
906
907            CLUSTER_NONRET_1: cluster-nonretentive-1 {
908                compatible = "riscv,idle-state";
909                riscv,sbi-suspend-param = <0x91000010>;
910                local-timer-stop;
911                entry-latency-us = <600>;
912                exit-latency-us = <1100>;
913                min-residency-us = <2700>;
914                wakeup-latency-us = <1500>;
915            };
916        };
917    };
918
919    // Example 4 - Qualcomm SPC
920    idle-states {
921      cpu_spc: cpu-spc {
922        compatible = "qcom,idle-state-spc", "arm,idle-state";
923        entry-latency-us = <150>;
924        exit-latency-us = <200>;
925        min-residency-us = <2000>;
926      };
927    };
928...
929