From: Doug Smythies doug.smythies@gmail.com
[ Upstream commit e749e09db30c38f1a275945814b0109e530a07b0 ]
Some syntax needs to be more rigorous for python 3. Backwards compatibility tested with python 2.7
Signed-off-by: Doug Smythies dsmythies@telus.net Signed-off-by: Rafael J. Wysocki rafael.j.wysocki@intel.com Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin sashal@kernel.org Signed-off-by: Yang Yingliang yangyingliang@huawei.com --- .../intel_pstate_tracer.py | 22 +++++++++---------- 1 file changed, 11 insertions(+), 11 deletions(-)
diff --git a/tools/power/x86/intel_pstate_tracer/intel_pstate_tracer.py b/tools/power/x86/intel_pstate_tracer/intel_pstate_tracer.py index 2fa3c5757bcb..dbed3d213bf1 100755 --- a/tools/power/x86/intel_pstate_tracer/intel_pstate_tracer.py +++ b/tools/power/x86/intel_pstate_tracer/intel_pstate_tracer.py @@ -10,11 +10,11 @@ then this utility enables and collects trace data for a user specified interval and generates performance plots.
Prerequisites: - Python version 2.7.x + Python version 2.7.x or higher gnuplot 5.0 or higher - gnuplot-py 1.8 + gnuplot-py 1.8 or higher (Most of the distributions have these required packages. They may be called - gnuplot-py, phython-gnuplot. ) + gnuplot-py, phython-gnuplot or phython3-gnuplot, gnuplot-nox, ... )
HWP (Hardware P-States are disabled) Kernel config for Linux trace is enabled @@ -180,7 +180,7 @@ def plot_pstate_cpu_with_sample(): g_plot('set xlabel "Samples"') g_plot('set ylabel "P-State"') g_plot('set title "{} : cpu pstate vs. sample : {:%F %H:%M}"'.format(testname, datetime.now())) - title_list = subprocess.check_output('ls cpu???.csv | sed -e 's/.csv//'',shell=True).replace('\n', ' ') + title_list = subprocess.check_output('ls cpu???.csv | sed -e 's/.csv//'',shell=True).decode('utf-8').replace('\n', ' ') plot_str = "plot for [i in title_list] i.'.csv' using {:d}:{:d} pt 7 ps 1 title i".format(C_SAMPLE, C_TO) g_plot('title_list = "{}"'.format(title_list)) g_plot(plot_str) @@ -197,7 +197,7 @@ def plot_pstate_cpu(): # the following command is really cool, but doesn't work with the CPU masking option because it aborts on the first missing file. # plot_str = 'plot for [i=0:*] file=sprintf("cpu%03d.csv",i) title_s=sprintf("cpu%03d",i) file using 16:7 pt 7 ps 1 title title_s' # - title_list = subprocess.check_output('ls cpu???.csv | sed -e 's/.csv//'',shell=True).replace('\n', ' ') + title_list = subprocess.check_output('ls cpu???.csv | sed -e 's/.csv//'',shell=True).decode('utf-8').replace('\n', ' ') plot_str = "plot for [i in title_list] i.'.csv' using {:d}:{:d} pt 7 ps 1 title i".format(C_ELAPSED, C_TO) g_plot('title_list = "{}"'.format(title_list)) g_plot(plot_str) @@ -211,7 +211,7 @@ def plot_load_cpu(): g_plot('set ylabel "CPU load (percent)"') g_plot('set title "{} : cpu loads : {:%F %H:%M}"'.format(testname, datetime.now()))
