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[RFC,3/6] sched: pack small tasks

Message ID 1349595838-31274-4-git-send-email-vincent.guittot@linaro.org (mailing list archive)
State New, archived
Headers show

Commit Message

Vincent Guittot Oct. 7, 2012, 7:43 a.m. UTC
During sched_domain creation, we define a pack buddy CPU if available.

On a system that share the powerline at all level, the buddy is set to -1

On a dual clusters / dual cores system which can powergate each core and
cluster independantly, the buddy configuration will be :
      | CPU0 | CPU1 | CPU2 | CPU3 |
-----------------------------------
buddy | CPU0 | CPU0 | CPU0 | CPU2 |

Small tasks tend to slip out of the periodic load balance.
The best place to choose to migrate them is at their wake up.

Signed-off-by: Vincent Guittot <vincent.guittot@linaro.org>
---
 kernel/sched/core.c  |    1 +
 kernel/sched/fair.c  |  109 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 kernel/sched/sched.h |    1 +
 3 files changed, 111 insertions(+)

Comments

Santosh Shilimkar Oct. 24, 2012, 3:20 p.m. UTC | #1
Vincent,

Few comments/questions.

On Sunday 07 October 2012 01:13 PM, Vincent Guittot wrote:
> During sched_domain creation, we define a pack buddy CPU if available.
>
> On a system that share the powerline at all level, the buddy is set to -1
>
> On a dual clusters / dual cores system which can powergate each core and
> cluster independantly, the buddy configuration will be :
>        | CPU0 | CPU1 | CPU2 | CPU3 |
> -----------------------------------
> buddy | CPU0 | CPU0 | CPU0 | CPU2 |
			^
Is that a typo ? Should it be CPU2 instead of
CPU0 ?

> Small tasks tend to slip out of the periodic load balance.
> The best place to choose to migrate them is at their wake up.
>
I have tried this series since I was looking at some of these packing
bits. On Mobile workloads like OSIdle with Screen ON, MP3, gallary,
I did see some additional filtering of threads with this series
but its not making much difference in power. More on this below.

> Signed-off-by: Vincent Guittot <vincent.guittot@linaro.org>
> ---
>   kernel/sched/core.c  |    1 +
>   kernel/sched/fair.c  |  109 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
>   kernel/sched/sched.h |    1 +
>   3 files changed, 111 insertions(+)
>
> diff --git a/kernel/sched/core.c b/kernel/sched/core.c
> index dab7908..70cadbe 100644
> --- a/kernel/sched/core.c
> +++ b/kernel/sched/core.c
> @@ -6131,6 +6131,7 @@ cpu_attach_domain(struct sched_domain *sd, struct root_domain *rd, int cpu)
>   	rcu_assign_pointer(rq->sd, sd);
>   	destroy_sched_domains(tmp, cpu);
>
> +	update_packing_domain(cpu);
>   	update_top_cache_domain(cpu);
>   }
>
> diff --git a/kernel/sched/fair.c b/kernel/sched/fair.c
> index 4f4a4f6..8c9d3ed 100644
> --- a/kernel/sched/fair.c
> +++ b/kernel/sched/fair.c
> @@ -157,6 +157,63 @@ void sched_init_granularity(void)
>   	update_sysctl();
>   }
>
> +
> +/*
> + * Save the id of the optimal CPU that should be used to pack small tasks
> + * The value -1 is used when no buddy has been found
> + */
> +DEFINE_PER_CPU(int, sd_pack_buddy);
> +
> +/* Look for the best buddy CPU that can be used to pack small tasks
> + * We make the assumption that it doesn't wort to pack on CPU that share the
s/wort/worth
> + * same powerline. We looks for the 1st sched_domain without the
> + * SD_SHARE_POWERLINE flag. Then We look for the sched_group witht the lowest
> + * power per core based on the assumption that their power efficiency is
> + * better */
Commenting style..
/*
  *
  */

Can you please expand the why the assumption is right ?
"it doesn't wort to pack on CPU that share the same powerline"

Think about a scenario where you have quad core, ducal cluster system

	|Cluster1|			|cluster 2|
| CPU0 | CPU1 | CPU2 | CPU3 |	| CPU0 | CPU1 | CPU2 | CPU3 |


Both clusters run from same voltage rail and have same PLL
clocking them. But the cluster have their own power domain
and all CPU's can power gate them-self to low power states.
Clusters also have their own level2 caches.

In this case, you will still save power if you try to pack
load on one cluster. No ?

> +void update_packing_domain(int cpu)
> +{
> +	struct sched_domain *sd;
> +	int id = -1;
> +
> +	sd = highest_flag_domain(cpu, SD_SHARE_POWERLINE);
> +	if (!sd)
> +		sd = rcu_dereference_check_sched_domain(cpu_rq(cpu)->sd);
> +	else
> +		sd = sd->parent;
> +
> +	while (sd) {
> +		struct sched_group *sg = sd->groups;
> +		struct sched_group *pack = sg;
> +		struct sched_group *tmp = sg->next;
> +
> +		/* 1st CPU of the sched domain is a good candidate */
> +		if (id == -1)
> +			id = cpumask_first(sched_domain_span(sd));
> +
> +		/* loop the sched groups to find the best one */
> +		while (tmp != sg) {
> +			if (tmp->sgp->power * sg->group_weight <
> +					sg->sgp->power * tmp->group_weight)
> +				pack = tmp;
> +			tmp = tmp->next;
> +		}
> +
> +		/* we have found a better group */
> +		if (pack != sg)
> +			id = cpumask_first(sched_group_cpus(pack));
> +
> +		/* Look for another CPU than itself */
> +		if ((id != cpu)
> +		 || ((sd->parent) && !(sd->parent->flags && SD_LOAD_BALANCE)))
Is the condition "!(sd->parent->flags && SD_LOAD_BALANCE)" for
big.LITTLE kind of system where SD_LOAD_BALANCE may not be used ?

> +			break;
> +
> +		sd = sd->parent;
> +	}
> +
> +	pr_info(KERN_INFO "CPU%d packing on CPU%d\n", cpu, id);
> +	per_cpu(sd_pack_buddy, cpu) = id;
> +}
> +
>   #if BITS_PER_LONG == 32
>   # define WMULT_CONST	(~0UL)
>   #else
> @@ -3073,6 +3130,55 @@ static int select_idle_sibling(struct task_struct *p, int target)
>   	return target;
>   }
>
> +static inline bool is_buddy_busy(int cpu)
> +{
> +	struct rq *rq = cpu_rq(cpu);
> +
> +	/*
> +	 * A busy buddy is a CPU with a high load or a small load with a lot of
> +	 * running tasks.
> +	 */
> +	return ((rq->avg.usage_avg_sum << rq->nr_running) >
> +			rq->avg.runnable_avg_period);
I agree busy CPU is the one with high load, but many small threads may
not make CPU fully busy, right ? Should we just stick to the load
parameter alone here ?

> +}
> +
> +static inline bool is_light_task(struct task_struct *p)
> +{
> +	/* A light task runs less than 25% in average */
> +	return ((p->se.avg.usage_avg_sum << 2) < p->se.avg.runnable_avg_period);
> +}
Since the whole packing logic relies on the light threads only, the
overall effectiveness is not significant. Infact with multiple tries on
Dual core system, I didn't see any major improvement in power. I think
we need to be more aggressive here. From the cover letter, I noticed
that, you were concerned about any performance drop due to packing and
may be that is the reason you chose the conservative threshold. But the
fact is, if we want to save meaningful power, there will be slight
performance drop which is expected.

> +static int check_pack_buddy(int cpu, struct task_struct *p)
> +{
> +	int buddy = per_cpu(sd_pack_buddy, cpu);
> +
> +	/* No pack buddy for this CPU */
> +	if (buddy == -1)
> +		return false;
> +
> +	/*
> +	 * If a task is waiting for running on the CPU which is its own buddy,
> +	 * let the default behavior to look for a better CPU if available
> +	 * The threshold has been set to 37.5%
> +	 */
> +	if ((buddy == cpu)
> +	 && ((p->se.avg.usage_avg_sum << 3) < (p->se.avg.runnable_avg_sum * 5)))
> +		return false;
I lost you here on better CPU , 37.5 % and last two conditions.
Isn't the first condition 'buddy==cpu' enough to return since nothing 
really needs to be done in that case. Can you please expand this a bit?

> +
> +	/* buddy is not an allowed CPU */
> +	if (!cpumask_test_cpu(buddy, tsk_cpus_allowed(p)))
> +		return false;
> +
> +	/*
> +	 * If the task is a small one and the buddy is not overloaded,
> +	 * we use buddy cpu
> +	 */
> +	 if (!is_light_task(p) || is_buddy_busy(buddy))
> +		return false;
This is right but both the evaluation needs update to be effective.

Regards
Santosh
Vincent Guittot Oct. 29, 2012, 1:12 p.m. UTC | #2
On 24 October 2012 17:20, Santosh Shilimkar <santosh.shilimkar@ti.com> wrote:
> Vincent,
>
> Few comments/questions.
>
>
> On Sunday 07 October 2012 01:13 PM, Vincent Guittot wrote:
>>
>> During sched_domain creation, we define a pack buddy CPU if available.
>>
>> On a system that share the powerline at all level, the buddy is set to -1
>>
>> On a dual clusters / dual cores system which can powergate each core and
>> cluster independantly, the buddy configuration will be :
>>        | CPU0 | CPU1 | CPU2 | CPU3 |
>> -----------------------------------
>> buddy | CPU0 | CPU0 | CPU0 | CPU2 |
>
>                         ^
> Is that a typo ? Should it be CPU2 instead of
> CPU0 ?

No it's not a typo.
The system packs at each scheduling level. It starts to pack in
cluster because each core can power gate independently so CPU1 tries
to pack its tasks in CPU0 and CPU3 in CPU2. Then, it packs at CPU
level so CPU2 tries to pack in the cluster of CPU0 and CPU0 packs in
itself

>
>
>> Small tasks tend to slip out of the periodic load balance.
>> The best place to choose to migrate them is at their wake up.
>>
> I have tried this series since I was looking at some of these packing
> bits. On Mobile workloads like OSIdle with Screen ON, MP3, gallary,
> I did see some additional filtering of threads with this series
> but its not making much difference in power. More on this below.

Can I ask you which configuration you have used ? how many cores and
cluster ?  Can they be power gated independently ?

>
>
>> Signed-off-by: Vincent Guittot <vincent.guittot@linaro.org>
>> ---
>>   kernel/sched/core.c  |    1 +
>>   kernel/sched/fair.c  |  109
>> ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
>>   kernel/sched/sched.h |    1 +
>>   3 files changed, 111 insertions(+)
>>
>> diff --git a/kernel/sched/core.c b/kernel/sched/core.c
>> index dab7908..70cadbe 100644
>> --- a/kernel/sched/core.c
>> +++ b/kernel/sched/core.c
>> @@ -6131,6 +6131,7 @@ cpu_attach_domain(struct sched_domain *sd, struct
>> root_domain *rd, int cpu)
>>         rcu_assign_pointer(rq->sd, sd);
>>         destroy_sched_domains(tmp, cpu);
>>
>> +       update_packing_domain(cpu);
>>         update_top_cache_domain(cpu);
>>   }
>>
>> diff --git a/kernel/sched/fair.c b/kernel/sched/fair.c
>> index 4f4a4f6..8c9d3ed 100644
>> --- a/kernel/sched/fair.c
>> +++ b/kernel/sched/fair.c
>> @@ -157,6 +157,63 @@ void sched_init_granularity(void)
>>         update_sysctl();
>>   }
>>
>> +
>> +/*
>> + * Save the id of the optimal CPU that should be used to pack small tasks
>> + * The value -1 is used when no buddy has been found
>> + */
>> +DEFINE_PER_CPU(int, sd_pack_buddy);
>> +
>> +/* Look for the best buddy CPU that can be used to pack small tasks
>> + * We make the assumption that it doesn't wort to pack on CPU that share
>> the
>
> s/wort/worth

yes

>
>> + * same powerline. We looks for the 1st sched_domain without the
>> + * SD_SHARE_POWERLINE flag. Then We look for the sched_group witht the
>> lowest
>> + * power per core based on the assumption that their power efficiency is
>> + * better */
>
> Commenting style..
> /*
>  *
>  */
>

yes

> Can you please expand the why the assumption is right ?
> "it doesn't wort to pack on CPU that share the same powerline"

By "share the same power-line", I mean that the CPUs can't power off
independently. So if some CPUs can't power off independently, it's
worth to try to use most of them to race to idle.

>
> Think about a scenario where you have quad core, ducal cluster system
>
>         |Cluster1|                      |cluster 2|
> | CPU0 | CPU1 | CPU2 | CPU3 |   | CPU0 | CPU1 | CPU2 | CPU3 |
>
>
> Both clusters run from same voltage rail and have same PLL
> clocking them. But the cluster have their own power domain
> and all CPU's can power gate them-self to low power states.
> Clusters also have their own level2 caches.
>
> In this case, you will still save power if you try to pack
> load on one cluster. No ?

yes, I need to update the description of SD_SHARE_POWERLINE because
I'm afraid I was not clear enough. SD_SHARE_POWERLINE includes the
power gating capacity of each core. For your example above, the
SD_SHARE_POWERLINE shoud be cleared at both MC and CPU level.

>
>
>> +void update_packing_domain(int cpu)
>> +{
>> +       struct sched_domain *sd;
>> +       int id = -1;
>> +
>> +       sd = highest_flag_domain(cpu, SD_SHARE_POWERLINE);
>> +       if (!sd)
>> +               sd = rcu_dereference_check_sched_domain(cpu_rq(cpu)->sd);
>> +       else
>> +               sd = sd->parent;
>> +
>> +       while (sd) {
>> +               struct sched_group *sg = sd->groups;
>> +               struct sched_group *pack = sg;
>> +               struct sched_group *tmp = sg->next;
>> +
>> +               /* 1st CPU of the sched domain is a good candidate */
>> +               if (id == -1)
>> +                       id = cpumask_first(sched_domain_span(sd));
>> +
>> +               /* loop the sched groups to find the best one */
>> +               while (tmp != sg) {
>> +                       if (tmp->sgp->power * sg->group_weight <
>> +                                       sg->sgp->power *
>> tmp->group_weight)
>> +                               pack = tmp;
>> +                       tmp = tmp->next;
>> +               }
>> +
>> +               /* we have found a better group */
>> +               if (pack != sg)
>> +                       id = cpumask_first(sched_group_cpus(pack));
>> +
>> +               /* Look for another CPU than itself */
>> +               if ((id != cpu)
>> +                || ((sd->parent) && !(sd->parent->flags &&
>> SD_LOAD_BALANCE)))
>
> Is the condition "!(sd->parent->flags && SD_LOAD_BALANCE)" for
> big.LITTLE kind of system where SD_LOAD_BALANCE may not be used ?

