1.. SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause 2 Copyright(c) 2010-2014 Intel Corporation. 3 4VM Power Management Application 5=============================== 6 7Introduction 8------------ 9 10Applications running in Virtual Environments have an abstract view of 11the underlying hardware on the Host, in particular applications cannot see 12the binding of virtual to physical hardware. 13When looking at CPU resourcing, the pinning of Virtual CPUs(vCPUs) to 14Host Physical CPUs(pCPUS) is not apparent to an application 15and this pinning may change over time. 16Furthermore, Operating Systems on virtual machines do not have the ability 17to govern their own power policy; the Machine Specific Registers (MSRs) 18for enabling P-State transitions are not exposed to Operating Systems 19running on Virtual Machines(VMs). 20 21The Virtual Machine Power Management solution shows an example of 22how a DPDK application can indicate its processing requirements using VM local 23only information(vCPU/lcore, etc.) to a Host based Monitor which is responsible 24for accepting requests for frequency changes for a vCPU, translating the vCPU 25to a pCPU via libvirt and affecting the change in frequency. 26 27The solution is comprised of two high-level components: 28 29#. Example Host Application 30 31 Using a Command Line Interface(CLI) for VM->Host communication channel management 32 allows adding channels to the Monitor, setting and querying the vCPU to pCPU pinning, 33 inspecting and manually changing the frequency for each CPU. 34 The CLI runs on a single lcore while the thread responsible for managing 35 VM requests runs on a second lcore. 36 37 VM requests arriving on a channel for frequency changes are passed 38 to the librte_power ACPI cpufreq sysfs based library. 39 The Host Application relies on both qemu-kvm and libvirt to function. 40 41 This monitoring application is responsible for: 42 43 - Accepting requests from client applications: Client applications can 44 request frequency changes for a vCPU, translating 45 the vCPU to a pCPU via libvirt and affecting the change in frequency. 46 47 - Accepting policies from client applications: Client application can 48 send a policy to the host application. The 49 host application will then apply the rules of the policy independent 50 of the application. For example, the policy can contain time-of-day 51 information for busy/quiet periods, and the host application can scale 52 up/down the relevant cores when required. See the details of the guest 53 application below for more information on setting the policy values. 54 55 - Out-of-band monitoring of workloads via cores hardware event counters: 56 The host application can manage power for an application in a virtualised 57 OR non-virtualised environment by looking at the event counters of the 58 cores and taking action based on the branch hit/miss ratio. See the host 59 application '--core-list' command line parameter below. 60 61#. librte_power for Virtual Machines 62 63 Using an alternate implementation for the librte_power API, requests for 64 frequency changes are forwarded to the host monitor rather than 65 the APCI cpufreq sysfs interface used on the host. 66 67 The l3fwd-power application will use this implementation when deployed on a VM 68 (see :doc:`l3_forward_power_man`). 69 70.. _figure_vm_power_mgr_highlevel: 71 72.. figure:: img/vm_power_mgr_highlevel.* 73 74 Highlevel Solution 75 76 77Overview 78-------- 79 80VM Power Management employs qemu-kvm to provide communications channels 81between the host and VMs in the form of Virtio-Serial which appears as 82a paravirtualized serial device on a VM and can be configured to use 83various backends on the host. For this example each Virtio-Serial endpoint 84on the host is configured as AF_UNIX file socket, supporting poll/select 85and epoll for event notification. 86In this example each channel endpoint on the host is monitored via 87epoll for EPOLLIN events. 88Each channel is specified as qemu-kvm arguments or as libvirt XML for each VM, 89where each VM can have a number of channels up to a maximum of 64 per VM, 90in this example each DPDK lcore on a VM has exclusive access to a channel. 91 92To enable frequency changes from within a VM, a request via the librte_power interface 93is forwarded via Virtio-Serial to the host, each request contains the vCPU 94and power command(scale up/down/min/max). 95The API for host and guest librte_power is consistent across environments, 96with the selection of VM or Host Implementation determined at automatically 97at runtime based on the environment. 