Re: [PATCH v7 00/13] fold per-CPU vmstats remotely

From: Michal Hocko
Date: Thu Apr 20 2023 - 04:40:33 EST


On Wed 19-04-23 13:35:12, Marcelo Tosatti wrote:
[...]
> This is a burden for application writers and for system configuration.

Yes. And I find it reasonable to expect that burden put there as there
are non-trivial requirements for those workloads anyway. It is not
out-of-the-box thing, right?

> Or it could be done automatically (from outside of the application).
> Which is what is described and implemented here:
>
> https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20220204173537.429902988@fedora.localdomain/
>
> "Task isolation is divided in two main steps: configuration and
> activation.
>
> Each step can be performed by an external tool or the latency
> sensitive application itself. util-linux contains the "chisol" tool
> for this purpose."

I cannot say I would be a fan of prctl interfaces in general but I do
agree with the overal idea to forcing a quiescent state on a set of
CPUs.

> But not only that, the second thing is:
>
> "> Another important point is this: if an application dirties
> > its own per-CPU vmstat cache, while performing a system call,
>
> Or while handling a VM-exit from a vCPU.

Do you have any specific examples on this?

> This are, in my mind, sufficient reasons to discard the "flush per-cpu
> caches" idea. This is also why i chose to abandon the prctrl interface
> patchset.
>
> > and a vmstat sync event is triggered on a different CPU, you'd have to:
> >
> > 1) Wait for that CPU to return to userspace and sync its stats
> > (unfeasible).
> >
> > 2) Queue work to execute on that CPU (undesirable, as that causes
> > an interruption).
> >
> > 3) Remotely sync the vmstat for that CPU."
>
> So the only option is to remotely sync vmstat for the CPU
> (unless you have a better suggestion).

`echo 1 > /proc/sys/vm/stat_refresh' achieves essentially the same
without any kernel changes.

But let me repeat, this is not just about vmstats. Just have a look at
other queue_work_on users. You do not want to handy pick each and every
one and do so in the future as well.
--
Michal Hocko
SUSE Labs