No, packing small tasks is part of the load balance so if the
LOAD_BALANCE flag is cleared, we will not try to pack which is a kind
of load balance. There is no link with big.LITTLE

>
>
>> +                       break;
>> +
>> +               sd = sd->parent;
>> +       }
>> +
>> +       pr_info(KERN_INFO "CPU%d packing on CPU%d\n", cpu, id);
>> +       per_cpu(sd_pack_buddy, cpu) = id;
>> +}
>> +
>>   #if BITS_PER_LONG == 32
>>   # define WMULT_CONST  (~0UL)
>>   #else
>> @@ -3073,6 +3130,55 @@ static int select_idle_sibling(struct task_struct
>> *p, int target)
>>         return target;
>>   }
>>
>> +static inline bool is_buddy_busy(int cpu)
>> +{
>> +       struct rq *rq = cpu_rq(cpu);
>> +
>> +       /*
>> +        * A busy buddy is a CPU with a high load or a small load with a
>> lot of
>> +        * running tasks.
>> +        */
>> +       return ((rq->avg.usage_avg_sum << rq->nr_running) >
>> +                       rq->avg.runnable_avg_period);
>
> I agree busy CPU is the one with high load, but many small threads may
> not make CPU fully busy, right ? Should we just stick to the load
> parameter alone here ?

IMO, the busy state of a CPU isn't only the load but also how many
threads are waiting for running on it. This formula tries to take into
account both inputs. If you have dozen of small tasks on a CPU, the
latency can be large even if the tasks are small.

>
>
>> +}
>> +
>> +static inline bool is_light_task(struct task_struct *p)
>> +{
>> +       /* A light task runs less than 25% in average */
>> +       return ((p->se.avg.usage_avg_sum << 2) <
>> p->se.avg.runnable_avg_period);
>> +}
>
> Since the whole packing logic relies on the light threads only, the
> overall effectiveness is not significant. Infact with multiple tries on
> Dual core system, I didn't see any major improvement in power. I think
> we need to be more aggressive here. From the cover letter, I noticed
> that, you were concerned about any performance drop due to packing and
> may be that is the reason you chose the conservative threshold. But the
> fact is, if we want to save meaningful power, there will be slight
> performance drop which is expected.

I think that everybody agrees that packing small tasks will save power
whereas it seems to be not so obvious for heavy task. But I may have
set the threshold a bit too low

Up to which load, you would like to pack on 1 core of your dual core system ?
Can you provide more details of your load ? Have you got a trace that
you can share ?

>
>
>> +static int check_pack_buddy(int cpu, struct task_struct *p)
>> +{
>> +       int buddy = per_cpu(sd_pack_buddy, cpu);
>> +
>> +       /* No pack buddy for this CPU */
>> +       if (buddy == -1)
>> +               return false;
>> +
>> +       /*
>> +        * If a task is waiting for running on the CPU which is its own
>> buddy,
>> +        * let the default behavior to look for a better CPU if available
>> +        * The threshold has been set to 37.5%
>> +        */
>> +       if ((buddy == cpu)
>> +        && ((p->se.avg.usage_avg_sum << 3) < (p->se.avg.runnable_avg_sum
>> * 5)))
>> +               return false;
>
> I lost you here on better CPU , 37.5 % and last two conditions.
> Isn't the first condition 'buddy==cpu' enough to return since nothing really
> needs to be done in that case. Can you please expand this a bit?

If you have a lot of small tasks waking up and running simultaneously,
Some tasks will wait for runnning and we could short the running time
by parallelizing tasks if possible (at MC level for example)

>
>
>> +
>> +       /* buddy is not an allowed CPU */
>> +       if (!cpumask_test_cpu(buddy, tsk_cpus_allowed(p)))
>> +               return false;
>> +
>> +       /*
>> +        * If the task is a small one and the buddy is not overloaded,
>> +        * we use buddy cpu
>> +        */
>> +        if (!is_light_task(p) || is_buddy_busy(buddy))
>> +               return false;
>
> This is right but both the evaluation needs update to be effective.
>
> Regards
> Santosh
Santosh Shilimkar Nov. 2, 2012, 10:53 a.m. UTC | #3
On Monday 29 October 2012 06:42 PM, Vincent Guittot wrote:
> On 24 October 2012 17:20, Santosh Shilimkar <santosh.shilimkar@ti.com> wrote:
>> Vincent,
>>
>> Few comments/questions.
>>
>>
>> On Sunday 07 October 2012 01:13 PM, Vincent Guittot wrote:
>>>
>>> During sched_domain creation, we define a pack buddy CPU if available.
>>>
>>> On a system that share the powerline at all level, the buddy is set to -1
>>>
>>> On a dual clusters / dual cores system which can powergate each core and
>>> cluster independantly, the buddy configuration will be :
>>>         | CPU0 | CPU1 | CPU2 | CPU3 |
>>> -----------------------------------
>>> buddy | CPU0 | CPU0 | CPU0 | CPU2 |
>>
>>                          ^
>> Is that a typo ? Should it be CPU2 instead of
>> CPU0 ?
>
> No it's not a typo.
> The system packs at each scheduling level. It starts to pack in
> cluster because each core can power gate independently so CPU1 tries
> to pack its tasks in CPU0 and CPU3 in CPU2. Then, it packs at CPU
> level so CPU2 tries to pack in the cluster of CPU0 and CPU0 packs in
> itself
>
I get it. Though in above example a task may migrate from say
CPU3->CPU2->CPU0 as part of packing. I was just thinking whether
moving such task from say CPU3 to CPU0 might be best instead.

>>
>>> Small tasks tend to slip out of the periodic load balance.
>>> The best place to choose to migrate them is at their wake up.
>>>
>> I have tried this series since I was looking at some of these packing
>> bits. On Mobile workloads like OSIdle with Screen ON, MP3, gallary,
>> I did see some additional filtering of threads with this series
>> but its not making much difference in power. More on this below.
>
> Can I ask you which configuration you have used ? how many cores and
> cluster ?  Can they be power gated independently ?
>
I have been trying with couple of setups. Dual Core ARM machine and
Quad core X86 box with single package thought most of the mobile
workload analysis I was doing on ARM machine. On both setups
CPUs can be gated independently.

>>
>>
>>> Signed-off-by: Vincent Guittot <vincent.guittot@linaro.org>
>>> ---
>>>    kernel/sched/core.c  |    1 +
>>>    kernel/sched/fair.c  |  109
>>> ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
>>>    kernel/sched/sched.h |    1 +
>>>    3 files changed, 111 insertions(+)
>>>
>>> diff --git a/kernel/sched/core.c b/kernel/sched/core.c
>>> index dab7908..70cadbe 100644
>>> --- a/kernel/sched/core.c
>>> +++ b/kernel/sched/core.c
>>> @@ -6131,6 +6131,7 @@ cpu_attach_domain(struct sched_domain *sd, struct
>>> root_domain *rd, int cpu)
>>>          rcu_assign_pointer(rq->sd, sd);
>>>          destroy_sched_domains(tmp, cpu);
>>>
>>> +       update_packing_domain(cpu);
>>>          update_top_cache_domain(cpu);
>>>    }
>>>
>>> diff --git a/kernel/sched/fair.c b/kernel/sched/fair.c
>>> index 4f4a4f6..8c9d3ed 100644
>>> --- a/kernel/sched/fair.c
>>> +++ b/kernel/sched/fair.c
>>> @@ -157,6 +157,63 @@ void sched_init_granularity(void)
>>>          update_sysctl();
>>>    }
>>>
>>> +
>>> +/*
>>> + * Save the id of the optimal CPU that should be used to pack small tasks
>>> + * The value -1 is used when no buddy has been found
>>> + */
>>> +DEFINE_PER_CPU(int, sd_pack_buddy);
>>> +
>>> +/* Look for the best buddy CPU that can be used to pack small tasks
>>> + * We make the assumption that it doesn't wort to pack on CPU that share
>>> the
>>
>> s/wort/worth
>
> yes
>
>>
>>> + * same powerline. We looks for the 1st sched_domain without the
>>> + * SD_SHARE_POWERLINE flag. Then We look for the sched_group witht the
>>> lowest
>>> + * power per core based on the assumption that their power efficiency is
>>> + * better */
>>
>> Commenting style..
>> /*
>>   *
>>   */
>>
>
> yes
>
>> Can you please expand the why the assumption is right ?
>> "it doesn't wort to pack on CPU that share the same powerline"
>
> By "share the same power-line", I mean that the CPUs can't power off
> independently. So if some CPUs can't power off independently, it's
> worth to try to use most of them to race to idle.
>
In that case I suggest we use different word here. Power line can be
treated as voltage line, power domain.
May be SD_SHARE_CPU_POWERDOMAIN ?

>>
>> Think about a scenario where you have quad core, ducal cluster system
>>
>>          |Cluster1|                      |cluster 2|
>> | CPU0 | CPU1 | CPU2 | CPU3 |   | CPU0 | CPU1 | CPU2 | CPU3 |
>>
>>
>> Both clusters run from same voltage rail and have same PLL
>> clocking them. But the cluster have their own power domain
>> and all CPU's can power gate them-self to low power states.
>> Clusters also have their own level2 caches.
>>
>> In this case, you will still save power if you try to pack
>> load on one cluster. No ?
>
> yes, I need to update the description of SD_SHARE_POWERLINE because
> I'm afraid I was not clear enough. SD_SHARE_POWERLINE includes the
> power gating capacity of each core. For your example above, the
> SD_SHARE_POWERLINE shoud be cleared at both MC and CPU level.
>
Thanks for clarification.

>>
>>
>>> +void update_packing_domain(int cpu)
>>> +{
>>> +       struct sched_domain *sd;
>>> +       int id = -1;
>>> +
>>> +       sd = highest_flag_domain(cpu, SD_SHARE_POWERLINE);
>>> +       if (!sd)
>>> +               sd = rcu_dereference_check_sched_domain(cpu_rq(cpu)->sd);
>>> +       else
>>> +               sd = sd->parent;
>>> +
>>> +       while (sd) {
>>> +               struct sched_group *sg = sd->groups;
>>> +               struct sched_group *pack = sg;
>>> +               struct sched_group *tmp = sg->next;
>>> +
>>> +               /* 1st CPU of the sched domain is a good candidate */
>>> +               if (id == -1)
>>> +                       id = cpumask_first(sched_domain_span(sd));
>>> +
>>> +               /* loop the sched groups to find the best one */
>>> +               while (tmp != sg) {
>>> +                       if (tmp->sgp->power * sg->group_weight <
>>> +                                       sg->sgp->power *
>>> tmp->group_weight)
>>> +                               pack = tmp;
>>> +                       tmp = tmp->next;
>>> +               }
>>> +
>>> +               /* we have found a better group */
>>> +               if (pack != sg)
>>> +                       id = cpumask_first(sched_group_cpus(pack));
>>> +
>>> +               /* Look for another CPU than itself */
>>> +               if ((id != cpu)
>>> +                || ((sd->parent) && !(sd->parent->flags &&
>>> SD_LOAD_BALANCE)))
>>
>> Is the condition "!(sd->parent->flags && SD_LOAD_BALANCE)" for
>> big.LITTLE kind of system where SD_LOAD_BALANCE may not be used ?
>
> No, packing small tasks is part of the load balance so if the
> LOAD_BALANCE flag is cleared, we will not try to pack which is a kind
> of load balance. There is no link with big.LITTLE
>
Now it make sense to me.

>>
>>
>>> +                       break;
>>> +
>>> +               sd = sd->parent;
>>> +       }
>>> +
>>> +       pr_info(KERN_INFO "CPU%d packing on CPU%d\n", cpu, id);
>>> +       per_cpu(sd_pack_buddy, cpu) = id;
>>> +}
>>> +
>>>    #if BITS_PER_LONG == 32
>>>    # define WMULT_CONST  (~0UL)
>>>    #else
>>> @@ -3073,6 +3130,55 @@ static int select_idle_sibling(struct task_struct
>>> *p, int target)
>>>          return target;
>>>    }
>>>
>>> +static inline bool is_buddy_busy(int cpu)
>>> +{
>>> +       struct rq *rq = cpu_rq(cpu);
>>> +
>>> +       /*
>>> +        * A busy buddy is a CPU with a high load or a small load with a
>>> lot of
>>> +        * running tasks.
>>> +        */
>>> +       return ((rq->avg.usage_avg_sum << rq->nr_running) >
>>> +                       rq->avg.runnable_avg_period);
>>
>> I agree busy CPU is the one with high load, but many small threads may
>> not make CPU fully busy, right ? Should we just stick to the load
>> parameter alone here ?
>
> IMO, the busy state of a CPU isn't only the load but also how many
> threads are waiting for running on it. This formula tries to take into
> account both inputs. If you have dozen of small tasks on a CPU, the
> latency can be large even if the tasks are small.
>
Sure. Your point is to avoid throttling and probably use race for
idle.

>>
>>
>>> +}
>>> +
>>> +static inline bool is_light_task(struct task_struct *p)
>>> +{
>>> +       /* A light task runs less than 25% in average */
>>> +       return ((p->se.avg.usage_avg_sum << 2) <
>>> p->se.avg.runnable_avg_period);
>>> +}
>>
>> Since the whole packing logic relies on the light threads only, the
>> overall effectiveness is not significant. Infact with multiple tries on
>> Dual core system, I didn't see any major improvement in power. I think
>> we need to be more aggressive here. From the cover letter, I noticed
>> that, you were concerned about any performance drop due to packing and
>> may be that is the reason you chose the conservative threshold. But the
>> fact is, if we want to save meaningful power, there will be slight
>> performance drop which is expected.
>
> I think that everybody agrees that packing small tasks will save power
> whereas it seems to be not so obvious for heavy task. But I may have
> set the threshold a bit too low
>
I agree on packing saves power part for sure.

> Up to which load, you would like to pack on 1 core of your dual core system ?
> Can you provide more details of your load ? Have you got a trace that
> you can share ?
>
More than how much load to pack, I was more looking from the power
savings delta we can achieve by doing it. Some of the usecases like
osidle, mp3, gallary are already very low power and that might be
the reason I didn't notice major mA delta. Though the perf
traces did show some filtering even at 25 % load. i tried upto
50 % threshold to see the effectiveness and there was more
improvement and hence the suggestion about aggressiveness.

May be you can try some of these use-cases on your setup instead of
synthetic workload and see the results.