98 99Upon receiving a request, the host translates the vCPU to a pCPU via 100the libvirt API before forwarding to the host librte_power. 101 102.. _figure_vm_power_mgr_vm_request_seq: 103 104.. figure:: img/vm_power_mgr_vm_request_seq.* 105 106 VM request to scale frequency 107 108 109Performance Considerations 110~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 111 112While Haswell Microarchitecture allows for independent power control for each core, 113earlier Microarchtectures do not offer such fine grained control. 114When deployed on pre-Haswell platforms greater care must be taken in selecting 115which cores are assigned to a VM, for instance a core will not scale down 116until its sibling is similarly scaled. 117 118Configuration 119------------- 120 121BIOS 122~~~~ 123 124Enhanced Intel SpeedStep® Technology must be enabled in the platform BIOS 125if the power management feature of DPDK is to be used. 126Otherwise, the sys file folder /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq will not exist, 127and the CPU frequency-based power management cannot be used. 128Consult the relevant BIOS documentation to determine how these settings 129can be accessed. 130 131Host Operating System 132~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 133 134The Host OS must also have the *apci_cpufreq* module installed, in some cases 135the *intel_pstate* driver may be the default Power Management environment. 136To enable *acpi_cpufreq* and disable *intel_pstate*, add the following 137to the grub Linux command line: 138 139.. code-block:: console 140 141 intel_pstate=disable 142 143Upon rebooting, load the *acpi_cpufreq* module: 144 145.. code-block:: console 146 147 modprobe acpi_cpufreq 148 149Hypervisor Channel Configuration 150~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 151 152Virtio-Serial channels are configured via libvirt XML: 153 154 155.. code-block:: xml 156 157 <name>{vm_name}</name> 158 <controller type='virtio-serial' index='0'> 159 <address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x00' slot='0x06' function='0x0'/> 160 </controller> 161 <channel type='unix'> 162 <source mode='bind' path='/tmp/powermonitor/{vm_name}.{channel_num}'/> 163 <target type='virtio' name='virtio.serial.port.poweragent.{vm_channel_num}'/> 164 <address type='virtio-serial' controller='0' bus='0' port='{N}'/> 165 </channel> 166 167 168Where a single controller of type *virtio-serial* is created and up to 32 channels 169can be associated with a single controller and multiple controllers can be specified. 170The convention is to use the name of the VM in the host path *{vm_name}* and 171to increment *{channel_num}* for each channel, likewise the port value *{N}* 172must be incremented for each channel. 173 174Each channel on the host will appear in *path*, the directory */tmp/powermonitor/* 175must first be created and given qemu permissions 176 177.. code-block:: console 178 179 mkdir /tmp/powermonitor/ 180 chown qemu:qemu /tmp/powermonitor 181 182Note that files and directories within /tmp are generally removed upon 183rebooting the host and the above steps may need to be carried out after each reboot. 184 185The serial device as it appears on a VM is configured with the *target* element attribute *name* 186and must be in the form of *virtio.serial.port.poweragent.{vm_channel_num}*, 187where *vm_channel_num* is typically the lcore channel to be used in DPDK VM applications. 188 189Each channel on a VM will be present at */dev/virtio-ports/virtio.serial.port.poweragent.{vm_channel_num}* 190 191Compiling and Running the Host Application 192------------------------------------------ 193 194Compiling 195~~~~~~~~~ 196 197For information on compiling DPDK and the sample applications 198see :doc:`compiling`. 199 200The application is located in the ``vm_power_manager`` sub-directory. 201 202To build just the ``vm_power_manager`` application using ``make``: 203 204.. code-block:: console 205 206 export RTE_SDK=/path/to/rte_sdk 207 export RTE_TARGET=build 208 cd ${RTE_SDK}/examples/vm_power_manager/ 209 make 210 211The resulting binary will be ${RTE_SDK}/build/examples/vm_power_manager 212 213To build just the ``vm_power_manager`` application using ``meson/ninja``: 214 215.. code-block:: console 216 217 export RTE_SDK=/path/to/rte_sdk 218 cd ${RTE_SDK} 219 meson build 220 cd build 221 ninja 222 meson configure -Dexamples=vm_power_manager 223 ninja 224 225The resulting binary will be ${RTE_SDK}/build/examples/dpdk-vm_power_manager 226 227Running 228~~~~~~~ 229 230The application does not have