Re: [ck] Re: [REPORT] cfs-v6-rc2 vs sd-0.46 vs 2.6.21-rc7

From: Ingo Molnar
Date: Fri Apr 27 2007 - 02:53:31 EST



* Con Kolivas <kernel@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> > as a summary: i think your numbers demonstrate it nicely that the
> > shorter 'timeslice length' that both CFS and SD utilizes does not have a
> > measurable negative impact on your workload. To measure the total impact
> > of 'timeslicing' you might want to try the exact same workload with a
> > much higher 'timeslice length' of say 400 msecs, via:
> >
> > echo 400000000 > /proc/sys/kernel/sched_granularity_ns # on CFS
> > echo 400 > /proc/sys/kernel/rr_interval # on SD
>
> I thought that the effective "timeslice" on CFS was double the
> sched_granularity_ns so wouldn't this make the effective timeslice
> double that of what you're setting SD to? [...]

The two settings are not really comparable. The "effective timeslice is
the double of the granularity" thing i mentioned before is really a
special-case: only true for a really undisturbed 100% CPU-using
_two-task_ workload, if and only if the workload would not reschedule
otherwise, but that is clearly not the case here: and if you look at the
vmstat output provided by Michael you'll see that all 3 schedulers
rescheduled this workload at around 1000/sec or 1 msec per scheduling
atom. (But i'd agree that to be on the safe side the context-switch rate
has to be monitored and if it seems too high on SD, the rr_interval
should be increased.)

> [...] Anyway the difference between 400 and 800ms timeslices is
> unlikely to be significant so I don't mind.

even on a totally idle system there's at least a 10 Hz 'background
sound' of various activities, so any setting above 100 msecs rarely has
any effect.

Ingo
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/