[PATCH v2 11/11] sched: replace capacity by activity
Preeti U Murthy
preeti at linux.vnet.ibm.com
Sun Jun 1 23:21:10 PDT 2014
On 05/29/2014 07:25 PM, Peter Zijlstra wrote:
> On Fri, May 23, 2014 at 05:53:05PM +0200, Vincent Guittot wrote:
>> The scheduler tries to compute how many tasks a group of CPUs can handle by
>> assuming that a task's load is SCHED_LOAD_SCALE and a CPU capacity is
>> SCHED_POWER_SCALE.
>> We can now have a better idea of the utilization of a group fo CPUs thanks to
>> group_actitvity and deduct how many capacity is still available.
>>
>> Signed-off-by: Vincent Guittot <vincent.guittot at linaro.org>
>> ---
>
> Right, so as Preeti already mentioned, this wrecks SMT. It also seems to
> loose the aggressive spread, where we want to run 1 task on each 'core'
> before we start 'balancing'.
True. I just profiled the ebizzy runs and found that ebizzy threads were
being packed onto a single core which is SMT-8 capable before spreading.
This was a 6 core, SMT-8 machine. So for instance if I run 8 threads of
ebizzy. the load balancing as record by perf sched record showed that
two cores were packed upto 3 ebizzy threads and one core ran two ebizzy
threads while the rest of the 3 cores were idle.
I am unable to understand which part of this patch is aiding packing to
a core. There is this check in this patch right?
if (sgs->group_capacity < 0)
return true;
which should ideally prevent such packing? Because irrespective of the
number of SMT threads, the capacity of a core is unchanged. And in the
above scenario, we have 6 tasks on 3 cores. So shouldn't the above check
have caught it?
Regards
Preeti U Murthy
>
> So I think we should be able to fix this by setting PREFER_SIBLING on
> the SMT domain, that way we'll get single tasks running on each SMT
> domain before filling them up until capacity.
>
> Now, its been a while since I looked at PREFER_SIBLING, and I've not yet
> looked at what your patch does to it, but it seems to me that that is
> the first direction we should look for an answer to this.
>
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