Re: [PATCH v3 05/22] sched: remove domain iterations in fork/exec/wake

From: Alex Shi
Date: Fri Jan 11 2013 - 09:56:26 EST


On 01/11/2013 04:01 PM, li guang wrote:
> å 2013-01-11äç 10:26 +0530ïPreeti U Murthyåéï
>> Hi Morten,Alex
>>
>> On 01/09/2013 11:51 PM, Morten Rasmussen wrote:
>>> On Sat, Jan 05, 2013 at 08:37:34AM +0000, Alex Shi wrote:
>>>> Guess the search cpu from bottom to up in domain tree come from
>>>> commit 3dbd5342074a1e sched: multilevel sbe sbf, the purpose is
>>>> balancing over tasks on all level domains.
>>>>
>>>> This balancing cost much if there has many domain/groups in a large
>>>> system. And force spreading task among different domains may cause
>>>> performance issue due to bad locality.
>>>>
>>>> If we remove this code, we will get quick fork/exec/wake, plus better
>>>> balancing among whole system, that also reduce migrations in future
>>>> load balancing.
>>>>
>>>> This patch increases 10+% performance of hackbench on my 4 sockets
>>>> NHM and SNB machines.
>>>>
>>>> Signed-off-by: Alex Shi <alex.shi@xxxxxxxxx>
>>>> ---
>>>> kernel/sched/fair.c | 20 +-------------------
>>>> 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 19 deletions(-)
>>>>
>>>> diff --git a/kernel/sched/fair.c b/kernel/sched/fair.c
>>>> index ecfbf8e..895a3f4 100644
>>>> --- a/kernel/sched/fair.c
>>>> +++ b/kernel/sched/fair.c
>>>> @@ -3364,15 +3364,9 @@ select_task_rq_fair(struct task_struct *p, int sd_flag, int wake_flags)
>>>> goto unlock;
>>>> }
>>>>
>>>> - while (sd) {
>>>> + if (sd) {
>>>> int load_idx = sd->forkexec_idx;
>>>> struct sched_group *group;
>>>> - int weight;
>>>> -
>>>> - if (!(sd->flags & sd_flag)) {
>>>> - sd = sd->child;
>>>> - continue;
>>>> - }
>>>>
>>>> if (sd_flag & SD_BALANCE_WAKE)
>>>> load_idx = sd->wake_idx;
>>>> @@ -3382,18 +3376,6 @@ select_task_rq_fair(struct task_struct *p, int sd_flag, int wake_flags)
>>>> goto unlock;
>>>>
>>>> new_cpu = find_idlest_cpu(group, p, cpu);
>>>> -
>>>> - /* Now try balancing at a lower domain level of new_cpu */
>>>> - cpu = new_cpu;
>>>> - weight = sd->span_weight;
>>>> - sd = NULL;
>>>> - for_each_domain(cpu, tmp) {
>>>> - if (weight <= tmp->span_weight)
>>>> - break;
>>>> - if (tmp->flags & sd_flag)
>>>> - sd = tmp;
>>>> - }
>>>> - /* while loop will break here if sd == NULL */
>>>
>>> I agree that this should be a major optimization. I just can't figure
>>> out why the existing recursive search for an idle cpu switches to the
>>> new cpu near the end and then starts a search for an idle cpu in the new
>>> cpu's domain. Is this to handle some exotic sched domain configurations?
>>> If so, they probably wouldn't work with your optimizations.
>>
>> Let me explain my understanding of why the recursive search is the way
>> it is.
>>
>> _________________________ sd0
>> | |
>> | ___sd1__ ___sd2__ |
>> | | | | | |
>> | | sgx | | sga | |
>> | | sgy | | sgb | |
>> | |________| |________| |
>> |_________________________|
>>
>> What the current recursive search is doing is (assuming we start with
>> sd0-the top level sched domain whose flags are rightly set). we find
>> that sd1 is the idlest group,and a cpux1 in sgx is the idlest cpu.
>>
>> We could have ideally stopped the search here.But the problem with this
>> is that there is a possibility that sgx is more loaded than sgy; meaning
>> the cpus in sgx are heavily imbalanced;say there are two cpus cpux1 and
>> cpux2 in sgx,where cpux2 is heavily loaded and cpux1 has recently gotten
>> idle and load balancing has not come to its rescue yet.According to the
>> search above, cpux1 is idle,but is *not the right candidate for
>> scheduling forked task,it is the right candidate for relieving the load
>> from cpux2* due to cache locality etc.
>
> This corner case may occur after "[PATCH v3 03/22] sched: fix
> find_idlest_group mess logical" brought in the local sched_group bias,
> and assume balancing runs on cpux2.
> ideally, find_idlest_group should find the real idlest(this case: sgy),
> then, this patch is reasonable.
>

Sure. but seems it is a bit hard to go down the idlest group.

and the old logical is real cost too much, on my 2 socket NHM/SNB
server, hackbench can increase 2~5% performance. and no clean
performance on kbuild/aim7 etc.

--
Thanks
Alex
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