any specific command line options other than *EAL*: 231 232.. code-block:: console 233 234 ./build/vm_power_mgr [EAL options] 235 236The application requires exactly two cores to run, one core is dedicated to the CLI, 237while the other is dedicated to the channel endpoint monitor, for example to run 238on cores 0 & 1 on a system with 4 memory channels: 239 240.. code-block:: console 241 242 ./build/vm_power_mgr -l 0-1 -n 4 243 244After successful initialization the user is presented with VM Power Manager CLI: 245 246.. code-block:: console 247 248 vm_power> 249 250Virtual Machines can now be added to the VM Power Manager: 251 252.. code-block:: console 253 254 vm_power> add_vm {vm_name} 255 256When a {vm_name} is specified with the *add_vm* command a lookup is performed 257with libvirt to ensure that the VM exists, {vm_name} is used as an unique identifier 258to associate channels with a particular VM and for executing operations on a VM within the CLI. 259VMs do not have to be running in order to add them. 260 261A number of commands can be issued via the CLI in relation to VMs: 262 263 Remove a Virtual Machine identified by {vm_name} from the VM Power Manager. 264 265 .. code-block:: console 266 267 rm_vm {vm_name} 268 269 Add communication channels for the specified VM, the virtio channels must be enabled 270 in the VM configuration(qemu/libvirt) and the associated VM must be active. 271 {list} is a comma-separated list of channel numbers to add, using the keyword 'all' 272 will attempt to add all channels for the VM: 273 274 .. code-block:: console 275 276 add_channels {vm_name} {list}|all 277 278 Enable or disable the communication channels in {list}(comma-separated) 279 for the specified VM, alternatively list can be replaced with keyword 'all'. 280 Disabled channels will still receive packets on the host, however the commands 281 they specify will be ignored. Set status to 'enabled' to begin processing requests again: 282 283 .. code-block:: console 284 285 set_channel_status {vm_name} {list}|all enabled|disabled 286 287 Print to the CLI the information on the specified VM, the information 288 lists the number of vCPUS, the pinning to pCPU(s) as a bit mask, along with 289 any communication channels associated with each VM, along with the status of each channel: 290 291 .. code-block:: console 292 293 show_vm {vm_name} 294 295 Set the binding of Virtual CPU on VM with name {vm_name} to the Physical CPU mask: 296 297 .. code-block:: console 298 299 set_pcpu_mask {vm_name} {vcpu} {pcpu} 300 301 Set the binding of Virtual CPU on VM to the Physical CPU: 302 303 .. code-block:: console 304 305 set_pcpu {vm_name} {vcpu} {pcpu} 306 307Manual control and inspection can also be carried in relation CPU frequency scaling: 308 309 Get the current frequency for each core specified in the mask: 310 311 .. code-block:: console 312 313 show_cpu_freq_mask {mask} 314 315 Set the current frequency for the cores specified in {core_mask} by scaling each up/down/min/max: 316 317 .. code-block:: console 318 319 set_cpu_freq {core_mask} up|down|min|max 320 321 Get the current frequency for the specified core: 322 323 .. code-block:: console 324 325 show_cpu_freq {core_num} 326 327 Set the current frequency for the specified core by scaling up/down/min/max: 328 329 .. code-block:: console 330 331 set_cpu_freq {core_num} up|down|min|max 332 333There are also some command line parameters for enabling the out-of-band 334monitoring of branch ratio on cores doing busy polling via PMDs. 335 336 .. code-block:: console 337 338 --core-list {list of cores} 339 340 When this parameter is used, the list of cores specified will monitor the ratio 341 between branch hits and branch misses. A tightly polling PMD thread will have a 342 very low branch ratio, so the core frequency will be scaled down to the minimim 343 allowed value. When packets are received, the code path will alter, causing the 344 branch ratio to increase. When the ratio goes above the ratio threshold, the 345 core frequency will be scaled up to the maximum allowed value. 346 347 .. code-block:: console 348 349 --branch-ratio {ratio} 350 351 The branch ratio is a floating point number that specifies the threshold at which 352 to scale up or down for the given workload. The default branch ratio is 0.01, 353 and will need to be adjusted for different workloads. 