Re: [PATCH v3 01/14] sched/core: uclamp: extend sched_setattr to support utilization clamping

From: Juri Lelli
Date: Tue Aug 07 2018 - 05:59:12 EST


Hi,

Minor comments below.

On 06/08/18 17:39, Patrick Bellasi wrote:

[...]

> + *
> + * Task Utilization Attributes
> + * ===========================
> + *
> + * A subset of sched_attr attributes allows to specify the utilization which
> + * should be expected by a task. These attributes allows to inform the
^
allow

> + * scheduler about the utilization boundaries within which is safe to schedule

Isn't all this more about providing hints than safety?

> + * the task. These utilization boundaries are valuable information to support
> + * scheduler decisions on both task placement and frequencies selection.
> + *
> + * @sched_util_min represents the minimum utilization
> + * @sched_util_max represents the maximum utilization
> + *
> + * Utilization is a value in the range [0..SCHED_CAPACITY_SCALE] which
> + * represents the percentage of CPU time used by a task when running at the
> + * maximum frequency on the highest capacity CPU of the system. Thus, for
> + * example, a 20% utilization task is a task running for 2ms every 10ms.
> + *
> + * A task with a min utilization value bigger then 0 is more likely to be
> + * scheduled on a CPU which can provide that bandwidth.
> + * A task with a max utilization value smaller then 1024 is more likely to be
> + * scheduled on a CPU which do not provide more then the required bandwidth.

Isn't s/bandwidth/capacity/ here, above, and in general where you use
the term "bandwidth" more appropriate? I wonder if overloading this term
(w.r.t. how is used with DEADLINE) might create confusion. In this case
we are not providing any sort of guarantees, it's a hint.

Best,

- Juri