Re: [RFC 5/9] sched: cpufreq: remove smp_processor_id() in remote paths

From: Rafael J. Wysocki
Date: Tue Apr 11 2017 - 10:00:35 EST


On Tue, Apr 11, 2017 at 12:35 PM, Viresh Kumar <viresh.kumar@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> On 29-03-17, 23:28, Rafael J. Wysocki wrote:
>> On Thursday, March 09, 2017 05:15:15 PM Viresh Kumar wrote:
>> > @@ -216,7 +216,7 @@ static void sugov_update_single(struct update_util_data *hook, u64 time,
>> > if (flags & SCHED_CPUFREQ_RT_DL) {
>> > next_f = policy->cpuinfo.max_freq;
>> > } else {
>> > - sugov_get_util(&util, &max);
>> > + sugov_get_util(&util, &max, hook->cpu);
>>
>> Why is this not racy?
>
> Why would reading the utilization values be racy? The only dynamic value here is
> "util_avg" and I am not sure if reading it is racy.
>
> But, this whole routine has races which I ignored as we may end up updating
> frequency simultaneously from two threads.

Those races aren't there if we don't update cross-CPU, which is my point. :-)

>> > sugov_iowait_boost(sg_cpu, &util, &max);
>> > next_f = get_next_freq(sg_policy, util, max);
>> > }
>> > @@ -272,7 +272,7 @@ static void sugov_update_shared(struct update_util_data *hook, u64 time,
>> > unsigned long util, max;
>> > unsigned int next_f;
>> >
>> > - sugov_get_util(&util, &max);
>> > + sugov_get_util(&util, &max, hook->cpu);
>> >
>>
>> And here?
>>
>> > raw_spin_lock(&sg_policy->update_lock);
>
> The lock prevents the same here though.
>
> So, if we are going to use this series, then we can use the same update-lock in
> case of single cpu per policies as well.

No, we can't.

The lock is unavoidable in the mulit-CPU policies case, but there's no
way I will agree on using a lock in the single-CPU case.

Thanks,
Rafael