Regards
Santosh
Morten Rasmussen Nov. 9, 2012, 4:46 p.m. UTC | #4
On Fri, Nov 02, 2012 at 10:53:47AM +0000, Santosh Shilimkar wrote:
> On Monday 29 October 2012 06:42 PM, Vincent Guittot wrote:
> > On 24 October 2012 17:20, Santosh Shilimkar <santosh.shilimkar@ti.com> wrote:
> >> Vincent,
> >>
> >> Few comments/questions.
> >>
> >>
> >> On Sunday 07 October 2012 01:13 PM, Vincent Guittot wrote:
> >>>
> >>> During sched_domain creation, we define a pack buddy CPU if available.
> >>>
> >>> On a system that share the powerline at all level, the buddy is set to -1
> >>>
> >>> On a dual clusters / dual cores system which can powergate each core and
> >>> cluster independantly, the buddy configuration will be :
> >>>         | CPU0 | CPU1 | CPU2 | CPU3 |
> >>> -----------------------------------
> >>> buddy | CPU0 | CPU0 | CPU0 | CPU2 |
> >>
> >>                          ^
> >> Is that a typo ? Should it be CPU2 instead of
> >> CPU0 ?
> >
> > No it's not a typo.
> > The system packs at each scheduling level. It starts to pack in
> > cluster because each core can power gate independently so CPU1 tries
> > to pack its tasks in CPU0 and CPU3 in CPU2. Then, it packs at CPU
> > level so CPU2 tries to pack in the cluster of CPU0 and CPU0 packs in
> > itself
> >
> I get it. Though in above example a task may migrate from say
> CPU3->CPU2->CPU0 as part of packing. I was just thinking whether
> moving such task from say CPU3 to CPU0 might be best instead.

To me it seems suboptimal to pack the task twice, but the alternative is
not good either. If you try to move the task directly to CPU0 you may
miss packing opportunities if CPU0 is already busy, while CPU2 might
have enough capacity to take it. It would probably be better to check
the business of CPU0 and then back off and try CPU2 if CP0 is busy. This
would require a buddy list for each CPU rather just a single buddy and
thus might become expensive.

> 
> >>
> >>> Small tasks tend to slip out of the periodic load balance.
> >>> The best place to choose to migrate them is at their wake up.
> >>>
> >> I have tried this series since I was looking at some of these packing
> >> bits. On Mobile workloads like OSIdle with Screen ON, MP3, gallary,
> >> I did see some additional filtering of threads with this series
> >> but its not making much difference in power. More on this below.
> >
> > Can I ask you which configuration you have used ? how many cores and
> > cluster ?  Can they be power gated independently ?
> >
> I have been trying with couple of setups. Dual Core ARM machine and
> Quad core X86 box with single package thought most of the mobile
> workload analysis I was doing on ARM machine. On both setups
> CPUs can be gated independently.
> 
> >>
> >>
> >>> Signed-off-by: Vincent Guittot <vincent.guittot@linaro.org>
> >>> ---
> >>>    kernel/sched/core.c  |    1 +
> >>>    kernel/sched/fair.c  |  109
> >>> ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
> >>>    kernel/sched/sched.h |    1 +
> >>>    3 files changed, 111 insertions(+)
> >>>
> >>> diff --git a/kernel/sched/core.c b/kernel/sched/core.c
> >>> index dab7908..70cadbe 100644
> >>> --- a/kernel/sched/core.c
> >>> +++ b/kernel/sched/core.c
> >>> @@ -6131,6 +6131,7 @@ cpu_attach_domain(struct sched_domain *sd, struct
> >>> root_domain *rd, int cpu)
> >>>          rcu_assign_pointer(rq->sd, sd);
> >>>          destroy_sched_domains(tmp, cpu);
> >>>
> >>> +       update_packing_domain(cpu);
> >>>          update_top_cache_domain(cpu);
> >>>    }
> >>>
> >>> diff --git a/kernel/sched/fair.c b/kernel/sched/fair.c
> >>> index 4f4a4f6..8c9d3ed 100644
> >>> --- a/kernel/sched/fair.c
> >>> +++ b/kernel/sched/fair.c
> >>> @@ -157,6 +157,63 @@ void sched_init_granularity(void)
> >>>          update_sysctl();
> >>>    }
> >>>
> >>> +
> >>> +/*
> >>> + * Save the id of the optimal CPU that should be used to pack small tasks
> >>> + * The value -1 is used when no buddy has been found
> >>> + */
> >>> +DEFINE_PER_CPU(int, sd_pack_buddy);
> >>> +
> >>> +/* Look for the best buddy CPU that can be used to pack small tasks
> >>> + * We make the assumption that it doesn't wort to pack on CPU that share
> >>> the
> >>
> >> s/wort/worth
> >
> > yes
> >
> >>
> >>> + * same powerline. We looks for the 1st sched_domain without the
> >>> + * SD_SHARE_POWERLINE flag. Then We look for the sched_group witht the
> >>> lowest
> >>> + * power per core based on the assumption that their power efficiency is
> >>> + * better */
> >>
> >> Commenting style..
> >> /*
> >>   *
> >>   */
> >>
> >
> > yes
> >
> >> Can you please expand the why the assumption is right ?
> >> "it doesn't wort to pack on CPU that share the same powerline"
> >
> > By "share the same power-line", I mean that the CPUs can't power off
> > independently. So if some CPUs can't power off independently, it's
> > worth to try to use most of them to race to idle.
> >
> In that case I suggest we use different word here. Power line can be
> treated as voltage line, power domain.
> May be SD_SHARE_CPU_POWERDOMAIN ?
> 

How about just SD_SHARE_POWERDOMAIN ?

> >>
> >> Think about a scenario where you have quad core, ducal cluster system
> >>
> >>          |Cluster1|                      |cluster 2|
> >> | CPU0 | CPU1 | CPU2 | CPU3 |   | CPU0 | CPU1 | CPU2 | CPU3 |
> >>
> >>
> >> Both clusters run from same voltage rail and have same PLL
> >> clocking them. But the cluster have their own power domain
> >> and all CPU's can power gate them-self to low power states.
> >> Clusters also have their own level2 caches.
> >>
> >> In this case, you will still save power if you try to pack
> >> load on one cluster. No ?
> >
> > yes, I need to update the description of SD_SHARE_POWERLINE because
> > I'm afraid I was not clear enough. SD_SHARE_POWERLINE includes the
> > power gating capacity of each core. For your example above, the
> > SD_SHARE_POWERLINE shoud be cleared at both MC and CPU level.
> >
> Thanks for clarification.
> 
> >>
> >>
> >>> +void update_packing_domain(int cpu)
> >>> +{
> >>> +       struct sched_domain *sd;
> >>> +       int id = -1;
> >>> +
> >>> +       sd = highest_flag_domain(cpu, SD_SHARE_POWERLINE);
> >>> +       if (!sd)
> >>> +               sd = rcu_dereference_check_sched_domain(cpu_rq(cpu)->sd);
> >>> +       else
> >>> +               sd = sd->parent;
> >>> +
> >>> +       while (sd) {
> >>> +               struct sched_group *sg = sd->groups;
> >>> +               struct sched_group *pack = sg;
> >>> +               struct sched_group *tmp = sg->next;
> >>> +
> >>> +               /* 1st CPU of the sched domain is a good candidate */
> >>> +               if (id == -1)
> >>> +                       id = cpumask_first(sched_domain_span(sd));
> >>> +
> >>> +               /* loop the sched groups to find the best one */
> >>> +               while (tmp != sg) {
> >>> +                       if (tmp->sgp->power * sg->group_weight <
> >>> +                                       sg->sgp->power *
> >>> tmp->group_weight)
> >>> +                               pack = tmp;
> >>> +                       tmp = tmp->next;
> >>> +               }
> >>> +
> >>> +               /* we have found a better group */
> >>> +               if (pack != sg)
> >>> +                       id = cpumask_first(sched_group_cpus(pack));
> >>> +
> >>> +               /* Look for another CPU than itself */
> >>> +               if ((id != cpu)
> >>> +                || ((sd->parent) && !(sd->parent->flags &&
> >>> SD_LOAD_BALANCE)))
> >>
> >> Is the condition "!(sd->parent->flags && SD_LOAD_BALANCE)" for
> >> big.LITTLE kind of system where SD_LOAD_BALANCE may not be used ?
> >
> > No, packing small tasks is part of the load balance so if the
> > LOAD_BALANCE flag is cleared, we will not try to pack which is a kind
> > of load balance. There is no link with big.LITTLE
> >
> Now it make sense to me.
> 
> >>
> >>
> >>> +                       break;
> >>> +
> >>> +               sd = sd->parent;
> >>> +       }
> >>> +
> >>> +       pr_info(KERN_INFO "CPU%d packing on CPU%d\n", cpu, id);
> >>> +       per_cpu(sd_pack_buddy, cpu) = id;
> >>> +}
> >>> +
> >>>    #if BITS_PER_LONG == 32
> >>>    # define WMULT_CONST  (~0UL)
> >>>    #else
> >>> @@ -3073,6 +3130,55 @@ static int select_idle_sibling(struct task_struct
> >>> *p, int target)
> >>>          return target;
> >>>    }
> >>>
> >>> +static inline bool is_buddy_busy(int cpu)
> >>> +{
> >>> +       struct rq *rq = cpu_rq(cpu);
> >>> +
> >>> +       /*
> >>> +        * A busy buddy is a CPU with a high load or a small load with a
> >>> lot of
> >>> +        * running tasks.
> >>> +        */
> >>> +       return ((rq->avg.usage_avg_sum << rq->nr_running) >
> >>> +                       rq->avg.runnable_avg_period);
> >>
> >> I agree busy CPU is the one with high load, but many small threads may
> >> not make CPU fully busy, right ? Should we just stick to the load
> >> parameter alone here ?
> >
> > IMO, the busy state of a CPU isn't only the load but also how many
> > threads are waiting for running on it. This formula tries to take into
> > account both inputs. If you have dozen of small tasks on a CPU, the
> > latency can be large even if the tasks are small.
> >
> Sure. Your point is to avoid throttling and probably use race for
> idle.
> 
> >>
> >>
> >>> +}
> >>> +
> >>> +static inline bool is_light_task(struct task_struct *p)
> >>> +{
> >>> +       /* A light task runs less than 25% in average */
> >>> +       return ((p->se.avg.usage_avg_sum << 2) <
> >>> p->se.avg.runnable_avg_period);
> >>> +}
> >>
> >> Since the whole packing logic relies on the light threads only, the
> >> overall effectiveness is not significant. Infact with multiple tries on
> >> Dual core system, I didn't see any major improvement in power. I think
> >> we need to be more aggressive here. From the cover letter, I noticed
> >> that, you were concerned about any performance drop due to packing and
> >> may be that is the reason you chose the conservative threshold. But the
> >> fact is, if we want to save meaningful power, there will be slight
> >> performance drop which is expected.
> >
> > I think that everybody agrees that packing small tasks will save power
> > whereas it seems to be not so obvious for heavy task. But I may have
> > set the threshold a bit too low
> >
> I agree on packing saves power part for sure.
> 

I'm not fully convinced that packing always saves power. For systems
with multiple cpu clusters where each cluster is a power domain and the
cpus have no individual power saving states it would probably be more
power efficient to spread the tasks and hope for more opportunities for
hitting cluster shutdown. If all tasks are packed on one cpu it will
keep the whole cluster up, while the remaining cpus are idling without
possibility for entering efficient power states.

Regards,
Morten

> > Up to which load, you would like to pack on 1 core of your dual core system ?
> > Can you provide more details of your load ? Have you got a trace that
> > you can share ?
> >
> More than how much load to pack, I was more looking from the power
> savings delta we can achieve by doing it. Some of the usecases like
> osidle, mp3, gallary are already very low power and that might be
> the reason I didn't notice major mA delta. Though the perf
> traces did show some filtering even at 25 % load. i tried upto
> 50 % threshold to see the effectiveness and there was more
> improvement and hence the suggestion about aggressiveness.
> 
> May be you can try some of these use-cases on your setup instead of
> synthetic workload and see the results.
> 
> Regards
> Santosh
> 
> 
> 
> 
> _______________________________________________
> linaro-dev mailing list
> linaro-dev@lists.linaro.org
> http://lists.linaro.org/mailman/listinfo/linaro-dev
>
Morten Rasmussen Nov. 9, 2012, 5:13 p.m. UTC | #5
Hi Vincent,

I have experienced suboptimal buddy selection on a dual cluster setup
(ARM TC2) if SD_SHARE_POWERLINE is enabled at MC level and disabled at
CPU level. This seems to be the correct flag settings for a system with
only cluster level power gating.

To me it looks like update_packing_domain() is not doing the right
thing. See inline comments below.

On Sun, Oct 07, 2012 at 08:43:55AM +0100, Vincent Guittot wrote:
> During sched_domain creation, we define a pack buddy CPU if available.
> 
> On a system that share the powerline at all level, the buddy is set to -1
> 
> On a dual clusters / dual cores system which can powergate each core and
> cluster independantly, the buddy configuration will be :
>       | CPU0 | CPU1 | CPU2 | CPU3 |
> -----------------------------------
> buddy | CPU0 | CPU0 | CPU0 | CPU2 |
> 
> Small tasks tend to slip out of the periodic load balance.
> The best place to choose to migrate them is at their wake up.
> 
> Signed-off-by: Vincent Guittot <vincent.guittot@linaro.org>
> ---
>  kernel/sched/core.c  |    1 +
>  kernel/sched/fair.c  |  109 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
>  kernel/sched/sched.h |    1 +
>  3 files changed, 111 insertions(+)
> 
> diff --git a/kernel/sched/core.c b/kernel/sched/core.c
> index dab7908..70cadbe 100644
> --- a/kernel/sched/core.c
> +++ b/kernel/sched/core.c
> @@ -6131,6 +6131,7 @@ cpu_attach_domain(struct sched_domain *sd, struct root_domain *rd, int cpu)
>  	rcu_assign_pointer(rq->sd, sd);
>  	destroy_sched_domains(tmp, cpu);
>  
> +	update_packing_domain(cpu);
>  	update_top_cache_domain(cpu);
>  }
>  
> diff --git a/kernel/sched/fair.c b/kernel/sched/fair.c
> index 4f4a4f6..8c9d3ed 100644
> --- a/kernel/sched/fair.c
> +++ b/kernel/sched/fair.c
> @@ -157,6 +157,63 @@ void sched_init_granularity(void)
>  	update_sysctl();
>  }
>  
> +
> +/*
> + * Save the id of the optimal CPU that should be used to pack small tasks
> + * The value -1 is used when no buddy has been found
> + */
> +DEFINE_PER_CPU(int, sd_pack_buddy);
> +
> +/* Look for the best buddy CPU that can be used to pack small tasks
> + * We make the assumption that it doesn't wort to pack on CPU that share the
> + * same powerline. We looks for the 1st sched_domain without the
> + * SD_SHARE_POWERLINE flag. Then We look for the sched_group witht the lowest
> + * power per core based on the assumption that their power efficiency is
> + * better */
> +void update_packing_domain(int cpu)
> +{
> +	struct sched_domain *sd;
> +	int id = -1;
> +
> +	sd = highest_flag_domain(cpu, SD_SHARE_POWERLINE);
> +	if (!sd)
> +		sd = rcu_dereference_check_sched_domain(cpu_rq(cpu)->sd);
> +	else
> +		sd = sd->parent;
sd is the highest level where SD_SHARE_POWERLINE is enabled so the sched
groups of the parent level would represent the power domains. If get it
right, we want to pack inside the cluster first and only let first cpu
of the cluster do packing on another cluster. So all cpus - except the
first one - in the current sched domain should find its buddy within the
domain and only the first one should go to the parent sched domain to
find its buddy.

