[PATCH 25/34] sched_ext: Add a cgroup-based core-scheduling scheduler

From: Tejun Heo
Date: Mon Jul 10 2023 - 21:16:56 EST


This patch adds scx_pair example scheduler which implements a variant of
core scheduling where a hyperthread pair only run tasks from the same
cgroup. The BPF scheduler achieves this by putting tasks into per-cgroup
queues, time-slicing the cgroup to run for each pair first, and then
scheduling within the cgroup. See the header comment in scx_pair.bpf.c for
more details.

Note that scx_pair's cgroup-boundary guarantee breaks down for tasks running
in higher priority scheduler classes. This will be addressed by a followup
patch which implements a mechanism to track CPU preemption.

v2: * Improved stride parameter input verification.

Signed-off-by: Tejun Heo <tj@xxxxxxxxxx>
Reviewed-by: David Vernet <dvernet@xxxxxxxx>
Acked-by: Josh Don <joshdon@xxxxxxxxxx>
Acked-by: Hao Luo <haoluo@xxxxxxxxxx>
Acked-by: Barret Rhoden <brho@xxxxxxxxxx>
---
tools/sched_ext/.gitignore | 1 +
tools/sched_ext/Makefile | 8 +-
tools/sched_ext/scx_pair.bpf.c | 536 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
tools/sched_ext/scx_pair.c | 164 ++++++++++
tools/sched_ext/scx_pair.h | 10 +
5 files changed, 717 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
create mode 100644 tools/sched_ext/scx_pair.bpf.c
create mode 100644 tools/sched_ext/scx_pair.c
create mode 100644 tools/sched_ext/scx_pair.h

diff --git a/tools/sched_ext/.gitignore b/tools/sched_ext/.gitignore
index 7e5dec30a87e..4659a15b8daf 100644
--- a/tools/sched_ext/.gitignore
+++ b/tools/sched_ext/.gitignore
@@ -1,6 +1,7 @@
scx_simple
scx_qmap
scx_central
+scx_pair
*.skel.h
*.subskel.h
/tools/
diff --git a/tools/sched_ext/Makefile b/tools/sched_ext/Makefile
index be0445e071ef..f3f8f083de16 100644
--- a/tools/sched_ext/Makefile
+++ b/tools/sched_ext/Makefile
@@ -115,7 +115,7 @@ BPF_CFLAGS = -g -D__TARGET_ARCH_$(SRCARCH) \
-Wall -Wno-compare-distinct-pointer-types \
-O2 -mcpu=v3

-all: scx_simple scx_qmap scx_central
+all: scx_simple scx_qmap scx_central scx_pair

# sort removes libbpf duplicates when not cross-building
MAKE_DIRS := $(sort $(BUILD_DIR)/libbpf $(HOST_BUILD_DIR)/libbpf \
@@ -178,10 +178,14 @@ scx_central: scx_central.c scx_central.skel.h user_exit_info.h
$(CC) $(CFLAGS) -c $< -o $@.o
$(CC) -o $@ $@.o $(HOST_BPFOBJ) $(LDFLAGS)

+scx_pair: scx_pair.c scx_pair.skel.h user_exit_info.h
+ $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -c $< -o $@.o
+ $(CC) -o $@ $@.o $(HOST_BPFOBJ) $(LDFLAGS)
+
clean:
rm -rf $(SCRATCH_DIR) $(HOST_SCRATCH_DIR)
rm -f *.o *.bpf.o *.skel.h *.subskel.h
- rm -f scx_simple scx_qmap scx_central
+ rm -f scx_simple scx_qmap scx_central scx_pair scx_flatcg

