Re: [PATCH 8/8] cpufreq: amd-pstate: Drop some uses of cpudata->hw_prefcore
From: Andrea Righi
Date: Wed Aug 28 2024 - 02:23:19 EST
On Wed, Aug 28, 2024 at 10:38:45AM +0530, Gautham R. Shenoy wrote:
...
> > I had thought this was a malfunction in the behavior that it reflected the
> > current status, not the hardware /capability/.
> >
> > Which one makes more sense for userspace? In my mind the most likely
> > consumer of this information would be something a sched_ext based userspace
> > scheduler. They would need to know whether the scheduler was using
> > preferred cores; not whether the hardware supported it.
>
> The commandline parameter currently impacts only the fair sched-class
> tasks since the preference information gets used only during
> load-balancing.
>
> IMO, the same should continue with sched-ext, i.e. if the user has
> explicitly disabled prefcore support via commandline, the no sched-ext
> scheduler should use the preference information to make task placement
> decisions. However, I would like to see what the sched-ext folks have
> to say. Adding some of them to the Cc list.
IMHO it makes more sense to reflect the real state of prefcore support
from a "system" perspective, more than a "hardware" perspective, so if
it's disabled via boot command line it should show disabled.
>From a user-space scheduler perspective we should be fine either way, as
long as the ABI is clearly documented, since we also have access to
/proc/cmdline and we would be able to figure out if the user has
disabled it via cmdline (however, the preference is still to report the
actual system status).
Question: having prefcore enabled affects also the value of
scaling_max_freq? Like an `lscpu -e`, for example, would show a higher
max frequency for the specific preferred cores? (this is another useful
information from a sched_ext scheduler perspective).
Thanks,
-Andrea