[PATCH v2 11/11] sched: replace capacity by activity
Peter Zijlstra
peterz at infradead.org
Thu May 29 23:34:02 PDT 2014
On Thu, May 29, 2014 at 09:56:24PM +0200, Vincent Guittot wrote:
> On 29 May 2014 16:02, Peter Zijlstra <peterz at infradead.org> wrote:
> > On Fri, May 23, 2014 at 05:53:05PM +0200, Vincent Guittot wrote:
> >> @@ -6052,8 +6006,8 @@ static inline void update_sd_lb_stats(struct lb_env *env, struct sd_lb_stats *sd
> >> * with a large weight task outweighs the tasks on the system).
> >> */
> >> if (prefer_sibling && sds->local &&
> >> - sds->local_stat.group_has_capacity)
> >> - sgs->group_capacity = min(sgs->group_capacity, 1U);
> >> + sds->local_stat.group_capacity > 0)
> >> + sgs->group_capacity = min(sgs->group_capacity, 1L);
> >>
> >> if (update_sd_pick_busiest(env, sds, sg, sgs)) {
> >> sds->busiest = sg;
> >> @@ -6228,7 +6182,7 @@ static inline void calculate_imbalance(struct lb_env *env, struct sd_lb_stats *s
> >> * have to drop below capacity to reach cpu-load equilibrium.
> >> */
> >> load_above_capacity =
> >> - (busiest->sum_nr_running - busiest->group_capacity);
> >> + (busiest->sum_nr_running - busiest->group_weight);
> >>
> >> load_above_capacity *= (SCHED_LOAD_SCALE * SCHED_POWER_SCALE);
> >> load_above_capacity /= busiest->group_power;
> >
> > I think you just broke PREFER_SIBLING here..
>
> you mean by replacing the capacity which was reflecting the number of
> core for SMT by the group_weight ?
Right to in the first hunk we lower group_capacity to 1 when prefer_sibling,
then in the second hunk, you replace that group_capacity usage with
group_weight.
With the end result that prefer_sibling is now ineffective.
That said, I fudged the prefer_sibling usage into the capacity logic,
mostly because I could and it was already how the SMT stuff was working.
But there is no reason we should continue to intertwine these two
things.
So I think it would be good to have a patch that implements
prefer_sibling on nr_running separate from the existing capacity bits,
and then convert the remaining capacity bits to utilization (or activity
or whatever you did call it, see Morton's comments etc.).
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