Re: desktop and multimedia as an afterthought?

From: Kasper Sandberg
Date: Tue Jul 13 2004 - 06:12:46 EST


On Mon, 2004-07-12 at 17:24 -0700, Andrew Morton wrote:
> Paul Davis <paul@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >
> > >It's too bad that the multimedia community didn't participate
> > >much during the 2.5.xx development leading up to 2.6.0. If they
> > >had done so, the situation might be different today. Fortunately,
> > >fixing up the multimedia problems isn't too risky to do during
> > >the stable 2.6.xx series.
> >
> > I regret that this description is persisting here. "We" (the audio
> > developer community) did not participate because it was made clear
> > that our needs were not going to be considered. We were told that the
> > preemption patch was sufficient to provide "low latency", and that
> > rescheduling points dotted all over the place was bad engineering
> > (probably true). With this as the pre-rendered verdict, there's not a
> > lot of point in dedicating time to tracking a situation that clearly
> > is not going to work.
>
> No, this is wrong. 2.6+preempt can satisfy your latency requirements
> without any scheduling points. All it requires is that the long-held locks
> be addressed. I've already done a metric ton of work in that area (notably
> removal of the buffer_head LRUs and rewriting the truncate code) but more
> apparently remains to be done. We know that reiserfs has problems.
>
> But what can I do? I set up a preempt-on-ext3 test box, thrash the crap
> out of it and see 300 usecs worst-case latency. So I am left empty-handed,
> wondering what on earth is happening out there.
>
> I am deeply skeptical about claims that autoregulated swappiness can make
> any difference.
>
> I am deeply skeptical about claims that CPU scheduler changes make any
> difference. A scheduler change shouldn't improve responsiveness of
> !SCHED_OTHER tasks at all, so perhaps there are application priority
> inversion problems, or applications aren't setting SCHED_FIFO/RR correctly.
> I do not know.
sorry to interrupt, and i dont know if i get this right, but i have been
using nick piggins patch for quite some time, and it really does
magic :)
>
> I am also fairly skeptical about claims that voluntary-preempt helps,
> because it only pops a couple of locks, and I doubt that testers are
> hitting the code paths which those changes address anyway.
>
> So Something Is Up, and I don't know what it is.
>
> Please double-check that there are no priority inversion problems and that
> the application is correctly setting the scheduling policy and that it is
> mlocking everything appropriately.
>
> And please ensure that people are setting xrun_debug, and are sending
> reports.
>
> > The kernel is not going to provide adequate latency for multimedia
> > needs without either (1) latency issues being front and center in
> > every kernel developer's mind, which seems unlikely and/or (2)
> > conditional rescheduling points added to the kernel, which appears to
> > require non-mainstreamed patches.
> >
>
> Nope, the conditional rescheduling points provide zero benefit on a
> preemptible kernel.
>
> Something weird is happening, I don't know what it is, I cannot reproduce
> it and I need help understanding what it is, OK? The sooner we can do
> that, the sooner it gets fixed up.
> -
> To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
> the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
> Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/
>

-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/