Re: [PATCH 1/3] sched/cputime: Improve scalability of times()/clock_gettime() on 32 bit cpus

From: Giovanni Gherdovich
Date: Sun Sep 04 2016 - 14:46:47 EST


On Thu, 2016-09-01 at 12:29 +0200, Peter Zijlstra wrote:
> On Thu, Sep 01, 2016 at 12:07:34PM +0200, Stanislaw Gruszka wrote:
>
> > On Thu, Sep 01, 2016 at 11:49:06AM +0200, Peter Zijlstra wrote:
> > >Â
> > > You're now making rather hot paths slower to benefit a rather
> > > slow path, that too is backwards.
>
> > Ok, you have right, I made update_curr() slower (a bit I think,
> > since this new seqcount primitive should be in the same cache line
> > as other things).
>Â
> seqcount adds 2 smp_wmb(), which on ARM, are not free (it is
> possible to do with just 1 FWIW).
>Â
>
> > But do we don't care about inconsistency of accessing of 64 bit
> > variable on 32 bit processors (see patch 3) ? I know this is
> > unlikely scenario to get inconsistency, but I assume it's still
> > possible, or not?
>Â
> Its actually quite possible. We've observed it a fair few
> times. 64bit variables are 2 32bit stores/loads and getting
> interleaved data is quite possible.
>Â

I think leaving the 32bit benchmark numbers where they are, in the
interest of not perturbing the update_curr() path, is the right call
here. task_rq_lock() may hurt the thread_group_cputime() path but the
seqcount alternate strategy could impact other scheduler-related
workloads.

>
> > If not, I can get rid of read_sum_exec_runtime() and just read
> > sum_exec_runtime without task_rq_lock() protection on
> > thread_group_cputime() . That would make the benchmark happy.
>Â
> I think this benchmark is misguided. Just accept that O(nr_threads)
> is expensive, same with process wide itimer, just don't use them
> when you care about performance.

As you say, the results of the "poundtime" benchmark have to be read
with a grain of salt, and probably I should put them in
perspective. In a sentence: a low number of threads represents real
world scenarios more faithfully, obviously. We run it in a framework
(Mel Gorman's MMTests) which stresses the box from 2 to 4*num_cpus
threads as it does with many other workloads where num_thread is a
parameter.

We're spraying all over the input space just to see if anything
interesting happens. If we see a regression in some obscure corner
case, that's not necessarily a bug -- sometimes it's just not
interesting or the trade-offs aren't worth fixing it.

"poundtime" first appeared on LKML in 2009 as test case for a
functional bug where a process' time wasn't monotonic; it was then
reused by Rik van Riel in 2014 as a performance workload, see
https://marc.info/?i=1408133138-22048-1-git-send-email-riel@xxxxxxxxxx

The slightly edited version we use at SUSE in MMTest is in the
changelog of 6075620b0590 "sched/cputime: Mitigate performance
regression in times()/clock_gettime()".


Giovanni