Re: [Patch v4 0/6] Introduce Thermal Pressure

From: Daniel Lezcano
Date: Thu Oct 31 2019 - 07:54:15 EST


Hi Ionela,

On 31/10/2019 11:07, Ionela Voinescu wrote:
> Hi Daniel,
>
> On Tuesday 29 Oct 2019 at 16:34:11 (+0100), Daniel Lezcano wrote:
>> Hi Thara,
>>
>> On 22/10/2019 22:34, Thara Gopinath wrote:
>>> Thermal governors can respond to an overheat event of a cpu by
>>> capping the cpu's maximum possible frequency. This in turn
>>> means that the maximum available compute capacity of the
>>> cpu is restricted. But today in the kernel, task scheduler is
>>> not notified of capping of maximum frequency of a cpu.
>>> In other words, scheduler is unware of maximum capacity
>>> restrictions placed on a cpu due to thermal activity.
>>> This patch series attempts to address this issue.
>>> The benefits identified are better task placement among available
>>> cpus in event of overheating which in turn leads to better
>>> performance numbers.
>>>
>>> The reduction in the maximum possible capacity of a cpu due to a
>>> thermal event can be considered as thermal pressure. Instantaneous
>>> thermal pressure is hard to record and can sometime be erroneous
>>> as there can be mismatch between the actual capping of capacity
>>> and scheduler recording it. Thus solution is to have a weighted
>>> average per cpu value for thermal pressure over time.
>>> The weight reflects the amount of time the cpu has spent at a
>>> capped maximum frequency. Since thermal pressure is recorded as
>>> an average, it must be decayed periodically. Exisiting algorithm
>>> in the kernel scheduler pelt framework is re-used to calculate
>>> the weighted average. This patch series also defines a sysctl
>>> inerface to allow for a configurable decay period.
>>>
>>> Regarding testing, basic build, boot and sanity testing have been
>>> performed on db845c platform with debian file system.
>>> Further, dhrystone and hackbench tests have been
>>> run with the thermal pressure algorithm. During testing, due to
>>> constraints of step wise governor in dealing with big little systems,
>>> trip point 0 temperature was made assymetric between cpus in little
>>> cluster and big cluster; the idea being that
>>> big core will heat up and cpu cooling device will throttle the
>>> frequency of the big cores faster, there by limiting the maximum available
>>> capacity and the scheduler will spread out tasks to little cores as well.
>>>
>>> Test Results
>>>
>>> Hackbench: 1 group , 30000 loops, 10 runs
>>> Result SD
>>> (Secs) (% of mean)
>>> No Thermal Pressure 14.03 2.69%
>>> Thermal Pressure PELT Algo. Decay : 32 ms 13.29 0.56%
>>> Thermal Pressure PELT Algo. Decay : 64 ms 12.57 1.56%
>>> Thermal Pressure PELT Algo. Decay : 128 ms 12.71 1.04%
>>> Thermal Pressure PELT Algo. Decay : 256 ms 12.29 1.42%
>>> Thermal Pressure PELT Algo. Decay : 512 ms 12.42 1.15%
>>>
>>> Dhrystone Run Time : 20 threads, 3000 MLOOPS
>>> Result SD
>>> (Secs) (% of mean)
>>> No Thermal Pressure 9.452 4.49%
>>> Thermal Pressure PELT Algo. Decay : 32 ms 8.793 5.30%
>>> Thermal Pressure PELT Algo. Decay : 64 ms 8.981 5.29%
>>> Thermal Pressure PELT Algo. Decay : 128 ms 8.647 6.62%
>>> Thermal Pressure PELT Algo. Decay : 256 ms 8.774 6.45%
>>> Thermal Pressure PELT Algo. Decay : 512 ms 8.603 5.41%
>>
>> I took the opportunity to try glmark2 on the db845c platform with the
>> default decay and got the following glmark2 scores:
>>
>> Without thermal pressure:
>>
>> # NumSamples = 9; Min = 790.00; Max = 805.00
>> # Mean = 794.888889; Variance = 19.209877; SD = 4.382907; Median 794.000000
>> # each â represents a count of 1
>> 790.0000 - 791.5000 [ 2]: ââ
>> 791.5000 - 793.0000 [ 2]: ââ
>> 793.0000 - 794.5000 [ 2]: ââ
>> 794.5000 - 796.0000 [ 1]: â
>> 796.0000 - 797.5000 [ 0]:
>> 797.5000 - 799.0000 [ 1]: â
>> 799.0000 - 800.5000 [ 0]:
>> 800.5000 - 802.0000 [ 0]:
>> 802.0000 - 803.5000 [ 0]:
>> 803.5000 - 805.0000 [ 1]: â
>>
>>
>> With thermal pressure:
>>
>> # NumSamples = 9; Min = 933.00; Max = 960.00
>> # Mean = 940.777778; Variance = 64.172840; SD = 8.010795; Median 937.000000
>> # each â represents a count of 1
>> 933.0000 - 935.7000 [ 3]: âââ
>> 935.7000 - 938.4000 [ 2]: ââ
>> 938.4000 - 941.1000 [ 2]: ââ
>> 941.1000 - 943.8000 [ 0]:
>> 943.8000 - 946.5000 [ 0]:
>> 946.5000 - 949.2000 [ 1]: â
>> 949.2000 - 951.9000 [ 0]:
>> 951.9000 - 954.6000 [ 0]:
>> 954.6000 - 957.3000 [ 0]:
>> 957.3000 - 960.0000 [ 1]: â
>>
>
> Interesting! If I'm interpreting these correctly there seems to be
> significant improvement when applying thermal pressure.
>
> I'm not familiar with glmark2, can you tell me more about the process
> and the work that the benchmark does?

glmark2 is a 3D benchmark. I ran it without parameters, so all tests are
run. At the end, it gives a score which are the values given above.

> I assume this is a GPU benchmark,
> but not knowing more about it I fail to see the correlation between
> applying thermal pressure to CPU capacities and the improvement of GPU
> performance.
> Do you happen to know more about the behaviour that resulted in these
> benchmark scores?

My hypothesis is glmark2 makes the GPU to contribute a lot to the
heating effect, thus increasing the temperature to the CPU close to it.




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