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Message-ID: <d2941e6f-d277-a68d-2837-00b628dd3be7@redhat.com>
Date: Thu, 10 Nov 2016 14:04:08 +0100
From: Hans de Goede <hdegoede@...hat.com>
To: Jacek Anaszewski <j.anaszewski@...sung.com>,
Jacek Anaszewski <jacek.anaszewski@...il.com>,
Tony Lindgren <tony@...mide.com>
Cc: linux-leds@...r.kernel.org, linux-omap@...r.kernel.org,
linux-arm-kernel@...ts.infradead.org, linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org,
Darren Hart <dvhart@...radead.org>, Pavel Machek <pavel@....cz>
Subject: Re: PM regression with LED changes in next-20161109
Hi,
On 10-11-16 13:56, Jacek Anaszewski wrote:
> Hi,
>
> On 11/10/2016 09:49 AM, Hans de Goede wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> On 09-11-16 21:45, Jacek Anaszewski wrote:
>>> Hi Tony,
>>>
>>> On 11/09/2016 08:23 PM, Tony Lindgren wrote:
>>>> Hi,
>>>>
>>>> Looks like commit 883d32ce3385 ("leds: core: Add support for poll()ing
>>>> the sysfs brightness attr for changes.") breaks runtime PM for me.
>>>>
>>>> On my omap dm3730 based test system, idle power consumption is over 70
>>>> times higher now with this patch! It goes from about 6mW for the core
>>>> system to over 440mW during idle meaning there's some busy timer now
>>>> active.
>>>>
>>>> Reverting this patch fixes the issue. Any ideas?
>>>
>>> Thanks for the report. This is probably caused by sysfs_notify_dirent().
>>> I'm afraid that we can't keep this feature in the current shape.
>>> Hans, I'm dropping the patch. We probably will have to delegate this
>>> call to a workqueue task. Think about use cases when the LED is blinked
>>> with high frequency e.g. from ledtrig-disk.c.
>>
>> sysfs_notify_dirent() already uses a workqueue, here is the actual
>> implementation of it (from fs/kernfs/file.c) :
>>
>> void kernfs_notify(struct kernfs_node *kn)
>> {
>> static DECLARE_WORK(kernfs_notify_work, kernfs_notify_workfn);
>> unsigned long flags;
>>
>> if (WARN_ON(kernfs_type(kn) != KERNFS_FILE))
>> return;
>>
>> spin_lock_irqsave(&kernfs_notify_lock, flags);
>> if (!kn->attr.notify_next) {
>> kernfs_get(kn);
>> kn->attr.notify_next = kernfs_notify_list;
>> kernfs_notify_list = kn;
>> schedule_work(&kernfs_notify_work);
>> }
>> spin_unlock_irqrestore(&kernfs_notify_lock, flags);
>> }
>
> Indeed. As a next step of this investigation Tony could disable
> particular calls made in kernfs_notify_workfn to check what
> exactly causes excessive power consumption.
>
>> So using a workqueue is not going to help. Note that I already
>> feared this, which is why my initial implementation only called
>> sysfs_notify_dirent() for user initiated changes and not for
>> triggers / blinking.
>
> AFAIR there were no calls to led_notify_brightness_change() in
> the initial implementation and it was entirely predestined for
> being called by LED class drivers on brightness changes made
> by firmware.
>
>> I think we may need to reconsider what getting the brightness
>> sysfs atrribute actually returns. Currently when a LED is
>> blinking it will return 0 resp. the actual brightness depending
>> on when in the blink cycle the user reads the brightness
>> sysfs atrribute.
>>
>> So a user can do "echo 128 > brightness && cat brightness" and
>> get out 0, or 128, depending purely on timing.
>>
>> This seems to contradict what Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-class-led
>> has to say:
>>
>> What: /sys/class/leds/<led>/brightness
>> Date: March 2006
>> KernelVersion: 2.6.17
>> Contact: Richard Purdie <rpurdie@...ys.net>
>> Description:
>> Set the brightness of the LED. Most LEDs don't
>> have hardware brightness support, so will just be turned
>> on for
>> non-zero brightness settings. The value is between 0 and
>> /sys/class/leds/<led>/max_brightness.
>>
>> Writing 0 to this file clears active trigger.
>>
>> Writing non-zero to this file while trigger is active
>> changes the
>> top brightness trigger is going to use.
>>
>> Even though it only talks about writing, the logical thing would be for
>> reading to be the exact opposite of writing, so we would get:
>>
>> Reading from this file while a trigger is active returns
>> the
>> top brightness trigger is going to use.
>>
>> The current docs say not about (sw) blinking, but that should be treated
>> just
>> like a trigger IMHO.
>
> You'r right, we should describe the semantics on reading, but it would
> have to be as follows:
>
> Reading from this file returns LED brightness at given moment, i.e.
> even though LED class device brightness setting is greater than 0, the
> momentary brightness can be 0 if the readout occurred during low phase
> of blink cycle.
Why would it need to read like this, because this is the current behavior ?
I doubt anyone is relying on this current behavior because it is really
unpredictable which value one can get.
I believe it would be better to change the read semantics to follow
the write semantics, this would be much more consistent.
Making the read behavior match the write behavior should be easy I would
be happy to write a patch for this.
>> If we can get consensus on what the read behavior for the brightness
>> attribute
>> should be, then I think that a better poll() behavior will automatically
>> follow
>> from that.
>
> It seems that we should get back to your initial approach. i.e. only
> brightness changes caused by hardware should be reported.
Ok, if you really want to keep the read behavior as is, I can provide
an updated patch for this.
Regards,
Hans
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