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Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -08001page.title=Power Profiles for Android
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19<div id="qv-wrapper">
20 <div id="qv">
21 <h2>In this document</h2>
22 <ol id="auto-toc"></ol>
23 </div>
24</div>
25
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -070026<p>Battery usage information is derived from battery usage statistics and power profile values.</p>
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -080027
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -070028<h2 id="usage-statistics">Battery Usage Statistics</h2>
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -080029
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -070030<p>The framework automatically determines battery usage statistics by tracking how long device
31components spend in different states. As components (WiFi chipset, Cellular Radio, Bluetooth, GPS,
32Display, CPU) change states (OFF/ON, idle/full power, low/high brightness, etc.), the controlling
33service reports to the framework BatteryStats service, which collects information over time and
34stores it for use across reboots. The service doesnt track battery current draw directly,
35but instead collects timing information that can be used to approximate battery
36consumption by different components.</p>
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -080037
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -070038<p>The framework gathers statistics using the following methods:</p>
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -080039
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -070040<ul>
41<li><strong>Push</strong>. Services aware of component changes push state changes to the
42BatteryStats service.</li>
43<li><strong>Pull</strong>. For components such as the CPU usage by apps, the framework automatically
44pulls the data at transition points (such as starting or stopping an activity) to take a
45snapshot.</li>
46</ul>
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -080047
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -070048<p>Resource consumption is associated with the application using the resource. When multiple
49applications simultaneously use a resource (such as wakelocks that prevent the system from
50suspending), the framework spreads consumption across those applications, although not necessarily
51equally.</p>
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -080052
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -070053<p>To avoid losing usage statistics for a shutdown event, which may indicate battery power
54consumption problems (i.e. shutdown occurs because the battery reached zero remaining capacity), the
55framework flashes statistics approximately every 30 minutes.</p>
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -080056
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -070057<p>Battery usage statistics are handled entirely by the framework and do not require OEM
58modifications.</p>
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -080059
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -070060<h2 id="profile-values">Power Profile Values</h2>
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -080061
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -070062<p>Device manufacturers must provide a component power profile that defines the current
63consumption value for the component and the approximate the actual battery drain caused by the
64component over time. Within a power profile, power consumption is specified in milliamps (mA) of
65current draw at a nominal voltage and can be a fractional value specified in microamps (uA). The
66value should be the mA consumed at the battery and not a value applicable to a power rail that does
67not correspond to current consumed from the battery.</p>
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -080068
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -070069<p>For example, a display power profile specifies the mA of current required to keep the display on
70at minimum brightness and at maximum brightness. To determine the power cost (i.e the battery
71drained by the display component) of keeping the display on, the framework tracks the time spent at
72each brightness level, then multiplies those time intervals by an interpolated display brightness
73cost.</p>
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -080074
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -070075<p>The framework also multiplies the CPU time for each application by the mA required to run the CPU
76at a specific speed. This calculation establishes a comparative ranking of how much battery an
77application consumes by executing CPU code (time as the foreground app and total time including
78background activity are reported separately).</p>
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -080079
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -070080<h2 id="component-power">Measuring Component Power</h2>
81
82<p>You can determine individual component power consumption by comparing the current drawn by the
83device when the component is in the desired state (on, active, scanning, etc.) and when the
84component is off. Measure the average instantaneous current drawn on the device at a
85nominal voltage using an external power monitor, such as a bench power supply or specialized
86battery-monitoring tools (such as Monsoon Solution Inc. Power Monitor and Power Tool software).</p>
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -080087
88<p class="note">
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -070089<strong>Note:</strong> Manufacturers often supply information about the current consumed by an
90individual component. Use this information if it accurately represents the current drawn from the
91device battery in practice. However, validate manufacturer-provided values before
92using those values in your device power profile.</p>
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -080093
