Re: [PATCH RFC] sched: deferred set priority (dprio)

From: Mike Galbraith
Date: Sat Jul 26 2014 - 04:59:26 EST


On Fri, 2014-07-25 at 12:45 -0700, Sergey Oboguev wrote:
> [This is a repost of the message from few day ago, with patch file
> inline instead of being pointed by the URL.]
>
> This patch is intended to improve the support for fine-grain parallel
> applications that may sometimes need to change the priority of their threads at
> a very high rate, hundreds or even thousands of times per scheduling timeslice.
>
> These are typically applications that have to execute short or very short
> lock-holding critical or otherwise time-urgent sections of code at a very high
> frequency and need to protect these sections with "set priority" system calls,
> one "set priority" call to elevate current thread priority before entering the
> critical or time-urgent section, followed by another call to downgrade thread
> priority at the completion of the section. Due to the high frequency of
> entering and leaving critical or time-urgent sections, the cost of these "set
> priority" system calls may raise to a noticeable part of an application's
> overall expended CPU time. Proposed "deferred set priority" facility allows to
> largely eliminate the cost of these system calls.

So you essentially want to ship preempt_disable() off to userspace?

(smiles wickedly, adds CCs)

-Mike

> Instead of executing a system call to elevate its thread priority, an
> application simply writes its desired priority level to a designated memory
> location in the userspace. When the kernel attempts to preempt the thread...

--
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/