Re: [RFC tg_shares_up improvements - v1 00/12] [RFC tg_shares_up -v1 00/12] Reducing cost of tg->shares distribution
From: Peter Zijlstra
Date: Sat Oct 16 2010 - 15:47:18 EST
On Fri, 2010-10-15 at 21:43 -0700, pjt@xxxxxxxxxx wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> Peter previously posted a patchset that attempted to improve the problem of
> task_group share distribution. This is something that has been a long-time
> pain point for group scheduling. The existing algorithm considers
> distributions on a per-cpu-per-domain basis and carries a fairly high update
> overhead, especially on larger machines.
>
> I was previously looking at improving this using Fenwick trees to allow a
> single sum without the exorbitant cost but then Peter's idea above was better :).
>
> The kernel is that by monitoring the average contribution to load on a
> per-cpu-per-taskgroup basis we can distribute the weight for which we are
> expected to consume.
>
> This set extends the original posting with a focus on increased fairness and
> reduced convergence (to true average) time. In particular the case of large
> over-commit in the case of a distributed wake-up is a concern which is now
> fairly well addressed.
>
> Obviously everything's experimental but it should be stable/fair.
I like what you've done with it, my only worry is 10/12 where you allow
for extra updates to the global state -- I think they should be fairly
limited in number, and I can see the need for the update if we get too
far out of whack, but it is something to look at while testing this
stuff.
> TODO:
> - Validate any RT interaction
I don't think there's anything to worry about there, the only
interaction which there is between this and the rt scheduling classes is
the initial sharing of the load-avg window, but you 'cure' that in 7/12.
(I think that sysctl wants a _us postfix someplace and we thus want some
NSEC_PER_USEC multiplication in there).
> - Continue collecting/analyzing performance and fairness data
Yes please ;-), I'll try and run this on some machines as well.
> - Should the shares period just be the sched_latency?
Interesting idea.. lets keep it a separate sysctl for now for easy
tuning, if things settle down and we're still good in that range we can
consider merging them.
--
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/