Re: [RFC PATCH] sched: wakeup buddy
From: Michael Wang
Date: Thu Feb 28 2013 - 03:15:09 EST
On 02/28/2013 04:04 PM, Mike Galbraith wrote:
> On Thu, 2013-02-28 at 15:40 +0800, Michael Wang wrote:
>> Hi, Mike
>>
>> Thanks for your reply.
>>
>> On 02/28/2013 03:18 PM, Mike Galbraith wrote:
>>> On Thu, 2013-02-28 at 14:38 +0800, Michael Wang wrote:
>>>
>>>> + /*
>>>> + * current is the only task on rq and it is
>>>> + * going to sleep, current cpu will be a nice
>>>> + * candidate for p to run on.
>>>> + */
>>>
>>> The sync hint only means it might be going to sleep soon, and even then,
>>> there can still be enough execution overlap to be a win to schedule
>>> cross core. Sched pipe numbers will always be much prettier if you do
>>> wakeup cpu affine, as it's ~100% scheduler and ~100% sync.
>>
>> Hmm.. so it's the comparison between 'cache benefit - execution overlap'
>> and 'latency - execution overlap'?
>
> Yeah. You'll always lose power cross core, and throughput breakeven and
> win depends on convertible overlap, and how much L2 miss etc costs. For
> sched pipe there is no win, but for other sync hint users there is.
>
>> I could not estimate how many latency will be added to wait for current
>> going to sleep (it should be faster than access cold data, isn't it?),
>> but I really like the cache benefit, unless sync doesn't means current
>> is going to sleep every time, but that's the promise of WF_SYNC, isn't it?
>
> It would be nice if it _were_ a promise, but it is not, it's a hint.
Bad to know :(
Should we fix it or this is by designed? The comments after WF_SYNC
cheated me...
Regards,
Michael Wang
>
>> You may lose
>>> a lot on other stuff if you interpret the hint as gospel truth.
>>
>> Could you please give more details on this point?
>
> tbench, mysql+oltp, on and on use the sync hint, many things jabber on
> localhost, use the sync hint, and have been shown in cold hard numbers
> to benefit, some things massively from cross core scheduling. You lose
> for sure at extreme context rates, but it has to be pretty darn high to
> be a guaranteed loser.
>
> That's why select_idle_sibling() is so very damn annoying.
>>> IMHO, sched pipe is a "how fat have I become" benchmark, not "how well
>>> do I perform". The scheduler performs well when it makes more work
>>> happen. Playing ping-pong with yourself is _exercise_, not a job :)
>>
>> That's right, may be I'm using the wrong description, it's the ops/sec
>> which has been doubled, that means 'fat', correct?
>
> In this case, it means you're not running a kernel with nohz on a chain,
> running two schedulers is more expensive than running one, and missing
> L2 each and every time hurts very badly when the load is ultra skinny.
>
> -Mike
>
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