Currently, when we set the pstate governor to "performance", we check if it is already set to this value, and if it is, we skip setting it.
However, we never save this value anywhere, so that next time we come back and request the governor to be set to its original value, the original value is empty. Fix it by saving the original pstate governor first. While we're at it, replace `strlcpy` with `rte_strscpy`. Fixes: e6c6dc0f96c8 ("power: add p-state driver compatibility") Cc: david.h...@intel.com Signed-off-by: Anatoly Burakov <anatoly.bura...@intel.com> --- lib/librte_power/power_pstate_cpufreq.c | 5 +++-- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/lib/librte_power/power_pstate_cpufreq.c b/lib/librte_power/power_pstate_cpufreq.c index af5ad0b506..3a5face4f0 100644 --- a/lib/librte_power/power_pstate_cpufreq.c +++ b/lib/librte_power/power_pstate_cpufreq.c @@ -382,6 +382,9 @@ power_set_governor_performance(struct pstate_power_info *pi) /* Strip off terminating '\n' */ strtok(buf, "\n"); + /* Save the original governor */ + rte_strscpy(pi->governor_ori, buf, sizeof(pi->governor_ori)); + /* Check if current governor is performance */ if (strncmp(buf, POWER_GOVERNOR_PERF, sizeof(POWER_GOVERNOR_PERF)) == 0) { @@ -390,8 +393,6 @@ power_set_governor_performance(struct pstate_power_info *pi) "already performance\n", pi->lcore_id); goto out; } - /* Save the original governor */ - strlcpy(pi->governor_ori, buf, sizeof(pi->governor_ori)); /* Write 'performance' to the governor */ val = fseek(f, 0, SEEK_SET); -- 2.25.1