xref: /dpdk/doc/guides/sample_app_ug/vm_power_management.rst (revision 9cd9d3e702fba4700539c1a2eddac13dd14ecf70)
1..  SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause
2    Copyright(c) 2010-2014 Intel Corporation.
3
4Virtual Machine Power Management Application
5============================================
6
7Applications running in virtual environments have an abstract view of
8the underlying hardware on the host. Specifically, applications cannot
9see the binding of virtual components to physical hardware. When looking
10at CPU resourcing, the pinning of Virtual CPUs (vCPUs) to Physical CPUs
11(pCPUs) on the host is not apparent to an application and this pinning
12may change over time. In addition, operating systems on Virtual Machines
13(VMs) do not have the ability to govern their own power policy. The
14Machine Specific Registers (MSRs) for enabling P-state transitions are
15not exposed to the operating systems running on the VMs.
16
17The solution demonstrated in this sample application shows an example of
18how a DPDK application can indicate its processing requirements using
19VM-local only information (vCPU/lcore, and so on) to a host resident VM
20Power Manager. The VM Power Manager is responsible for:
21
22- **Accepting requests for frequency changes for a vCPU**
23- **Translating the vCPU to a pCPU using libvirt**
24- **Performing the change in frequency**
25
26This application demonstrates the following features:
27
28- **The handling of VM application requests to change frequency.**
29  VM applications can request frequency changes for a vCPU. The VM
30  Power Management Application uses libvirt to translate that
31  virtual CPU (vCPU) request to a physical CPU (pCPU) request and
32  performs the frequency change.
33
34- **The acceptance of power management policies from VM applications.**
35  A VM application can send a policy to the host application. The
36  policy contains rules that define the power management behaviour
37  of the VM. The host application then applies the rules of the
38  policy independent of the VM application. For example, the
39  policy can contain time-of-day information for busy/quiet
40  periods, and the host application can scale up/down the relevant
41  cores when required. See :ref:`sending_policy` for information on
42  setting policy values.
43
44- **Out-of-band monitoring of workloads using core hardware event counters.**
45  The host application can manage power for an application by looking
46  at the event counters of the cores and taking action based on the
47  branch miss/hit ratio. See :ref:`enabling_out_of_band`.
48
49  **Note**: This functionality also applies in non-virtualised environments.
50
51In addition to the ``librte_power`` library used on the host, the
52application uses a special version of ``librte_power`` on each VM, which
53directs frequency changes and policies to the host monitor rather than
54the APCI ``cpufreq`` ``sysfs`` interface used on the host in non-virtualised
55environments.
56
57.. _figure_vm_power_mgr_highlevel:
58
59.. figure:: img/vm_power_mgr_highlevel.*
60
61   Highlevel Solution
62
63In the above diagram, the DPDK Applications are shown running in
64virtual machines, and the VM Power Monitor application is shown running
65in the host.
66
67**DPDK VM Application**
68
69- Reuse ``librte_power`` interface, but uses an implementation that
70  forwards frequency requests to the host using a ``virtio-serial`` channel
71- Each lcore has exclusive access to a single channel
72- Sample application reuses ``l3fwd_power``
73- A CLI for changing frequency from within a VM is also included
74
75**VM Power Monitor**
76
77- Accepts VM commands over ``virtio-serial`` endpoints, monitored
78  using ``epoll``
79- Commands include the virtual core to be modified, using ``libvirt`` to get
80  the physical core mapping
81- Uses ``librte_power`` to affect frequency changes using Linux userspace
82  power governor (``acpi_cpufreq`` OR ``intel_pstate`` driver)
83- CLI: For adding VM channels to monitor, inspecting and changing channel
84  state, manually altering CPU frequency. Also allows for the changings
85  of vCPU to pCPU pinning
86
87Sample Application Architecture Overview
88----------------------------------------
89
90The VM power management solution employs ``qemu-kvm`` to provide
91communications channels between the host and VMs in the form of a
92``virtio-serial`` connection that appears as a para-virtualised serial
93device on a VM and can be configured to use various backends on the
94host. For this example, the configuration of each ``virtio-serial`` endpoint
95on the host as an ``AF_UNIX`` file socket, supporting poll/select and
96``epoll`` for event notification. In this example, each channel endpoint on
97the host is monitored for ``EPOLLIN`` events using ``epoll``. Each channel
98is specified as ``qemu-kvm`` arguments or as ``libvirt`` XML for each VM,
99where each VM can have several channels up to a maximum of 64 per VM. In this
100example, each DPDK lcore on a VM has exclusive access to a channel.
