Re: [PATCH 3/7] idle, thermal, acpi: Remove home grown idleimplementations

From: Paul E. McKenney
Date: Thu Nov 21 2013 - 15:07:30 EST


On Thu, Nov 21, 2013 at 11:45:20AM -0800, Arjan van de Ven wrote:
> On 11/21/2013 11:19 AM, Paul E. McKenney wrote:
> >On Thu, Nov 21, 2013 at 08:21:03AM -0800, Arjan van de Ven wrote:
> >>On 11/21/2013 8:07 AM, Paul E. McKenney wrote:
> >>>As long as RCU has some reliable way to identify an idle task, I am
> >>>good. But I have to ask -- why can't idle injection coordinate with
> >>>the existing idle tasks rather than temporarily making alternative
> >>>idle tasks?
> >>
> >>it's not a real idle. that's the whole problem of the situation.
> >>to the rest of the OS, this is being BUSY (busy saving power using
> >>a CPU instruction, but it might as well have been an mdelay() operation)
> >>and it's also what end users expect; they want to be able to see
> >>where there performance (read: cpu time in "top") is going.
> >
> >My concern is keeping RCU's books straight. Suppose that there is a need
> >to call for idle in the middle of a preemptible RCU read-side critical
> >section. Now, if that call for idle involves a context switch, all is
> >well -- RCU will see the task as still being in its RCU read-side critical
> >section, which means that it is OK for RCU to see the CPU as idle.
> >
> >However, if there is no context switch and RCU sees the CPU as idle,
> >preemptible RCU could prematurely end the grace period. If there is no
> >context switch and RCU sees the CPU as non-idle for too long, we start
> >getting RCU CPU stall warning splats.
> >
> >Another approach would be to only inject idle when the CPU is not
> >doing anything that could possibly be in an RCU read-side critical
> >section. But things might get a bit hot in case of an overly
> >long RCU read-side critical section.
> >
> >One approach that might work would be to hook into RCU's context-switch
> >code going in and coming out, then telling RCU that the CPU is idle,
> >even though top and friends see it as non-idle. This last is in fact
> >similar to how RCU handles userspace execution for NO_HZ_FULL.
> >
>
> so powerclamp and such are not "idle".
> They are "busy" from everything except the lowest level of the CPU hardware.
> once you start thinking of them as idle, all hell breaks lose in terms of implications
> (including sysadmin visibility etc).... (hence some of the explosions in this thread
> as well).
>
> but it's not "idle".
>
> it's "put the cpu in a low power state for a specified amount of time". sure it uses the same
> instruction to do so that the idle loop uses.
>
> (now to make it messy, the current driver does a bunch of things similar to the idle loop
> which is a mess and fair to be complained about)

Then from an RCU viewpoint, they need to be short in duration. Otherwise
you risk getting CPU stall-warning explosions from RCU. ;-)

Thanx, Paul

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