Re: [PATCH] timers: Exclude isolated cpus from timer migation
From: Frederic Weisbecker
Date: Thu Apr 10 2025 - 11:00:29 EST
Le Thu, Apr 10, 2025 at 04:46:06PM +0200, Thomas Gleixner a écrit :
> On Thu, Apr 10 2025 at 16:20, Frederic Weisbecker wrote:
> > Le Thu, Apr 10, 2025 at 03:56:02PM +0200, Gabriele Monaco a écrit :
> >> On Thu, 2025-04-10 at 15:27 +0200, Frederic Weisbecker wrote:
> >> > But how do we handle global timers that have been initialized and
> >> > queued from
> >> > isolated CPUs?
> >>
> >> I need to sketch a bit more the solution but the rough idea is:
> >> 1. isolated CPUs don't pull remote timers
> >
> > That's the "easy" part.
> >
> >> 2. isolated CPUs ignore their global timers and let others pull them
> >> perhaps with some more logic to avoid it expiring
> >
> > This will always involve added overhead because you may need to wake up
> > a CPU upon enqueueing a global timer to make sure it will be handled.
> > At least when all other CPUs are idle.
>
> Which is true for the remote enqueue path too. But you inflict the
> handling of this muck into the generic enqueue path as you have to turn
> a 'global' timer into a remote timer right in the hot path.
Fair point.
>
> When you enqueue it in the regular way on the 'global' list, then you
> can delegate the expiry to a remote CPU on return to user, no?
If you're referring to nohz_full, it's not a problem there because
it's already considered as an idle CPU.
But for isolcpus alone that notification is necessary. I'm not sure
if return to user is the best place. I hear that some kernel threads
can spend a lot of time doing things...
But to begin with, is this all really necessary for isolcpus users?
--
Frederic Weisbecker
SUSE Labs