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -070094<p>When measuring, ensure the device does not have a connection to an external charge source, such
95as a USB connection to a development host used when running Android Debug Bridge (adb). The device
96under test might draw current from the host, thus lowering measurements at the battery. Avoid USB
97On-The-Go (OTG) connections, as the OTG device might draw current from the device under test.</p>
98
99<p>Excluding the component being measured, the system should run at a constant level of power
100consumption to avoid inaccurate measurements caused by changes in other components. System
101activities that can introduce unwanted changes to power measurements include:</p>
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -0800102
103<ul>
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -0700104<li><strong>Cellular, Wi-Fi, and Bluetooth receive, transmit, or scanning activity</strong>. When
105not measuring cell radio power, set the device to airplane mode and enable Wi-Fi or Bluetooth as
106appropriate.</li>
107<li><strong>Screen on/off</strong>. Colors displayed while the screen is on can affect power draw on
108some screen technologies. Turn the screen off when measuring values for non-screen components.</li>
109<li><strong>System suspend/resume</strong>. A screen off state can trigger a system suspension,
110placing parts of the device in a low-power or off state. This can affect power consumption of the
111component being measured and introduce large variances in power readings as the system periodically
112resumes to send alarms, etc. For details, see <a href="#control-suspend">Controlling System
113Suspend</a>.</li>
114<li><strong>CPUs changing speed and entering/exiting low-power scheduler idle state</strong>. During
115normal operation, the system makes frequent adjustments to CPU speeds, the number of online CPU
116cores, and other system core states such as memory bus speed and voltages of power rails associated
117with CPUs and memory. During testing, these adjustments affect power measurements:
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -0800118
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -0800119<ul>
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -0700120<li>CPU speed scaling operations can reduce the amount of clock and voltage scaling of memory buses
121and other system core components.</li>
122<li>Scheduling activity can affect the percentage of the time CPUs spend in low-power idle states.
123For details on preventing these adjustments from occurring during testing, see
124<a href="#control-cpu">Controlling CPU Speeds</a>.</li>
125</ul>
126
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -0800127</li>
128</ul>
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -0700129
130<p>For example, Joe Droid wants to compute the <code>screen.on</code> value for a device. He enables
131airplane mode on the device, runs the device at a stable current state, holds the CPU speed constant
132, and uses a partial wakelock to prevent system suspend. Joe then turns the device screen off and
133takes a measurement (200mA). Next, Joe turns the device screen on at minimum brightness and takes
134another measurement (300mA). The <code>screen.on</code> value is 100mA (300 - 200).</p>
135
136<p>For components that dont have a flat waveform of current consumption when active (such as
137cellular radio or Wi-Fi), measure the average current over time using a power monitoring tool.</p>
138
139<p>When using an external power source in place of the device battery, the system might experience
140problems due to an unconnected battery thermistor or integrated fuel gauge pins (i.e. an invalid
141reading for battery temperature or remaining battery capacity could shut down the kernel or Android
142system). Fake batteries can provide signals on thermistor or fuel gauge pins that mimic temperature
143and state of charge readings for a normal system, and may also provide convenient leads for
144connecting to external power supplies. Alternatively, you can modify the system to ignore the
145invalid data from the missing battery.</p>
146
147<a name="control-suspend"><h3 id="control-suspend">Controlling System Suspend</h3></a>
148
149<p>This section describes how to avoid system suspend state when you dont want it to interfere with
150other measurements, and how to measure the power draw of system suspend state when you do want to
151measure it.</p>
152
153<h4>Preventing System Suspend</h4>
154
155<p>System suspend can introduce unwanted variance in power measurements and place system components
156in low-power states inappropriate for measuring active power use. To prevent the system from
157suspending while the screen is off, use a temporary partial wakelock. Using a USB cable, connect the
158device to a development host, then issue the following command:</p>
159
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -0800160<pre>
161$ adb shell "echo temporary &gt; /sys/power/wake_lock"
162</pre>
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -0700163
164<p>While in wake_lock, the screen off state does not trigger a system suspend. (Remember to
165disconnect the USB cable from the device before measuring power consumption.)</p>
166
167<p>To remove the wakelock:</p>
168
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -0800169<pre>
170$ adb shell "echo temporary &gt; /sys/power/wake_unlock"
171</pre>
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -0700172
173<h4>Measuring System Suspend</h4>
174
175<p>To measure the power draw during the system suspend state, measure the value of cpu.idle in the
176power profile. Before measuring:
177
178<ul>
179<li>Remove existing wakelocks (as described above).</li>
180<li>Place the device in airplane mode to avoid concurrent activity by the cellular radio, which
181might run on a processor separate from the SoC portions controlled by the system suspend.</li>
182<li>Ensure the system is in suspend state by:
183<ul>
184<li>Confirming current readings settle to a steady value. Readings should be within the expected