101
102To enable frequency changes from within a VM, the VM forwards a
103``librte_power`` request over the ``virtio-serial`` channel to the host. Each
104request contains the vCPU and power command (scale up/down/min/max). The
105API for the host ``librte_power`` and guest ``librte_power`` is consistent
106across environments, with the selection of VM or host implementation
107determined automatically at runtime based on the environment. On
108receiving a request, the host translates the vCPU to a pCPU using the
109libvirt API before forwarding it to the host ``librte_power``.
110
111
112.. _figure_vm_power_mgr_vm_request_seq:
113
114.. figure:: img/vm_power_mgr_vm_request_seq.*
115
116In addition to the ability to send power management requests to the
117host, a VM can send a power management policy to the host. In some
118cases, using a power management policy is a preferred option because it
119can eliminate possible latency issues that can occur when sending power
120management requests. Once the VM sends the policy to the host, the VM no
121longer needs to worry about power management, because the host now
122manages the power for the VM based on the policy. The policy can specify
123power behavior that is based on incoming traffic rates or time-of-day
124power adjustment (busy/quiet hour power adjustment for example). See
125:ref:`sending_policy` for more information.
126
127One method of power management is to sense how busy a core is when
128processing packets and adjusting power accordingly. One technique for
129doing this is to monitor the ratio of the branch miss to branch hits
130counters and scale the core power accordingly. This technique is based
131on the premise that when a core is not processing packets, the ratio of
132branch misses to branch hits is very low, but when the core is
133processing packets, it is measurably higher. The implementation of this
134capability is as a policy of type ``BRANCH_RATIO``.
135See :ref:`sending_policy` for more information on using the
136BRANCH_RATIO policy option.
137
138A JSON interface enables the specification of power management requests
139and policies in JSON format. The JSON interfaces provide a more
140convenient and more easily interpreted interface for the specification
141of requests and policies. See :ref:`power_man_requests` for more information.
142
143Performance Considerations
144~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
145
146While the Haswell microarchitecture allows for independent power control
147for each core, earlier microarchitectures do not offer such fine-grained
148control. When deploying on pre-Haswell platforms, greater care must be
149taken when selecting which cores are assigned to a VM, for example, a
150core does not scale down in frequency until all of its siblings are
151similarly scaled down.
152
153Configuration
154-------------
155
156BIOS
157~~~~
158
159To use the power management features of the DPDK, you must enable
160Enhanced Intel SpeedStep® Technology in the platform BIOS. Otherwise,
161the ``sys`` file folder ``/sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq`` does not
162exist, and you cannot use CPU frequency-based power management. Refer to the
163relevant BIOS documentation to determine how to access these settings.
164
165Host Operating System
166~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
167
168The DPDK Power Management library can use either the ``acpi_cpufreq`` or
169the ``intel_pstate`` kernel driver for the management of core frequencies. In
170many cases, the ``intel_pstate`` driver is the default power management
171environment.
172
173Should the ``acpi-cpufreq driver`` be required, the ``intel_pstate``
174module must be disabled, and the ``acpi-cpufreq`` module loaded in its place.