I propose the following fix:

-		sd = sd->parent;
+		if (cpumask_first(sched_domain_span(sd)) == cpu
+			|| !sd->parent)
+			sd = sd->parent;


> +
> +	while (sd) {
> +		struct sched_group *sg = sd->groups;
> +		struct sched_group *pack = sg;
> +		struct sched_group *tmp = sg->next;
> +
> +		/* 1st CPU of the sched domain is a good candidate */
> +		if (id == -1)
> +			id = cpumask_first(sched_domain_span(sd));

There is no guarantee that id is in the sched group pointed to by
sd->groups, which is implicitly assumed later in the search loop. We
need to find the sched group that contains id and point sg to that
instead. I haven't found an elegant way to find that group, but the fix
below should at least give the right result.

+		/* Find sched group of candidate */
+		tmp = sd->groups;
+		do {
+			if (cpumask_test_cpu(id, sched_group_cpus(tmp)))
+			{
+				sg = tmp;
+				break;
+			}
+		} while (tmp = tmp->next, tmp != sd->groups);
+
+		pack = sg;
+		tmp = sg->next;

Regards,
Morten

> +
> +		/* loop the sched groups to find the best one */
> +		while (tmp != sg) {
> +			if (tmp->sgp->power * sg->group_weight <
> +					sg->sgp->power * tmp->group_weight)
> +				pack = tmp;
> +			tmp = tmp->next;
> +		}
> +
> +		/* we have found a better group */
> +		if (pack != sg)
> +			id = cpumask_first(sched_group_cpus(pack));
> +
> +		/* Look for another CPU than itself */
> +		if ((id != cpu)
> +		 || ((sd->parent) && !(sd->parent->flags && SD_LOAD_BALANCE)))
> +			break;
> +
> +		sd = sd->parent;
> +	}
> +
> +	pr_info(KERN_INFO "CPU%d packing on CPU%d\n", cpu, id);
> +	per_cpu(sd_pack_buddy, cpu) = id;
> +}
> +
>  #if BITS_PER_LONG == 32
>  # define WMULT_CONST	(~0UL)
>  #else
> @@ -3073,6 +3130,55 @@ static int select_idle_sibling(struct task_struct *p, int target)
>  	return target;
>  }
>  
> +static inline bool is_buddy_busy(int cpu)
> +{
> +	struct rq *rq = cpu_rq(cpu);
> +
> +	/*
> +	 * A busy buddy is a CPU with a high load or a small load with a lot of
> +	 * running tasks.
> +	 */
> +	return ((rq->avg.usage_avg_sum << rq->nr_running) >
> +			rq->avg.runnable_avg_period);
> +}
> +
> +static inline bool is_light_task(struct task_struct *p)
> +{
> +	/* A light task runs less than 25% in average */
> +	return ((p->se.avg.usage_avg_sum << 2) < p->se.avg.runnable_avg_period);
> +}
> +
> +static int check_pack_buddy(int cpu, struct task_struct *p)
> +{
> +	int buddy = per_cpu(sd_pack_buddy, cpu);
> +
> +	/* No pack buddy for this CPU */
> +	if (buddy == -1)
> +		return false;
> +
> +	/*
> +	 * If a task is waiting for running on the CPU which is its own buddy,
> +	 * let the default behavior to look for a better CPU if available
> +	 * The threshold has been set to 37.5%
> +	 */
> +	if ((buddy == cpu)
> +	 && ((p->se.avg.usage_avg_sum << 3) < (p->se.avg.runnable_avg_sum * 5)))
> +		return false;
> +
> +	/* buddy is not an allowed CPU */
> +	if (!cpumask_test_cpu(buddy, tsk_cpus_allowed(p)))
> +		return false;
> +
> +	/*
> +	 * If the task is a small one and the buddy is not overloaded,
> +	 * we use buddy cpu
> +	 */
> +	 if (!is_light_task(p) || is_buddy_busy(buddy))
> +		return false;
> +
> +	return true;
> +}
> +
>  /*
>   * sched_balance_self: balance the current task (running on cpu) in domains
>   * that have the 'flag' flag set. In practice, this is SD_BALANCE_FORK and
> @@ -3098,6 +3204,9 @@ select_task_rq_fair(struct task_struct *p, int sd_flag, int wake_flags)
>  	if (p->nr_cpus_allowed == 1)
>  		return prev_cpu;
>  
> +	if (check_pack_buddy(cpu, p))
> +		return per_cpu(sd_pack_buddy, cpu);
> +
>  	if (sd_flag & SD_BALANCE_WAKE) {
>  		if (cpumask_test_cpu(cpu, tsk_cpus_allowed(p)))
>  			want_affine = 1;
> diff --git a/kernel/sched/sched.h b/kernel/sched/sched.h
> index a95d5c1..086d8bf 100644
> --- a/kernel/sched/sched.h
> +++ b/kernel/sched/sched.h
> @@ -875,6 +875,7 @@ static inline void idle_balance(int cpu, struct rq *rq)
>  
>  extern void sysrq_sched_debug_show(void);
>  extern void sched_init_granularity(void);
> +extern void update_packing_domain(int cpu);
>  extern void update_max_interval(void);
>  extern void update_group_power(struct sched_domain *sd, int cpu);
>  extern int update_runtime(struct notifier_block *nfb, unsigned long action, void *hcpu);
> -- 
> 1.7.9.5
> 
> 
> _______________________________________________
> linaro-dev mailing list
> linaro-dev@lists.linaro.org
> http://lists.linaro.org/mailman/listinfo/linaro-dev
>
Vincent Guittot Nov. 12, 2012, 9:30 a.m. UTC | #6
On 2 November 2012 11:53, Santosh Shilimkar <santosh.shilimkar@ti.com> wrote:
> On Monday 29 October 2012 06:42 PM, Vincent Guittot wrote:
>>
>> On 24 October 2012 17:20, Santosh Shilimkar <santosh.shilimkar@ti.com>
>> wrote:
>>>
>>> Vincent,
>>>
>>> Few comments/questions.
>>>
>>>
>>> On Sunday 07 October 2012 01:13 PM, Vincent Guittot wrote:
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> During sched_domain creation, we define a pack buddy CPU if available.
>>>>
>>>> On a system that share the powerline at all level, the buddy is set to
>>>> -1
>>>>
>>>> On a dual clusters / dual cores system which can powergate each core and
>>>> cluster independantly, the buddy configuration will be :
>>>>         | CPU0 | CPU1 | CPU2 | CPU3 |
>>>> -----------------------------------
>>>> buddy | CPU0 | CPU0 | CPU0 | CPU2 |
>>>
>>>
>>>                          ^
>>> Is that a typo ? Should it be CPU2 instead of
>>> CPU0 ?
>>
>>
>> No it's not a typo.
>> The system packs at each scheduling level. It starts to pack in
>> cluster because each core can power gate independently so CPU1 tries
>> to pack its tasks in CPU0 and CPU3 in CPU2. Then, it packs at CPU
>> level so CPU2 tries to pack in the cluster of CPU0 and CPU0 packs in
>> itself
>>
> I get it. Though in above example a task may migrate from say
> CPU3->CPU2->CPU0 as part of packing. I was just thinking whether
> moving such task from say CPU3 to CPU0 might be best instead.

We pack in the cluster then at CPU level. Tasks could sometimes
migrate directly to CPU0 but we would miss the case where CPU0 is busy
but CPU2 is not

Vincent

>
>
>>>
>>>> Small tasks tend to slip out of the periodic load balance.
>>>> The best place to choose to migrate them is at their wake up.
>>>>
>>> I have tried this series since I was looking at some of these packing
>>> bits. On Mobile workloads like OSIdle with Screen ON, MP3, gallary,
>>> I did see some additional filtering of threads with this series
>>> but its not making much difference in power. More on this below.
>>
>>
>> Can I ask you which configuration you have used ? how many cores and
>> cluster ?  Can they be power gated independently ?
>>
> I have been trying with couple of setups. Dual Core ARM machine and
> Quad core X86 box with single package thought most of the mobile
> workload analysis I was doing on ARM machine. On both setups
> CPUs can be gated independently.
>
>
>>>
>>>
>>>> Signed-off-by: Vincent Guittot <vincent.guittot@linaro.org>
>>>> ---
>>>>    kernel/sched/core.c  |    1 +
>>>>    kernel/sched/fair.c  |  109
>>>> ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
>>>>    kernel/sched/sched.h |    1 +
>>>>    3 files changed, 111 insertions(+)
>>>>
>>>> diff --git a/kernel/sched/core.c b/kernel/sched/core.c
>>>> index dab7908..70cadbe 100644
>>>> --- a/kernel/sched/core.c
>>>> +++ b/kernel/sched/core.c
>>>> @@ -6131,6 +6131,7 @@ cpu_attach_domain(struct sched_domain *sd, struct
>>>> root_domain *rd, int cpu)
>>>>          rcu_assign_pointer(rq->sd, sd);
>>>>          destroy_sched_domains(tmp, cpu);
>>>>
>>>> +       update_packing_domain(cpu);
>>>>          update_top_cache_domain(cpu);
>>>>    }
>>>>
>>>> diff --git a/kernel/sched/fair.c b/kernel/sched/fair.c
>>>> index 4f4a4f6..8c9d3ed 100644
>>>> --- a/kernel/sched/fair.c
>>>> +++ b/kernel/sched/fair.c
>>>> @@ -157,6 +157,63 @@ void sched_init_granularity(void)
>>>>          update_sysctl();
>>>>    }
>>>>
>>>> +
>>>> +/*
>>>> + * Save the id of the optimal CPU that should be used to pack small
>>>> tasks
>>>> + * The value -1 is used when no buddy has been found
>>>> + */
>>>> +DEFINE_PER_CPU(int, sd_pack_buddy);
>>>> +
>>>> +/* Look for the best buddy CPU that can be used to pack small tasks
>>>> + * We make the assumption that it doesn't wort to pack on CPU that
>>>> share
>>>> the
>>>
>>>
>>> s/wort/worth
>>
>>
>> yes
>>
>>>
>>>> + * same powerline. We looks for the 1st sched_domain without the
>>>> + * SD_SHARE_POWERLINE flag. Then We look for the sched_group witht the
>>>> lowest
>>>> + * power per core based on the assumption that their power efficiency
>>>> is
>>>> + * better */
>>>
>>>
>>> Commenting style..
>>> /*
>>>   *
>>>   */
>>>
>>
>> yes
>>
>>> Can you please expand the why the assumption is right ?
>>> "it doesn't wort to pack on CPU that share the same powerline"
>>
>>
>> By "share the same power-line", I mean that the CPUs can't power off
>> independently. So if some CPUs can't power off independently, it's
>> worth to try to use most of them to race to idle.
>>
> In that case I suggest we use different word here. Power line can be
> treated as voltage line, power domain.
> May be SD_SHARE_CPU_POWERDOMAIN ?
>
>
>>>
>>> Think about a scenario where you have quad core, ducal cluster system
>>>
>>>          |Cluster1|                      |cluster 2|
>>> | CPU0 | CPU1 | CPU2 | CPU3 |   | CPU0 | CPU1 | CPU2 | CPU3 |
>>>
>>>
>>> Both clusters run from same voltage rail and have same PLL
>>> clocking them. But the cluster have their own power domain
>>> and all CPU's can power gate them-self to low power states.
>>> Clusters also have their own level2 caches.
>>>
>>> In this case, you will still save power if you try to pack
>>> load on one cluster. No ?
>>
>>
>> yes, I need to update the description of SD_SHARE_POWERLINE because
>> I'm afraid I was not clear enough. SD_SHARE_POWERLINE includes the
>> power gating capacity of each core. For your example above, the
>> SD_SHARE_POWERLINE shoud be cleared at both MC and CPU level.
>>
> Thanks for clarification.
>
>
>>>
>>>
>>>> +void update_packing_domain(int cpu)
>>>> +{
>>>> +       struct sched_domain *sd;
>>>> +       int id = -1;
>>>> +
>>>> +       sd = highest_flag_domain(cpu, SD_SHARE_POWERLINE);
>>>> +       if (!sd)
>>>> +               sd =
>>>> rcu_dereference_check_sched_domain(cpu_rq(cpu)->sd);
>>>> +       else
>>>> +               sd = sd->parent;
>>>> +
>>>> +       while (sd) {
>>>> +               struct sched_group *sg = sd->groups;
>>>> +               struct sched_group *pack = sg;
>>>> +               struct sched_group *tmp = sg->next;
>>>> +
>>>> +               /* 1st CPU of the sched domain is a good candidate */
>>>> +               if (id == -1)
>>>> +                       id = cpumask_first(sched_domain_span(sd));
>>>> +
>>>> +               /* loop the sched groups to find the best one */
>>>> +               while (tmp != sg) {
>>>> +                       if (tmp->sgp->power * sg->group_weight <
>>>> +                                       sg->sgp->power *
>>>> tmp->group_weight)
>>>> +                               pack = tmp;
>>>> +                       tmp = tmp->next;
>>>> +               }
>>>> +
>>>> +               /* we have found a better group */
>>>> +               if (pack != sg)
>>>> +                       id = cpumask_first(sched_group_cpus(pack));
>>>> +
>>>> +               /* Look for another CPU than itself */
>>>> +               if ((id != cpu)
>>>> +                || ((sd->parent) && !(sd->parent->flags &&
>>>> SD_LOAD_BALANCE)))
>>>
>>>
>>> Is the condition "!(sd->parent->flags && SD_LOAD_BALANCE)" for
>>> big.LITTLE kind of system where SD_LOAD_BALANCE may not be used ?
>>
>>
>> No, packing small tasks is part of the load balance so if the
>> LOAD_BALANCE flag is cleared, we will not try to pack which is a kind
>> of load balance. There is no link with big.LITTLE
>>
> Now it make sense to me.
>
>
>>>
>>>
>>>> +                       break;
>>>> +
>>>> +               sd = sd->parent;
>>>> +       }
>>>> +
>>>> +       pr_info(KERN_INFO "CPU%d packing on CPU%d\n", cpu, id);
>>>> +       per_cpu(sd_pack_buddy, cpu) = id;
>>>> +}
>>>> +
>>>>    #if BITS_PER_LONG == 32
>>>>    # define WMULT_CONST  (~0UL)
>>>>    #else
>>>> @@ -3073,6 +3130,55 @@ static int select_idle_sibling(struct task_struct
>>>> *p, int target)
>>>>          return target;
>>>>    }
>>>>
>>>> +static inline bool is_buddy_busy(int cpu)
>>>> +{
>>>> +       struct rq *rq = cpu_rq(cpu);
>>>> +
>>>> +       /*
>>>> +        * A busy buddy is a CPU with a high load or a small load with a
>>>> lot of
>>>> +        * running tasks.
>>>> +        */
>>>> +       return ((rq->avg.usage_avg_sum << rq->nr_running) >
>>>> +                       rq->avg.runnable_avg_period);
>>>
>>>
>>> I agree busy CPU is the one with high load, but many small threads may
>>> not make CPU fully busy, right ? Should we just stick to the load
>>> parameter alone here ?
>>
>>
>> IMO, the busy state of a CPU isn't only the load but also how many
>> threads are waiting for running on it. This formula tries to take into
>> account both inputs. If you have dozen of small tasks on a CPU, the
>> latency can be large even if the tasks are small.
>>
> Sure. Your point is to avoid throttling and probably use race for
> idle.
>
>
>>>
>>>
>>>> +}
>>>> +
>>>> +static inline bool is_light_task(struct task_struct *p)
>>>> +{
>>>> +       /* A light task runs less than 25% in average */
>>>> +       return ((p->se.avg.usage_avg_sum << 2) <
>>>> p->se.avg.runnable_avg_period);
>>>> +}
>>>
>>>
>>> Since the whole packing logic relies on the light threads only, the
>>> overall effectiveness is not significant. Infact with multiple tries on
>>> Dual core system, I didn't see any major improvement in power. I think
>>> we need to be more aggressive here. From the cover letter, I noticed
>>> that, you were concerned about any performance drop due to packing and
>>> may be that is the reason you chose the conservative threshold. But the
>>> fact is, if we want to save meaningful power, there will be slight
>>> performance drop which is expected.
>>
>>
>> I think that everybody agrees that packing small tasks will save power
>> whereas it seems to be not so obvious for heavy task. But I may have
>> set the threshold a bit too low
>>
> I agree on packing saves power part for sure.
>
>
>> Up to which load, you would like to pack on 1 core of your dual core
>> system ?
>> Can you provide more details of your load ? Have you got a trace that
>> you can share ?
>>
> More than how much load to pack, I was more looking from the power
> savings delta we can achieve by doing it. Some of the usecases like
> osidle, mp3, gallary are already very low power and that might be
> the reason I didn't notice major mA delta. Though the perf
> traces did show some filtering even at 25 % load. i tried upto
> 50 % threshold to see the effectiveness and there was more
> improvement and hence the suggestion about aggressiveness.
>
> May be you can try some of these use-cases on your setup instead of
> synthetic workload and see the results.