185range for the power consumption of the SoC suspend state plus the power consumption of system
186components that remain powered (such as the USB PHY).</li>
187<li>Checking the system console output.</li>
188<li>Watching for external indications of system status (such as an LED turning off when not in
189suspend).</li>
190</ul>
191</li>
192</ul>
193
194<a name="control-cpu"><h3 id="control-cpu">Controlling CPU Speeds</h3></a>
195
196<p>Active CPUs can be brought online or put offline, have their clock speeds and associated voltages
197changed (possibly also affecting memory bus speeds and other system core power states), and
198can enter lower power idle states while in the kernel idle loop. When measuring different CPU power
199states for the power profile, avoid the power draw variance when measuring other parameters. The
200power profile assumes all CPUs have the same available speeds and power characteristics.</p>
201
202<p>While measuring CPU power, or while holding CPU power constant to make other measurements, keep
203the number of CPUs brought online constant (such as having one CPU online and the rest
204offline/hotplugged out). Keeping all CPUs except one in scheduling idle may product acceptable
205results. Stopping the Android framework with <code>adb shell stop</code> can reduce system
206scheduling activity.</p>
207
208<p>You must specify the available CPU speeds for your device in the power profile cpu.speeds
209entry. To get a list of available CPU speeds, run:</p>
210
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -0800211<pre>
212adb shell cat /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/stats/time_in_state
213</pre>
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -0700214
215<p>These speeds match the corresponding power measurements in value <code>cpu.active</code>.</p>
216
217<p>For platforms where number of cores brought online significantly affects power consumption, you
218might need to modify the cpufreq driver or governor for the platform. Most platforms support
219controlling CPU speed using the userspace cpufreq governor and using sysfs interfaces to
220set the speed. For example, to set speed for 200MHz on a system with only 1 CPU or all CPUs sharing
221a common cpufreq policy, use the system console or adb shell to run the following commands:</p>
222
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -0800223<pre>
224echo userspace &gt; /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/scaling_governor
225echo 200000 &gt; /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/scaling_max_freq
226echo 200000 &gt; /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/scaling_min_freq
227echo 200000 &gt; /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/scaling_setspeed
228cat /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/scaling_cur_freq
229</pre>
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -0700230
231<p class="note">
232<strong>Note</strong>: The exact commands differ depending on the platform cpufreq implementation.
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -0800233</p>
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -0700234
235<p>These commands ensure the new speed is not outside the allowed bounds, set the new speed, then
236print the speed at which the CPU is actually running (for verification). If the current
237minimum speed prior to execution is higher than 200000, you might need to reverse the order
238of the first two lines, or execute the first line again to drop the minimum speed prior to
239setting the maximum speed.</p>
240
241<p>To measure current consumed by a CPU running at various speeds, use the system console place the
242CPU in a CPU-bound loop using the command:</p>
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -0800243<pre>
244# while true; do true; done
245</pre>
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -0700246
247<p>Take the measurement while the loop executes.</p>
248
249<p>Some devices can limit maximum CPU speed while performing thermal throttling due to a high
250temperature measurement (i.e. after running CPUs at high speeds for sustained periods). Watch for
251such limiting, either using the system console output when taking measurements or by checking the
252kernel log after measuring.</p>
253
254<p>For the <code>cpu.active</code> value, measure the power consumed when the system is not in
255suspend and not executing tasks. The CPU should be in a low-power scheduler <em>idle loop
256</em>, possibly executing an ARM Wait For Event instruction or in an SoC-specific low power state
257with a fast exit latency suitable for idle use. Your platform might have more than one idle state in
258use with differing levels of power consumption; choose a representative idle state for
259longer periods of scheduler idle (several milliseconds). Examine the power graph on your measurement
260equipment and choose samples where the CPU is at its lowest consumption, discarding higher samples
261where the CPU exited idle.</p>
262
263<h3 id="screen-power">Measuring Screen Power</h3>
264
265<p>When measuring screen on power, ensure that other devices normally turned on when the screen is
266enabled are also on. For example, if the touchscreen and display backlight would normally be on when
267the screen is on, ensure these devices are on when you measure to get a realistic example of screen
268on power usage.</p>
269
270<p>Some display technologies vary in power consumption according to the colors displayed, causing
271power measurements to vary considerably depending on what is displayed on the screen at the time of
272measurement. When measuring, ensure the screen is displaying something that has power
273characteristics of a realistic screen. Aim between the extremes of an all-black screen (which
274consumes the lowest power for some technologies) and an all-white screen. A common choice is a view
275of a schedule in the calendar app, which has a mix of white background and non-white elements.</p>
276
277<p>Measure screen on power at <em>minimum</em> and <em>maximum</em> display/backlight brightness.
