Re: [PATCH v2] KVM: arm64: Add KVM_CAP to control WFx trapping

From: Quentin Perret
Date: Fri Mar 22 2024 - 10:35:06 EST


On Friday 22 Mar 2024 at 14:24:35 (+0000), Quentin Perret wrote:
> On Tuesday 19 Mar 2024 at 16:43:41 (+0000), Colton Lewis wrote:
> > Add a KVM_CAP to control WFx (WFI or WFE) trapping based on scheduler
> > runqueue depth. This is so they can be passed through if the runqueue
> > is shallow or the CPU has support for direct interrupt injection. They
> > may be always trapped by setting this value to 0. Technically this
> > means traps will be cleared when the runqueue depth is 0, but that
> > implies nothing is running anyway so there is no reason to care. The
> > default value is 1 to preserve previous behavior before adding this
> > option.
>
> I recently discovered that this was enabled by default, but it's not
> obvious to me everyone will want this enabled, so I'm in favour of
> figuring out a way to turn it off (in fact we might want to make this
> feature opt in as the status quo used to be to always trap).
>
> There are a few potential issues I see with having this enabled:
>
> - a lone vcpu thread on a CPU will completely screw up the host
> scheduler's load tracking metrics if the vCPU actually spends a
> significant amount of time in WFI (the PELT signal will no longer
> be a good proxy for "how much CPU time does this task need");
>
> - the scheduler's decision will impact massively the behaviour of the
> vcpu task itself. Co-scheduling a task with a vcpu task (or not) will
> impact massively the perceived behaviour of the vcpu task in a way
> that is entirely unpredictable to the scheduler;
>
> - while the above problems might be OK for some users, I don't think
> this will always be true, e.g. when running on big.LITTLE systems the
> above sounds nightmare-ish;
>
> - the guest spending long periods of time in WFI prevents the host from
> being able to enter deeper idle states, which will impact power very
> negatively;
>
> And probably a whole bunch of other things.
>
> > Think about his option as a threshold. The instruction will be trapped
> > if the runqueue depth is higher than the threshold.
>
> So talking about the exact interface, I'm not sure exposing this to
> userspace is really appropriate. The current rq depth is next to
> impossible for userspace to control well.
>
> My gut feeling tells me we might want to gate all of this on
> PREEMPT_FULL instead, since PREEMPT_FULL is pretty much a way to say
> "I'm willing to give up scheduler tracking accuracy to gain throughput
> when I've got a task running alone on a CPU". Thoughts?

And obviously I meant s/PREEMPT_FULL/NOHZ_FULL, but hopefully that was
clear :-)