Re: [RFC PATCH v3 00/16] Core scheduling v3

From: Phil Auld
Date: Tue Aug 06 2019 - 10:55:36 EST


On Tue, Aug 06, 2019 at 10:41:25PM +0800 Aaron Lu wrote:
> On 2019/8/6 22:17, Phil Auld wrote:
> > On Tue, Aug 06, 2019 at 09:54:01PM +0800 Aaron Lu wrote:
> >> On Mon, Aug 05, 2019 at 04:09:15PM -0400, Phil Auld wrote:
> >>> Hi,
> >>>
> >>> On Fri, Aug 02, 2019 at 11:37:15AM -0400 Julien Desfossez wrote:
> >>>> We tested both Aaron's and Tim's patches and here are our results.
> >>>>
> >>>> Test setup:
> >>>> - 2 1-thread sysbench, one running the cpu benchmark, the other one the
> >>>> mem benchmark
> >>>> - both started at the same time
> >>>> - both are pinned on the same core (2 hardware threads)
> >>>> - 10 30-seconds runs
> >>>> - test script: https://paste.debian.net/plainh/834cf45c
> >>>> - only showing the CPU events/sec (higher is better)
> >>>> - tested 4 tag configurations:
> >>>> - no tag
> >>>> - sysbench mem untagged, sysbench cpu tagged
> >>>> - sysbench mem tagged, sysbench cpu untagged
> >>>> - both tagged with a different tag
> >>>> - "Alone" is the sysbench CPU running alone on the core, no tag
> >>>> - "nosmt" is both sysbench pinned on the same hardware thread, no tag
> >>>> - "Tim's full patchset + sched" is an experiment with Tim's patchset
> >>>> combined with Aaron's "hack patch" to get rid of the remaining deep
> >>>> idle cases
> >>>> - In all test cases, both tasks can run simultaneously (which was not
> >>>> the case without those patches), but the standard deviation is a
> >>>> pretty good indicator of the fairness/consistency.
> >>>>
> >>>> No tag
> >>>> ------
> >>>> Test Average Stdev
> >>>> Alone 1306.90 0.94
> >>>> nosmt 649.95 1.44
> >>>> Aaron's full patchset: 828.15 32.45
> >>>> Aaron's first 2 patches: 832.12 36.53
> >>>> Aaron's 3rd patch alone: 864.21 3.68
> >>>> Tim's full patchset: 852.50 4.11
> >>>> Tim's full patchset + sched: 852.59 8.25
> >>>>
> >>>> Sysbench mem untagged, sysbench cpu tagged
> >>>> ------------------------------------------
> >>>> Test Average Stdev
> >>>> Alone 1306.90 0.94
> >>>> nosmt 649.95 1.44
> >>>> Aaron's full patchset: 586.06 1.77
> >>>> Aaron's first 2 patches: 630.08 47.30
> >>>> Aaron's 3rd patch alone: 1086.65 246.54
> >>>> Tim's full patchset: 852.50 4.11
> >>>> Tim's full patchset + sched: 390.49 15.76
> >>>>
> >>>> Sysbench mem tagged, sysbench cpu untagged
> >>>> ------------------------------------------
> >>>> Test Average Stdev
> >>>> Alone 1306.90 0.94
> >>>> nosmt 649.95 1.44
> >>>> Aaron's full patchset: 583.77 3.52
> >>>> Aaron's first 2 patches: 513.63 63.09
> >>>> Aaron's 3rd patch alone: 1171.23 3.35
> >>>> Tim's full patchset: 564.04 58.05
> >>>> Tim's full patchset + sched: 1026.16 49.43
> >>>>
> >>>> Both sysbench tagged
> >>>> --------------------
> >>>> Test Average Stdev
> >>>> Alone 1306.90 0.94
> >>>> nosmt 649.95 1.44
> >>>> Aaron's full patchset: 582.15 3.75
> >>>> Aaron's first 2 patches: 561.07 91.61
> >>>> Aaron's 3rd patch alone: 638.49 231.06
> >>>> Tim's full patchset: 679.43 70.07
> >>>> Tim's full patchset + sched: 664.34 210.14
> >>>>
> >>>
> >>> Sorry if I'm missing something obvious here but with only 2 processes
> >>> of interest shouldn't one tagged and one untagged be about the same
> >>> as both tagged?
> >>
> >> It should.
> >>
> >>> In both cases the 2 sysbenches should not be running on the core at
> >>> the same time.
> >>
> >> Agree.
> >>
> >>> There will be times when oher non-related threads could share the core
> >>> with the untagged one. Is that enough to account for this difference?
> >>
> >> What difference do you mean?
> >
> >
> > I was looking at the above posted numbers. For example:
> >
> >>>> Sysbench mem untagged, sysbench cpu tagged
> >>>> Aaron's 3rd patch alone: 1086.65 246.54
> >
> >>>> Sysbench mem tagged, sysbench cpu untagged
> >>>> Aaron's 3rd patch alone: 1171.23 3.35
> >
> >>>> Both sysbench tagged
> >>>> Aaron's 3rd patch alone: 638.49 231.06
> >
> >
> > Admittedly, there's some high variance on some of those numbers.
>
> The high variance suggests the code having some fairness issues :-)
>
> For the test here, I didn't expect the 3rd patch being used alone
> since the fairness is solved by patch2 and patch3 together.

Makes sense, thanks.


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