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Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH 0/9] Porting the intel_pstate driver to Xen



>>> On 24.04.15 at 11:46, <wei.w.wang@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> On 24/04/2015 17:11, Jan Beulich wrote:
>> >>> On 24.04.15 at 10:32, <wei.w.wang@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> > In the old driver, a powersave governor just sets the CPU to run with
>> > the lowest possible performance state. This one does not exist in the
>> > intel_pstate driver.
>> > The intel_pstate driver changes the terminology by using "powersave"
>> > to refer to the previous "ondemand" case. This does make people feel
>> confused.
>> > But we may think it this way: it only has two modes, the max
>> > performance mode and the ondemand mode. "ondemand" is the one who
>> > saves power (actually in a more reasonable way compared to the
>> > previous "powersave" which simply sets the CPU to run with the lowest
>> > performance state). Anyway, we can surely change the name if it sounds
>> uncomfortable.
>> 
>> I think at the very least from a user interface perspective (e.g. the xenpm
>> tool) the meaning of the old governor names should be retained as much as
>> possible.
> 
> Ok. I am simply using the name "internal" for user tools. Please see the 
> example below:
> 
> scaling_driver           : intel_pstate
> scaling_avail_gov    : internal
> current_governor    : internal 

But xenpm's set-scaling-governor command should still do something
useful for the currently available governor options. And with that,
showing "internal" in its output may also end up being confusing (at
least I am already being confused).

Jan


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