Yes, I will do that. The main advantage of synthetic workload is the
reproducibility and the interdependency against the framework that is
used. But I'm going to use more realistic use-cases.

Regards,
Vincent

>
> Regards
> Santosh
>
>
>
Vincent Guittot Nov. 12, 2012, 1:13 p.m. UTC | #7
On 9 November 2012 17:46, Morten Rasmussen <Morten.Rasmussen@arm.com> wrote:
> On Fri, Nov 02, 2012 at 10:53:47AM +0000, Santosh Shilimkar wrote:
>> On Monday 29 October 2012 06:42 PM, Vincent Guittot wrote:
>> > On 24 October 2012 17:20, Santosh Shilimkar <santosh.shilimkar@ti.com> wrote:
>> >> Vincent,
>> >>
>> >> Few comments/questions.
>> >>
>> >>
>> >> On Sunday 07 October 2012 01:13 PM, Vincent Guittot wrote:
>> >>>
>> >>> During sched_domain creation, we define a pack buddy CPU if available.
>> >>>
>> >>> On a system that share the powerline at all level, the buddy is set to -1
>> >>>
>> >>> On a dual clusters / dual cores system which can powergate each core and
>> >>> cluster independantly, the buddy configuration will be :
>> >>>         | CPU0 | CPU1 | CPU2 | CPU3 |
>> >>> -----------------------------------
>> >>> buddy | CPU0 | CPU0 | CPU0 | CPU2 |
>> >>
>> >>                          ^
>> >> Is that a typo ? Should it be CPU2 instead of
>> >> CPU0 ?
>> >
>> > No it's not a typo.
>> > The system packs at each scheduling level. It starts to pack in
>> > cluster because each core can power gate independently so CPU1 tries
>> > to pack its tasks in CPU0 and CPU3 in CPU2. Then, it packs at CPU
>> > level so CPU2 tries to pack in the cluster of CPU0 and CPU0 packs in
>> > itself
>> >
>> I get it. Though in above example a task may migrate from say
>> CPU3->CPU2->CPU0 as part of packing. I was just thinking whether
>> moving such task from say CPU3 to CPU0 might be best instead.
>
> To me it seems suboptimal to pack the task twice, but the alternative is
> not good either. If you try to move the task directly to CPU0 you may
> miss packing opportunities if CPU0 is already busy, while CPU2 might
> have enough capacity to take it. It would probably be better to check
> the business of CPU0 and then back off and try CPU2 if CP0 is busy. This
> would require a buddy list for each CPU rather just a single buddy and
> thus might become expensive.
>
>>
>> >>
>> >>> Small tasks tend to slip out of the periodic load balance.
>> >>> The best place to choose to migrate them is at their wake up.
>> >>>
>> >> I have tried this series since I was looking at some of these packing
>> >> bits. On Mobile workloads like OSIdle with Screen ON, MP3, gallary,
>> >> I did see some additional filtering of threads with this series
>> >> but its not making much difference in power. More on this below.
>> >
>> > Can I ask you which configuration you have used ? how many cores and
>> > cluster ?  Can they be power gated independently ?
>> >
>> I have been trying with couple of setups. Dual Core ARM machine and
>> Quad core X86 box with single package thought most of the mobile
>> workload analysis I was doing on ARM machine. On both setups
>> CPUs can be gated independently.
>>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>> Signed-off-by: Vincent Guittot <vincent.guittot@linaro.org>
>> >>> ---
>> >>>    kernel/sched/core.c  |    1 +
>> >>>    kernel/sched/fair.c  |  109
>> >>> ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
>> >>>    kernel/sched/sched.h |    1 +
>> >>>    3 files changed, 111 insertions(+)
>> >>>
>> >>> diff --git a/kernel/sched/core.c b/kernel/sched/core.c
>> >>> index dab7908..70cadbe 100644
>> >>> --- a/kernel/sched/core.c
>> >>> +++ b/kernel/sched/core.c
>> >>> @@ -6131,6 +6131,7 @@ cpu_attach_domain(struct sched_domain *sd, struct
>> >>> root_domain *rd, int cpu)
>> >>>          rcu_assign_pointer(rq->sd, sd);
>> >>>          destroy_sched_domains(tmp, cpu);
>> >>>
>> >>> +       update_packing_domain(cpu);
>> >>>          update_top_cache_domain(cpu);
>> >>>    }
>> >>>
>> >>> diff --git a/kernel/sched/fair.c b/kernel/sched/fair.c
>> >>> index 4f4a4f6..8c9d3ed 100644
>> >>> --- a/kernel/sched/fair.c
>> >>> +++ b/kernel/sched/fair.c
>> >>> @@ -157,6 +157,63 @@ void sched_init_granularity(void)
>> >>>          update_sysctl();
>> >>>    }
>> >>>
>> >>> +
>> >>> +/*
>> >>> + * Save the id of the optimal CPU that should be used to pack small tasks
>> >>> + * The value -1 is used when no buddy has been found
>> >>> + */
>> >>> +DEFINE_PER_CPU(int, sd_pack_buddy);
>> >>> +
>> >>> +/* Look for the best buddy CPU that can be used to pack small tasks
>> >>> + * We make the assumption that it doesn't wort to pack on CPU that share
>> >>> the
>> >>
>> >> s/wort/worth
>> >
>> > yes
>> >
>> >>
>> >>> + * same powerline. We looks for the 1st sched_domain without the
>> >>> + * SD_SHARE_POWERLINE flag. Then We look for the sched_group witht the
>> >>> lowest
>> >>> + * power per core based on the assumption that their power efficiency is
>> >>> + * better */
>> >>
>> >> Commenting style..
>> >> /*
>> >>   *
>> >>   */
>> >>
>> >
>> > yes
>> >
>> >> Can you please expand the why the assumption is right ?
>> >> "it doesn't wort to pack on CPU that share the same powerline"
>> >
>> > By "share the same power-line", I mean that the CPUs can't power off
>> > independently. So if some CPUs can't power off independently, it's
>> > worth to try to use most of them to race to idle.
>> >
>> In that case I suggest we use different word here. Power line can be
>> treated as voltage line, power domain.
>> May be SD_SHARE_CPU_POWERDOMAIN ?
>>
>
> How about just SD_SHARE_POWERDOMAIN ?

It looks better than SD_SHARE_POWERLINE. I will replace the name

>
>> >>
>> >> Think about a scenario where you have quad core, ducal cluster system
>> >>
>> >>          |Cluster1|                      |cluster 2|
>> >> | CPU0 | CPU1 | CPU2 | CPU3 |   | CPU0 | CPU1 | CPU2 | CPU3 |
>> >>
>> >>
>> >> Both clusters run from same voltage rail and have same PLL
>> >> clocking them. But the cluster have their own power domain
>> >> and all CPU's can power gate them-self to low power states.
>> >> Clusters also have their own level2 caches.
>> >>
>> >> In this case, you will still save power if you try to pack
>> >> load on one cluster. No ?
>> >
>> > yes, I need to update the description of SD_SHARE_POWERLINE because
>> > I'm afraid I was not clear enough. SD_SHARE_POWERLINE includes the
>> > power gating capacity of each core. For your example above, the
>> > SD_SHARE_POWERLINE shoud be cleared at both MC and CPU level.
>> >
>> Thanks for clarification.
>>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>> +void update_packing_domain(int cpu)
>> >>> +{
>> >>> +       struct sched_domain *sd;
>> >>> +       int id = -1;
>> >>> +
>> >>> +       sd = highest_flag_domain(cpu, SD_SHARE_POWERLINE);
>> >>> +       if (!sd)
>> >>> +               sd = rcu_dereference_check_sched_domain(cpu_rq(cpu)->sd);
>> >>> +       else
>> >>> +               sd = sd->parent;
>> >>> +
>> >>> +       while (sd) {
>> >>> +               struct sched_group *sg = sd->groups;
>> >>> +               struct sched_group *pack = sg;
>> >>> +               struct sched_group *tmp = sg->next;
>> >>> +
>> >>> +               /* 1st CPU of the sched domain is a good candidate */
>> >>> +               if (id == -1)
>> >>> +                       id = cpumask_first(sched_domain_span(sd));
>> >>> +
>> >>> +               /* loop the sched groups to find the best one */
>> >>> +               while (tmp != sg) {
>> >>> +                       if (tmp->sgp->power * sg->group_weight <
>> >>> +                                       sg->sgp->power *
>> >>> tmp->group_weight)
>> >>> +                               pack = tmp;
>> >>> +                       tmp = tmp->next;
>> >>> +               }
>> >>> +
>> >>> +               /* we have found a better group */
>> >>> +               if (pack != sg)
>> >>> +                       id = cpumask_first(sched_group_cpus(pack));
>> >>> +
>> >>> +               /* Look for another CPU than itself */
>> >>> +               if ((id != cpu)
>> >>> +                || ((sd->parent) && !(sd->parent->flags &&
>> >>> SD_LOAD_BALANCE)))
>> >>
>> >> Is the condition "!(sd->parent->flags && SD_LOAD_BALANCE)" for
>> >> big.LITTLE kind of system where SD_LOAD_BALANCE may not be used ?
>> >
>> > No, packing small tasks is part of the load balance so if the
>> > LOAD_BALANCE flag is cleared, we will not try to pack which is a kind
>> > of load balance. There is no link with big.LITTLE
>> >
>> Now it make sense to me.
>>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>> +                       break;
>> >>> +
>> >>> +               sd = sd->parent;
>> >>> +       }
>> >>> +
>> >>> +       pr_info(KERN_INFO "CPU%d packing on CPU%d\n", cpu, id);
>> >>> +       per_cpu(sd_pack_buddy, cpu) = id;
>> >>> +}
>> >>> +
>> >>>    #if BITS_PER_LONG == 32
>> >>>    # define WMULT_CONST  (~0UL)
>> >>>    #else
>> >>> @@ -3073,6 +3130,55 @@ static int select_idle_sibling(struct task_struct
>> >>> *p, int target)
>> >>>          return target;
>> >>>    }
>> >>>
>> >>> +static inline bool is_buddy_busy(int cpu)
>> >>> +{
>> >>> +       struct rq *rq = cpu_rq(cpu);
>> >>> +
>> >>> +       /*
>> >>> +        * A busy buddy is a CPU with a high load or a small load with a
>> >>> lot of
>> >>> +        * running tasks.
>> >>> +        */
>> >>> +       return ((rq->avg.usage_avg_sum << rq->nr_running) >
>> >>> +                       rq->avg.runnable_avg_period);
>> >>
>> >> I agree busy CPU is the one with high load, but many small threads may
>> >> not make CPU fully busy, right ? Should we just stick to the load
>> >> parameter alone here ?
>> >
>> > IMO, the busy state of a CPU isn't only the load but also how many
>> > threads are waiting for running on it. This formula tries to take into
>> > account both inputs. If you have dozen of small tasks on a CPU, the
>> > latency can be large even if the tasks are small.
>> >
>> Sure. Your point is to avoid throttling and probably use race for
>> idle.
>>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>> +}
>> >>> +
>> >>> +static inline bool is_light_task(struct task_struct *p)
>> >>> +{
>> >>> +       /* A light task runs less than 25% in average */
>> >>> +       return ((p->se.avg.usage_avg_sum << 2) <
>> >>> p->se.avg.runnable_avg_period);
>> >>> +}
>> >>
>> >> Since the whole packing logic relies on the light threads only, the
>> >> overall effectiveness is not significant. Infact with multiple tries on
>> >> Dual core system, I didn't see any major improvement in power. I think
>> >> we need to be more aggressive here. From the cover letter, I noticed
>> >> that, you were concerned about any performance drop due to packing and
>> >> may be that is the reason you chose the conservative threshold. But the
>> >> fact is, if we want to save meaningful power, there will be slight
>> >> performance drop which is expected.
>> >
>> > I think that everybody agrees that packing small tasks will save power
>> > whereas it seems to be not so obvious for heavy task. But I may have
>> > set the threshold a bit too low
>> >
>> I agree on packing saves power part for sure.
>>
>
> I'm not fully convinced that packing always saves power. For systems
> with multiple cpu clusters where each cluster is a power domain and the
> cpus have no individual power saving states it would probably be more
> power efficient to spread the tasks and hope for more opportunities for
> hitting cluster shutdown. If all tasks are packed on one cpu it will
> keep the whole cluster up, while the remaining cpus are idling without
> possibility for entering efficient power states.
>
> Regards,
> Morten
>
>> > Up to which load, you would like to pack on 1 core of your dual core system ?
>> > Can you provide more details of your load ? Have you got a trace that
>> > you can share ?
>> >
>> More than how much load to pack, I was more looking from the power
>> savings delta we can achieve by doing it. Some of the usecases like
>> osidle, mp3, gallary are already very low power and that might be
>> the reason I didn't notice major mA delta. Though the perf
>> traces did show some filtering even at 25 % load. i tried upto
>> 50 % threshold to see the effectiveness and there was more
>> improvement and hence the suggestion about aggressiveness.
>>
>> May be you can try some of these use-cases on your setup instead of
>> synthetic workload and see the results.
>>
>> Regards
>> Santosh
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> linaro-dev mailing list
>> linaro-dev@lists.linaro.org
>> http://lists.linaro.org/mailman/listinfo/linaro-dev
>>
>
Vincent Guittot Nov. 12, 2012, 1:51 p.m. UTC | #8
On 9 November 2012 18:13, Morten Rasmussen <Morten.Rasmussen@arm.com> wrote:
> Hi Vincent,
>
> I have experienced suboptimal buddy selection on a dual cluster setup
> (ARM TC2) if SD_SHARE_POWERLINE is enabled at MC level and disabled at
> CPU level. This seems to be the correct flag settings for a system with
> only cluster level power gating.
>
> To me it looks like update_packing_domain() is not doing the right
> thing. See inline comments below.