354 355 356 357JSON API 358~~~~~~~~ 359 360In addition to the command line interface for host command and a virtio-serial 361interface for VM power policies, there is also a JSON interface through which 362power commands and policies can be sent. This functionality adds a dependency 363on the Jansson library, and the Jansson development package must be installed 364on the system before the JSON parsing functionality is included in the app. 365This is achieved by: 366 367 .. code-block:: javascript 368 369 apt-get install libjansson-dev 370 371The command and package name may be different depending on your operating 372system. It's worth noting that the app will successfully build without this 373package present, but a warning is shown during compilation, and the JSON 374parsing functionality will not be present in the app. 375 376Sending a command or policy to the power manager application is achieved by 377simply opening a fifo file, writing a JSON string to that fifo, and closing 378the file. 379 380The fifo is at /tmp/powermonitor/fifo 381 382The jason string can be a policy or instruction, and takes the following 383format: 384 385 .. code-block:: javascript 386 387 {"packet_type": { 388 "pair_1": value, 389 "pair_2": value 390 }} 391 392The 'packet_type' header can contain one of two values, depending on 393whether a policy or power command is being sent. The two possible values are 394"policy" and "instruction", and the expected name-value pairs is different 395depending on which type is being sent. 396 397The pairs are the format of standard JSON name-value pairs. The value type 398varies between the different name/value pairs, and may be integers, strings, 399arrays, etc. Examples of policies follow later in this document. The allowed 400names and value types are as follows: 401 402 403:Pair Name: "name" 404:Description: Name of the VM or Host. Allows the parser to associate the 405 policy with the relevant VM or Host OS. 406:Type: string 407:Values: any valid string 408:Required: yes 409:Example: 410 411 .. code-block:: javascript 412 413 "name", "ubuntu2" 414 415 416:Pair Name: "command" 417:Description: The type of packet we're sending to the power manager. We can be 418 creating or destroying a policy, or sending a direct command to adjust 419 the frequency of a core, similar to the command line interface. 420:Type: string 421:Values: 422 423 :CREATE: used when creating a new policy, 424 :DESTROY: used when removing a policy, 425 :POWER: used when sending an immediate command, max, min, etc. 426:Required: yes 427:Example: 428 429 .. code-block:: javascript 430 431 "command", "CREATE" 432 433 434:Pair Name: "policy_type" 435:Description: Type of policy to apply. Please see vm_power_manager documentation 436 for more information on the types of policies that may be used. 437:Type: string 438:Values: 439 440 :TIME: Time-of-day policy. Frequencies of the relevant cores are 441 scaled up/down depending on busy and quiet hours. 442 :TRAFFIC: This policy takes statistics from the NIC and scales up 443 and down accordingly. 444 :WORKLOAD: This policy looks at how heavily loaded the cores are, 445 and scales up and down accordingly. 446 :BRANCH_RATIO: This out-of-band policy can look at the ratio between 447 branch hits and misses on a core, and is useful for detecting 448 how much packet processing a core is doing. 449:Required: only for CREATE/DESTROY command 450:Example: 451 452 .. code-block:: javascript 453 454 "policy_type", "TIME" 455 456:Pair Name: "busy_hours" 457:Description: The hours of the day in which we scale up the cores for busy 458 times. 459:Type: array of integers 460:Values: array with list of hour numbers, (0-23) 461:Required: only for TIME policy 462:Example: 463 464 .. code-block:: javascript 465 466 "busy_hours":[ 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23 ] 467 468:Pair Name: "quiet_hours" 469:Description: The hours of the day in which we scale down the cores for quiet 470 times. 471:Type: array of integers 472:Values: array with list of hour numbers, (0-23) 473:Required: only for TIME policy 474:Example: 475 476 .. code-block:: javascript 477 478 "quiet_hours":[ 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 ] 479 480:Pair Name: "avg_packet_thresh" 481:Description: Threshold below which the frequency will be set to min for 482 the TRAFFIC policy. If the traffic rate is above this and below max, the 483 frequency will be set to medium. 484:Type: integer 485:Values: The number of packets below which the TRAFFIC policy applies the 486 minimum frequency, or medium frequency if between avg and max thresholds. 