Re: [PATCH] sched/fair: Skip newidle_balance() when an idle CPU is woken up to process an IPI

From: K Prateek Nayak
Date: Wed Jan 24 2024 - 03:35:48 EST


Hello David,

Thank you for taking a look at the patch.

On 1/24/2024 2:47 AM, David Vernet wrote:
> On Tue, Jan 23, 2024 at 10:28:31AM +0530, K Prateek Nayak wrote:
>> Hello Tim,
>>
>> On 1/23/2024 3:29 AM, Tim Chen wrote:
>>> On Fri, 2024-01-19 at 14:15 +0530, K Prateek Nayak wrote:
>>>>
>>>> diff --git a/kernel/sched/fair.c b/kernel/sched/fair.c
>>>> index b803030c3a03..1fedc7e29c98 100644
>>>> --- a/kernel/sched/fair.c
>>>> +++ b/kernel/sched/fair.c
>>>> @@ -8499,6 +8499,16 @@ done: __maybe_unused;
>>>> if (!rf)
>>>> return NULL;
>>>>
>>>> + /*
>>>> + * An idle CPU in TIF_POLLING mode might end up here after processing
>>>> + * an IPI when the sender sets the TIF_NEED_RESCHED bit and avoids
>>>> + * sending an actual IPI. In such cases, where an idle CPU was woken
>>>> + * up only to process an interrupt, without necessarily queuing a task
>>>> + * on it, skip newidle_balance() to facilitate faster idle re-entry.
>>>> + */
>>>> + if (prev == rq->idle)
>>>> + return NULL;
>>>> +
>>>
>>> Should we check the call function queue directly to detect that there is
>>> an IPI waiting to be processed? something like
>>>
>>> if (!llist_empty(&per_cpu(call_single_queue, rq->cpu)))
>>> return NULL;
>>
>> That could be a valid check too. However, if an IPI is queued right
>> after this check, the processing is still delayed since
>> newidle_balance() only bails out for scenarios when a wakeup is trying
>> to queue a new task on the CPU running the newidle_balance().
>>
>>>
>>> Could there be cases where we want to do idle balance in this code path?
>>> Say a cpu is idle and a scheduling tick came in, we may try
>>> to look for something to run on the idle cpu. Seems like after
>>> your change above, that would be skipped.
>>
>> Wouldn't scheduler_tick() do load balancing when the time comes? In my
>> testing, I did not see a case where the workloads I tested were
>> sensitive to the aspect of newidle_balance() being invoked at scheduler
>> tick. Have you come across a workload which might be sensitive to this
>> aspect that I can quickly test and verify? Meanwhile, I'll run the
>> workloads mentioned in the commit log on an Intel system to see if I
>> can spot any sensitivity to this change.
>>
>> Adding David to the thread too since HHVM seems to be one of those
>> workloads that is very sensitive to a successful newidle_balance().
>
> Thanks for the cc. FWIW, I think a lot of things are very sensitive to
> timing in newidle_balance(), but it goes both ways. For example, we had
> to revert commit e60b56e46b38 ("sched/fair: Wait before decaying
> max_newidle_lb_cost") [0] on our internal kernel because it regressed
> some workloads by causing us to load_balance() too frequently. I think
> the fix is correct in that there's no reason we shouldn't apply the ~1%
> decay / second to newidle lb cost in newidle_balance(), but by causing
> us to (correctly) decay newidle lb cost in newidle_balance(), it also
> increased CPU util rather significantly and had us spending too much
> time in load_balance().
>
> [0]: https://lore.kernel.org/all/20211019123537.17146-4-vincent.guittot@xxxxxxxxxx/
>
> On the other hand, on other hosts, we use SHARED_RUNQ to load balance as
> aggressively as possible, and those hosts would have benefited from that
> change if SHARED_RUNQ wasn't an option.
>
> My 2 cents is that I think it's impossible to make everyone happy, and I
> think the change here makes sense. If there's imbalance, it's something
> we would uncover when load_balance() is kicked off on the tick path
> anyways. I also agree with Vincent [1] that your idea / prototype of
> adding a TIF_NEED_IPI flag is an overall better solution, but this does
> seem fine to me as well in the interim.

Thank you for the detailing your explorations and giving more insights
around newidle_balance(). I'll clean up and test the TIF_NEED_IPI
prototype some more before sending out an RFC.

>
> [1]: https://lore.kernel.org/all/CAKfTPtC446Lo9CATPp7PExdkLhHQFoBuY-JMGC7agOHY4hs-Pw@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx/
>
> Thanks,
> David

--
Thanks and Regards,
Prateek