[PATCH v5 00/18] timer: Move from a push remote at enqueue to a pull at expiry model
From: Anna-Maria Behnsen
Date: Wed Mar 01 2023 - 09:18:31 EST
Placing timers at enqueue time on a target CPU based on dubious heuristics
does not make any sense:
1) Most timer wheel timers are canceled or rearmed before they expire.
2) The heuristics to predict which CPU will be busy when the timer expires
are wrong by definition.
So placing the timers at enqueue wastes precious cycles.
The proper solution to this problem is to always queue the timers on the
local CPU and allow the non pinned timers to be pulled onto a busy CPU at
expiry time.
Therefore split the timer storage into local pinned and global timers:
Local pinned timers are always expired on the CPU on which they have been
queued. Global timers can be expired on any CPU.
As long as a CPU is busy it expires both local and global timers. When a
CPU goes idle it arms for the first expiring local timer. If the first
expiring pinned (local) timer is before the first expiring movable timer,
then no action is required because the CPU will wake up before the first
movable timer expires. If the first expiring movable timer is before the
first expiring pinned (local) timer, then this timer is queued into a idle
timerqueue and eventually expired by some other active CPU.
To avoid global locking the timerqueues are implemented as a hierarchy. The
lowest level of the hierarchy holds the CPUs. The CPUs are associated to
groups of 8, which are seperated per node. If more than one CPU group
exist, then a second level in the hierarchy collects the groups. Depending
on the size of the system more than 2 levels are required. Each group has a
"migrator" which checks the timerqueue during the tick for remote expirable
timers.
If the last CPU in a group goes idle it reports the first expiring event in
the group up to the next group(s) in the hierarchy. If the last CPU goes
idle it arms its timer for the first system wide expiring timer to ensure
that no timer event is missed.
Testing
~~~~~~~
The impact of wasting cycles during enqueue by using the heuristic in
contrast to always queueing the timer on the local CPU was measured with a
micro benchmark. Therefore a timer is enqueued and dequeued in a loop with
1000 repetitions on a isolated CPU. The time the loop takes is measured. A
quater of the remaining CPUs was kept busy. This measurement was repeated
several times. With the patch queue the average duration was reduced by
approximately 25%.
145ns plain v6
109ns v6 with patch queue
Furthermore the impact of residence in deep idle states of an idle system
was investigated. The patch queue doesn't downgrade this behavior.
During testing on a mostly idle machine a ping pong game could be observed:
a process_timeout timer is expired remotely on a non idle CPU. Then the CPU
where the schedule_timeout() was executed to enqueue the timer comes out of
idle and restarts the timer using schedule_timeout() and goes back to idle
again. This is due to the fair scheduler which tries to keep the task on
the CPU which it previously executed on.
Next Steps
~~~~~~~~~~
Simple deferrable timers are no longer required as they can be converted to
global timers. If a CPU goes idle, a formerly deferrable timer will not
prevent the CPU to sleep as long as possible. Only the last migrator CPU
has to take care of them. Deferrable timers with timer pinned flags needs
to be expired on the specified CPU but must not prevent CPU from going
idle. They require their own timer base which is never taken into account
when calculating the next expiry time. This conversation and required
cleanup will be done in a follow up series.
v4..v5:
- address review feedback of Frederic Weisbecker
- fix issue with group timer update after remote expiry
v3..v4:
- address review feedback of Frederic Weisbecker
- address kernel test robot fallout
- Move patch 16 "add_timer_on(): Make sure callers have TIMER_PINNED
flag" at the begin of the queue to prevent timers to end up in global
timer base when they were queued using add_timer_on()
- Fix some comments and typos
v2..v3: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20170418111102.490432548@xxxxxxxxxxxxx/
- Minimize usage of locks by storing data using atomic_cmpxchg() for
migrator information and information about active cpus.
Thanks,
Anna-Maria
Anna-Maria Behnsen (15):
tick-sched: Warn when next tick seems to be in the past
timer: Add comment to get_next_timer_interrupt() description
timer: Move store of next event into __next_timer_interrupt()
timer: Split next timer interrupt logic
add_timer_on(): Make sure callers have TIMER_PINNED flag
timers: Ease code in run_local_timers()
timers: Create helper function to forward timer base clk
timer: Keep the pinned timers separate from the others
timer: Retrieve next expiry of pinned/non-pinned timers seperately
timer: Split out "get next timer interrupt" functionality
timer: Add get next timer interrupt functionality for remote CPUs
timer: Check if timers base is handled already
timer: Implement the hierarchical pull model
timer_migration: Add tracepoints
timer: Always queue timers on the local CPU
Richard Cochran (linutronix GmbH) (2):
timer: Restructure internal locking
tick/sched: Split out jiffies update helper function
Thomas Gleixner (1):
timer: Rework idle logic
arch/x86/kernel/tsc_sync.c | 3 +-
drivers/char/random.c | 2 +-
include/linux/cpuhotplug.h | 1 +
include/linux/timer.h | 5 +-
include/trace/events/timer_migration.h | 277 +++++
kernel/time/Makefile | 3 +
kernel/time/clocksource.c | 2 +-
kernel/time/tick-internal.h | 9 +
kernel/time/tick-sched.c | 20 +-
kernel/time/timer.c | 370 +++++--
kernel/time/timer_migration.c | 1279 ++++++++++++++++++++++++
kernel/time/timer_migration.h | 123 +++
kernel/workqueue.c | 15 +-
13 files changed, 2017 insertions(+), 92 deletions(-)
create mode 100644 include/trace/events/timer_migration.h
create mode 100644 kernel/time/timer_migration.c
create mode 100644 kernel/time/timer_migration.h
--
2.30.2