487:Required: only for TRAFFIC policy 488:Example: 489 490 .. code-block:: javascript 491 492 "avg_packet_thresh": 100000 493 494:Pair Name: "max_packet_thresh" 495:Description: Threshold above which the frequency will be set to max for 496 the TRAFFIC policy 497:Type: integer 498:Values: The number of packets per interval above which the TRAFFIC policy 499 applies the maximum frequency 500:Required: only for TRAFFIC policy 501:Example: 502 503 .. code-block:: javascript 504 505 "max_packet_thresh": 500000 506 507:Pair Name: "core_list" 508:Description: The cores to which to apply the policy. 509:Type: array of integers 510:Values: array with list of virtual CPUs. 511:Required: only policy CREATE/DESTROY 512:Example: 513 514 .. code-block:: javascript 515 516 "core_list":[ 10, 11 ] 517 518:Pair Name: "workload" 519:Description: When our policy is of type WORKLOAD, we need to specify how 520 heavy our workload is. 521:Type: string 522:Values: 523 524 :HIGH: For cores running workloads that require high frequencies 525 :MEDIUM: For cores running workloads that require medium frequencies 526 :LOW: For cores running workloads that require low frequencies 527:Required: only for WORKLOAD policy types 528:Example: 529 530 .. code-block:: javascript 531 532 "workload", "MEDIUM" 533 534:Pair Name: "mac_list" 535:Description: When our policy is of type TRAFFIC, we need to specify the 536 MAC addresses that the host needs to monitor 537:Type: string 538:Values: array with a list of mac address strings. 539:Required: only for TRAFFIC policy types 540:Example: 541 542 .. code-block:: javascript 543 544 "mac_list":[ "de:ad:be:ef:01:01", "de:ad:be:ef:01:02" ] 545 546:Pair Name: "unit" 547:Description: the type of power operation to apply in the command 548:Type: string 549:Values: 550 551 :SCALE_MAX: Scale frequency of this core to maximum 552 :SCALE_MIN: Scale frequency of this core to minimum 553 :SCALE_UP: Scale up frequency of this core 554 :SCALE_DOWN: Scale down frequency of this core 555 :ENABLE_TURBO: Enable Turbo Boost for this core 556 :DISABLE_TURBO: Disable Turbo Boost for this core 557:Required: only for POWER instruction 558:Example: 559 560 .. code-block:: javascript 561 562 "unit", "SCALE_MAX" 563 564:Pair Name: "resource_id" 565:Description: The core to which to apply the power command. 566:Type: integer 567:Values: valid core id for VM or host OS. 568:Required: only POWER instruction 569:Example: 570 571 .. code-block:: javascript 572 573 "resource_id": 10 574 575JSON API Examples 576~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 577 578Profile create example: 579 580 .. code-block:: javascript 581 582 {"policy": { 583 "name": "ubuntu", 584 "command": "create", 585 "policy_type": "TIME", 586 "busy_hours":[ 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23 ], 587 "quiet_hours":[ 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 ], 588 "core_list":[ 11 ] 589 }} 590 591Profile destroy example: 592 593 .. code-block:: javascript 594 595 {"profile": { 596 "name": "ubuntu", 597 "command": "destroy", 598 }} 599 600Power command example: 601 602 .. code-block:: javascript 603 604 {"command": { 605 "name": "ubuntu", 606 "unit": "SCALE_MAX", 607 "resource_id": 10 608 }} 609 610To send a JSON string to the Power Manager application, simply paste the 611example JSON string into a text file and cat it into the fifo: 612 613 .. code-block:: console 614 615 cat file.json >/tmp/powermonitor/fifo 616 617The console of the Power Manager application should indicate the command that 618was just received via the fifo. 619 620Compiling and Running the Guest Applications 621-------------------------------------------- 622 623l3fwd-power is one sample application that can be used with vm_power_manager. 624 625A guest CLI is also provided for validating the setup. 626 627For both l3fwd-power and guest CLI, the channels for the VM must be monitored by the 628host application using the *add_channels* command on the host. This typically uses 629the following commands in the host application: 630 631.. code-block:: console 632 633 vm_power> add_vm vmname 634 vm_power> add_channels vmname all 635 vm_power> set_channel_status vmname all enabled 636 vm_power> show_vm vmname 637 638 639Compiling 640~~~~~~~~~ 641 642For information on compiling DPDK and the sample applications 643see :doc:`compiling`. 644 645For compiling and running l3fwd-power, see :doc:`l3_forward_power_man`. 646 647The application is located in the ``guest_cli`` sub-directory under ``vm_power_manager``. 