Re: [PATCH] x86: Reduce the default HZ value
From: Chris Snook
Date: Thu May 07 2009 - 16:29:55 EST
On Thu, May 7, 2009 at 12:56 PM, Alok Kataria <akataria@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> On Thu, 2009-05-07 at 09:35 -0700, Chris Snook wrote:
>> On Tue, May 5, 2009 at 5:57 PM, Alok Kataria <akataria@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> >
>> > On Tue, 2009-05-05 at 14:21 -0700, H. Peter Anvin wrote:
>> >> Alok Kataria wrote:
>> >> > Hi,
>> >> >
>> >> > Given that there were no major objections that came up regarding
>> >> > reducing the HZ value in http://lkml.org/lkml/2009/4/27/499.
>> >> >
>> >> > Below is the patch which actually reduces it, please consider for tip.
>> >> >
>> >>
>> >> What is the benefit of this?
>> >
>> > I did some experiments on linux 2.6.29 guests running on VMware and
>> > noticed that the number of timer interrupts could have some slowdown on
>> > the total throughput on the system.
>> > A simple tight loop experiment showed that with HZ=1000 we took about
>> > 264sec to complete the loop and that same loop took about 255sec with
>> > HZ=100.
>> > You can find more information here http://lkml.org/lkml/2009/4/28/401
>>
>> This is why certain niches, such as HPC users, often prefer HZ=100
>> kernels. For the rest of us, sacrificing a few percent CPU throughput
>> for significant latency gains is well worth it.
>>
>> > And with HRT i don't see any downsides in terms of increased latencies
>> > for device timer's or anything of that sought.
>> >
>> >>
>> >> I can see at least one immediate downside: some timeout values in the
>> >> kernel are still maintained in units of HZ (like poll, I believe), and
>> >> so with a lower HZ value we'll have higher roundoff errors.
>> >
>> > If that at all is such a big problem shouldn't we think about moving to
>> > using schedule_hrtimeout for such cases rather than relying on jiffy
>> > based timeouts.
>> > The hrtimer explanation over here http://www.tglx.de/hrtimers.html
>> > also talks about where these HZ (timer wheel) based timeouts be used and
>> > shouldn't really be dependent on accurate timing.
>>
>> But your patch doesn't do this.
>
> The reason it doesn't do it is because poll and select already use
> hrtimer. So IMO no important subsystem relies on jiffies for wakeups.
> Thus the latency problem is not actually present in the kernel.
TCP/IP still uses jiffies. There's been talk of changing that, but it
hasn't been done yet, and it's definitely a latency-critical
subsystem.
>> If you want us to merge a patch that
>> makes VMware systems faster, we're a lot more likely to take it if it
>> make everyone else's systems faster, or at least not slower.
>
> I doubt it would make any system slower, running these simple
> experiments is not hard at all and one could run these on native system
> too to check.
If this patch improves performance for both simple loops and
transaction processing by changing a non-idiotic tuning parameter, it
would be a first. Can you at least run some sort of database
benchmark to back this up?
>>
>> > Also the default HZ value was 250 before this commit
>> >
>> > commit 5cb04df8d3f03e37a19f2502591a84156be71772
>> > x86: defconfig updates
>> >
>> > And it was 250 for a very long time before that too. The commit log
>> > doesn't explain why the value was bumped up either.
>>
>> 250 was considered a compromise between 100 and 1000, but almost
>> everyone who cared just ended up using one or the other, and most of
>> them preferred 1000.
>>
>> Given your use case, what you really need to do is get Red Hat,
>> Novell, et al. on the phone and ask them to ship kernels with HZ=100,
>> because the distributions do their own thing anyway.
>
> Yeah but I don't think there is any better platform other than LKML to
> figure out if at all this is a problem anymore. Once we are assured that
> a low HZ is no more a problem I don't see why would the various distros
> not consider reducing it.
>
>> If you can
>> figure out a way to do that without harming latency, they'll be
>> thrilled.
>
> Why do you think it would harm latency ?
> The sched_tick too is driven by hrtimers, if there is any specific
> subsystem which you think still relies on jiffy we could think about
> using hrtimer's for them too, right ?
> I did a quick scan and the only things that rely on jiffy are the device
> timeout's where latency is not a issue.
> So please let me know in what cases do you think it could affect system
> latency.
If you can get TCP/IP converted, or convince me that this won't hurt
transaction processing, I'm sold.
-- Chris
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