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+This is cpufreq-bench, a microbenchmark for the cpufreq framework.
+
+Purpose
+=======
+
+What is this benchmark for:
+ - Identify worst case performance loss when doing dynamic frequency
+ scaling using Linux kernel governors
+ - Identify average reaction time of a governor to CPU load changes
+ - (Stress) Testing whether a cpufreq low level driver or governor works
+ as expected
+ - Identify cpufreq related performance regressions between kernels
+ - Possibly Real time priority testing? -> what happens if there are
+ processes with a higher prio than the governor's kernel thread
+ - ...
+
+What this benchmark does *not* cover:
+ - Power saving related regressions (In fact as better the performance
+ throughput is, the worse the power savings will be, but the first should
+ mostly count more...)
+ - Real world (workloads)
+
+
+Description
+===========
+
+cpufreq-bench helps to test the condition of a given cpufreq governor.
+For that purpose, it compares the performance governor to a configured
+powersave module.
+
+
+How it works
+============
+You can specify load (100% CPU load) and sleep (0% CPU load) times in us which
+will be run X time in a row (cycles):
+
+ sleep=25000
+ load=25000
+ cycles=20
+
+This part of the configuration file will create 25ms load/sleep turns,
+repeated 20 times.
+
+Adding this:
+ sleep_step=25000
+ load_step=25000
+ rounds=5
+Will increase load and sleep time by 25ms 5 times.
+Together you get following test:
+25ms load/sleep time repeated 20 times (cycles).
+50ms load/sleep time repeated 20 times (cycles).
+..
+100ms load/sleep time repeated 20 times (cycles).
+
+First it is calibrated how long a specific CPU intensive calculation
+takes on this machine and needs to be run in a loop using the performance
+governor.
+Then the above test runs are processed using the performance governor
+and the governor to test. The time the calculation really needed
+with the dynamic freq scaling governor is compared with the time needed
+on full performance and you get the overall performance loss.
+
+
+Example of expected results with ondemand governor:
+
+This shows expected results of the first two test run rounds from
+above config, you there have:
+
+100% CPU load (load) | 0 % CPU load (sleep) | round
+ 25 ms | 25 ms | 1
+ 50 ms | 50 ms | 2
+
+For example if ondemand governor is configured to have a 50ms
+sampling rate you get:
+
+In round 1, ondemand should have rather static 50% load and probably
+won't ever switch up (as long as up_threshold is above).
+
+In round 2, if the ondemand sampling times exactly match the load/sleep
+trigger of the cpufreq-bench, you will see no performance loss (compare with
+below possible ondemand sample kick ins (1)):
+
+But if ondemand always kicks in in the middle of the load sleep cycles, it
+will always see 50% loads and you get worst performance impact never
+switching up (compare with below possible ondemand sample kick ins (2))::
+
+ 50 50 50 50ms ->time
+load -----| |-----| |-----| |-----|
+ | | | | | | |
+sleep |-----| |-----| |-----| |----
+ |-----|-----|-----|-----|-----|-----|-----|---- ondemand sampling (1)
+ 100 0 100 0 100 0 100 load seen by ondemand(%)
+ |-----|-----|-----|-----|-----|-----|-----|-- ondemand sampling (2)
+ 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 load seen by ondemand(%)
+
+You can easily test all kind of load/sleep times and check whether your
+governor in average behaves as expected.
+
+
+ToDo
+====
+
+Provide a gnuplot utility script for easy generation of plots to present
+the outcome nicely.
+
+
+cpufreq-bench Command Usage
+===========================
+-l, --load=<long int> initial load time in us
+-s, --sleep=<long int> initial sleep time in us
+-x, --load-step=<long int> time to be added to load time, in us
+-y, --sleep-step=<long int> time to be added to sleep time, in us
+-c, --cpu=<unsigned int> CPU Number to use, starting at 0
+-p, --prio=<priority> scheduler priority, HIGH, LOW or DEFAULT
+-g, --governor=<governor> cpufreq governor to test
+-n, --cycles=<int> load/sleep cycles to get an average value to compare
+-r, --rounds<int> load/sleep rounds
+-f, --file=<configfile> config file to use
+-o, --output=<dir> output dir, must exist
+-v, --verbose verbose output on/off
+
+Due to the high priority, the application may not be responsible for some time.
+After the benchmark, the logfile is saved in OUTPUTDIR/benchmark_TIMESTAMP.log
+