WSL2-Linux-Kernel/tools/power/cpupower
Thomas Renninger 8c37df3d63 cpupower: rapl monitor - shows the used power consumption in uj for each rapl domain
This CPU power monitor shows the power consumption
as exposed by the powercap subsystem, cmp with:
Documentation/power/powercap/powercap.rst

cpupower monitor -m RAPL
    | RAPL
 CPU| pack | core | unco
   0|6853926|967832|442381
   8|6853926|967832|442381
   1|6853926|967832|442381
   9|6853926|967832|442381

Unfortunately RAPL domains cannot be directly mapped to the corresponding
CPU socket/package, core it belongs to.
Not sure this is possible at all with the current data exposed from the
kernel.

Still it can be worthful information for developers trying to optimize
power consumption of workloads or their system in general.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Renninger <trenn@suse.de>
CC: Zhang Rui <rui.zhang@intel.com>
CC: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
2022-11-30 16:48:34 -07:00
..
bench
debug
lib
man
po
utils
.gitignore
Makefile
README
TODO
cpupower-completion.sh

README

The cpupower package consists of the following elements:

requirements
------------

On x86 pciutils is needed at runtime (-lpci).
For compilation pciutils-devel (pci/pci.h) and a gcc version
providing cpuid.h is needed.
For both it's not explicitly checked for (yet).


libcpupower
----------

"libcpupower" is a library which offers a unified access method for userspace
tools and programs to the cpufreq core and drivers in the Linux kernel. This
allows for code reduction in userspace tools, a clean implementation of
the interaction to the cpufreq core, and support for both the sysfs and proc
interfaces [depending on configuration, see below].


compilation and installation
----------------------------

make
su
make install

should suffice on most systems. It builds libcpupower to put in
/usr/lib; cpupower, cpufreq-bench_plot.sh to put in /usr/bin; and
cpufreq-bench to put in /usr/sbin. If you want to set up the paths
differently and/or want to configure the package to your specific
needs, you need to open "Makefile" with an editor of your choice and
edit the block marked CONFIGURATION.


THANKS
------
Many thanks to Mattia Dongili who wrote the autotoolization and
libtoolization, the manpages and the italian language file for cpupower;
to Dave Jones for his feedback and his dump_psb tool; to Bruno Ducrot for his
powernow-k8-decode and intel_gsic tools as well as the french language file;
and to various others commenting on the previous (pre-)releases of 
cpupower.


        Dominik Brodowski