template <>
class WireWeakAsyncBufferClientImpl
Defined at line 3575 of file fidling/gen/sdk/fidl/fuchsia.hardware.cpu.ctrl/fuchsia.hardware.cpu.ctrl/cpp/fidl/fuchsia.hardware.cpu.ctrl/cpp/wire_messaging.h
Public Methods
::fidl::internal::WireBufferThenable< ::fuchsia_hardware_cpu_ctrl::Device::GetOperatingPointInfo> GetOperatingPointInfo (uint32_t opp)
Returns information about a given operating point for this performance
domain.
Caller provides the backing storage for FIDL message.
::fidl::internal::WireBufferThenable< ::fuchsia_hardware_cpu_ctrl::Device::GetCurrentOperatingPoint> GetCurrentOperatingPoint ()
Gets the current operating point of the device.
Caller provides the backing storage for FIDL message.
::fidl::internal::WireBufferThenable< ::fuchsia_hardware_cpu_ctrl::Device::SetCurrentOperatingPoint> SetCurrentOperatingPoint (uint32_t requested_opp)
Set the operating point of this device to the requested operating point.
Operating points are in numeric P-state order, such that the maximum
operating performance point is 0 and the minimum is n-1, where n is the
number of operating points returned by GetOperatingPointCount().
The requested operating point may be clamped to the range [min, max]
when operating point limits are supported. See SetOperatingPointLimits
for details.
Returns ZX_OK, if the device is in a working state and the operating
point is changed to requested_opp successfully. out_opp will be same as
requested_opp.
Returns ZX_ERR_OUT_OF_RANGE if the minimum_opp is outside of the range
[n-1, 0], where n is the number of operating points returned by
GetOperatingPointCount().
Returns error status, if switching to the requested_opp was
unsuccessful. out_opp is the operating performance point (OPP) that the
device is currently in.
Caller provides the backing storage for FIDL message.
::fidl::internal::WireBufferThenable< ::fuchsia_hardware_cpu_ctrl::Device::SetMinimumOperatingPointLimit> SetMinimumOperatingPointLimit (uint32_t minimum_opp)
Sets the minimum operating point to use, particularly when the kernel
automatically controls the operating points of this device.
See SetOperatingPointLimits for details on the semantics of operating
point limits.
Returns ZX_OK on success.
Returns ZX_ERR_OUT_OF_RANGE if the minimum_opp is outside of the range
[n-1, 0], where n is the number of operating points returned by
GetOperatingPointCount().
Returns ZX_ERR_NOT_SUPPORTED if the device does not support limits.
Caller provides the backing storage for FIDL message.
::fidl::internal::WireBufferThenable< ::fuchsia_hardware_cpu_ctrl::Device::SetMaximumOperatingPointLimit> SetMaximumOperatingPointLimit (uint32_t maximum_opp)
Sets the maximum operating point to use, particularly when the kernel
automatically controls the operating points of this device.
See SetOperatingPointLimits for details on the semantics of operating
point limits.
Returns ZX_OK on success.
Returns ZX_ERR_OUT_OF_RANGE if the maximum_opp is outside of the range
[n-1, 0], where n is the number of operating points returned by
GetOperatingPointCount().
Returns ZX_ERR_NOT_SUPPORTED if the device does not support limits.
Caller provides the backing storage for FIDL message.
::fidl::internal::WireBufferThenable< ::fuchsia_hardware_cpu_ctrl::Device::SetOperatingPointLimits> SetOperatingPointLimits (uint32_t minimum_opp, uint32_t maximum_opp)
Sets the operational boundaries (minimum and maximum operating points)
for the device, when supported.
Limits define the allowable performance range for the performance
domain. They are primarily used for:
* Thermal Mitigation: Progressively lowering the maximum operating point
(moving from 0 toward n-1) to reduce power dissipation.
* Performance Boosting: Raising the minimum operating point (moving
from n-1 toward 0) when automatic performance matching is insufficient
for the current workload.
Limits are useful on platforms where ether hardware or the kernel
automatically manages performance. By setting boundaries, userspace can
enforce power and performance policies while allowing the underlying
system to react to high-fidelity signals in real-time.
When limits are applied, the active operating point is clamped to the range:
`[max(minimum_opp, maximim_opp), maximum_opp]`.
Note that `maximim_opp` and `minimum_opp` reside in the P-state range [n-1, 0].
This logic ensures that the `minimum_opp` can be adjusted independently while
always respecting the ceiling imposed by the `maximim_opp`.
Set the operating point limits to (n-1, 0) to effectively remove the limits.
Returns ZX_OK on success.
Returns ZX_ERR_OUT_OF_RANGE if the minimum_opp or maximum_opp is outside
of the range [n-1, 0], where n is the number of operating points
returned by GetOperatingPointCount().
Returns ZX_ERR_NOT_SUPPORTED if the device does not support limits.
Caller provides the backing storage for FIDL message.
::fidl::internal::WireBufferThenable< ::fuchsia_hardware_cpu_ctrl::Device::GetCurrentOperatingPointLimits> GetCurrentOperatingPointLimits ()
Returns the current minimum and maximum operating point limits.
Returns ZX_OK on success.
Returns ZX_ERR_NOT_SUPPORTED if the device does not support limits.
Caller provides the backing storage for FIDL message.
::fidl::internal::WireBufferThenable< ::fuchsia_hardware_cpu_ctrl::Device::GetOperatingPointCount> GetOperatingPointCount ()
Returns the number of operating points within this performance domain.
Caller provides the backing storage for FIDL message.
::fidl::internal::WireBufferThenable< ::fuchsia_hardware_cpu_ctrl::Device::GetNumLogicalCores> GetNumLogicalCores ()
Returns the number of logical cores contained within this performance
domain.
Caller provides the backing storage for FIDL message.
::fidl::internal::WireBufferThenable< ::fuchsia_hardware_cpu_ctrl::Device::GetLogicalCoreId> GetLogicalCoreId (uint64_t index)
Returns a global system-wide core ID for the nth core in this
performance domain. `index` must be a value in the range [0, n) where
n is the value returned by GetNumLogicalCores().
Caller provides the backing storage for FIDL message.
::fidl::internal::WireBufferThenable< ::fuchsia_hardware_cpu_ctrl::Device::GetDomainId> GetDomainId ()
Returns the id of this performance domain within its package. This
number should be stable across boots, but clients should prefer to use
GetRelativePerformance to differentiate cores if possible.
Caller provides the backing storage for FIDL message.
::fidl::internal::WireBufferThenable< ::fuchsia_hardware_cpu_ctrl::Device::GetRelativePerformance> GetRelativePerformance ()
The relative performance of this domain as configured by the platform,
if known. The highest performance domain should return 255, while others
should return N/255 fractional values relative to that domain.
Returns ZX_ERR_NOT_SUPPORTED if the performance level is unknown.
Caller provides the backing storage for FIDL message.