Re: [PATCH] limit CPU time spent in kipmid
From: Greg KH
Date: Fri Mar 20 2009 - 13:51:47 EST
On Fri, Mar 20, 2009 at 10:30:45AM -0500, Corey Minyard wrote:
> Greg KH wrote:
>> On Thu, Mar 19, 2009 at 04:31:00PM -0500, Corey Minyard wrote:
>>
>>> Martin, thanks for the patch. I had actually implemented something like
>>> this before, and it didn't really help very much with the hardware I had,
>>> so I had abandoned this method. There's even a comment about it in
>>> si_sm_result smi_event_handler(). Maybe making it tunable is better, I
>>> don't know. But I'm afraid this will kill performance on a lot of
>>> systems.
>>>
>>> Did you test throughput on this? The main problem people had without
>>> kipmid was that things like firmware upgrades took a *long* time; adding
>>> kipmid improved speeds by an order of magnitude or more.
>>>
>>> It's my opinion that if you want this interface to work efficiently with
>>> good performance, you should design the hardware to be used efficiently
>>> by using interrupts (which are supported and disable kipmid). With the
>>> way the hardware is defined, you cannot have both good performance and
>>> low CPU usage without interrupts.
>>>
>>> It may be possible to add an option to choose between performance and
>>> efficiency, but it will have to default to performance.
>>>
>>
>> I would think that very infrequent things, like firmware upgrades, would
>> not take priority over a long-term "keep the cpu busy" type system, like
>> what we currently have.
>>
>> Is there any way to switch between the different modes dynamically?
>> I like the idea of this change, as I have got a lot of complaints lately
>> about kipmi taking way too much cpu time up on idle systems, messing up
>> some user's process accounting rules in their management systems. But I
>> worry about making it a module parameter, why can't this be a
>> "self-tunable" thing?
>>
> It's actually already sort of self-tuning. kipmid sleeps unless there is
> IPMI activity. It only spins if it is expecting something from the
> controller.
>
> I've been thinking about this a little more. Assuming that the self-tuning
> is working (and it appears to be working fine on my systems), that means
> that something is causing the IPMI driver to constantly talk to the
> management controller. I can think of three things:
>
> 1. The user is constantly sending messages to management controller.
> 2. There is something wrong with the hardware, like the ATTN bit is
> stuck high, causing the driver to constantly poll the management
> controller.
> 3. The driver either has a bug or needs some more work to account for
> something the hardware needs it to do to clear the ATTN bit.
>
> If it's #1 above, then I don't know if there is anything we can do about
> it. The patch Martin sent will simply slow things down.
Does the "normal" ipmi userspace tools do #1?
For #2, this might make sense, as I have had reports of some hardware
working just fine, while others have the load issue. Both were
different hardware manufacturers.
> #2 and #3 will require someone to do some debugging. If the ATTN bit is
> stuck, you should see the "attentions" field in /proc/ipmi/0/si_stats
> constantly going up. Actually, the contents of that file would be helpful,
> along with /proc/ipmi/0/stats.
Martin has one of these machines, right? If not, I can dig and try to
get some information as well.
thanks,
greg k-h
--
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/