[PATCH v6 13/21] sched: Admit forcefully-affined tasks into SCHED_DEADLINE
Quentin Perret
qperret at google.com
Fri May 21 06:02:01 PDT 2021
On Friday 21 May 2021 at 13:23:55 (+0200), Dietmar Eggemann wrote:
> On 21/05/2021 12:37, Will Deacon wrote:
> > On Fri, May 21, 2021 at 10:39:32AM +0200, Juri Lelli wrote:
> >> On 21/05/21 08:15, Quentin Perret wrote:
> >>> On Friday 21 May 2021 at 07:25:51 (+0200), Juri Lelli wrote:
> >>>> On 20/05/21 19:01, Will Deacon wrote:
> >>>>> On Thu, May 20, 2021 at 02:38:55PM +0200, Daniel Bristot de Oliveira wrote:
> >>>>>> On 5/20/21 12:33 PM, Quentin Perret wrote:
> >>>>>>> On Thursday 20 May 2021 at 11:16:41 (+0100), Will Deacon wrote:
> >>>>>>>> Ok, thanks for the insight. In which case, I'll go with what we discussed:
> >>>>>>>> require admission control to be disabled for sched_setattr() but allow
> >>>>>>>> execve() to a 32-bit task from a 64-bit deadline task with a warning (this
> >>>>>>>> is probably similar to CPU hotplug?).
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>> Still not sure that we can let execve go through ... It will break AC
> >>>>>>> all the same, so it should probably fail as well if AC is on IMO
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> If the cpumask of the 32-bit task is != of the 64-bit task that is executing it,
> >>>>>> the admission control needs to be re-executed, and it could fail. So I see this
> >>>>>> operation equivalent to sched_setaffinity(). This will likely be true for future
> >>>>>> schedulers that will allow arbitrary affinities (AC should run on affinity
> >>>>>> change, and could fail).
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> I would vote with Juri: "I'd go with fail hard if AC is on, let it
> >>>>>> pass if AC is off (supposedly the user knows what to do)," (also hope nobody
> >>>>>> complains until we add better support for affinity, and use this as a motivation
> >>>>>> to get back on this front).
> >>>>>
> >>>>> I can have a go at implementing it, but I don't think it's a great solution
> >>>>> and here's why:
> >>>>>
> >>>>> Failing an execve() is _very_ likely to be fatal to the application. It's
> >>>>> also very likely that the task calling execve() doesn't know whether the
> >>>>> program it's trying to execute is 32-bit or not. Consequently, if we go
> >>>>> with failing execve() then all that will happen is that people will disable
> >>>>> admission control altogether.
> >>>
> >>> Right, but only on these dumb 32bit asymmetric systems, and only if we
> >>> care about running 32bits deadline tasks -- which I seriously doubt for
> >>> the Android use-case.
> >>>
> >>> Note that running deadline tasks is also a privileged operation, it
> >>> can't be done by random apps.
> >>>
> >>>>> That has a negative impact on "pure" 64-bit
> >>>>> applications and so I think we end up with the tail wagging the dog because
> >>>>> admission control will be disabled for everybody just because there is a
> >>>>> handful of 32-bit programs which may get executed. I understand that it
> >>>>> also means that RT throttling would be disabled.
> >>>>
> >>>> Completely understand your perplexity. But how can the kernel still give
> >>>> guarantees to "pure" 64-bit applications if there are 32-bit
> >>>> applications around that essentially broke admission control when they
> >>>> were restricted to a subset of cores?
> >>>>
> >>>>> Allowing the execve() to continue with a warning is very similar to the
> >>>>> case in which all the 64-bit CPUs are hot-unplugged at the point of
> >>>>> execve(), and this is much closer to the illusion that this patch series
> >>>>> intends to provide.
> >>>>
> >>>> So, for hotplug we currently have a check that would make hotplug
> >>>> operations fail if removing a CPU would mean not enough bandwidth to run
> >>>> the currently admitted set of DEADLINE tasks.
> >>>
> >>> Aha, wasn't aware. Any pointers to that check for my education?
> >>
> >> Hotplug ends up calling dl_cpu_busy() (after the cpu being hotplugged out
> >> got removed), IIRC. So, if that fails the operation in undone.
> >
> > Interesting, thanks. Thinking about this some more, it strikes me that with
> > these silly asymmetric systems there could be an interesting additional
> > problem with hotplug and deadline tasks. Imagine the following sequence of
> > events:
> >
> > 1. All online CPUs are 32-bit-capable
> > 2. sched_setattr() admits a 32-bit deadline task
> > 3. A 64-bit-only CPU is onlined
> > 4. Some of the 32-bit-capable CPUs are offlined
> >
> > I wonder if we can get into a situation where we think we have enough
> > bandwidth available, but in reality the 32-bit task is in trouble because
> > it can't make use of the 64-bit-only CPU.
> >
> > If so, then it seems to me that admission control is really just
> > "best-effort" for 32-bit deadline tasks on these systems because it's based
> > on a snapshot in time of the available resources.
>
> IMHO DL AC is per root domain (rd). So if we have e.g. an 8 CPU system
> with aarch32_el0 eq. [0-3] then we would need 2 exclusive cpusets ([0-3]
> and [4-7]) to admit 32-bit DL tasks into [0-3] (i.e. to pass the `if
> (!cpumask_subset(span, p->cpus_ptr) ...` test in __sched_setscheduler().
>
> Trying to admit too many 32-bit DL tasks or trying to hp out a CPU[0-3]
> would lead to `Device or resource busy` in case the rd bw wouldn't be
> sufficient anymore for the set of admitted tasks. But the [0-3] DL AC
> wouldn't care about hp on CPU[4-7].
So I think Will has a point since, IIRC, the root domains get rebuilt
during hotplug. So you can imagine a case with a single root domain, but
CPUs 4-7 are offline. In this case, sched_setattr() will happily promote
a task to DL as long as its affinity mask is a superset of the rd span,
but things may get ugly when CPUs are plugged back in later on.
This looks like an existing bug though. I just tried the following on a
system with 4 CPUs:
// Create a task affined to CPU [0-2]
> while true; do echo "Hi" > /dev/null; done &
[1] 560
> mypid=$!
> taskset -p 7 $mypid
pid 560's current affinity mask: f
pid 560's new affinity mask: 7
// Try to move it DL, this should fail because of the affinity
> chrt -d -T 5000000 -P 16666666 -p 0 $mypid
chrt: failed to set pid 560's policy: Operation not permitted
// Offline CPU 3, so the rd now covers CPUs 0-2 only
> echo 0 > /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu3/online
[ 400.843830] CPU3: shutdown
[ 400.844100] psci: CPU3 killed (polled 0 ms)
// Try to admit the task again, which now succeeds
> chrt -d -T 5000000 -P 16666666 -p 0 $mypid
// Plug CPU3 back online
> echo 1 > /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu3/online
[ 408.819337] Detected PIPT I-cache on CPU3
[ 408.819642] GICv3: CPU3: found redistributor 3 region 0:0x0000000008100000
[ 408.820165] CPU3: Booted secondary processor 0x0000000003 [0x410fd083]
I don't see any easy way to fix this w/o iterating over all deadline
tasks in the rd when hotplugging a CPU back on, and blocking the hotplug
operation if it'll cause affinity issues. Urgh.
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