175
176To disable the ``intel_pstate`` driver, add the following to the ``grub``
177Linux command line:
178
179   ``intel_pstate=disable``
180
181On reboot, load the ``acpi_cpufreq`` module:
182
183   ``modprobe acpi_cpufreq``
184
185Hypervisor Channel Configuration
186~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
187
188Configure ``virtio-serial`` channels using ``libvirt`` XML.
189The XML structure is as follows: 
190
191.. code-block:: XML
192
193   <name>{vm_name}</name>
194   <controller type='virtio-serial' index='0'>
195      <address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x00' slot='0x06' function='0x0'/>
196   </controller>
197   <channel type='unix'>
198      <source mode='bind' path='/tmp/powermonitor/{vm_name}.{channel_num}'/>
199      <target type='virtio' name='virtio.serial.port.poweragent.{vm_channel_num}'/>
200      <address type='virtio-serial' controller='0' bus='0' port='{N}'/>
201   </channel>
202
203Where a single controller of type ``virtio-serial`` is created, up to 32
204channels can be associated with a single controller, and multiple
205controllers can be specified. The convention is to use the name of the
206VM in the host path ``{vm_name}`` and to increment ``{channel_num}`` for each
207channel. Likewise, the port value ``{N}`` must be incremented for each
208channel.
209
210On the host, for each channel to appear in the path, ensure the creation
211of the ``/tmp/powermonitor/`` directory and the assignment of ``qemu``
212permissions:
213
214.. code-block:: console
215
216   mkdir /tmp/powermonitor/
217   chown qemu:qemu /tmp/powermonitor
218
219Note that files and directories in ``/tmp`` are generally removed when
220rebooting the host and you may need to perform the previous steps after
221each reboot.
222
223The serial device as it appears on a VM is configured with the target
224element attribute name and must be in the form:
225``virtio.serial.port.poweragent.{vm_channel_num}``, where
226``vm_channel_num`` is typically the lcore channel to be used in
227DPDK VM applications.
228
229Each channel on a VM is present at:
230
231``/dev/virtio-ports/virtio.serial.port.poweragent.{vm_channel_num}``
232
233Compiling and Running the Host Application
234------------------------------------------
235
236Compiling the Host Application
237~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
238
239For information on compiling the DPDK and sample applications, see
240see :doc:`compiling`.
241
242The application is located in the ``vm_power_manager`` subdirectory.
243
244To build just the ``vm_power_manager`` application using ``make``:
245
246.. code-block:: console
247
248   export RTE_SDK=/path/to/rte_sdk
249   export RTE_TARGET=build
250   cd ${RTE_SDK}/examples/vm_power_manager/
251   make
252
253The resulting binary is ``${RTE_SDK}/build/examples/vm_power_manager``.
254
255To build just the ``vm_power_manager`` application using ``meson``/``ninja``:
256
257.. code-block:: console
258
259   export RTE_SDK=/path/to/rte_sdk
260   cd ${RTE_SDK}
261   meson build
262   cd build
263   ninja
264   meson configure -Dexamples=vm_power_manager
265   ninja
266
267The resulting binary is ``${RTE_SDK}/build/examples/dpdk-vm_power_manager``.
268
269Running the Host Application
270~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
271
272The application does not have any specific command line options other
273than the EAL options:
274
275.. code-block:: console
276
277   ./build/vm_power_mgr [EAL options]
278
279The application requires exactly two cores to run. One core for the CLI
280and the other for the channel endpoint monitor. For example, to run on
281cores 0 and 1 on a system with four memory channels, issue the command:
282
283.. code-block:: console
284
285   ./build/vm_power_mgr -l 0-1 -n 4
286
287After successful initialization, the VM Power Manager CLI prompt appears:
288
289.. code-block:: console
290
291   vm_power>
292
293Now, it is possible to add virtual machines to the VM Power Manager:
294
295.. code-block:: console
296
297   vm_power> add_vm {vm_name}
298
299When a ``{vm_name}`` is specified with the ``add_vm`` command, a lookup is
300performed with ``libvirt`` to ensure that the VM exists. ``{vm_name}`` is a
301unique identifier to associate channels with a particular VM and for
302executing operations on a VM within the CLI. VMs do not have to be
303running to add them.
