Track the actual time spent in C-States (C2 upwards, we can't determine this
for C1), not only the number of invocations. This is especially useful for
dynamic ticks / "tickless systems", but is also of interest on normal systems,
as any interrupt activity leads to C-States being exited, not only the timer
interrupt.
The time is being measured in PM timer ticks, so an increase by one equals 279
nanoseconds.
Signed-off-by: Dominik Brodowski <linux@dominikbrodowski.net>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@osdl.org>
Signed-off-by: Len Brown <len.brown@intel.com>
cx = &pr->power.states[ACPI_STATE_C1];
#endif
- cx->usage++;
-
/*
* Sleep:
* ------
local_irq_enable();
return;
}
+ cx->usage++;
+ if ((cx->type != ACPI_STATE_C1) && (sleep_ticks > 0))
+ cx->time += sleep_ticks;
next_state = pr->power.state;
else
seq_puts(seq, "demotion[--] ");
- seq_printf(seq, "latency[%03d] usage[%08d]\n",
+ seq_printf(seq, "latency[%03d] usage[%08d] duration[%020llu]\n",
pr->power.states[i].latency,
- pr->power.states[i].usage);
+ pr->power.states[i].usage,
+ pr->power.states[i].time);
}
end:
u32 latency_ticks;
u32 power;
u32 usage;
+ u64 time;
struct acpi_processor_cx_policy promotion;
struct acpi_processor_cx_policy demotion;
};