5eede802d4
BugLink: https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/2060704 On Fri, Sep 22 2023 at 00:55, Thomas Gleixner wrote: > On Thu, Sep 21 2023 at 09:00, Linus Torvalds wrote: >> That said - I think as a proof of concept and "look, with this we get >> the expected scheduling event counts", that patch is perfect. I think >> you more than proved the concept. > > There is certainly quite some analyis work to do to make this a one to > one replacement. > > With a handful of benchmarks the PoC (tweaked with some obvious fixes) > is pretty much on par with the current mainline variants (NONE/FULL), > but the memtier benchmark makes a massive dent. > > It sports a whopping 10% regression with the LAZY mode versus the mainline > NONE model. Non-LAZY and FULL behave unsurprisingly in the same way. > > That benchmark is really sensitive to the preemption model. With current > mainline (DYNAMIC_PREEMPT enabled) the preempt=FULL model has ~20% > performance drop versus preempt=NONE. That 20% was a tired pilot error. The real number is in the 5% ballpark. > I have no clue what's going on there yet, but that shows that there is > obviously quite some work ahead to get this sorted. It took some head scratching to figure that out. The initial fix broke the handling of the hog issue, i.e. the problem that Ankur tried to solve, but I hacked up a "solution" for that too. With that the memtier benchmark is roughly back to the mainline numbers, but my throughput benchmark know how is pretty close to zero, so that should be looked at by people who actually understand these things. Likewise the hog prevention is just at the PoC level and clearly beyond my knowledge of scheduler details: It unconditionally forces a reschedule when the looping task is not responding to a lazy reschedule request before the next tick. IOW it forces a reschedule on the second tick, which is obviously different from the cond_resched()/might_sleep() behaviour. The changes vs. the original PoC aside of the bug and thinko fixes: 1) A hack to utilize the TRACE_FLAG_IRQS_NOSUPPORT flag to trace the lazy preempt bit as the trace_entry::flags field is full already. That obviously breaks the tracer ABI, but if we go there then this needs to be fixed. Steven? 2) debugfs file to validate that loops can be force preempted w/o cond_resched() The usage is: # taskset -c 1 bash # echo 1 > /sys/kernel/debug/sched/hog & # echo 1 > /sys/kernel/debug/sched/hog & # echo 1 > /sys/kernel/debug/sched/hog & top shows ~33% CPU for each of the hogs and tracing confirms that the crude hack in the scheduler tick works: bash-4559 [001] dlh2. 2253.331202: resched_curr <-__update_curr bash-4560 [001] dlh2. 2253.340199: resched_curr <-__update_curr bash-4561 [001] dlh2. 2253.346199: resched_curr <-__update_curr bash-4559 [001] dlh2. 2253.353199: resched_curr <-__update_curr bash-4561 [001] dlh2. 2253.358199: resched_curr <-__update_curr bash-4560 [001] dlh2. 2253.370202: resched_curr <-__update_curr bash-4559 [001] dlh2. 2253.378198: resched_curr <-__update_curr bash-4561 [001] dlh2. 2253.389199: resched_curr <-__update_curr The 'l' instead of the usual 'N' reflects that the lazy resched bit is set. That makes __update_curr() invoke resched_curr() instead of the lazy variant. resched_curr() sets TIF_NEED_RESCHED and folds it into preempt_count so that preemption happens at the next possible point, i.e. either in return from interrupt or at the next preempt_enable(). That's as much as I wanted to demonstrate and I'm not going to spend more cycles on it as I have already too many other things on flight and the resulting scheduler woes are clearly outside of my expertice. Though definitely I'm putting a permanent NAK in place for any attempts to duct tape the preempt=NONE model any further by sprinkling more cond*() and whatever warts around. Thanks, tglx [tglx: s@CONFIG_PREEMPT_AUTO@CONFIG_PREEMPT_BUILD_AUTO@ ] Link: https://lore.kernel.org/all/87jzshhexi.ffs@tglx/ Signed-off-by: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de> Signed-off-by: Sebastian Andrzej Siewior <bigeasy@linutronix.de> Signed-off-by: Kevin Becker <kevin.becker@canonical.com>