278To set minimum brightness:</p>
279
280<ul>
281<li><strong>Use the Android UI</strong> (not recommended). Set the Settings > Display Brightness
282slider to the minimum display brightness. However, the Android UI allows setting brightness only to
283a minimum of 10-20% of the possible panel/backlight brightness, and does not allow setting
284brightness so low that the screen might not be visible without great effort.</li>
285<li><strong>Use a sysfs file</strong> (recommended). If available, use a sysfs file to control panel
286brightness all the way down to the minimum brightness supported by the hardware.</li>
287</ul>
288
289<p>Additionally, if the platform sysfs file enables turning the LCD panel, backlight, and
290touchscreen on and off, use the file to take measurements with the screen on and off. Otherwise,
291set a partial wakelock so the system does not suspend, then turn on and off the
292screen with the power button.</p>
293
294<h3 id="wifi-power">Measuring Wi-Fi Power</h3>
295
296<p>Perform Wi-Fi measurements on a relatively quiet network. Avoid introducing additional work
297processing high volumes of broadcast traffic that is unrelated to the activity being measured.</p>
298
299<p>The <code>wifi.on</code> value measures the power consumed when Wi-Fi is enabled but not actively
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -0800300transmitting or receiving. This is often measured as the delta between the current draw in
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -0700301system suspend (sleep) state with Wi-Fi enabled vs. disabled.</p>
302
303<p>The <code>wifi.scan</code> value measures the power consumed during a Wi-Fi scan for access
304points. Applications can trigger Wi-Fi scans using the WifiManager class
305<a href = "http://developer.android.com/reference/android/net/wifi/WifiManager.html">
306<code>startScan()</code>API</a>. You can also open Settings &gt; Wi-Fi, which performs access point
307scans every few seconds with an apparent jump in power consumption, but you must subtract screen
308power from these measurements.</p>
309
310<p class="note">
311<strong>Note</strong>: Use a controlled setup (such as
312<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iperf">iperf</a>) to generate network receive and transmit
313traffic.</p>
314
315<h2 id="device-power">Measuring Device Power</h2>
316
317<p>You can determine device power consumption for Android devices that include a battery fuel gauge
318such as a Summit SMB347 or Maxim MAX17050 (available on many Nexus devices). Use the in-system
319battery fuel gauge when external measurement equipment is not available or is inconvenient to
320connect to a device (such as in mobile usage).</p>
321
322<p>Measurements can include instantaneous current, remaining charge, battery capacity at test start
323and end, and more depending on the supported properties of the device (see below). For best results,
324perform device power measurements during long-running A/B tests that use the same device type with
325the same fuel gauge and same current sense resistor. Ensure the starting battery charge is the same
326for each device to avoid differing fuel gauge behavior at different points in the battery discharge
327curve.</p>
328
329<p>Even with identical test environments, measurements are not guaranteed to be of high absolute
330accuracy. However, most inaccuracies specific to the fuel gauge and sense resistor are consistent
331between test runs, making comparisons between identical devices useful. We recommend running
332multiple tests in different configurations to identify significant differences and relative power
333consumption between configurations.</p>
334
335<h3 id="power-consumption">Reading Power Consumption</h3>
336
337<p>To read power consumption data, insert calls to the API in your testing code.</p>
338
339<pre>
340import android.os.BatteryManager;
341import android.os.ServiceManager;
342import android.content.Context;
343BatteryManager mBatteryManager =
344(BatteryManager)Context.getSystemService(Context.BATTERY_SERVICE);
345Long energy =
346mBatteryManager.getLongProperty(BatteryManager.BATTERY_PROPERTY_ENERGY_COUNTER);
347Slog.i(TAG, "Remaining energy = " + energy + "nWh");
348</pre>
349
350<h3 id="avail-props">Available Properties</h3>
351
352<p>Android supports the following battery fuel gauge properties:</p>
353
354<pre>
355BATTERY_PROPERTY_CHARGE_COUNTER Remaining battery capacity in microampere-hours
356BATTERY_PROPERTY_CURRENT_NOW Instantaneous battery current in microamperes
357BATTERY_PROPERTY_CURRENT_AVERAGE Average battery current in microamperes
358BATTERY_PROPERTY_CAPACITY Remaining battery capacity as an integer percentage
359BATTERY_PROPERTY_ENERGY_COUNTER Remaining energy in nanowatt-hours
360</pre>
361
362<p>Most properties are read from kernel power_supply subsystem attributes of similar names.
