Re: How can I migrate a currently running task?

From: Peter Zijlstra
Date: Sat Jun 28 2008 - 03:56:37 EST


On Sat, 2008-06-28 at 12:05 +0800, xialiang wrote:
> Quoting Robin Holt <holt@xxxxxxx>:
>
> > On Fri, Jun 27, 2008 at 09:38:05PM +0800, xialiang wrote:
> >> Quoting Bart Van Assche <bart.vanassche@xxxxxxxxx>:
> >>
> >>> On Fri, Jun 27, 2008 at 3:17 PM, åä <xiaiaxaxi@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >>>> I am working on Intel Duo Core with Linux OS 2.6.21, and I'd like to
> >>>> migrate task from one cpu to another cpu.
> >>>> In SMP systems, load_balance() function uses move_tasks() to move
> >>>> processes
> >>>> from source runqueue to local runqueue, but it does not move a currently
> >>>> running task. If I want to migrate a currently running task from source
> >>>> runqueue to local runqueue, how can I do? Any suggestion is preferred.
> >>>
> >>> Are you familiar with the glibc pthread_setaffinity_np() function
> >>> and/or the sched_setaffinity() system call ?
> >>>
> >>> Bart.
> >>>
> >>
> >> Yes. I know sched_setaffinity(), it sets cpu_mask of a task. I want to
> >> use it in a timer interrupt( scheduler_tick() ), can I?
> >
> > Don't use it from a timer handler. You can use migrate_task() to move the
> > task, but your email from a couple days ago said you wanted to move the
> > task at the head of the runqueue due to cpu heat or something like that.
> > That is a very imprecise way to move the task as any unfortunate task
> > that happens to be running when the timer tick occurs could get migrated,
> > not the one generating the work.
> >
> > I think you really want to look at the other areas of the kernel which do
> > stuff like throttling the cpu. Just moving a task off the cpu does not
> > prevent it from being used for another compute intesive load. You could
> > take the cpu offline. I guess to do that, I would use schedule_work()
> > or kthread_create() to get out of the timer context and into a regular
> > thread context then take the cpu offline from there.
> >
> > Good Luck,
> > Robin
> >
>
> I would move a task at the head of the runqueue, but I already
> know which task creates the heat. I get the profile of tasks
> beforehand. So if I find the temperature of a cpu is much higher than
> that of the other, and coincidentally the currently running task of
> the cpu is what I want to migrate. Can I migrate it in the
> scheduler_tick()?

No, you cannot migrate current from hardirq context.

> Or where should I put the migration code? Thanks!

If you want to balance temperature, the best place would be the load
balancer.

Just don't wreck all the other balance conditions.

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