Re: [PATCH v2] schedutil: Allow cpufreq requests to be made even when kthread kicked
From: Juri Lelli
Date: Mon May 21 2018 - 05:03:04 EST
On 21/05/18 10:29, Rafael J. Wysocki wrote:
> On Mon, May 21, 2018 at 7:14 AM, Viresh Kumar <viresh.kumar@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > On 18-05-18, 11:55, Joel Fernandes (Google.) wrote:
> >> From: "Joel Fernandes (Google)" <joel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> >>
> >> Currently there is a chance of a schedutil cpufreq update request to be
> >> dropped if there is a pending update request. This pending request can
> >> be delayed if there is a scheduling delay of the irq_work and the wake
> >> up of the schedutil governor kthread.
> >>
> >> A very bad scenario is when a schedutil request was already just made,
> >> such as to reduce the CPU frequency, then a newer request to increase
> >> CPU frequency (even sched deadline urgent frequency increase requests)
> >> can be dropped, even though the rate limits suggest that its Ok to
> >> process a request. This is because of the way the work_in_progress flag
> >> is used.
> >>
> >> This patch improves the situation by allowing new requests to happen
> >> even though the old one is still being processed. Note that in this
> >> approach, if an irq_work was already issued, we just update next_freq
> >> and don't bother to queue another request so there's no extra work being
> >> done to make this happen.
> >
> > Now that this isn't an RFC anymore, you shouldn't have added below
> > paragraph here. It could go to the comments section though.
> >
> >> I had brought up this issue at the OSPM conference and Claudio had a
> >> discussion RFC with an alternate approach [1]. I prefer the approach as
> >> done in the patch below since it doesn't need any new flags and doesn't
> >> cause any other extra overhead.
> >>
> >> [1] https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/10384261/
> >>
> >> LGTMed-by: Viresh Kumar <viresh.kumar@xxxxxxxxxx>
> >> LGTMed-by: Juri Lelli <juri.lelli@xxxxxxxxxx>
> >
> > Looks like a Tag you just invented ? :)
>
> Yeah.
>
> The LGTM from Juri can be converned into an ACK silently IMO. That
Sure! :)
Thanks,
- Juri