363However, the exact properties, resolution of property values, and update frequency
364available for a specific device depend on:</p>
365
366<ul>
367<li>Fuel gauge hardware, such as a Summit SMB347 or Maxim MAX17050.</li>
368<li>Fuel gauge-to-system connection, such as the value of external current sense resistors.</li>
369<li>Fuel gauge chip software configuration, such as values chosen for average current computation
370intervals in the kernel driver.</li>
371</ul>
372
373<p>For details, see the properties available for <a href="#nexus-devices">Nexus devices</a>.</p>
374
375<h3 id="maxim-fuel">Maxim Fuel Gauge</h3>
376
377<p>When determining battery state-of-charge over a long period of time, the Maxim fuel gauge
378(MAX17050, BC15) corrects for coulomb-counter offset measurements. For measurements made over a
379short period of time (such as power consumption metering tests), the fuel gauge does not make
380corrections, making the offset the primary source of error when current measurements are too small
381(although no amount of time can eliminate the offset error completely).</p>
382
383<p>For a typical 10mOhm sense resistor design, the offset current should be better than 1.5mA,
384meaning any measurement is +/-1.5mA (PCBoard layout can also affect this variation). For example,
385when measuring a large current (200mA) you can expect the following:</p>
386
387<ul>
388<li>2mA (1% gain error of 200mA due to fuel gauge gain error)</li>
389<li>+2mA (1% gain error of 200mA due to sense resistor error)</li>
390<li>+1.5mA (current sense offset error from fuel gauge)</li>
391</ul>
392
393<p>The total error is 5.5mA (2.75%). Compare this to a medium current (50mA) where the same error
394percentages give a total error of 7% or to a small current (15mA) where +/-1.5mA gives a total error
395of 10%.</p>
396
397<p>For best results, we recommend measuring greater than 20mA. Gain measurement errors are
398systematic and repeatable, enabling you to test a device in multiple modes and get clean relative
399measurements (with exceptions for the 1.5mA offset).</p>
400
401<p>For +/-100uA relative measurements, required measurement time depends on:</p>
402
403<ul>
404<li><b>ADC sampling noise</b>. The MAX17050 with its normal factory configuration produces +/-1.5mA
405sample-to-sample variation due to noise, with each sample delivered at 175.8ms. You can expect a
406rough +/-100uA for a 1 minute test window and a clean 3-sigma noise less than 100uA (or 1-sigma
407noise at 33uA) for a 6 minute test window.</li>
408<li><b>Sample Aliasing because of load variation</b>. Variation exaggerates errors, so for samples
409with variation inherent in the loading, consider using a longer test window.</li>
410</ul>
411
412<a name="nexus-devices"><h3>Supported Nexus Devices</h3></a>
413
414<h5><a name="nexus-5">Nexus 5</a></h5>
415
416<table>
417<tbody>
418<tr>
419<th>Model</th>
420<td>Nexus 5</td>
421</tr>
422<tr>
423<th>Fuel Gauge</th>
424<td>Maxim MAX17048 fuel gauge (ModelGauge™, no coulomb counter)</td>
425</tr>
426<tr>
427<th>Properties</th>
428<td>BATTERY_PROPERTY_CAPACITY</td>
429</tr>
430<tr>
431<th>Measurements</th>
432<td>The fuel gauge does not support any measurements other than battery State Of Charge to a
433resolution of %/256 (1/256th of a percent of full battery capacity).</td>
434</tr>
435</tbody>
436</table>
437
438
439<h5><a name="nexus-6">Nexus 6</a></h5>
440
441<table>
442<tbody>
443<tr>
444<th>Model</th>
445<td>Nexus 6</td>
446</tr>
447<tr>
448<th>Fuel Gauge</th>
449<td>Maxim MAX17050 fuel gauge (a coulomb counter with Maxim ModelGauge adjustments), and a 10mohm
450current sense resistor.</td>
451</tr>
452<tr>
453<th>Properties</th>
454<td>BATTERY_PROPERTY_CAPACITY<br>
455BATTERY_PROPERTY_CURRENT_NOW<br>
456BATTERY_PROPERTY_CURRENT_AVERAGE<br>
457BATTERY_PROPERTY_CHARGE_COUNTER<br>
458BATTERY_PROPERTY_ENERGY_COUNTER</td>
459</tr>
460<tr>
461<th>Measurements</th>
462<td>CURRENT_NOW resolution 156.25uA, update period is 175.8ms.<br>
