[PATCH v2 2/2] cpufreq: Specify default governor on command line

Rafael J. Wysocki rafael at kernel.org
Thu Jun 25 23:28:43 AEST 2020


On Thu, Jun 25, 2020 at 1:53 PM Quentin Perret <qperret at google.com> wrote:
>
> On Thursday 25 Jun 2020 at 13:44:34 (+0200), Rafael J. Wysocki wrote:
> > On Thu, Jun 25, 2020 at 1:36 PM Viresh Kumar <viresh.kumar at linaro.org> wrote:
> > > This change is not right IMO. This part handles the set-policy case,
> > > where there are no governors. Right now this code, for some reasons
> > > unknown to me, forcefully uses the default governor set to indicate
> > > the policy, which is not a great idea in my opinion TBH. This doesn't
> > > and shouldn't care about governor modules and should only be looking
> > > at strings instead of governor pointer.
> >
> > Sounds right.
> >
> > > Rafael, I even think we should remove this code completely and just
> > > rely on what the driver has sent to us. Using the selected governor
> > > for set policy drivers is very confusing and also we shouldn't be
> > > forced to compiling any governor for the set-policy case.
> >
> > Well, AFAICS the idea was to use the default governor as a kind of
> > default policy proxy, but I agree that strings should be sufficient
> > for that.
>
> I agree with all the above. I'd much rather not rely on the default
> governor name to populate the default policy, too, so +1 from me.

So before this series the default governor was selected at the kernel
configuration time (pre-build) and was always built-in.  Because it
could not go away, its name could be used to indicate the default
policy for the "setpolicy" drivers.

After this series, however, it cannot be used this way reliably, but
you can still pass cpufreq_param_governor to cpufreq_parse_policy()
instead of def_gov->name in cpufreq_init_policy(), can't you?


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