304
305It is possible to issue several commands from the CLI to manage VMs.
306
307Remove the virtual machine identified by ``{vm_name}`` from the VM Power
308Manager using the command:
309
310.. code-block:: console
311
312   rm_vm {vm_name}
313
314Add communication channels for the specified VM using the following
315command. The ``virtio`` channels must be enabled in the VM configuration
316(``qemu/libvirt``) and the associated VM must be active. ``{list}`` is a
317comma-separated list of channel numbers to add. Specifying the keyword
318``all`` attempts to add all channels for the VM:
319
320.. code-block:: console
321
322   set_pcpu {vm_name} {vcpu} {pcpu}
323
324  Enable query of physical core information from a VM:
325
326.. code-block:: console
327
328   set_query {vm_name} enable|disable
329
330Manual control and inspection can also be carried in relation CPU frequency scaling:
331
332  Get the current frequency for each core specified in the mask:
333
334.. code-block:: console
335
336   show_cpu_freq_mask {mask}
337
338  Set the current frequency for the cores specified in {core_mask} by scaling each up/down/min/max:
339
340.. code-block:: console
341
342   add_channels {vm_name} {list}|all
343
344Enable or disable the communication channels in ``{list}`` (comma-separated)
345for the specified VM. Alternatively, replace ``list`` with the keyword
346``all``. Disabled channels receive packets on the host. However, the commands
347they specify are ignored. Set the status to enabled to begin processing
348requests again:
349
350.. code-block:: console
351
352   set_channel_status {vm_name} {list}|all enabled|disabled
353
354Print to the CLI information on the specified VM. The information lists
355the number of vCPUs, the pinning to pCPU(s) as a bit mask, along with
356any communication channels associated with each VM, and the status of
357each channel:
358
359.. code-block:: console
360
361   show_vm {vm_name}
362
363Set the binding of a virtual CPU on a VM with name ``{vm_name}`` to the
364physical CPU mask:
365
366.. code-block:: console
367
368   set_pcpu_mask {vm_name} {vcpu} {pcpu}
369
370Set the binding of the virtual CPU on the VM to the physical CPU:
371 
372  .. code-block:: console
373
374   set_pcpu {vm_name} {vcpu} {pcpu}
375
376It is also possible to perform manual control and inspection in relation
377to CPU frequency scaling.
378
379Get the current frequency for each core specified in the mask:
380
381.. code-block:: console
382
383   show_cpu_freq_mask {mask}
384
385Set the current frequency for the cores specified in ``{core_mask}`` by
386scaling each up/down/min/max:
387
388.. code-block:: console
389
390   set_cpu_freq {core_mask} up|down|min|max
391
392Get the current frequency for the specified core:
393
394.. code-block:: console
395
396   show_cpu_freq {core_num}
397
398Set the current frequency for the specified core by scaling up/down/min/max:
399
400.. code-block:: console
401
402   set_cpu_freq {core_num} up|down|min|max
403
404.. _enabling_out_of_band:
405
406Command Line Options for Enabling Out-of-band Branch Ratio Monitoring
407~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
408
409There are a couple of command line parameters for enabling the out-of-band
410monitoring of branch ratios on cores doing busy polling using PMDs as
411described below:
412
413``--core-list {list of cores}``
414   Specify the list of cores to monitor the ratio of branch misses
415   to branch hits.  A tightly-polling PMD thread has a very low
416   branch ratio, therefore the core frequency scales down to the
417   minimum allowed value. On receiving packets, the code path changes,
418   causing the branch ratio to increase. When the ratio goes above
419   the ratio threshold, the core frequency scales up to the maximum
420   allowed value.