Hi Morten,

Thanks for testing the patches.

It seems that I have too optimized the loop and remove some use cases.

>
> On Sun, Oct 07, 2012 at 08:43:55AM +0100, Vincent Guittot wrote:
>> During sched_domain creation, we define a pack buddy CPU if available.
>>
>> On a system that share the powerline at all level, the buddy is set to -1
>>
>> On a dual clusters / dual cores system which can powergate each core and
>> cluster independantly, the buddy configuration will be :
>>       | CPU0 | CPU1 | CPU2 | CPU3 |
>> -----------------------------------
>> buddy | CPU0 | CPU0 | CPU0 | CPU2 |
>>
>> Small tasks tend to slip out of the periodic load balance.
>> The best place to choose to migrate them is at their wake up.
>>
>> Signed-off-by: Vincent Guittot <vincent.guittot@linaro.org>
>> ---
>>  kernel/sched/core.c  |    1 +
>>  kernel/sched/fair.c  |  109 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
>>  kernel/sched/sched.h |    1 +
>>  3 files changed, 111 insertions(+)
>>
>> diff --git a/kernel/sched/core.c b/kernel/sched/core.c
>> index dab7908..70cadbe 100644
>> --- a/kernel/sched/core.c
>> +++ b/kernel/sched/core.c
>> @@ -6131,6 +6131,7 @@ cpu_attach_domain(struct sched_domain *sd, struct root_domain *rd, int cpu)
>>       rcu_assign_pointer(rq->sd, sd);
>>       destroy_sched_domains(tmp, cpu);
>>
>> +     update_packing_domain(cpu);
>>       update_top_cache_domain(cpu);
>>  }
>>
>> diff --git a/kernel/sched/fair.c b/kernel/sched/fair.c
>> index 4f4a4f6..8c9d3ed 100644
>> --- a/kernel/sched/fair.c
>> +++ b/kernel/sched/fair.c
>> @@ -157,6 +157,63 @@ void sched_init_granularity(void)
>>       update_sysctl();
>>  }
>>
>> +
>> +/*
>> + * Save the id of the optimal CPU that should be used to pack small tasks
>> + * The value -1 is used when no buddy has been found
>> + */
>> +DEFINE_PER_CPU(int, sd_pack_buddy);
>> +
>> +/* Look for the best buddy CPU that can be used to pack small tasks
>> + * We make the assumption that it doesn't wort to pack on CPU that share the
>> + * same powerline. We looks for the 1st sched_domain without the
>> + * SD_SHARE_POWERLINE flag. Then We look for the sched_group witht the lowest
>> + * power per core based on the assumption that their power efficiency is
>> + * better */
>> +void update_packing_domain(int cpu)
>> +{
>> +     struct sched_domain *sd;
>> +     int id = -1;
>> +
>> +     sd = highest_flag_domain(cpu, SD_SHARE_POWERLINE);
>> +     if (!sd)
>> +             sd = rcu_dereference_check_sched_domain(cpu_rq(cpu)->sd);
>> +     else
>> +             sd = sd->parent;
> sd is the highest level where SD_SHARE_POWERLINE is enabled so the sched
> groups of the parent level would represent the power domains. If get it
> right, we want to pack inside the cluster first and only let first cpu

You probably wanted to use sched_group instead of cluster because
cluster is only a special use case, didn't you ?

> of the cluster do packing on another cluster. So all cpus - except the
> first one - in the current sched domain should find its buddy within the
> domain and only the first one should go to the parent sched domain to
> find its buddy.

We don't want to pack in the current sched_domain because it shares
power domain. We want to pack at the parent level

>
> I propose the following fix:
>
> -               sd = sd->parent;
> +               if (cpumask_first(sched_domain_span(sd)) == cpu
> +                       || !sd->parent)
> +                       sd = sd->parent;

We always look for the buddy in the parent level whatever the cpu
position in the mask is.

>
>
>> +
>> +     while (sd) {
>> +             struct sched_group *sg = sd->groups;
>> +             struct sched_group *pack = sg;
>> +             struct sched_group *tmp = sg->next;
>> +
>> +             /* 1st CPU of the sched domain is a good candidate */
>> +             if (id == -1)
>> +                     id = cpumask_first(sched_domain_span(sd));
>
> There is no guarantee that id is in the sched group pointed to by
> sd->groups, which is implicitly assumed later in the search loop. We
> need to find the sched group that contains id and point sg to that
> instead. I haven't found an elegant way to find that group, but the fix
> below should at least give the right result.
>
> +               /* Find sched group of candidate */
> +               tmp = sd->groups;
> +               do {
> +                       if (cpumask_test_cpu(id, sched_group_cpus(tmp)))
> +                       {
> +                               sg = tmp;
> +                               break;
> +                       }
> +               } while (tmp = tmp->next, tmp != sd->groups);
> +
> +               pack = sg;
> +               tmp = sg->next;


I have a new loop which solves your issue and others. I will use it
for the next version

+	while (sd) {
+		struct sched_group *sg = sd->groups;
+		struct sched_group *pack = sg;
+		struct sched_group *tmp;
+
+		/* The 1st CPU of the local group is a good candidate */
+		id = cpumask_first(sched_group_cpus(pack));
+
+		/* loop the sched groups to find the best one */
+		for (tmp = sg->next; tmp != sg; tmp = tmp->next) {
+			if (tmp->sgp->power * pack->group_weight >
+					pack->sgp->power * tmp->group_weight)
+				continue;
+
+			if ((tmp->sgp->power * pack->group_weight ==
+					pack->sgp->power * tmp->group_weight)
+			 && (cpumask_first(sched_group_cpus(tmp)) >= id))
+				continue;
+
+			/* we have found a better group */
+			pack = tmp;
+
+			/* Take the 1st CPU of the new group */
+			id = cpumask_first(sched_group_cpus(pack));
+		}
+
+		/* Look for another CPU than itself */
+		if ((id != cpu)
+		 || ((sd->parent) && !(sd->parent->flags && SD_LOAD_BALANCE)))
+			break;
+
+		sd = sd->parent;
+	}

Regards,
Vincent

>
> Regards,
> Morten
>
>> +
>> +             /* loop the sched groups to find the best one */
>> +             while (tmp != sg) {
>> +                     if (tmp->sgp->power * sg->group_weight <
>> +                                     sg->sgp->power * tmp->group_weight)
>> +                             pack = tmp;
>> +                     tmp = tmp->next;
>> +             }
>> +
>> +             /* we have found a better group */
>> +             if (pack != sg)
>> +                     id = cpumask_first(sched_group_cpus(pack));
>> +
>> +             /* Look for another CPU than itself */
>> +             if ((id != cpu)
>> +              || ((sd->parent) && !(sd->parent->flags && SD_LOAD_BALANCE)))
>> +                     break;
>> +
>> +             sd = sd->parent;
>> +     }
>> +
>> +     pr_info(KERN_INFO "CPU%d packing on CPU%d\n", cpu, id);
>> +     per_cpu(sd_pack_buddy, cpu) = id;
>> +}
>> +
>>  #if BITS_PER_LONG == 32
>>  # define WMULT_CONST (~0UL)
>>  #else
>> @@ -3073,6 +3130,55 @@ static int select_idle_sibling(struct task_struct *p, int target)
>>       return target;
>>  }
>>
>> +static inline bool is_buddy_busy(int cpu)
>> +{
>> +     struct rq *rq = cpu_rq(cpu);
>> +
>> +     /*
>> +      * A busy buddy is a CPU with a high load or a small load with a lot of
>> +      * running tasks.
>> +      */
>> +     return ((rq->avg.usage_avg_sum << rq->nr_running) >
>> +                     rq->avg.runnable_avg_period);
>> +}
>> +
>> +static inline bool is_light_task(struct task_struct *p)
>> +{
>> +     /* A light task runs less than 25% in average */
>> +     return ((p->se.avg.usage_avg_sum << 2) < p->se.avg.runnable_avg_period);
>> +}
>> +
>> +static int check_pack_buddy(int cpu, struct task_struct *p)
>> +{
>> +     int buddy = per_cpu(sd_pack_buddy, cpu);
>> +
>> +     /* No pack buddy for this CPU */
>> +     if (buddy == -1)
>> +             return false;
>> +
>> +     /*
>> +      * If a task is waiting for running on the CPU which is its own buddy,
>> +      * let the default behavior to look for a better CPU if available
>> +      * The threshold has been set to 37.5%
>> +      */
>> +     if ((buddy == cpu)
>> +      && ((p->se.avg.usage_avg_sum << 3) < (p->se.avg.runnable_avg_sum * 5)))
>> +             return false;
>> +
>> +     /* buddy is not an allowed CPU */
>> +     if (!cpumask_test_cpu(buddy, tsk_cpus_allowed(p)))
>> +             return false;
>> +
>> +     /*
>> +      * If the task is a small one and the buddy is not overloaded,
>> +      * we use buddy cpu
>> +      */
>> +      if (!is_light_task(p) || is_buddy_busy(buddy))
>> +             return false;
>> +
>> +     return true;
>> +}
>> +
>>  /*
>>   * sched_balance_self: balance the current task (running on cpu) in domains
>>   * that have the 'flag' flag set. In practice, this is SD_BALANCE_FORK and
>> @@ -3098,6 +3204,9 @@ select_task_rq_fair(struct task_struct *p, int sd_flag, int wake_flags)
>>       if (p->nr_cpus_allowed == 1)
>>               return prev_cpu;
>>
>> +     if (check_pack_buddy(cpu, p))
>> +             return per_cpu(sd_pack_buddy, cpu);
>> +
>>       if (sd_flag & SD_BALANCE_WAKE) {
>>               if (cpumask_test_cpu(cpu, tsk_cpus_allowed(p)))
>>                       want_affine = 1;
>> diff --git a/kernel/sched/sched.h b/kernel/sched/sched.h
>> index a95d5c1..086d8bf 100644
>> --- a/kernel/sched/sched.h
>> +++ b/kernel/sched/sched.h
>> @@ -875,6 +875,7 @@ static inline void idle_balance(int cpu, struct rq *rq)
>>
>>  extern void sysrq_sched_debug_show(void);
>>  extern void sched_init_granularity(void);
>> +extern void update_packing_domain(int cpu);
>>  extern void update_max_interval(void);
>>  extern void update_group_power(struct sched_domain *sd, int cpu);
>>  extern int update_runtime(struct notifier_block *nfb, unsigned long action, void *hcpu);
>> --
>> 1.7.9.5
>>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> linaro-dev mailing list
>> linaro-dev@lists.linaro.org
>> http://lists.linaro.org/mailman/listinfo/linaro-dev
>>
>
Morten Rasmussen Nov. 20, 2012, 2:28 p.m. UTC | #9
Hi Vincent,

On Mon, Nov 12, 2012 at 01:51:00PM +0000, Vincent Guittot wrote:
> On 9 November 2012 18:13, Morten Rasmussen <Morten.Rasmussen@arm.com> wrote:
> > Hi Vincent,
> >
> > I have experienced suboptimal buddy selection on a dual cluster setup
> > (ARM TC2) if SD_SHARE_POWERLINE is enabled at MC level and disabled at
> > CPU level. This seems to be the correct flag settings for a system with
> > only cluster level power gating.
> >
> > To me it looks like update_packing_domain() is not doing the right
> > thing. See inline comments below.
> 
> Hi Morten,
> 
> Thanks for testing the patches.
> 
> It seems that I have too optimized the loop and remove some use cases.
> 
> >
> > On Sun, Oct 07, 2012 at 08:43:55AM +0100, Vincent Guittot wrote:
> >> During sched_domain creation, we define a pack buddy CPU if available.
> >>
> >> On a system that share the powerline at all level, the buddy is set to -1
> >>
> >> On a dual clusters / dual cores system which can powergate each core and
> >> cluster independantly, the buddy configuration will be :
> >>       | CPU0 | CPU1 | CPU2 | CPU3 |
> >> -----------------------------------
> >> buddy | CPU0 | CPU0 | CPU0 | CPU2 |
> >>
> >> Small tasks tend to slip out of the periodic load balance.
> >> The best place to choose to migrate them is at their wake up.
> >>
> >> Signed-off-by: Vincent Guittot <vincent.guittot@linaro.org>
> >> ---
> >>  kernel/sched/core.c  |    1 +
> >>  kernel/sched/fair.c  |  109 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
> >>  kernel/sched/sched.h |    1 +
> >>  3 files changed, 111 insertions(+)
> >>
> >> diff --git a/kernel/sched/core.c b/kernel/sched/core.c
> >> index dab7908..70cadbe 100644
> >> --- a/kernel/sched/core.c
> >> +++ b/kernel/sched/core.c
> >> @@ -6131,6 +6131,7 @@ cpu_attach_domain(struct sched_domain *sd, struct root_domain *rd, int cpu)
> >>       rcu_assign_pointer(rq->sd, sd);
> >>       destroy_sched_domains(tmp, cpu);
> >>
> >> +     update_packing_domain(cpu);
> >>       update_top_cache_domain(cpu);
> >>  }
> >>
> >> diff --git a/kernel/sched/fair.c b/kernel/sched/fair.c
> >> index 4f4a4f6..8c9d3ed 100644
> >> --- a/kernel/sched/fair.c
> >> +++ b/kernel/sched/fair.c
> >> @@ -157,6 +157,63 @@ void sched_init_granularity(void)
> >>       update_sysctl();
> >>  }
> >>
> >> +
> >> +/*
> >> + * Save the id of the optimal CPU that should be used to pack small tasks
> >> + * The value -1 is used when no buddy has been found
> >> + */
> >> +DEFINE_PER_CPU(int, sd_pack_buddy);
> >> +
> >> +/* Look for the best buddy CPU that can be used to pack small tasks
> >> + * We make the assumption that it doesn't wort to pack on CPU that share the
> >> + * same powerline. We looks for the 1st sched_domain without the
> >> + * SD_SHARE_POWERLINE flag. Then We look for the sched_group witht the lowest
> >> + * power per core based on the assumption that their power efficiency is
> >> + * better */
> >> +void update_packing_domain(int cpu)
> >> +{
> >> +     struct sched_domain *sd;
> >> +     int id = -1;
> >> +
> >> +     sd = highest_flag_domain(cpu, SD_SHARE_POWERLINE);
> >> +     if (!sd)
> >> +             sd = rcu_dereference_check_sched_domain(cpu_rq(cpu)->sd);
> >> +     else
> >> +             sd = sd->parent;
> > sd is the highest level where SD_SHARE_POWERLINE is enabled so the sched
> > groups of the parent level would represent the power domains. If get it
> > right, we want to pack inside the cluster first and only let first cpu
> 
> You probably wanted to use sched_group instead of cluster because
> cluster is only a special use case, didn't you ?
> 
> > of the cluster do packing on another cluster. So all cpus - except the
> > first one - in the current sched domain should find its buddy within the
> > domain and only the first one should go to the parent sched domain to
> > find its buddy.
> 
> We don't want to pack in the current sched_domain because it shares
> power domain. We want to pack at the parent level
> 

Yes. I think we mean the same thing. The packing takes place at the
parent sched_domain but the sched_group that we are looking at only
contains the cpus of the level below.

