Re: 2.5.74-mm1

From: Daniel Phillips (phillips@arcor.de)
Date: Sun Jul 06 2003 - 13:50:29 EST


On Sunday 06 July 2003 05:41, Con Kolivas wrote:
> On Sun, 6 Jul 2003 03:47, Daniel Phillips wrote:
> > Not having to worry about detecting and babying along the realtime sound
> > thread should make your job considerably easier. OK, looking at the Zinf
> > code I see that it does know about thread priority, via pthreads. It's
> > either not working, or it's not set to sensible defaults. I'm looking
> > into that.
>
> Well if it gets real time scheduling all that goes away.. But of course
> that would mean it needs root or equivalent user access.

We need to do something about that, apparently. OK, in another thread it's
been pointed out that SCHED_RR is broken for this, but nice=-something is
still an option.

> Even the lowest
> priority real time apps get scheduled ahead of any nice priority boosted or
> interactive boosted normal scheduling apps. However I'm going to give X
> less buffer in the next version so it should get better without RT
> scheduling.
>
> WRT the other lkml threads, audio should work without skips on normal
> desktop loads without priority changes, without root privileges and without
> RT scheduling. Therefore I am still considering it a regression.

Given that my sound is now working better for me than it ever has on any
version of Linux, I wouldn't be so fast to call it a regression. The active
ingredient is a priori priority assignment. With your patch, nice=-2 gives
solid, reliable sound playing under all conditions I've thought to try.
Without your patch, nice=-10 is insufficient. So you're on to something
good, it seems.

> > Now, just so this doesn't get too easy for you, I have a nice little
> > opengl application here:
> >
> > http://nl.linux.org/~phillips/world.tgz
> > (3D engine - see screenshots on the same page)
> >
> > The "bounce" demo is suitable for testing how steady the framerate is.
> > It's working pretty well since 2.4.73, if you leave the window in one
> > place, but scheduling gets challenging (i.e., sucks) when you drag the 3D
> > window around. How should we fix that? It's my code so I'm willing to
> > add whatever priority control is appropriate.
>
> I assume you're not asking for the scheduler to be tweaked for this. You
> want the 3d rendering to occur regardless of what is happening anywhere
> else?

I don't know what's required, this is just the next problem on my list after
sound scheduling, which as far as I'm concerned isn't particularly
interesting any more (except for the missing formal analysis) because we've
got solutions on the table.

What I want is a reasonably steady frame rate, even when the window is being
dragged. After that, being greedy, I'll want a steady rate under lots of
other challenging conditions as well. (Note there's a tweakable option in
the source to emit ms/frame.)

> If it doesn't use much cpu time but wakes lots then in it's current
> form the scheduler will happily put this equal sharing with everything at
> nice 0. X intermittently gets cpu hungry so will make this slow down at the
> moment during those bursts. Your app will go ahead of everything else at a
> priority of -3.

So why is -1 or -2 not sufficient?

> If it is cpu hungry, it will need at least -8 to get in on the act, and -13
> to be ahead of everyone (not really recommended though).

Being a 3D renderer, of course it's cpu hungry. It's also a very common type
of interactive application. As with sound, interactive 3D applications on
Linux should work by default, not be broken by default. If that means fixing
applications, so be it, let's do that to avoid going overboard with kernel
scheduling policy.

As I noted before, your patch is small, that's great. Now the thing is to
really get the goodness out of it, and avoid building in too much automagic
where it isn't appropriate.

Regards,

Daniel

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