421
422``--branch-ratio {ratio}``
423   Specify a floating-point number that identifies the threshold at which
424   to scale up or down for the given workload. The default branch ratio
425   is 0.01 and needs adjustment for different workloads.
426
427
428Compiling and Running the Guest Applications
429--------------------------------------------
430
431It is possible to use the ``l3fwd-power`` application (for example) with the
432``vm_power_manager``.
433
434The distribution also provides a guest CLI for validating the setup.
435
436For both ``l3fwd-power`` and the guest CLI, the host application must use
437the ``add_channels`` command to monitor the channels for the VM. To do this,
438issue the following commands in the host application:
439
440.. code-block:: console
441
442   vm_power> add_vm vmname
443   vm_power> add_channels vmname all
444   vm_power> set_channel_status vmname all enabled
445   vm_power> show_vm vmname
446
447Compiling the Guest Application
448~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
449
450For information on compiling DPDK and the sample applications in general,
451see :doc:`compiling`.
452
453For compiling and running the ``l3fwd-power`` sample application, see
454:doc:`l3_forward_power_man`.
455
456The application is in the ``guest_cli`` subdirectory under ``vm_power_manager``.
457
458To build just the ``guest_vm_power_manager`` application using ``make``, issue
459the following commands:
460
461.. code-block:: console
462
463   export RTE_SDK=/path/to/rte_sdk
464   export RTE_TARGET=build
465   cd ${RTE_SDK}/examples/vm_power_manager/guest_cli/
466   make
467
468The resulting binary is ``${RTE_SDK}/build/examples/guest_cli``.
469
470**Note**: This sample application conditionally links in the Jansson JSON
471library. Consequently, if you are using a multilib or cross-compile
472environment, you may need to set the ``PKG_CONFIG_LIBDIR`` environmental
473variable to point to the relevant ``pkgconfig`` folder so that the correct
474library is linked in.
475
476For example, if you are building for a 32-bit target, you could find the
477correct directory using the following find command:
478
479.. code-block:: console
480
481   # find /usr -type d -name pkgconfig
482   /usr/lib/i386-linux-gnu/pkgconfig
483   /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/pkgconfig
484
485Then use:
486
487.. code-block:: console
488
489   export PKG_CONFIG_LIBDIR=/usr/lib/i386-linux-gnu/pkgconfig
490
491You then use the ``make`` command as normal, which should find the 32-bit
492version of the library, if it installed. If not, the application builds
493without the JSON interface functionality.
494
495To build just the ``vm_power_manager`` application using ``meson``/``ninja``:
496
497.. code-block:: console
498
499   export RTE_SDK=/path/to/rte_sdk
500   cd ${RTE_SDK}
501   meson build
502   cd build
503   ninja
504   meson configure -Dexamples=vm_power_manager/guest_cli
505   ninja
506
507The resulting binary is ``${RTE_SDK}/build/examples/guest_cli``.
508
509Running the Guest Application
510~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
511
512The standard EAL command line parameters are necessary:
513
514.. code-block:: console
515
516   ./build/vm_power_mgr [EAL options] -- [guest options]
517
518The guest example uses a channel for each lcore enabled. For example, to
519run on cores 0, 1, 2 and 3:
520
521.. code-block:: console
522
523   ./build/guest_vm_power_mgr -l 0-3
524
525.. _sending_policy:
526
527Command Line Options Available When Sending a Policy to the Host
528~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
529
530Optionally, there are several command line options for a user who needs
531to send a power policy to the host application:
532
533``--vm-name {name of guest vm}``
534   Allows the user to change the virtual machine name
535   passed down to the host application using the power policy.
536   The default is ubuntu2.
537
538``--vcpu-list {list vm cores}``
539   A comma-separated list of cores in the VM that the user
540   wants the host application to monitor.