> >
> > I propose the following fix:
> >
> > -               sd = sd->parent;
> > +               if (cpumask_first(sched_domain_span(sd)) == cpu
> > +                       || !sd->parent)
> > +                       sd = sd->parent;
> 
> We always look for the buddy in the parent level whatever the cpu
> position in the mask is.
> 
> >
> >
> >> +
> >> +     while (sd) {
> >> +             struct sched_group *sg = sd->groups;
> >> +             struct sched_group *pack = sg;
> >> +             struct sched_group *tmp = sg->next;
> >> +
> >> +             /* 1st CPU of the sched domain is a good candidate */
> >> +             if (id == -1)
> >> +                     id = cpumask_first(sched_domain_span(sd));
> >
> > There is no guarantee that id is in the sched group pointed to by
> > sd->groups, which is implicitly assumed later in the search loop. We
> > need to find the sched group that contains id and point sg to that
> > instead. I haven't found an elegant way to find that group, but the fix
> > below should at least give the right result.
> >
> > +               /* Find sched group of candidate */
> > +               tmp = sd->groups;
> > +               do {
> > +                       if (cpumask_test_cpu(id, sched_group_cpus(tmp)))
> > +                       {
> > +                               sg = tmp;
> > +                               break;
> > +                       }
> > +               } while (tmp = tmp->next, tmp != sd->groups);
> > +
> > +               pack = sg;
> > +               tmp = sg->next;
> 
> 
> I have a new loop which solves your issue and others. I will use it
> for the next version
> 
> +	while (sd) {
> +		struct sched_group *sg = sd->groups;
> +		struct sched_group *pack = sg;
> +		struct sched_group *tmp;
> +
> +		/* The 1st CPU of the local group is a good candidate */
> +		id = cpumask_first(sched_group_cpus(pack));

You make the assumption that the first sched_group in the list always contains
the current cpu. I think that is always the case, but I haven't verified
it. Maybe a comment about this would help people to understand the code
easier.

> +
> +		/* loop the sched groups to find the best one */
> +		for (tmp = sg->next; tmp != sg; tmp = tmp->next) {
> +			if (tmp->sgp->power * pack->group_weight >
> +					pack->sgp->power * tmp->group_weight)
> +				continue;
> +
> +			if ((tmp->sgp->power * pack->group_weight ==
> +					pack->sgp->power * tmp->group_weight)
> +			 && (cpumask_first(sched_group_cpus(tmp)) >= id))
> +				continue;
> +
> +			/* we have found a better group */
> +			pack = tmp;
> +
> +			/* Take the 1st CPU of the new group */
> +			id = cpumask_first(sched_group_cpus(pack));
> +		}
> +

Works great on my setup.

> +		/* Look for another CPU than itself */
> +		if ((id != cpu)
> +		 || ((sd->parent) && !(sd->parent->flags && SD_LOAD_BALANCE)))
> +			break;

If I understand correctly the last part of this check should avoid
selecting a buddy in a sched_group that is not load balanced with the
current one. In that case, I think that this check (or a similar check)
should be done before the loop as well. As it is, the first iteration of
the loop will always search all the groups of the first domain where
SD_SHARE_POWERLINE is disabled regardless of the state of
SD_LOAD_BALANCE flag. So if they are both disabled at the same level
packing will happen across groups that are not supposed to be
load-balanced.

Regards,
Morten

> +
> +		sd = sd->parent;
> +	}
> 
> Regards,
> Vincent
> 
> >
> > Regards,
> > Morten
> >
> >> +
> >> +             /* loop the sched groups to find the best one */
> >> +             while (tmp != sg) {
> >> +                     if (tmp->sgp->power * sg->group_weight <
> >> +                                     sg->sgp->power * tmp->group_weight)
> >> +                             pack = tmp;
> >> +                     tmp = tmp->next;
> >> +             }
> >> +
> >> +             /* we have found a better group */
> >> +             if (pack != sg)
> >> +                     id = cpumask_first(sched_group_cpus(pack));
> >> +
> >> +             /* Look for another CPU than itself */
> >> +             if ((id != cpu)
> >> +              || ((sd->parent) && !(sd->parent->flags && SD_LOAD_BALANCE)))
> >> +                     break;
> >> +
> >> +             sd = sd->parent;
> >> +     }
> >> +
> >> +     pr_info(KERN_INFO "CPU%d packing on CPU%d\n", cpu, id);
> >> +     per_cpu(sd_pack_buddy, cpu) = id;
> >> +}
> >> +
> >>  #if BITS_PER_LONG == 32
> >>  # define WMULT_CONST (~0UL)
> >>  #else
> >> @@ -3073,6 +3130,55 @@ static int select_idle_sibling(struct task_struct *p, int target)
> >>       return target;
> >>  }
> >>
> >> +static inline bool is_buddy_busy(int cpu)
> >> +{
> >> +     struct rq *rq = cpu_rq(cpu);
> >> +
> >> +     /*
> >> +      * A busy buddy is a CPU with a high load or a small load with a lot of
> >> +      * running tasks.
> >> +      */
> >> +     return ((rq->avg.usage_avg_sum << rq->nr_running) >
> >> +                     rq->avg.runnable_avg_period);
> >> +}
> >> +
> >> +static inline bool is_light_task(struct task_struct *p)
> >> +{
> >> +     /* A light task runs less than 25% in average */
> >> +     return ((p->se.avg.usage_avg_sum << 2) < p->se.avg.runnable_avg_period);
> >> +}
> >> +
> >> +static int check_pack_buddy(int cpu, struct task_struct *p)
> >> +{
> >> +     int buddy = per_cpu(sd_pack_buddy, cpu);
> >> +
> >> +     /* No pack buddy for this CPU */
> >> +     if (buddy == -1)
> >> +             return false;
> >> +
> >> +     /*
> >> +      * If a task is waiting for running on the CPU which is its own buddy,
> >> +      * let the default behavior to look for a better CPU if available
> >> +      * The threshold has been set to 37.5%
> >> +      */
> >> +     if ((buddy == cpu)
> >> +      && ((p->se.avg.usage_avg_sum << 3) < (p->se.avg.runnable_avg_sum * 5)))
> >> +             return false;
> >> +
> >> +     /* buddy is not an allowed CPU */
> >> +     if (!cpumask_test_cpu(buddy, tsk_cpus_allowed(p)))
> >> +             return false;
> >> +
> >> +     /*
> >> +      * If the task is a small one and the buddy is not overloaded,
> >> +      * we use buddy cpu
> >> +      */
> >> +      if (!is_light_task(p) || is_buddy_busy(buddy))
> >> +             return false;
> >> +
> >> +     return true;
> >> +}
> >> +
> >>  /*
> >>   * sched_balance_self: balance the current task (running on cpu) in domains
> >>   * that have the 'flag' flag set. In practice, this is SD_BALANCE_FORK and
> >> @@ -3098,6 +3204,9 @@ select_task_rq_fair(struct task_struct *p, int sd_flag, int wake_flags)
> >>       if (p->nr_cpus_allowed == 1)
> >>               return prev_cpu;
> >>
> >> +     if (check_pack_buddy(cpu, p))
> >> +             return per_cpu(sd_pack_buddy, cpu);
> >> +
> >>       if (sd_flag & SD_BALANCE_WAKE) {
> >>               if (cpumask_test_cpu(cpu, tsk_cpus_allowed(p)))
> >>                       want_affine = 1;
> >> diff --git a/kernel/sched/sched.h b/kernel/sched/sched.h
> >> index a95d5c1..086d8bf 100644
> >> --- a/kernel/sched/sched.h
> >> +++ b/kernel/sched/sched.h
> >> @@ -875,6 +875,7 @@ static inline void idle_balance(int cpu, struct rq *rq)
> >>
> >>  extern void sysrq_sched_debug_show(void);
> >>  extern void sched_init_granularity(void);
> >> +extern void update_packing_domain(int cpu);
> >>  extern void update_max_interval(void);
> >>  extern void update_group_power(struct sched_domain *sd, int cpu);
> >>  extern int update_runtime(struct notifier_block *nfb, unsigned long action, void *hcpu);
> >> --
> >> 1.7.9.5
> >>
> >>
> >> _______________________________________________
> >> linaro-dev mailing list
> >> linaro-dev@lists.linaro.org
> >> http://lists.linaro.org/mailman/listinfo/linaro-dev
> >>
> >
>
Vincent Guittot Nov. 20, 2012, 4:59 p.m. UTC | #10
On 20 November 2012 15:28, Morten Rasmussen <Morten.Rasmussen@arm.com> wrote:
> Hi Vincent,
>
> On Mon, Nov 12, 2012 at 01:51:00PM +0000, Vincent Guittot wrote:
>> On 9 November 2012 18:13, Morten Rasmussen <Morten.Rasmussen@arm.com> wrote:
>> > Hi Vincent,
>> >
>> > I have experienced suboptimal buddy selection on a dual cluster setup
>> > (ARM TC2) if SD_SHARE_POWERLINE is enabled at MC level and disabled at
>> > CPU level. This seems to be the correct flag settings for a system with
>> > only cluster level power gating.
>> >
>> > To me it looks like update_packing_domain() is not doing the right
>> > thing. See inline comments below.
>>
>> Hi Morten,
>>
>> Thanks for testing the patches.
>>
>> It seems that I have too optimized the loop and remove some use cases.
>>
>> >
>> > On Sun, Oct 07, 2012 at 08:43:55AM +0100, Vincent Guittot wrote:
>> >> During sched_domain creation, we define a pack buddy CPU if available.
>> >>
>> >> On a system that share the powerline at all level, the buddy is set to -1
>> >>
>> >> On a dual clusters / dual cores system which can powergate each core and
>> >> cluster independantly, the buddy configuration will be :
>> >>       | CPU0 | CPU1 | CPU2 | CPU3 |
>> >> -----------------------------------
>> >> buddy | CPU0 | CPU0 | CPU0 | CPU2 |
>> >>
>> >> Small tasks tend to slip out of the periodic load balance.
>> >> The best place to choose to migrate them is at their wake up.
>> >>
>> >> Signed-off-by: Vincent Guittot <vincent.guittot@linaro.org>
>> >> ---
>> >>  kernel/sched/core.c  |    1 +
>> >>  kernel/sched/fair.c  |  109 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
>> >>  kernel/sched/sched.h |    1 +
>> >>  3 files changed, 111 insertions(+)
>> >>
>> >> diff --git a/kernel/sched/core.c b/kernel/sched/core.c
>> >> index dab7908..70cadbe 100644
>> >> --- a/kernel/sched/core.c
>> >> +++ b/kernel/sched/core.c
>> >> @@ -6131,6 +6131,7 @@ cpu_attach_domain(struct sched_domain *sd, struct root_domain *rd, int cpu)
>> >>       rcu_assign_pointer(rq->sd, sd);
>> >>       destroy_sched_domains(tmp, cpu);
>> >>
>> >> +     update_packing_domain(cpu);
>> >>       update_top_cache_domain(cpu);
>> >>  }
>> >>
>> >> diff --git a/kernel/sched/fair.c b/kernel/sched/fair.c
>> >> index 4f4a4f6..8c9d3ed 100644
>> >> --- a/kernel/sched/fair.c
>> >> +++ b/kernel/sched/fair.c
>> >> @@ -157,6 +157,63 @@ void sched_init_granularity(void)
>> >>       update_sysctl();
>> >>  }
>> >>
>> >> +
>> >> +/*
>> >> + * Save the id of the optimal CPU that should be used to pack small tasks
>> >> + * The value -1 is used when no buddy has been found
>> >> + */
>> >> +DEFINE_PER_CPU(int, sd_pack_buddy);
>> >> +
>> >> +/* Look for the best buddy CPU that can be used to pack small tasks
>> >> + * We make the assumption that it doesn't wort to pack on CPU that share the
>> >> + * same powerline. We looks for the 1st sched_domain without the
>> >> + * SD_SHARE_POWERLINE flag. Then We look for the sched_group witht the lowest
>> >> + * power per core based on the assumption that their power efficiency is
>> >> + * better */
>> >> +void update_packing_domain(int cpu)
>> >> +{
>> >> +     struct sched_domain *sd;
>> >> +     int id = -1;
>> >> +
>> >> +     sd = highest_flag_domain(cpu, SD_SHARE_POWERLINE);
>> >> +     if (!sd)
>> >> +             sd = rcu_dereference_check_sched_domain(cpu_rq(cpu)->sd);
>> >> +     else
>> >> +             sd = sd->parent;
>> > sd is the highest level where SD_SHARE_POWERLINE is enabled so the sched
>> > groups of the parent level would represent the power domains. If get it
>> > right, we want to pack inside the cluster first and only let first cpu
>>
>> You probably wanted to use sched_group instead of cluster because
>> cluster is only a special use case, didn't you ?
>>
>> > of the cluster do packing on another cluster. So all cpus - except the
>> > first one - in the current sched domain should find its buddy within the
>> > domain and only the first one should go to the parent sched domain to
>> > find its buddy.
>>
>> We don't want to pack in the current sched_domain because it shares
>> power domain. We want to pack at the parent level
>>
>
> Yes. I think we mean the same thing. The packing takes place at the
> parent sched_domain but the sched_group that we are looking at only
> contains the cpus of the level below.
>
>> >
>> > I propose the following fix:
>> >
>> > -               sd = sd->parent;
>> > +               if (cpumask_first(sched_domain_span(sd)) == cpu
>> > +                       || !sd->parent)
>> > +                       sd = sd->parent;
>>
>> We always look for the buddy in the parent level whatever the cpu
>> position in the mask is.
>>
>> >
>> >
>> >> +
>> >> +     while (sd) {
>> >> +             struct sched_group *sg = sd->groups;
>> >> +             struct sched_group *pack = sg;
>> >> +             struct sched_group *tmp = sg->next;
>> >> +
>> >> +             /* 1st CPU of the sched domain is a good candidate */
>> >> +             if (id == -1)
>> >> +                     id = cpumask_first(sched_domain_span(sd));
>> >
>> > There is no guarantee that id is in the sched group pointed to by
>> > sd->groups, which is implicitly assumed later in the search loop. We
>> > need to find the sched group that contains id and point sg to that
>> > instead. I haven't found an elegant way to find that group, but the fix
>> > below should at least give the right result.
>> >
>> > +               /* Find sched group of candidate */
>> > +               tmp = sd->groups;
>> > +               do {
>> > +                       if (cpumask_test_cpu(id, sched_group_cpus(tmp)))
>> > +                       {
>> > +                               sg = tmp;
>> > +                               break;
>> > +                       }
>> > +               } while (tmp = tmp->next, tmp != sd->groups);
>> > +
>> > +               pack = sg;
>> > +               tmp = sg->next;
>>
>>
>> I have a new loop which solves your issue and others. I will use it
>> for the next version
>>
>> +     while (sd) {
>> +             struct sched_group *sg = sd->groups;
>> +             struct sched_group *pack = sg;
>> +             struct sched_group *tmp;
>> +
>> +             /* The 1st CPU of the local group is a good candidate */
>> +             id = cpumask_first(sched_group_cpus(pack));
>
> You make the assumption that the first sched_group in the list always contains
> the current cpu. I think that is always the case, but I haven't verified
> it. Maybe a comment about this would help people to understand the code
> easier.

