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[RFC,13/16] padata: Run helper threads at MAX_NICE

Message ID 20220106004656.126790-14-daniel.m.jordan@oracle.com (mailing list archive)
State New
Headers show
Series padata, vfio, sched: Multithreaded VFIO page pinning | expand

Commit Message

Daniel Jordan Jan. 6, 2022, 12:46 a.m. UTC
Optimistic parallelization can go wrong if too many helpers are started
on a busy system.  They can unfairly degrade the performance of other
tasks, so they should be sensitive to current CPU utilization[1].

Achieve this by running helpers at MAX_NICE so that their CPU time is
proportional to idle CPU time.  The main thread, however, runs at its
original priority so that it can make progress on a heavily loaded
system, as it would if padata were not in the picture.

Here are two test cases in which a padata and a non-padata workload
compete for the same CPUs to show that normal priority (i.e. nice=0)
padata helpers cause the non-padata workload to run more slowly, whereas
MAX_NICE padata helpers don't.

Notes:
  - Each case was run using 8 CPUs on a large two-socket server, with a
    cpumask allowing all test threads to run anywhere within the 8.
  - The non-padata workload used 7 threads and the padata workload used 8
    threads to evaluate how much padata helpers, rather than the main padata
    thread, disturbed the non-padata workload.
  - The non-padata workload was started after the padata workload and run
    for less time to maximize the chances that the non-padata workload would
    be disturbed.
  - Runtimes in seconds.

Case 1: Synthetic, worst-case CPU contention

    padata_test - a tight loop doing integer multiplication to max out on CPU;
                  used for testing only, does not appear in this series
    stress-ng   - cpu stressor ("-c --cpu-method ackerman --cpu-ops 1200");

                 stress-ng
                     alone  (stdev)   max_nice  (stdev)   normal_prio  (stdev)
                  ------------------------------------------------------------
    padata_test                          96.87  ( 1.09)         90.81  ( 0.29)
    stress-ng        43.04  ( 0.00)      43.58  ( 0.01)         75.86  ( 0.39)

MAX_NICE helpers make a significant difference compared to normal
priority helpers, with stress-ng taking 76% longer to finish when
competing with normal priority padata threads than when run by itself,
but only 1% longer when run with MAX_NICE helpers.  The 1% comes from
the small amount of CPU time MAX_NICE threads are given despite their
low priority.

Case 2: Real-world CPU contention

    padata_vfio - VFIO page pin a 175G kvm guest
    usemem      - faults in 25G of anonymous THP per thread, PAGE_SIZE stride;
                  used to mimic the page clearing that dominates in padata_vfio
                  so that usemem competes for the same system resources

                    usemem
                     alone  (stdev)   max_nice  (stdev)   normal_prio  (stdev)
                  ------------------------------------------------------------
    padata_vfio                          14.74  ( 0.04)          9.93  ( 0.09)
        usemem       10.45  ( 0.04)      10.75  ( 0.04)         14.14  ( 0.07)

Here the effect is similar, just not as pronounced.  The usemem threads
take 35% longer to finish with normal priority padata threads than when
run alone, but only 3% longer when MAX_NICE is used.

[1] lkml.kernel.org/r/20171206143509.GG7515@dhcp22.suse.cz

Signed-off-by: Daniel Jordan <daniel.m.jordan@oracle.com>
---
 kernel/padata.c | 3 +++
 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+)
diff mbox series

Patch

diff --git a/kernel/padata.c b/kernel/padata.c
index ef6589a6b665..83e86724b3e1 100644
--- a/kernel/padata.c
+++ b/kernel/padata.c
@@ -638,7 +638,10 @@  int padata_do_multithreaded_job(struct padata_mt_job *job,
 		if (IS_ERR(task)) {
 			--ps.nworks;
 		} else {
+			/* Helper threads shouldn't disturb other workloads. */
+			set_user_nice(task, MAX_NICE);
 			kthread_bind_mask(task, current->cpus_ptr);
+
 			wake_up_process(task);
 		}
 	}