541   The list of cores in any VM starts at zero,
542   and the host application maps these to the physical cores
543   once the policy passes down to the host.
544   Valid syntax includes individual cores 2,3,4,
545   a range of cores 2-4, or a combination of both 1,3,5-7.
546
547``--busy-hours {list of busy hours}``
548   A comma-separated list of hours in which to set the core
549   frequency to the maximum.
550   Valid syntax includes individual hours 2,3,4,
551   a range of hours 2-4, or a combination of both 1,3,5-7.
552   Valid hour values are 0 to 23.
553
554``--quiet-hours {list of quiet hours}``
555   A comma-separated list of hours in which to set the core frequency
556   to minimum. Valid syntax includes individual hours 2,3,4,
557   a range of hours 2-4, or a combination of both 1,3,5-7.
558   Valid hour values are 0 to 23.
559
560``--policy {policy type}``
561   The type of policy. This can be one of the following values:
562
563   - TRAFFIC - Based on incoming traffic rates on the NIC.
564   - TIME - Uses a busy/quiet hours policy.
565   - BRANCH_RATIO - Uses branch ratio counters to determine core busyness.
566   - WORKLOAD - Sets the frequency to low, medium or high
567     based on the received policy setting.
568
569   **Note**: Not all policy types need all parameters.
570   For example, BRANCH_RATIO only needs the vcpu-list parameter.
571
572After successful initialization, the VM Power Manager Guest CLI prompt
573appears:
574
575.. code-block:: console
576
577   vm_power(guest)>
578
579To change the frequency of an lcore, use a ``set_cpu_freq`` command similar
580to the following:
581
582.. code-block:: console
583
584   set_cpu_freq {core_num} up|down|min|max
585
586where, ``{core_num}`` is the lcore and channel to change frequency by
587scaling up/down/min/max.
588
589To start an application, configure the power policy, and send it to the
590host, use a command like the following:
591
592.. code-block:: console
593
594   ./build/guest_vm_power_mgr -l 0-3 -n 4 -- --vm-name=ubuntu --policy=BRANCH_RATIO --vcpu-list=2-4
595
596Once the VM Power Manager Guest CLI appears, issuing the 'send_policy now' command
597will send the policy to the host:
598
599.. code-block:: console
600
601  send_policy now
602
603Once the policy is sent to the host, the host application takes over the power monitoring
604of the specified cores in the policy.
605
606.. _power_man_requests:
607
608JSON Interface for Power Management Requests and Policies
609---------------------------------------------------------
610
611In addition to the command line interface for the host command, and a
612``virtio-serial`` interface for VM power policies, there is also a JSON
613interface through which power commands and policies can be sent.
614
615**Note**: This functionality adds a dependency on the Jansson library.
616Install the Jansson development package on the system to avail of the
617JSON parsing functionality in the app. Issue the ``apt-get install
618libjansson-dev`` command to install the development package. The command
619and package name may be different depending on your operating system. It
620is worth noting that the app builds successfully if this package is not
621present, but a warning displays during compilation, and the JSON parsing
622functionality is not present in the app.
623
624Send a request or policy to the VM Power Manager by simply opening a
625fifo file at ``/tmp/powermonitor/fifo``, writing a JSON string to that file,
626and closing the file.
627
628The JSON string can be a power management request or a policy, and takes
629the following format:
630
631.. code-block:: javascript
632
633   {"packet_type": {
634   "pair_1": value,
635   "pair_2": value
636   }}
637
638The ``packet_type`` header can contain one of two values, depending on
639whether a power management request or policy is being sent. The two
640possible values are ``instruction`` and ``policy`` and the expected name-value
641pairs are different depending on which type is sent.
642
643The pairs are in the format of standard JSON name-value pairs. The value
644type varies between the different name-value pairs, and may be integers,
645strings, arrays, and so on. See :ref:`json_interface_ex`
646for examples of policies and instructions and
647:ref:`json_name_value_pair` for the supported names and value types.