463CURRENT_AVERAGE resolution 156.25uA, update period configurable 0.7s - 6.4h, default 11.25 secs.<br>
464CHARGE_COUNTER (accumulated current, non-extended precision) resolution is 500uAh (raw coulomb
465counter read, not adjusted by fuel gauge for coulomb counter offset, plus inputs from the ModelGauge
466m3 algorithm including empty compensation).<br>
467CHARGE_COUNTER_EXT (extended precision in kernel) resolution 8nAh.<br>
468ENERGY_COUNTER is CHARGE_COUNTER_EXT at nominal voltage of 3.7V.</td>
469</tr>
470</tbody>
471</table>
472
473
474<h5><a name="nexus-9">Nexus 9</a></h5>
475
476<table>
477<tbody>
478<tr>
479<th>Model</th>
480<td>Nexus 9</td>
481</tr>
482<tr>
483<th>Fuel Gauge</th>
484<td>Maxim MAX17050 fuel gauge (a coulomb counter with Maxim ModelGauge adjustments), and a 10mohm
485current sense resistor.</td>
486</tr>
487<tr>
488<th>Properties</th>
489<td>BATTERY_PROPERTY_CAPACITY<br>
490BATTERY_PROPERTY_CURRENT_NOW<br>
491BATTERY_PROPERTY_CURRENT_AVERAGE<br>
492BATTERY_PROPERTY_CHARGE_COUNTER<br>
493BATTERY_PROPERTY_ENERGY_COUNTER</td>
494</tr>
495<tr>
496<th>Measurements</th>
497<td>CURRENT_NOW resolution 156.25uA, update period is 175.8ms.<br>
498CURRENT_AVERAGE resolution 156.25uA, update period configurable 0.7s - 6.4h, default 11.25 secs.<br>
499CHARGE_COUNTER (accumulated current, non-extended precision) resolution is 500uAh.<br>
500CHARGE_COUNTER_EXT (extended precision in kernel) resolution 8nAh.<br>
501ENERGY_COUNTER is CHARGE_COUNTER_EXT at nominal voltage of 3.7V.<br>
502Accumulated current update period 175.8ms.<br>
503ADC sampled at 175ms quantization with a 4ms sample period. Can adjust duty cycle.</td>
504</tr>
505</tbody>
506</table>
507
508
509<h5><a name="nexus-10">Nexus 10</a></h5>
510
511<table>
512<tbody>
513<tr>
514<th>Model</th>
515<td>Nexus 10</td>
516</tr>
517<tr>
518<th>Fuel Gauge</th>
519<td>Dallas Semiconductor DS2784 fuel gauge (a coulomb counter), with a 10mohm current sense
520resistor.</td>
521</tr>
522<tr>
523<th>Properties</th>
524<td>BATTERY_PROPERTY_CAPACITY<br>
525BATTERY_PROPERTY_CURRENT_NOW<br>
526BATTERY_PROPERTY_CURRENT_AVERAGE<br>
527BATTERY_PROPERTY_CHARGE_COUNTER<br>
528BATTERY_PROPERTY_ENERGY_COUNTER</td>
529</tr>
530<tr>
531<th>Measurements</th>
532<td>Current measurement (instantaneous and average) resolution is 156.3uA.<br>
533CURRENT_NOW instantaneous current update period is 3.5 seconds.<br>
534CURRENT_AVERAGE update period is 28 seconds (not configurable).<br>
535CHARGE_COUNTER (accumulated current, non-extended precision) resolution is 625uAh.<br>
536CHARGE_COUNTER_EXT (extended precision in kernel) resolution is 144nAh.<br>
537ENERGY_COUNTER is CHARGE_COUNTER_EXT at nominal voltage of 3.7V.<br>
538Update period for all is 3.5 seconds.</td>
539</tr>
540</tbody>
541</table>
542
543
544<h2 id="viewing-usage">Viewing Battery Usage Data</h2>
545
546<p>The <code>dumpsys</code> <code>batterystats</code> command generates interesting statistical data
547about battery usage on a device, organized by unique application ID. You can view a history of
548battery-related events such as mobile radio state, Wi-Fi and Bluetooth power states, and wakelock
549reasons.</p>
550
551<p>Statistics include:</p>
552
553<ul>
554<li>History of battery-related events</li>
555<li>Global statistics for the device</li>
556<li>Approximate power use per UID and system component</li>
557<li>System UID aggregated statistics</li>
558</ul>
559
560<p>Use the output of the dumpsys command with the
561<a href="https://github.com/google/battery-historian">Battery Historian</a> tool to generate HTML
562visualizations of power-related events from logs.</p>
563
564
565<h2 id="power-values">Power Values</h2>
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -0800566<table>
567<tr>
568 <th>Name</th>
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -0700569 <th>Description</th>
570 <th>Example Value</th>
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -0800571 <th>Notes</th>
