Re: [PATCH v2] sched/fair: check for idle core

From: Mel Gorman
Date: Fri Oct 23 2020 - 04:40:23 EST


On Thu, Oct 22, 2020 at 03:15:50PM +0200, Julia Lawall wrote:
> In the case of a thread wakeup, wake_affine determines whether a core
> will be chosen for the thread on the socket where the thread ran
> previously or on the socket of the waker. This is done primarily by
> comparing the load of the core where th thread ran previously (prev)
> and the load of the waker (this).
>
> commit 11f10e5420f6 ("sched/fair: Use load instead of runnable load
> in wakeup path") changed the load computation from the runnable load
> to the load average, where the latter includes the load of threads
> that have already blocked on the core.
>
> When a short-running daemon processes happens to run on prev, this
> change raised the situation that prev could appear to have a greater
> load than this, even when prev is actually idle. When prev and this
> are on the same socket, the idle prev is detected later, in
> select_idle_sibling. But if that does not hold, prev is completely
> ignored, causing the waking thread to move to the socket of the waker.
> In the case of N mostly active threads on N cores, this triggers other
> migrations and hurts performance.
>
> In contrast, before commit 11f10e5420f6, the load on an idle core
> was 0, and in the case of a non-idle waker core, the effect of
> wake_affine was to select prev as the target for searching for a core
> for the waking thread.
>
> To avoid unnecessary migrations, extend wake_affine_idle to check
> whether the core where the thread previously ran is currently idle,
> and if so simply return that core as the target.
> target
> [1] commit 11f10e5420f6ce ("sched/fair: Use load instead of runnable
> load in wakeup path")
>
> This particularly has an impact when using the ondemand power manager,
> where kworkers run every 0.004 seconds on all cores, increasing the
> likelihood that an idle core will be considered to have a load.
>
> The following numbers were obtained with the benchmarking tool
> hyperfine (https://github.com/sharkdp/hyperfine) on the NAS parallel
> benchmarks (https://www.nas.nasa.gov/publications/npb.html). The
> tests were run on an 80-core Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E7-8870 v4 @
> 2.10GHz. Active (intel_pstate) and passive (intel_cpufreq) power
> management were used. Times are in seconds. All experiments use all
> 160 hardware threads.
>
> v5.9/intel-pstate v5.9+patch/intel-pstate
> bt.C.c 24.725724+-0.962340 23.349608+-1.607214
> lu.C.x 29.105952+-4.804203 25.249052+-5.561617
> sp.C.x 31.220696+-1.831335 30.227760+-2.429792
> ua.C.x 26.606118+-1.767384 25.778367+-1.263850
>
> v5.9/ondemand v5.9+patch/ondemand
> bt.C.c 25.330360+-1.028316 23.544036+-1.020189
> lu.C.x 35.872659+-4.872090 23.719295+-3.883848
> sp.C.x 32.141310+-2.289541 29.125363+-0.872300
> ua.C.x 29.024597+-1.667049 25.728888+-1.539772
>
> On the smaller data sets (A and B) and on the other NAS benchmarks
> there is no impact on performance.
>
> This also has a major impact on the splash2x.volrend benchmark of the
> parsec benchmark suite that goes from 1m25 without this patch to 0m45,
> in active (intel_pstate) mode.
>
> Fixes: 11f10e5420f6 ("sched/fair: Use load instead of runnable load in wakeup path")
> Signed-off-by: Julia Lawall <Julia.Lawall@xxxxxxxx>
> Reviewed-by Vincent Guittot <vincent.guittot@xxxxxxxxxx>
>

In principal, I think the patch is ok after the recent discussion. I'm
holding off an ack until a battery of tests on loads with different
levels of utilisation and wakeup patterns makes its way through a test
grid. It's based on Linus's tree mid-merge window that includes what is
in the scheduler pipeline

--
Mel Gorman
SUSE Labs