648
649.. _json_interface_ex:
650
651JSON Interface Examples
652~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
653
654The following is an example JSON string that creates a time-profile
655policy.
656
657.. code-block:: JSON
658
659   {"policy": {
660   "name": "ubuntu",
661   "command": "create",
662   "policy_type": "TIME",
663   "busy_hours":[ 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23 ],
664   "quiet_hours":[ 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 ],
665   "core_list":[ 11 ]
666   }}
667
668The following is an example JSON string that removes the named policy.
669
670.. code-block:: JSON
671
672   {"policy": {
673   "name": "ubuntu",
674   "command": "destroy",
675   }}
676
677The following is an example JSON string for a power management request.
678
679.. code-block:: JSON
680
681   {"instruction": {
682   "name": "ubuntu",
683   "command": "power",
684   "unit": "SCALE_MAX",
685   "resource_id": 10
686   }}
687
688To query the available frequences of an lcore, use the query_cpu_freq command.
689Where {core_num} is the lcore to query.
690Before using this command, please enable responses via the set_query command on the host.
691
692.. code-block:: console
693
694  query_cpu_freq {core_num}|all
695
696To query the capabilities of an lcore, use the query_cpu_caps command.
697Where {core_num} is the lcore to query.
698Before using this command, please enable responses via the set_query command on the host.
699
700.. code-block:: console
701
702  query_cpu_caps {core_num}|all
703
704To start the application and configure the power policy, and send it to the host:
705
706.. code-block:: console
707
708 ./build/guest_vm_power_mgr -l 0-3 -n 4 -- --vm-name=ubuntu --policy=BRANCH_RATIO --vcpu-list=2-4
709
710Once the VM Power Manager Guest CLI appears, issuing the 'send_policy now' command
711will send the policy to the host:
712
713.. code-block:: console
714
715  send_policy now
716
717Once the policy is sent to the host, the host application takes over the power monitoring
718of the specified cores in the policy.
719
720.. _json_name_value_pair:
721
722JSON Name-value Pairs
723~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
724
725The following are the name-value pairs supported by the JSON interface:
726
727-  `avg_packet_thresh`_
728-  `busy_hours`_
729-  `command`_
730-  `core_list`_
731-  `mac_list`_
732-  `max_packet_thresh`_
733-  `name`_
734-  `policy_type`_
735-  `quiet_hours`_
736-  `resource_id`_
737-  `unit`_
738-  `workload`_
739
740avg_packet_thresh
741^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
742
743Description
744   The threshold below which the frequency is set to the minimum value
745   for the TRAFFIC policy.
746   If the traffic rate is above this value and below the maximum value,
747   the frequency is set to medium.
748Type
749   integer
750Values
751   The number of packets below which the TRAFFIC policy applies
752   the minimum frequency, or the medium frequency
753   if between the average and maximum thresholds.
754Required
755   Yes
756Example
757   ``"avg_packet_thresh": 100000``
758
759busy_hours
760^^^^^^^^^^
761
762Description
763   The hours of the day in which we scale up the cores for busy times.
764Type
765   array of integers
766Values
767   An array with a list of hour values (0-23).
768Required
769   For the TIME policy only.
770Example
771   ``"busy_hours":[ 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23 ]``
772
773command
774^^^^^^^
775
776Description
777   The type of packet to send to the VM Power Manager.
778   It is possible to create or destroy a policy or send a direct command
779   to adjust the frequency of a core,
780   as is possible on the command line interface.
781Type
782   string
783Values
784   Possible values are:
785   - CREATE: Create a new policy.
786   - DESTROY: Remove an existing policy.
787   - POWER: Send an immediate command, max, min, and so on.
