Re: [PATCH v10 12/16] sched/core: uclamp: Extend CPU's cgroup controller

From: Patrick Bellasi
Date: Tue Jun 25 2019 - 05:32:01 EST


On 24-Jun 10:52, Tejun Heo wrote:

> Hey, Patrick.

Hi,

> On Mon, Jun 24, 2019 at 06:29:06PM +0100, Patrick Bellasi wrote:
> > > I kinda wonder whether the term bandwidth is a bit confusing because
> > > it's also used for cpu.max/min. Would just calling it frequency be
> > > clearer?
> >
> > Maybe I should find a better way to express the concept above.
> >
> > I agree that bandwidth is already used by cpu.{max,min}, what I want
> > to call out is that clamps allows to enrich that concept.
> >
> > By hinting the scheduler on min/max required utilization we can better
> > defined the amount of actual CPU cycles required/allowed.
> > That's a bit more precise bandwidth control compared to just rely on
> > temporal runnable/period limits.
>
> I see. I wonder whether it's overloading the same term too subtly
> tho. It's great to document how they interact but it *might* be
> easier for readers if a different term is used even if the meaning is
> essentially the same. Anyways, it's a nitpick. Please feel free to
> ignore.

Got it, will try come up with a better description in the v11 to avoid
confusion and better explain the "improvements" without polluting too
much the original concept.

> > > > + tg = css_tg(of_css(of));
> > > > + if (tg == &root_task_group) {
> > > > + ret = -EINVAL;
> > > > + goto out;
> > > > + }
> > >
> > > I don't think you need the above check.
> >
> > Don't we want to forbid attributes tuning from the root group?
>
> Yeah, that's enforced by NOT_ON_ROOT flag, right?

Oh right, since we don't show them we can't write them :)

> > > So, uclamp.max limits the maximum freq% can get and uclamp.min limits
> > > hte maximum freq% protection can get in the subtree. Let's say
> > > uclamp.max is 50% and uclamp.min is 100%.
> >
> > That's not possible, in the current implementation we always enforce
> > the limit (uclamp.max) to be _not smaller_ then the protection
> > (uclamp.min).
> >
> > Indeed, in principle, it does not make sense to ask for a minimum
> > utilization (i.e. frequency boosting) which is higher then the
> > maximum allowed utilization (i.e. frequency capping).
>
> Yeah, I'm trying to explain actually it does.
>
> > > It means that protection is not limited but the actual freq% is
> > > limited upto 50%, which isn't necessarily invalid.
> > > For a simple example, a user might be saying
> > > that they want to get whatever protection they can get from its parent
> > > but wanna limit eventual freq at 50% and it isn't too difficult to
> > > imagine cases where the two knobs are configured separately especially
> > > configuration is being managed hierarchically / automatically.
> >
> > That's not my understanding, in v10 by default when we create a
> > subgroup we assign it uclamp.min=0%, meaning that we don't boost
> > frequencies.
> >
> > It seems instead that you are asking to set uclamp.min=100% by
> > default, so that the effective value will give us whatever the father
> > allow. Is that correct?
>
> No, the defaults are fine. I'm trying to say that min/max
> configurations don't need to be coupled like this and there are valid
> use cases where the configured min is higher than max when
> configurations are nested and managed automatically.
>
> Limits always trump protection in effect of course but please don't
> limit what can be configured.

Got it, thanks!

Will fix it in v11.

> Thanks.
>
> --
> tejun

Cheers,
Patrick

--
#include <best/regards.h>

Patrick Bellasi