Re: [PATCH v2 3/3] X86: Add a thread cpu time implementation to vDSO

From: Chris Mason
Date: Fri Dec 19 2014 - 12:43:30 EST




On Fri, Dec 19, 2014 at 11:48 AM, Andy Lutomirski <luto@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Fri, Dec 19, 2014 at 3:23 AM, Peter Zijlstra <peterz@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Thu, Dec 18, 2014 at 04:22:59PM -0800, Andy Lutomirski wrote:
Bad news: this patch is incorrect, I think. Take a look at
update_rq_clock -- it does fancy things involving irq time and
paravirt steal time. So this patch could result in extremely
non-monotonic results.

Yeah, I'm not sure how (and if) we could make all that work :/

I obviously can't comment on what Facebook needs, but if I were
rigging something up to profile my own code*, I'd want a count of
elapsed time, including user, system, and probably interrupt as well.
I would probably not want to count time during which I'm not
scheduled, and I would also probably not want to count steal time.
The latter makes any implementation kind of nasty.

The API presumably doesn't need to be any particular clock id for
clock_gettime, and it may not even need to be clock_gettime at all.

Is perf self-monitoring good enough for this? If not, can we make it
good enough?

* I do this today using CLOCK_MONOTONIC

The clock_gettime calls are used for a wide variety of things, but usually they are trying to instrument how much CPU the application is using. So for example with the HHVM interpreter they have a ratio of the number of hhvm instructions they were able to execute in N seconds of cputime. This gets used to optimize the HHVM implementation and can be used as a push blocking counter (code can't go in if it makes it slower).

Wall time isn't a great representation of this because it includes factors that might be outside a given HHVM patch, but it sounds like we're saying almost the same thing.

I'm not familiar with the perf self monitoring?

-chris




--
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/