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author | Michael Wang <wangyun@linux.vnet.ibm.com> | 2013-07-04 12:55:51 +0800 |
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committer | Ingo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org> | 2013-07-23 12:18:41 +0200 |
commit | 62470419e993f8d9d93db0effd3af4296ecb79a5 (patch) | |
tree | 3702386db7d904f8e5163a812f4d5352bc9b93a1 /kernel/sched | |
parent | 685207963be973fbb73550db6edaf920a283e1a7 (diff) | |
download | blackbird-op-linux-62470419e993f8d9d93db0effd3af4296ecb79a5.tar.gz blackbird-op-linux-62470419e993f8d9d93db0effd3af4296ecb79a5.zip |
sched: Implement smarter wake-affine logic
The wake-affine scheduler feature is currently always trying to pull
the wakee close to the waker. In theory this should be beneficial if
the waker's CPU caches hot data for the wakee, and it's also beneficial
in the extreme ping-pong high context switch rate case.
Testing shows it can benefit hackbench up to 15%.
However, the feature is somewhat blind, from which some workloads
such as pgbench suffer. It's also time-consuming algorithmically.
Testing shows it can damage pgbench up to 50% - far more than the
benefit it brings in the best case.
So wake-affine should be smarter and it should realize when to
stop its thankless effort at trying to find a suitable CPU to wake on.
This patch introduces 'wakee_flips', which will be increased each
time the task flips (switches) its wakee target.
So a high 'wakee_flips' value means the task has more than one
wakee, and the bigger the number, the higher the wakeup frequency.
Now when making the decision on whether to pull or not, pay attention to
the wakee with a high 'wakee_flips', pulling such a task may benefit
the wakee. Also imply that the waker will face cruel competition later,
it could be very cruel or very fast depends on the story behind
'wakee_flips', waker therefore suffers.
Furthermore, if waker also has a high 'wakee_flips', that implies that
multiple tasks rely on it, then waker's higher latency will damage all
of them, so pulling wakee seems to be a bad deal.
Thus, when 'waker->wakee_flips / wakee->wakee_flips' becomes
higher and higher, the cost of pulling seems to be worse and worse.
The patch therefore helps the wake-affine feature to stop its pulling
work when:
wakee->wakee_flips > factor &&
waker->wakee_flips > (factor * wakee->wakee_flips)
The 'factor' here is the number of CPUs in the current CPU's NUMA node,
so a bigger node will lead to more pulling since the trial becomes more
severe.
After applying the patch, pgbench shows up to 40% improvements and no regressions.
Tested with 12 cpu x86 server and tip 3.10.0-rc7.
The percentages in the final column highlight the areas with the biggest wins,
all other areas improved as well:
pgbench base smart
| db_size | clients | tps | | tps |
+---------+---------+-------+ +-------+
| 22 MB | 1 | 10598 | | 10796 |
| 22 MB | 2 | 21257 | | 21336 |
| 22 MB | 4 | 41386 | | 41622 |
| 22 MB | 8 | 51253 | | 57932 |
| 22 MB | 12 | 48570 | | 54000 |
| 22 MB | 16 | 46748 | | 55982 | +19.75%
| 22 MB | 24 | 44346 | | 55847 | +25.93%
| 22 MB | 32 | 43460 | | 54614 | +25.66%
| 7484 MB | 1 | 8951 | | 9193 |
| 7484 MB | 2 | 19233 | | 19240 |
| 7484 MB | 4 | 37239 | | 37302 |
| 7484 MB | 8 | 46087 | | 50018 |
| 7484 MB | 12 | 42054 | | 48763 |
| 7484 MB | 16 | 40765 | | 51633 | +26.66%
| 7484 MB | 24 | 37651 | | 52377 | +39.11%
| 7484 MB | 32 | 37056 | | 51108 | +37.92%
| 15 GB | 1 | 8845 | | 9104 |
| 15 GB | 2 | 19094 | | 19162 |
| 15 GB | 4 | 36979 | | 36983 |
| 15 GB | 8 | 46087 | | 49977 |
| 15 GB | 12 | 41901 | | 48591 |
| 15 GB | 16 | 40147 | | 50651 | +26.16%
| 15 GB | 24 | 37250 | | 52365 | +40.58%
| 15 GB | 32 | 36470 | | 50015 | +37.14%
Signed-off-by: Michael Wang <wangyun@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Cc: Mike Galbraith <efault@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org>
Link: http://lkml.kernel.org/r/51D50057.9000809@linux.vnet.ibm.com
[ Improved the changelog. ]
Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'kernel/sched')
-rw-r--r-- | kernel/sched/fair.c | 47 |
1 files changed, 47 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/kernel/sched/fair.c b/kernel/sched/fair.c index 765d87acdf05..860063a8c849 100644 --- a/kernel/sched/fair.c +++ b/kernel/sched/fair.c @@ -3017,6 +3017,23 @@ static unsigned long cpu_avg_load_per_task(int cpu) return 0; } +static void record_wakee(struct task_struct *p) +{ + /* + * Rough decay (wiping) for cost saving, don't worry + * about the boundary, really active task won't care + * about the loss. + */ + if (jiffies > current->wakee_flip_decay_ts + HZ) { + current->wakee_flips = 0; + current->wakee_flip_decay_ts = jiffies; + } + + if (current->last_wakee != p) { + current->last_wakee = p; + current->wakee_flips++; + } +} static void task_waking_fair(struct task_struct *p) { @@ -3037,6 +3054,7 @@ static void task_waking_fair(struct task_struct *p) #endif se->vruntime -= min_vruntime; + record_wakee(p); } #ifdef CONFIG_FAIR_GROUP_SCHED @@ -3155,6 +3173,28 @@ static inline unsigned long effective_load(struct task_group *tg, int cpu, #endif +static int wake_wide(struct task_struct *p) +{ + int factor = nr_cpus_node(cpu_to_node(smp_processor_id())); + + /* + * Yeah, it's the switching-frequency, could means many wakee or + * rapidly switch, use factor here will just help to automatically + * adjust the loose-degree, so bigger node will lead to more pull. + */ + if (p->wakee_flips > factor) { + /* + * wakee is somewhat hot, it needs certain amount of cpu + * resource, so if waker is far more hot, prefer to leave + * it alone. + */ + if (current->wakee_flips > (factor * p->wakee_flips)) + return 1; + } + + return 0; +} + static int wake_affine(struct sched_domain *sd, struct task_struct *p, int sync) { s64 this_load, load; @@ -3164,6 +3204,13 @@ static int wake_affine(struct sched_domain *sd, struct task_struct *p, int sync) unsigned long weight; int balanced; + /* + * If we wake multiple tasks be careful to not bounce + * ourselves around too much. + */ + if (wake_wide(p)) + return 0; + idx = sd->wake_idx; this_cpu = smp_processor_id(); prev_cpu = task_cpu(p); |