Re: [PATCH RFC tip/core/rcu] Parallelize and economize NOCB kthread wakeups

From: Mike Galbraith
Date: Wed Jul 02 2014 - 23:31:30 EST


On Wed, 2014-07-02 at 10:08 -0700, Paul E. McKenney wrote:
> On Wed, Jul 02, 2014 at 06:04:12PM +0200, Peter Zijlstra wrote:
> > On Wed, Jul 02, 2014 at 08:39:15AM -0700, Paul E. McKenney wrote:
> > > On Wed, Jul 02, 2014 at 02:34:12PM +0200, Peter Zijlstra wrote:
> > > > On Fri, Jun 27, 2014 at 07:20:38AM -0700, Paul E. McKenney wrote:
> > > > > An 80-CPU system with a context-switch-heavy workload can require so
> > > > > many NOCB kthread wakeups that the RCU grace-period kthreads spend several
> > > > > tens of percent of a CPU just awakening things. This clearly will not
> > > > > scale well: If you add enough CPUs, the RCU grace-period kthreads would
> > > > > get behind, increasing grace-period latency.
> > > > >
> > > > > To avoid this problem, this commit divides the NOCB kthreads into leaders
> > > > > and followers, where the grace-period kthreads awaken the leaders each of
> > > > > whom in turn awakens its followers. By default, the number of groups of
> > > > > kthreads is the square root of the number of CPUs, but this default may
> > > > > be overridden using the rcutree.rcu_nocb_leader_stride boot parameter.
> > > > > This reduces the number of wakeups done per grace period by the RCU
> > > > > grace-period kthread by the square root of the number of CPUs, but of
> > > > > course by shifting those wakeups to the leaders. In addition, because
> > > > > the leaders do grace periods on behalf of their respective followers,
> > > > > the number of wakeups of the followers decreases by up to a factor of two.
> > > > > Instead of being awakened once when new callbacks arrive and again
> > > > > at the end of the grace period, the followers are awakened only at
> > > > > the end of the grace period.
> > > > >
> > > > > For a numerical example, in a 4096-CPU system, the grace-period kthread
> > > > > would awaken 64 leaders, each of which would awaken its 63 followers
> > > > > at the end of the grace period. This compares favorably with the 79
> > > > > wakeups for the grace-period kthread on an 80-CPU system.
> > > >
> > > > Urgh, how about we kill the entire nocb nonsense and try again? This is
> > > > getting quite rediculous.
> > >
> > > Sure thing, Peter.
> >
> > So you don't think this has gotten a little out of hand? The NOCB stuff
> > has lead to these masses of rcu threads and now you're adding extra
> > cache misses to the perfectly sane and normal code paths just to deal
> > with so many threads.
>
> Indeed it appears to have gotten a bit out of hand. But let's please
> attack the real problem rather than the immediate irritant.
>
> And in this case, the real problem is that users are getting callback
> offloading even when there is no reason for it.
>
> > And all to support a feature that nearly nobody uses. And you were
> > talking about making nocb the default rcu...
>
> As were others, not that long ago. Today is the first hint that I got
> that you feel otherwise. But it does look like the softirq approach to
> callback processing needs to stick around for awhile longer. Nice to
> hear that softirq is now "sane and normal" again, I guess. ;-)
>
> Please see my patch in reply to Rik's email. The idea is to neither
> rip callback offloading from the kernel nor to keep callback offloading
> as the default, but instead do callback offloading only for those CPUs
> specifically marked as NO_HZ_FULL CPUs, or when specifically requested
> at build time or at boot time. In other words, only do it when it is
> needed.

Exactly! Like dynamically, when the user isolates CPUs via the cpuset
interface, none of it making much sense without that particular property
of a set of CPUs, and cpuset being the manager of CPU set properties.

NO_HZ_FULL is a property of a set of CPUs. isolcpus is supposed to go
away as being a redundant interface to manage a single property of a set
of CPUs, but it's perfectly fine for NO_HZ_FULL to add an interface to
manage a single property of a set of CPUs. What am I missing?

-Mike

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