788Required
789   Yes
790Example
791   ``"command": "CREATE"``
792
793core_list
794^^^^^^^^^
795
796Description
797   The cores to which to apply a policy.
798Type
799   array of integers
800Values
801   An array with a list of virtual CPUs.
802Required
803   For CREATE/DESTROY policy requests only.
804Example
805   ``"core_list":[ 10, 11 ]``
806
807mac_list
808^^^^^^^^
809
810Description
811   When the policy is of type TRAFFIC,
812   it is necessary to specify the MAC addresses that the host must monitor.
813Type
814   array of strings
815Values
816   An array with a list of MAC address strings.
817Required
818   For TRAFFIC policy types only.
819Example
820   ``"mac_list":[ "de:ad:be:ef:01:01","de:ad:be:ef:01:02" ]``
821
822max_packet_thresh
823^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
824
825Description
826   In a policy of type TRAFFIC,
827   the threshold value above which the frequency is set to a maximum.
828Type
829   integer
830Values
831   The number of packets per interval above which
832   the TRAFFIC policy applies the maximum frequency.
833Required
834   For the TRAFFIC policy only.
835Example
836   ``"max_packet_thresh": 500000``
837
838name
839^^^^
840
841Description
842   The name of the VM or host.
843   Allows the parser to associate the policy with the relevant VM or host OS.
844Type
845   string
846Values
847   Any valid string.
848Required
849   Yes
850Example
851   ``"name": "ubuntu2"``
852
853policy_type
854^^^^^^^^^^^
855
856Description
857   The type of policy to apply.
858   See the ``--policy`` option description for more information.
859Type
860   string
861Values
862   Possible values are:
863
864   - TIME: Time-of-day policy.
865     Scale the frequencies of the relevant cores up/down
866     depending on busy and quiet hours.
867   - TRAFFIC: Use statistics from the NIC and scale up and down accordingly.
868   - WORKLOAD: Determine how heavily loaded the cores are
869     and scale up and down accordingly.
870   - BRANCH_RATIO: An out-of-band policy that looks at the ratio
871     between branch hits and misses on a core
872     and uses that information to determine how much packet processing
873     a core is doing.
874
875Required
876   For ``CREATE`` and ``DESTROY`` policy requests only.
877Example
878   ``"policy_type": "TIME"``
879
880quiet_hours
881^^^^^^^^^^^
882
883Description
884   The hours of the day to scale down the cores for quiet times.
885Type
886   array of integers
887Values
888   An array with a list of hour numbers with values in the range 0 to 23.
889Required
890   For the TIME policy only.
891Example
892   ``"quiet_hours":[ 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 ]``
893
894resource_id
895^^^^^^^^^^^
896
897Description
898   The core to which to apply a power command.
899Type
900   integer
901Values
902   A valid core ID for the VM or host OS.
903Required
904   For the ``POWER`` instruction only.
905Example
906   ``"resource_id": 10``
907
908unit
909^^^^
910
911Description
912   The type of power operation to apply in the command.
913Type
914   string
915Values
916   - SCALE_MAX: Scale the frequency of this core to the maximum.
917   - SCALE_MIN: Scale the frequency of this core to the minimum.
918   - SCALE_UP: Scale up the frequency of this core.
919   - SCALE_DOWN: Scale down the frequency of this core.
920   - ENABLE_TURBO: Enable Intel® Turbo Boost Technology for this core.
921   - DISABLE_TURBO: Disable Intel® Turbo Boost Technology for this core.
922Required
923   For the ``POWER`` instruction only.
924Example
925   ``"unit": "SCALE_MAX"``
926
927workload
928^^^^^^^^
929
930Description
931   In a policy of type WORKLOAD,
932   it is necessary to specify how heavy the workload is.
933Type
934   string
935Values
936   - HIGH: Scale the frequency of this core to maximum.
937   - MEDIUM: Scale the frequency of this core to minimum.
938   - LOW: Scale up the frequency of this core.
939Required
940   For the ``WORKLOAD`` policy only.
941Example
942   ``"workload": "MEDIUM"``
943