572</tr>
573<tr>
574 <td>none</td>
575 <td>Nothing</td>
576 <td>0</td>
577 <td></td>
578</tr>
579
580<tr>
581 <td>screen.on</td>
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -0700582 <td>Additional power used when screen is turned on at minimum brightness.</td>
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -0800583 <td>200mA</td>
584 <td>Includes touch controller and display backlight. At 0 brightness, not the Android minimum which tends to be 10 or 20%.</td>
585</tr>
586
587<tr>
588 <td>screen.full</td>
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -0700589 <td>Additional power used when screen is at maximum brightness, compared to screen at minimum brightness.</td>
590 <td>100mA-300mA</td>
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -0800591 <td>A fraction of this value (based on screen brightness) is added to the screen.on value to compute the power usage of the screen.</td>
592</tr>
593
594<tr>
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -0700595 <td>bluetooth.active</td>
596 <td>Additional power used when playing audio through bluetooth A2DP.</td>
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -0800597 <td>14mA</td>
598 <td></td>
599</tr>
600
601<tr>
602 <td>bluetooth.on</td>
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -0700603 <td>Additional power used when bluetooth is turned on but idle.</td>
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -0800604 <td>1.4mA</td>
605 <td></td>
606</tr>
607
608<tr>
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -0700609 <td>wifi.on</td>
610 <td>Additional power used when Wi-Fi is turned on but not receiving, transmitting, or scanning.</td>
611 <td>2mA</td>
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -0800612 <td></td>
613</tr>
614
615<tr>
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -0700616 <td>wifi.active</td>
617 <td>Additional power used when transmitting or receiving over Wi-Fi.</td>
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -0800618 <td>31mA</td>
619 <td></td>
620</tr>
621
622<tr>
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -0700623 <td>wifi.scan</td>
624 <td>Additional power used when Wi-Fi is scanning for access points.</td>
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -0800625 <td>100mA</td>
626 <td></td>
627</tr>
628
629<tr>
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -0700630 <td>dsp.audio</td>
631 <td>Additional power used when audio decoding/encoding via DSP.</td>
632 <td>14.1mA</td>
633 <td>Reserved for future use.</td>
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -0800634</tr>
635
636
637<tr>
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -0700638 <td>dsp.video</td>
639 <td>Additional power used when video decoding via DSP.</td>
640 <td>54mA</td>
641 <td>Reserved for future use.</td>
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -0800642</tr>
643
644<tr>
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -0700645 <td>gps.on</td>
646 <td>Additional power used when GPS is acquiring a signal.</td>
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -0800647 <td>50mA</td>
648 <td></td>
649</tr>
650
651<tr>
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -0700652 <td>radio.active</td>
653 <td>Additional power used when cellular radio is transmitting/receiving.</td>
654 <td>100mA-300mA</td>
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -0800655 <td></td>
656</tr>
657
658<tr>
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -0700659 <td>radio.scanning</td>
660 <td>Additional power used when cellular radio is paging the tower.</td>
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -0800661 <td>1.2mA</td>
662 <td></td>
663</tr>
664
665<tr>
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -0700666 <td>radio.on</td>
667 <td>Additional power used when the cellular radio is on. Multi-value entry, one per signal strength (no signal, weak, moderate, strong).</td>
668 <td>1.2mA</td>