yes, the first sched_group contains the cpu. I will add a comment

>
>> +
>> +             /* loop the sched groups to find the best one */
>> +             for (tmp = sg->next; tmp != sg; tmp = tmp->next) {
>> +                     if (tmp->sgp->power * pack->group_weight >
>> +                                     pack->sgp->power * tmp->group_weight)
>> +                             continue;
>> +
>> +                     if ((tmp->sgp->power * pack->group_weight ==
>> +                                     pack->sgp->power * tmp->group_weight)
>> +                      && (cpumask_first(sched_group_cpus(tmp)) >= id))
>> +                             continue;
>> +
>> +                     /* we have found a better group */
>> +                     pack = tmp;
>> +
>> +                     /* Take the 1st CPU of the new group */
>> +                     id = cpumask_first(sched_group_cpus(pack));
>> +             }
>> +
>
> Works great on my setup.
>
>> +             /* Look for another CPU than itself */
>> +             if ((id != cpu)
>> +              || ((sd->parent) && !(sd->parent->flags && SD_LOAD_BALANCE)))
>> +                     break;
>
> If I understand correctly the last part of this check should avoid
> selecting a buddy in a sched_group that is not load balanced with the
> current one. In that case, I think that this check (or a similar check)
> should be done before the loop as well. As it is, the first iteration of
> the loop will always search all the groups of the first domain where
> SD_SHARE_POWERLINE is disabled regardless of the state of
> SD_LOAD_BALANCE flag. So if they are both disabled at the same level
> packing will happen across groups that are not supposed to be
> load-balanced.

you're right, i'm going to fix it

Thanks

>
> Regards,
> Morten
>
>> +
>> +             sd = sd->parent;
>> +     }
>>
>> Regards,
>> Vincent
>>
>> >
>> > Regards,
>> > Morten
>> >
>> >> +
>> >> +             /* loop the sched groups to find the best one */
>> >> +             while (tmp != sg) {
>> >> +                     if (tmp->sgp->power * sg->group_weight <
>> >> +                                     sg->sgp->power * tmp->group_weight)
>> >> +                             pack = tmp;
>> >> +                     tmp = tmp->next;
>> >> +             }
>> >> +
>> >> +             /* we have found a better group */
>> >> +             if (pack != sg)
>> >> +                     id = cpumask_first(sched_group_cpus(pack));
>> >> +
>> >> +             /* Look for another CPU than itself */
>> >> +             if ((id != cpu)
>> >> +              || ((sd->parent) && !(sd->parent->flags && SD_LOAD_BALANCE)))
>> >> +                     break;
>> >> +
>> >> +             sd = sd->parent;
>> >> +     }
>> >> +
>> >> +     pr_info(KERN_INFO "CPU%d packing on CPU%d\n", cpu, id);
>> >> +     per_cpu(sd_pack_buddy, cpu) = id;
>> >> +}
>> >> +
>> >>  #if BITS_PER_LONG == 32
>> >>  # define WMULT_CONST (~0UL)
>> >>  #else
>> >> @@ -3073,6 +3130,55 @@ static int select_idle_sibling(struct task_struct *p, int target)
>> >>       return target;
>> >>  }
>> >>
>> >> +static inline bool is_buddy_busy(int cpu)
>> >> +{
>> >> +     struct rq *rq = cpu_rq(cpu);
>> >> +
>> >> +     /*
>> >> +      * A busy buddy is a CPU with a high load or a small load with a lot of
>> >> +      * running tasks.
>> >> +      */
>> >> +     return ((rq->avg.usage_avg_sum << rq->nr_running) >
>> >> +                     rq->avg.runnable_avg_period);
>> >> +}
>> >> +
>> >> +static inline bool is_light_task(struct task_struct *p)
>> >> +{
>> >> +     /* A light task runs less than 25% in average */
>> >> +     return ((p->se.avg.usage_avg_sum << 2) < p->se.avg.runnable_avg_period);
>> >> +}
>> >> +
>> >> +static int check_pack_buddy(int cpu, struct task_struct *p)
>> >> +{
>> >> +     int buddy = per_cpu(sd_pack_buddy, cpu);
>> >> +
>> >> +     /* No pack buddy for this CPU */
>> >> +     if (buddy == -1)
>> >> +             return false;
>> >> +
>> >> +     /*
>> >> +      * If a task is waiting for running on the CPU which is its own buddy,
>> >> +      * let the default behavior to look for a better CPU if available
>> >> +      * The threshold has been set to 37.5%
>> >> +      */
>> >> +     if ((buddy == cpu)
>> >> +      && ((p->se.avg.usage_avg_sum << 3) < (p->se.avg.runnable_avg_sum * 5)))
>> >> +             return false;
>> >> +
>> >> +     /* buddy is not an allowed CPU */
>> >> +     if (!cpumask_test_cpu(buddy, tsk_cpus_allowed(p)))
>> >> +             return false;
>> >> +
>> >> +     /*
>> >> +      * If the task is a small one and the buddy is not overloaded,
>> >> +      * we use buddy cpu
>> >> +      */
>> >> +      if (!is_light_task(p) || is_buddy_busy(buddy))
>> >> +             return false;
>> >> +
>> >> +     return true;
>> >> +}
>> >> +
>> >>  /*
>> >>   * sched_balance_self: balance the current task (running on cpu) in domains
>> >>   * that have the 'flag' flag set. In practice, this is SD_BALANCE_FORK and
>> >> @@ -3098,6 +3204,9 @@ select_task_rq_fair(struct task_struct *p, int sd_flag, int wake_flags)
>> >>       if (p->nr_cpus_allowed == 1)
>> >>               return prev_cpu;
>> >>
>> >> +     if (check_pack_buddy(cpu, p))
>> >> +             return per_cpu(sd_pack_buddy, cpu);
>> >> +
>> >>       if (sd_flag & SD_BALANCE_WAKE) {
>> >>               if (cpumask_test_cpu(cpu, tsk_cpus_allowed(p)))
>> >>                       want_affine = 1;
>> >> diff --git a/kernel/sched/sched.h b/kernel/sched/sched.h
>> >> index a95d5c1..086d8bf 100644
>> >> --- a/kernel/sched/sched.h
>> >> +++ b/kernel/sched/sched.h
>> >> @@ -875,6 +875,7 @@ static inline void idle_balance(int cpu, struct rq *rq)
>> >>
>> >>  extern void sysrq_sched_debug_show(void);
>> >>  extern void sched_init_granularity(void);
>> >> +extern void update_packing_domain(int cpu);
>> >>  extern void update_max_interval(void);
>> >>  extern void update_group_power(struct sched_domain *sd, int cpu);
>> >>  extern int update_runtime(struct notifier_block *nfb, unsigned long action, void *hcpu);
>> >> --
>> >> 1.7.9.5
>> >>
>> >>
>> >> _______________________________________________
>> >> linaro-dev mailing list
>> >> linaro-dev@lists.linaro.org
>> >> http://lists.linaro.org/mailman/listinfo/linaro-dev
>> >>
>> >
>>
>
diff mbox

Patch

diff --git a/kernel/sched/core.c b/kernel/sched/core.c
index dab7908..70cadbe 100644
--- a/kernel/sched/core.c
+++ b/kernel/sched/core.c
@@ -6131,6 +6131,7 @@  cpu_attach_domain(struct sched_domain *sd, struct root_domain *rd, int cpu)
 	rcu_assign_pointer(rq->sd, sd);
 	destroy_sched_domains(tmp, cpu);
 
+	update_packing_domain(cpu);
 	update_top_cache_domain(cpu);
 }
 
diff --git a/kernel/sched/fair.c b/kernel/sched/fair.c
index 4f4a4f6..8c9d3ed 100644
--- a/kernel/sched/fair.c
+++ b/kernel/sched/fair.c
@@ -157,6 +157,63 @@  void sched_init_granularity(void)
 	update_sysctl();
 }
 
+
+/*
+ * Save the id of the optimal CPU that should be used to pack small tasks
+ * The value -1 is used when no buddy has been found
+ */
+DEFINE_PER_CPU(int, sd_pack_buddy);
+
+/* Look for the best buddy CPU that can be used to pack small tasks
+ * We make the assumption that it doesn't wort to pack on CPU that share the
+ * same powerline. We looks for the 1st sched_domain without the
+ * SD_SHARE_POWERLINE flag. Then We look for the sched_group witht the lowest
+ * power per core based on the assumption that their power efficiency is
+ * better */
+void update_packing_domain(int cpu)
+{
+	struct sched_domain *sd;
+	int id = -1;
+
+	sd = highest_flag_domain(cpu, SD_SHARE_POWERLINE);
+	if (!sd)
+		sd = rcu_dereference_check_sched_domain(cpu_rq(cpu)->sd);
+	else
+		sd = sd->parent;
+
+	while (sd) {
+		struct sched_group *sg = sd->groups;
+		struct sched_group *pack = sg;
+		struct sched_group *tmp = sg->next;
+
+		/* 1st CPU of the sched domain is a good candidate */
+		if (id == -1)
+			id = cpumask_first(sched_domain_span(sd));
+
+		/* loop the sched groups to find the best one */
+		while (tmp != sg) {
+			if (tmp->sgp->power * sg->group_weight <
+					sg->sgp->power * tmp->group_weight)
+				pack = tmp;
+			tmp = tmp->next;
+		}
+
+		/* we have found a better group */
+		if (pack != sg)
+			id = cpumask_first(sched_group_cpus(pack));
+
+		/* Look for another CPU than itself */
+		if ((id != cpu)
+		 || ((sd->parent) && !(sd->parent->flags && SD_LOAD_BALANCE)))
+			break;
+
+		sd = sd->parent;
+	}
+
+	pr_info(KERN_INFO "CPU%d packing on CPU%d\n", cpu, id);
+	per_cpu(sd_pack_buddy, cpu) = id;
+}
+
 #if BITS_PER_LONG == 32
 # define WMULT_CONST	(~0UL)
 #else
@@ -3073,6 +3130,55 @@  static int select_idle_sibling(struct task_struct *p, int target)
 	return target;
 }
 
+static inline bool is_buddy_busy(int cpu)
+{
+	struct rq *rq = cpu_rq(cpu);
+
+	/*
+	 * A busy buddy is a CPU with a high load or a small load with a lot of
+	 * running tasks.
+	 */
+	return ((rq->avg.usage_avg_sum << rq->nr_running) >
+			rq->avg.runnable_avg_period);
+}
+
+static inline bool is_light_task(struct task_struct *p)
+{
+	/* A light task runs less than 25% in average */
+	return ((p->se.avg.usage_avg_sum << 2) < p->se.avg.runnable_avg_period);
+}
+
+static int check_pack_buddy(int cpu, struct task_struct *p)
+{
+	int buddy = per_cpu(sd_pack_buddy, cpu);
+
+	/* No pack buddy for this CPU */
+	if (buddy == -1)
+		return false;
+
+	/*
+	 * If a task is waiting for running on the CPU which is its own buddy,
+	 * let the default behavior to look for a better CPU if available
+	 * The threshold has been set to 37.5%
+	 */
+	if ((buddy == cpu)
+	 && ((p->se.avg.usage_avg_sum << 3) < (p->se.avg.runnable_avg_sum * 5)))
+		return false;
+
+	/* buddy is not an allowed CPU */
+	if (!cpumask_test_cpu(buddy, tsk_cpus_allowed(p)))
+		return false;
+
+	/*
+	 * If the task is a small one and the buddy is not overloaded,
+	 * we use buddy cpu
+	 */
+	 if (!is_light_task(p) || is_buddy_busy(buddy))
+		return false;
+
+	return true;
+}
+
 /*
  * sched_balance_self: balance the current task (running on cpu) in domains
  * that have the 'flag' flag set. In practice, this is SD_BALANCE_FORK and
@@ -3098,6 +3204,9 @@  select_task_rq_fair(struct task_struct *p, int sd_flag, int wake_flags)
 	if (p->nr_cpus_allowed == 1)
 		return prev_cpu;
 
+	if (check_pack_buddy(cpu, p))
+		return per_cpu(sd_pack_buddy, cpu);
+
 	if (sd_flag & SD_BALANCE_WAKE) {
 		if (cpumask_test_cpu(cpu, tsk_cpus_allowed(p)))
 			want_affine = 1;
diff --git a/kernel/sched/sched.h b/kernel/sched/sched.h
index a95d5c1..086d8bf 100644
--- a/kernel/sched/sched.h
+++ b/kernel/sched/sched.h
@@ -875,6 +875,7 @@  static inline void idle_balance(int cpu, struct rq *rq)
 
 extern void sysrq_sched_debug_show(void);
 extern void sched_init_granularity(void);
+extern void update_packing_domain(int cpu);
 extern void update_max_interval(void);
 extern void update_group_power(struct sched_domain *sd, int cpu);
 extern int update_runtime(struct notifier_block *nfb, unsigned long action, void *hcpu);