Re: HT (Hyper Threading) aware process scheduling doesn't work asit should

From: Henrique de Moraes Holschuh
Date: Thu Nov 03 2011 - 08:42:50 EST


On Thu, 03 Nov 2011, Artem S. Tashkinov wrote:
> So, now the question is whether VCPUs quite an illogical enumeration is good for
> power users as I highly doubt that 0-4, 1-5, 2-6 and 3-7 order can be easily
> remembered and grasped. Besides neither top, not htop are HT aware so just by

Power users are directed to hwloc. There's a reason I pointed you to it.
hwloc would have told you upfront your real memory/cache/core/thread
topology, either in text mode, through graphics, or as XML:

Here's hwloc's "lstopo" text output for my single-processor X5550:

Machine (6029MB) + Socket #0 + L3 #0 (8192KB)
L2 #0 (256KB) + L1 #0 (32KB) + Core #0
PU #0 (phys=0)
PU #1 (phys=4)
L2 #1 (256KB) + L1 #1 (32KB) + Core #1
PU #2 (phys=1)
PU #3 (phys=5)
L2 #2 (256KB) + L1 #2 (32KB) + Core #2
PU #4 (phys=2)
PU #5 (phys=6)
L2 #3 (256KB) + L1 #3 (32KB) + Core #3
PU #6 (phys=3)
PU #7 (phys=7)

http://www.open-mpi.org/projects/hwloc/

and examples/documentation:
http://www.open-mpi.org/projects/hwloc/doc/v1.3/

Most likely, your distro will have it packaged.

You should also try the turbostat tool I pointed you at, it lives in the
"tools/power/x86" folder inside the kernel source, and will help you track
processor core performance a lot better than top/htop (but not what is using
the cores):

(turbostat output):
core CPU %c0 GHz TSC %c1 %c3 %c6 %pc3 %pc6
0.29 1.60 2.67 0.94 12.63 86.14 0.00 0.00
0 0 0.31 1.60 2.67 1.62 3.21 94.87 0.00 0.00
0 4 0.48 1.61 2.67 1.45 3.21 94.87 0.00 0.00
1 1 0.18 1.60 2.67 0.91 2.17 96.75 0.00 0.00
1 5 0.24 1.60 2.67 0.84 2.17 96.75 0.00 0.00
2 2 0.03 1.60 2.67 0.07 0.16 99.74 0.00 0.00
2 6 0.02 1.60 2.67 0.08 0.16 99.74 0.00 0.00
3 3 1.00 1.60 2.67 0.83 44.97 53.20 0.00 0.00
3 7 0.09 1.60 2.67 1.75 44.97 53.20 0.00 0.00

Which tells me my system spends most of its time sleeping. You will notice
it does tell you upfront that core 0 is CPUs 0 and 4.

--
"One disk to rule them all, One disk to find them. One disk to bring
them all and in the darkness grind them. In the Land of Redmond
where the shadows lie." -- The Silicon Valley Tarot
Henrique Holschuh
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