Documentation/trace/events-power.rst
The power tracing system captures events related to power transitions within the kernel. Broadly speaking there are three major subheadings:
This document describes what each of the tracepoints is and why they might be useful.
Cf. include/trace/events/power.h for the events definitions.
A 'cpu' event class gathers the CPU-related events: cpuidle and cpufreq. ::
cpu_idle "state=%lu cpu_id=%lu" cpu_frequency "state=%lu cpu_id=%lu" cpu_frequency_limits "min=%lu max=%lu cpu_id=%lu"
A suspend event is used to indicate the system going in and out of the suspend mode: ::
machine_suspend "state=%lu"
Note: the value of '-1' or '4294967295' for state means an exit from the current state, i.e. trace_cpu_idle(4, smp_processor_id()) means that the system enters the idle state 4, while trace_cpu_idle(PWR_EVENT_EXIT, smp_processor_id()) means that the system exits the previous idle state.
The event which has 'state=4294967295' in the trace is very important to the user space tools which are using it to detect the end of the current state, and so to correctly draw the states diagrams and to calculate accurate statistics etc.
clock_enable "%s state=%lu cpu_id=%lu" clock_disable "%s state=%lu cpu_id=%lu" clock_set_rate "%s state=%lu cpu_id=%lu"
The first parameter gives the clock name (e.g. "gpio1_iclk"). The second parameter is '1' for enable, '0' for disable, the target clock rate for set_rate.
power_domain_target "%s state=%lu cpu_id=%lu"
The first parameter gives the power domain name (e.g. "mpu_pwrdm"). The second parameter is the power domain target state.
pm_qos_update_target "action=%s prev_value=%d curr_value=%d" pm_qos_update_flags "action=%s prev_value=0x%x curr_value=0x%x"
The first parameter gives the QoS action name (e.g. "ADD_REQ"). The second parameter is the previous QoS value. The third parameter is the current QoS value to update.
There are also events used for device PM QoS add/update/remove request. ::
dev_pm_qos_add_request "device=%s type=%s new_value=%d" dev_pm_qos_update_request "device=%s type=%s new_value=%d" dev_pm_qos_remove_request "device=%s type=%s new_value=%d"
The first parameter gives the device name which tries to add/update/remove QoS requests. The second parameter gives the request type (e.g. "DEV_PM_QOS_RESUME_LATENCY"). The third parameter is value to be added/updated/removed.
And, there are events used for CPU latency QoS add/update/remove request. ::
pm_qos_add_request "value=%d" pm_qos_update_request "value=%d" pm_qos_remove_request "value=%d"
The parameter is the value to be added/updated/removed.