669 <td>Some radios boost power when they search for a cell tower and do not detect a signal. These
670 numbers could all be the same or decreasing with increasing signal strength. If you provide only
671 one value, the same value will be used for all strengths. If you provide 2 values, the first will
672 be for no-signal and the second for all other strengths, and so on.</td>
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -0800673</tr>
674
675<tr>
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -0700676 <td>cpu.speeds</td>
677 <td>Multi-value entry that lists each possible CPU speed in KHz.</td>
678 <td>125000, 250000, 500000, 1000000, 1500000</td>
679 <td>The number and order of entries must correspond to the mA entries in cpu.active.</td>
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -0800680</tr>
681
682<tr>
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -0700683 <td>cpu.idle</td>
684 <td>Total power drawn by the system when CPUs (and the SoC) are in system suspend state.</td>
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -0800685 <td>3mA</td>
686 <td></td>
687</tr>
688
689<tr>
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -0700690 <td>cpu.awake</td>
691 <td>Additional power used when CPUs are in scheduling idle state (kernel idle loop); system is not
692 in system suspend state.</td>
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -0800693 <td>50mA</td>
694 <td></td>
695</tr>
696
697<tr>
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -0700698 <td>cpu.active</td>
699 <td>Additional power used by CPUs when running at different speeds.</td>
700 <td>100, 120, 140, 160, 200</td>
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -0800701 <td>Set the max speed in the kernel to each of the allowed speeds and peg the CPU at that
702speed. The number of entries here correspond to the number of entries in cpu.speeds, in the
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -0700703same order.</td>
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -0800704</tr>
705
706<tr>
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -0700707 <td>battery.capacity</td>
708 <td>The total battery capacity in mAh.</td>
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -0800709 <td>3000mAh</td>
710 <td></td>
711</tr>
712
713</table>
714
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -0700715<p>The power_profile.xml file is placed in an overlay in
716device///frameworks/base/core/res/res/xml/power_profile.xml</p>
717
718<h3 id="sample">Sample file</h3>
719
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -0800720<pre>
721&lt;!-- Most values are the incremental current used by a feature, in mA (measured at
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -0700722nominal voltage). OEMs must measure and provide actual values before shipping a device.
723Example real-world values are given, but are dependent on the platform
Robert Ly35f2fda2013-01-29 16:27:05 -0800724and can vary significantly, so should be measured on the shipping platform with a power meter.
725--&gt;
7260
727200
728160
72910
730&lt;!-- Bluetooth stereo audio playback 10.0 mA --&gt;
7311.3
7320.5
73330
734100
73512
73650
73750
73875
7391.1
740&lt;!-- Strength 0 to BINS-1 (4) --&gt;
7411.1
742
743&lt;!-- Different CPU speeds as reported in
744/sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/stats/time_in_state --&gt;
745
746250000 <!-- 250 MHz -->
747500000 <!-- 500 MHz -->
748750000 <!-- 750 MHz -->
7491000000 <!-- 1 GHz -->
7501200000 <!-- 1.2 GHz -->
751
752&lt;!-- Power consumption when CPU is idle --&gt;
7533.0
75450.1
755&lt;!-- Power consumption at different speeds --&gt;
756
757100 &lt;!-- 250 MHz --&gt;
758120 &lt;!-- 500 MHz --&gt;
759140 &lt;!-- 750 MHz --&gt;
760155 &lt;!-- 1 GHz --&gt;
761175 &lt;!-- 1.2 GHz --&gt;
762
763&lt;!-- This is the battery capacity in mAh --&gt;
7643000
765&lt;!-- Battery capacity is 3000 mAH (at 3.6 Volts) --&gt;
766
Heidi Millerbf752972014-10-28 16:49:15 -0700767</pre>