648 649To build just the ``guest_vm_power_manager`` application using ``make``: 650 651.. code-block:: console 652 653 export RTE_SDK=/path/to/rte_sdk 654 export RTE_TARGET=build 655 cd ${RTE_SDK}/examples/vm_power_manager/guest_cli/ 656 make 657 658The resulting binary will be ${RTE_SDK}/build/examples/guest_cli 659 660.. Note:: 661 This sample application conditionally links in the Jansson JSON 662 library, so if you are using a multilib or cross compile environment you 663 may need to set the ``PKG_CONFIG_LIBDIR`` environmental variable to point to 664 the relevant pkgconfig folder so that the correct library is linked in. 665 666 For example, if you are building for a 32-bit target, you could find the 667 correct directory using the following ``find`` command: 668 669 .. code-block:: console 670 671 # find /usr -type d -name pkgconfig 672 /usr/lib/i386-linux-gnu/pkgconfig 673 /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/pkgconfig 674 675 Then use: 676 677 .. code-block:: console 678 679 export PKG_CONFIG_LIBDIR=/usr/lib/i386-linux-gnu/pkgconfig 680 681 You then use the make command as normal, which should find the 32-bit 682 version of the library, if it installed. If not, the application will 683 be built without the JSON interface functionality. 684 685To build just the ``vm_power_manager`` application using ``meson/ninja``: 686 687.. code-block:: console 688 689 export RTE_SDK=/path/to/rte_sdk 690 cd ${RTE_SDK} 691 meson build 692 cd build 693 ninja 694 meson configure -Dexamples=vm_power_manager/guest_cli 695 ninja 696 697The resulting binary will be ${RTE_SDK}/build/examples/guest_cli 698 699Running 700~~~~~~~ 701 702The standard *EAL* command line parameters are required: 703 704.. code-block:: console 705 706 ./build/guest_vm_power_mgr [EAL options] -- [guest options] 707 708The guest example uses a channel for each lcore enabled. For example, 709to run on cores 0,1,2,3: 710 711.. code-block:: console 712 713 ./build/guest_vm_power_mgr -l 0-3 714 715Optionally, there is a list of command line parameter should the user wish to send a power 716policy down to the host application. These parameters are as follows: 717 718 .. code-block:: console 719 720 --vm-name {name of guest vm} 721 722 This parameter allows the user to change the Virtual Machine name passed down to the 723 host application via the power policy. The default is "ubuntu2" 724 725 .. code-block:: console 726 727 --vcpu-list {list vm cores} 728 729 A comma-separated list of cores in the VM that the user wants the host application to 730 monitor. The list of cores in any vm starts at zero, and these are mapped to the 731 physical cores by the host application once the policy is passed down. 732 Valid syntax includes individial cores '2,3,4', or a range of cores '2-4', or a 733 combination of both '1,3,5-7' 734 735 .. code-block:: console 736 737 --busy-hours {list of busy hours} 738 739 A comma-separated list of hours within which to set the core frequency to maximum. 740 Valid syntax includes individial hours '2,3,4', or a range of hours '2-4', or a 741 combination of both '1,3,5-7'. Valid hours are 0 to 23. 742 743 .. code-block:: console 744 745 --quiet-hours {list of quiet hours} 746 747 A comma-separated list of hours within which to set the core frequency to minimum. 748 Valid syntax includes individial hours '2,3,4', or a range of hours '2-4', or a 749 combination of both '1,3,5-7'. Valid hours are 0 to 23. 750 751 .. code-block:: console 752 753 --policy {policy type} 754 755 The type of policy. This can be one of the following values: 756 TRAFFIC - based on incoming traffic rates on the NIC. 757 TIME - busy/quiet hours policy. 758 BRANCH_RATIO - uses branch ratio counters to determine core busyness. 759 Not all parameters are needed for all policy types. For example, BRANCH_RATIO 760 only needs the vcpu-list parameter, not any of the hours. 761 762 763After successful initialization the user is presented with VM Power Manager Guest CLI: 764 765.. code-block:: console 766 767 vm_power(guest)> 768 769To change the frequency of a lcore, use the set_cpu_freq command. 770Where {core_num} is the lcore and channel to change frequency by scaling up/down/min/max. 771 772.. code-block:: console 773 774 set_cpu_freq {core_num} up|down|min|max 775 776To start the application and configure the power policy, and send it to the host: 777 778.. code-block:: console 779 780 ./build/guest_vm_power_mgr -l 0-3 -n 4 -- --vm-name=ubuntu --policy=BRANCH_RATIO --vcpu-list=2-4 781 782Once the VM Power Manager Guest CLI appears, issuing the 'send_policy now' command 783will send the policy to the host: 784 785.. code-block:: console 786 787 send_policy now 788 789Once the policy is sent to the host, the host application takes over the power monitoring 790of the specified cores in the policy. 791 792