Re: [PATCH 2/2] drm/i915: Limit the busy wait on requests to 2us not 10ms!

From: Tvrtko Ursulin
Date: Mon Nov 16 2015 - 05:24:55 EST



Hi,

On 15/11/15 13:32, Chris Wilson wrote:
When waiting for high frequency requests, the finite amount of time
required to set up the irq and wait upon it limits the response rate. By
busywaiting on the request completion for a short while we can service
the high frequency waits as quick as possible. However, if it is a slow
request, we want to sleep as quickly as possible. The tradeoff between
waiting and sleeping is roughly the time it takes to sleep on a request,
on the order of a microsecond. Based on measurements from big core, I
have set the limit for busywaiting as 2 microseconds.

Sounds like solid reasoning. Would it also be worth finding the trade off limit for small core?

The code currently uses the jiffie clock, but that is far too coarse (on
the order of 10 milliseconds) and results in poor interactivity as the
CPU ends up being hogged by slow requests. To get microsecond resolution
we need to use a high resolution timer. The cheapest of which is polling
local_clock(), but that is only valid on the same CPU. If we switch CPUs
because the task was preempted, we can also use that as an indicator that
the system is too busy to waste cycles on spinning and we should sleep
instead.

Hm, need_resched would not cover the CPU switch anyway? Or maybe need_resched means something other than I thought which is "there are other runnable tasks"?

This would also have impact on the patch subject line.I thought we would burn a jiffie of CPU cycles only if there are no other runnable tasks - so how come an impact on interactivity?

Also again I think the commit message needs some data on how this was found and what is the impact.

Btw as it happens, just last week as I was playing with perf, I did notice busy spinning is the top cycle waster in some benchmarks. I was in the process of trying to quantize the difference with it on or off but did not complete it.

__i915_spin_request was introduced in
commit 2def4ad99befa25775dd2f714fdd4d92faec6e34 [v4.2]
Author: Chris Wilson <chris@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Tue Apr 7 16:20:41 2015 +0100

drm/i915: Optimistically spin for the request completion

Reported-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@xxxxxxxxx>
Link: https://lkml.org/lkml/2015/11/12/621
Cc: Jens Axboe <axboe@xxxxxxxxx>
Cc; "Rogozhkin, Dmitry V" <dmitry.v.rogozhkin@xxxxxxxxx>
Cc: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@xxxxxxxx>
Cc: Tvrtko Ursulin <tvrtko.ursulin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Cc: Eero Tamminen <eero.t.tamminen@xxxxxxxxx>
Cc: "Rantala, Valtteri" <valtteri.rantala@xxxxxxxxx>
Cc: stable@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
---
drivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_gem.c | 28 +++++++++++++++++++++++++---
1 file changed, 25 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)

diff --git a/drivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_gem.c b/drivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_gem.c
index 740530c571d1..2a88158bd1f7 100644
--- a/drivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_gem.c
+++ b/drivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_gem.c
@@ -1146,14 +1146,36 @@ static bool missed_irq(struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv,
return test_bit(ring->id, &dev_priv->gpu_error.missed_irq_rings);
}

+static u64 local_clock_us(unsigned *cpu)
+{
+ u64 t;
+
+ *cpu = get_cpu();
+ t = local_clock() >> 10;

Needs comment I think to explicitly mention the approximation, or maybe drop the _us suffix?

+ put_cpu();
+
+ return t;
+}
+
+static bool busywait_stop(u64 timeout, unsigned cpu)
+{
+ unsigned this_cpu;
+
+ if (time_after64(local_clock_us(&this_cpu), timeout))
+ return true;
+
+ return this_cpu != cpu;
+}
+
static int __i915_spin_request(struct drm_i915_gem_request *req, int state)
{
- unsigned long timeout;
+ u64 timeout;
+ unsigned cpu;

if (i915_gem_request_get_ring(req)->irq_refcount)
return -EBUSY;

- timeout = jiffies + 1;
+ timeout = local_clock_us(&cpu) + 2;
while (!need_resched()) {
if (i915_gem_request_completed(req, true))
return 0;
@@ -1161,7 +1183,7 @@ static int __i915_spin_request(struct drm_i915_gem_request *req, int state)
if (signal_pending_state(state, current))
break;

- if (time_after_eq(jiffies, timeout))
+ if (busywait_stop(timeout, cpu))
break;

cpu_relax_lowlatency();


Otherwise looks good. Not sure what would you convert to 32-bit from your follow up reply since you need us resolution?

Regards,

Tvrtko
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