- title_list = subprocess.check_output('ls cpu???.csv | sed -e 's/.csv//'',shell=True).replace('\n', ' ') + title_list = subprocess.check_output('ls cpu???.csv | sed -e 's/.csv//'',shell=True).decode('utf-8').replace('\n', ' ') plot_str = "plot for [i in title_list] i.'.csv' using {:d}:{:d} pt 7 ps 1 title i".format(C_ELAPSED, C_LOAD) g_plot('title_list = "{}"'.format(title_list)) g_plot(plot_str) @@ -225,7 +225,7 @@ def plot_frequency_cpu(): g_plot('set ylabel "CPU Frequency (GHz)"') g_plot('set title "{} : cpu frequencies : {:%F %H:%M}"'.format(testname, datetime.now()))
- title_list = subprocess.check_output('ls cpu???.csv | sed -e 's/.csv//'',shell=True).replace('\n', ' ') + title_list = subprocess.check_output('ls cpu???.csv | sed -e 's/.csv//'',shell=True).decode('utf-8').replace('\n', ' ') plot_str = "plot for [i in title_list] i.'.csv' using {:d}:{:d} pt 7 ps 1 title i".format(C_ELAPSED, C_FREQ) g_plot('title_list = "{}"'.format(title_list)) g_plot(plot_str) @@ -240,7 +240,7 @@ def plot_duration_cpu(): g_plot('set ylabel "Timer Duration (MilliSeconds)"') g_plot('set title "{} : cpu durations : {:%F %H:%M}"'.format(testname, datetime.now()))
- title_list = subprocess.check_output('ls cpu???.csv | sed -e 's/.csv//'',shell=True).replace('\n', ' ') + title_list = subprocess.check_output('ls cpu???.csv | sed -e 's/.csv//'',shell=True).decode('utf-8').replace('\n', ' ') plot_str = "plot for [i in title_list] i.'.csv' using {:d}:{:d} pt 7 ps 1 title i".format(C_ELAPSED, C_DURATION) g_plot('title_list = "{}"'.format(title_list)) g_plot(plot_str) @@ -254,7 +254,7 @@ def plot_scaled_cpu(): g_plot('set ylabel "Scaled Busy (Unitless)"') g_plot('set title "{} : cpu scaled busy : {:%F %H:%M}"'.format(testname, datetime.now()))
- title_list = subprocess.check_output('ls cpu???.csv | sed -e 's/.csv//'',shell=True).replace('\n', ' ') + title_list = subprocess.check_output('ls cpu???.csv | sed -e 's/.csv//'',shell=True).decode('utf-8').replace('\n', ' ') plot_str = "plot for [i in title_list] i.'.csv' using {:d}:{:d} pt 7 ps 1 title i".format(C_ELAPSED, C_SCALED) g_plot('title_list = "{}"'.format(title_list)) g_plot(plot_str) @@ -268,7 +268,7 @@ def plot_boost_cpu(): g_plot('set ylabel "CPU IO Boost (percent)"') g_plot('set title "{} : cpu io boost : {:%F %H:%M}"'.format(testname, datetime.now()))
- title_list = subprocess.check_output('ls cpu???.csv | sed -e 's/.csv//'',shell=True).replace('\n', ' ') + title_list = subprocess.check_output('ls cpu???.csv | sed -e 's/.csv//'',shell=True).decode('utf-8').replace('\n', ' ') plot_str = "plot for [i in title_list] i.'.csv' using {:d}:{:d} pt 7 ps 1 title i".format(C_ELAPSED, C_BOOST) g_plot('title_list = "{}"'.format(title_list)) g_plot(plot_str) @@ -282,7 +282,7 @@ def plot_ghz_cpu(): g_plot('set ylabel "TSC Frequency (GHz)"') g_plot('set title "{} : cpu TSC Frequencies (Sanity check calculation) : {:%F %H:%M}"'.format(testname, datetime.now()))
- title_list = subprocess.check_output('ls cpu???.csv | sed -e 's/.csv//'',shell=True).replace('\n', ' ') + title_list = subprocess.check_output('ls cpu???.csv | sed -e 's/.csv//'',shell=True).decode('utf-8').replace('\n', ' ') plot_str = "plot for [i in title_list] i.'.csv' using {:d}:{:d} pt 7 ps 1 title i".format(C_ELAPSED, C_GHZ) g_plot('title_list = "{}"'.format(title_list)) g_plot(plot_str)