.PHONY: all clean

diff --git a/tools/sched_ext/scx_pair.bpf.c b/tools/sched_ext/scx_pair.bpf.c
new file mode 100644
index 000000000000..f980d301dbbe
--- /dev/null
+++ b/tools/sched_ext/scx_pair.bpf.c
@@ -0,0 +1,536 @@
+/* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 */
+/*
+ * A demo sched_ext core-scheduler which always makes every sibling CPU pair
+ * execute from the same CPU cgroup.
+ *
+ * This scheduler is a minimal implementation and would need some form of
+ * priority handling both inside each cgroup and across the cgroups to be
+ * practically useful.
+ *
+ * Each CPU in the system is paired with exactly one other CPU, according to a
+ * "stride" value that can be specified when the BPF scheduler program is first
+ * loaded. Throughout the runtime of the scheduler, these CPU pairs guarantee
+ * that they will only ever schedule tasks that belong to the same CPU cgroup.
+ *
+ * Scheduler Initialization
+ * ------------------------
+ *
+ * The scheduler BPF program is first initialized from user space, before it is
+ * enabled. During this initialization process, each CPU on the system is
+ * assigned several values that are constant throughout its runtime:
+ *
+ * 1. *Pair CPU*: The CPU that it synchronizes with when making scheduling
+ * decisions. Paired CPUs always schedule tasks from the same
+ * CPU cgroup, and synchronize with each other to guarantee
+ * that this constraint is not violated.
+ * 2. *Pair ID*: Each CPU pair is assigned a Pair ID, which is used to access
+ * a struct pair_ctx object that is shared between the pair.
+ * 3. *In-pair-index*: An index, 0 or 1, that is assigned to each core in the
+ * pair. Each struct pair_ctx has an active_mask field,
+ * which is a bitmap used to indicate whether each core
+ * in the pair currently has an actively running task.
+ * This index specifies which entry in the bitmap corresponds
+ * to each CPU in the pair.
+ *
+ * During this initialization, the CPUs are paired according to a "stride" that
+ * may be specified when invoking the user space program that initializes and
+ * loads the scheduler. By default, the stride is 1/2 the total number of CPUs.
+ *
+ * Tasks and cgroups
+ * -----------------
+ *
+ * Every cgroup in the system is registered with the scheduler using the
+ * pair_cgroup_init() callback, and every task in the system is associated with
+ * exactly one cgroup. At a high level, the idea with the pair scheduler is to
+ * always schedule tasks from the same cgroup within a given CPU pair. When a
+ * task is enqueued (i.e. passed to the pair_enqueue() callback function), its
+ * cgroup ID is read from its task struct, and then a corresponding queue map
+ * is used to FIFO-enqueue the task for that cgroup.
+ *
+ * If you look through the implementation of the scheduler, you'll notice that
+ * there is quite a bit of complexity involved with looking up the per-cgroup
+ * FIFO queue that we enqueue tasks in. For example, there is a cgrp_q_idx_hash
+ * BPF hash map that is used to map a cgroup ID to a globally unique ID that's
+ * allocated in the BPF program. This is done because we use separate maps to
+ * store the FIFO queue of tasks, and the length of that map, per cgroup. This
+ * complexity is only present because of current deficiencies in BPF that will
+ * soon be addressed. The main point to keep in mind is that newly enqueued
+ * tasks are added to their cgroup's FIFO queue.
+ *
+ * Dispatching tasks
+ * -----------------
+ *
+ * This section will describe how enqueued tasks are dispatched and scheduled.
+ * Tasks are dispatched in pair_dispatch(), and at a high level the workflow is
+ * as follows:
+ *
+ * 1. Fetch the struct pair_ctx for the current CPU. As mentioned above, this is
+ * the structure that's used to synchronize amongst the two pair CPUs in their
+ * scheduling decisions. After any of the following events have occurred:
+ *
+ * - The cgroup's slice run has expired, or
+ * - The cgroup becomes empty, or
+ * - Either CPU in the pair is preempted by a higher priority scheduling class
+ *
+ * The cgroup transitions to the draining state and stops executing new tasks
+ * from the cgroup.
+ *
+ * 2. If the pair is still executing a task, mark the pair_ctx as draining, and
+ * wait for the pair CPU to be preempted.
+ *
+ * 3. Otherwise, if the pair CPU is not running a task, we can move onto
+ * scheduling new tasks. Pop the next cgroup id from the top_q queue.
+ *
+ * 4. Pop a task from that cgroup's FIFO task queue, and begin executing it.
+ *
+ * Note again that this scheduling behavior is simple, but the implementation
+ * is complex mostly because this it hits several BPF shortcomings and has to
+ * work around in often awkward ways. Most of the shortcomings are expected to
+ * be resolved in the near future which should allow greatly simplifying this
+ * scheduler.
+ *
+ * Copyright (c) 2022 Meta Platforms, Inc. and affiliates.
+ * Copyright (c) 2022 Tejun Heo <tj@xxxxxxxxxx>
+ * Copyright (c) 2022 David Vernet <dvernet@xxxxxxxx>
+ */
+#include "scx_common.bpf.h"
+#include "scx_pair.h"
+
+char _license[] SEC("license") = "GPL";
+
+const volatile bool switch_partial;
+
+/* !0 for veristat, set during init */
+const volatile u32 nr_cpu_ids = 64;
+
+/* a pair of CPUs stay on a cgroup for this duration */
+const volatile u32 pair_batch_dur_ns = SCX_SLICE_DFL;
+
+/* cpu ID -> pair cpu ID */
+const volatile s32 pair_cpu[MAX_CPUS] = { [0 ... MAX_CPUS - 1] = -1 };
+
+/* cpu ID -> pair_id */
+const volatile u32 pair_id[MAX_CPUS];
+
+/* CPU ID -> CPU # in the pair (0 or 1) */
+const volatile u32 in_pair_idx[MAX_CPUS];
+
+struct pair_ctx {
+ struct bpf_spin_lock lock;
+
+ /* the cgroup the pair is currently executing */
+ u64 cgid;
+
+ /* the pair started executing the current cgroup at */
+ u64 started_at;
+
+ /* whether the current cgroup is draining */
+ bool draining;
+
+ /* the CPUs that are currently active on the cgroup */
+ u32 active_mask;
+};
+
+struct {
+ __uint(type, BPF_MAP_TYPE_ARRAY);
+ __uint(max_entries, MAX_CPUS / 2);
+ __type(key, u32);
+ __type(value, struct pair_ctx);
+} pair_ctx SEC(".maps");
+
+/* queue of cgrp_q's possibly with tasks on them */
+struct {
+ __uint(type, BPF_MAP_TYPE_QUEUE);
+ /*
+ * Because it's difficult to build strong synchronization encompassing
+ * multiple non-trivial operations in BPF, this queue is managed in an
+ * opportunistic way so that we guarantee that a cgroup w/ active tasks
+ * is always on it but possibly multiple times. Once we have more robust
+ * synchronization constructs and e.g. linked list, we should be able to
+ * do this in a prettier way but for now just size it big enough.
+ */
+ __uint(max_entries, 4 * MAX_CGRPS);
+ __type(value, u64);
+} top_q SEC(".maps");
+
+/* per-cgroup q which FIFOs the tasks from the cgroup */
+struct cgrp_q {
+ __uint(type, BPF_MAP_TYPE_QUEUE);
+ __uint(max_entries, MAX_QUEUED);
+ __type(value, u32);
+};
+
+/*
+ * Ideally, we want to allocate cgrp_q and cgrq_q_len in the cgroup local
+ * storage; however, a cgroup local storage can only be accessed from the BPF
+ * progs attached to the cgroup. For now, work around by allocating array of
+ * cgrp_q's and then allocating per-cgroup indices.
+ *
+ * Another caveat: It's difficult to populate a large array of maps statically
+ * or from BPF. Initialize it from userland.
+ */
+struct {
+ __uint(type, BPF_MAP_TYPE_ARRAY_OF_MAPS);
+ __uint(max_entries, MAX_CGRPS);
+ __type(key, s32);
+ __array(values, struct cgrp_q);
+} cgrp_q_arr SEC(".maps");
+
+static u64 cgrp_q_len[MAX_CGRPS];
+
+/*
+ * This and cgrp_q_idx_hash combine into a poor man's IDR. This likely would be
+ * useful to have as a map type.
+ */
+static u32 cgrp_q_idx_cursor;
+static u64 cgrp_q_idx_busy[MAX_CGRPS];
+
+/*
+ * All added up, the following is what we do:
+ *
+ * 1. When a cgroup is enabled, RR cgroup_q_idx_busy array doing cmpxchg looking
+ * for a free ID. If not found, fail cgroup creation with -EBUSY.
+ *
+ * 2. Hash the cgroup ID to the allocated cgrp_q_idx in the following
+ * cgrp_q_idx_hash.
+ *
+ * 3. Whenever a cgrp_q needs to be accessed, first look up the cgrp_q_idx from
+ * cgrp_q_idx_hash and then access the corresponding entry in cgrp_q_arr.
+ *
+ * This is sadly complicated for something pretty simple. Hopefully, we should
+ * be able to simplify in the future.
+ */
+struct {
+ __uint(type, BPF_MAP_TYPE_HASH);
+ __uint(max_entries, MAX_CGRPS);
+ __uint(key_size, sizeof(u64)); /* cgrp ID */
+ __uint(value_size, sizeof(s32)); /* cgrp_q idx */
+} cgrp_q_idx_hash SEC(".maps");
+
+/* statistics */
+u64 nr_total, nr_dispatched, nr_missing, nr_kicks, nr_preemptions;
+u64 nr_exps, nr_exp_waits, nr_exp_empty;
+u64 nr_cgrp_next, nr_cgrp_coll, nr_cgrp_empty;
+
+struct user_exit_info uei;
+
+static bool time_before(u64 a, u64 b)
+{
+ return (s64)(a - b) < 0;
+}
+
+void BPF_STRUCT_OPS(pair_enqueue, struct task_struct *p, u64 enq_flags)
+{
+ struct cgroup *cgrp;
+ struct cgrp_q *cgq;
+ s32 pid = p->pid;
+ u64 cgid;
+ u32 *q_idx;
+ u64 *cgq_len;
+
+ __sync_fetch_and_add(&nr_total, 1);
+
+ cgrp = scx_bpf_task_cgroup(p);
+ cgid = cgrp->kn->id;
+ bpf_cgroup_release(cgrp);
+
+ /* find the cgroup's q and push @p into it */
+ q_idx = bpf_map_lookup_elem(&cgrp_q_idx_hash, &cgid);
+ if (!q_idx) {
+ scx_bpf_error("failed to lookup q_idx for cgroup[%llu]", cgid);
+ return;
+ }
+
+ cgq = bpf_map_lookup_elem(&cgrp_q_arr, q_idx);
+ if (!cgq) {
+ scx_bpf_error("failed to lookup q_arr for cgroup[%llu] q_idx[%u]",
+ cgid, *q_idx);
+ return;
+ }
+
+ if (bpf_map_push_elem(cgq, &pid, 0)) {
+ scx_bpf_error("cgroup[%llu] queue overflow", cgid);
+ return;
+ }
+
+ /* bump q len, if going 0 -> 1, queue cgroup into the top_q */
+ cgq_len = MEMBER_VPTR(cgrp_q_len, [*q_idx]);
+ if (!cgq_len) {
+ scx_bpf_error("MEMBER_VTPR malfunction");
+ return;
+ }
+
+ if (!__sync_fetch_and_add(cgq_len, 1) &&
+ bpf_map_push_elem(&top_q, &cgid, 0)) {
+ scx_bpf_error("top_q overflow");
+ return;
+ }
+}
+
+static int lookup_pairc_and_mask(s32 cpu, struct pair_ctx **pairc, u32 *mask)
+{
+ u32 *vptr;
+
+ vptr = (u32 *)MEMBER_VPTR(pair_id, [cpu]);
+ if (!vptr)
+ return -EINVAL;
+
+ *pairc = bpf_map_lookup_elem(&pair_ctx, vptr);
+ if (!(*pairc))
+ return -EINVAL;
+
+ vptr = (u32 *)MEMBER_VPTR(in_pair_idx, [cpu]);
+ if (!vptr)
+ return -EINVAL;
+
+ *mask = 1U << *vptr;
+
+ return 0;
+}
+
+static int try_dispatch(s32 cpu)
+{
+ struct pair_ctx *pairc;
+ struct bpf_map *cgq_map;
+ struct task_struct *p;
+ u64 now = bpf_ktime_get_ns();
+ bool kick_pair = false;
+ bool expired;
+ u32 *vptr, in_pair_mask;
+ s32 pid, q_idx;
+ u64 cgid;
+ int ret;
+
+ ret = lookup_pairc_and_mask(cpu, &pairc, &in_pair_mask);
+ if (ret) {
+ scx_bpf_error("failed to lookup pairc and in_pair_mask for cpu[%d]",
+ cpu);
+ return -ENOENT;
+ }
+
+ bpf_spin_lock(&pairc->lock);
+ pairc->active_mask &= ~in_pair_mask;
+
+ expired = time_before(pairc->started_at + pair_batch_dur_ns, now);
+ if (expired || pairc->draining) {
+ u64 new_cgid = 0;
+
+ __sync_fetch_and_add(&nr_exps, 1);
+
+ /*
+ * We're done with the current cgid. An obvious optimization
+ * would be not draining if the next cgroup is the current one.
+ * For now, be dumb and always expire.
+ */
+ pairc->draining = true;
+
+ if (pairc->active_mask) {
+ /*
+ * The other CPU is still active We want to wait until
+ * this cgroup expires.
+ *
+ * If the pair controls its CPU, and the time already
+ * expired, kick. When the other CPU arrives at
+ * dispatch and clears its active mask, it'll push the
+ * pair to the next cgroup and kick this CPU.
+ */
+ __sync_fetch_and_add(&nr_exp_waits, 1);
+ bpf_spin_unlock(&pairc->lock);
+ if (expired)
+ kick_pair = true;
+ goto out_maybe_kick;
+ }
+
+ bpf_spin_unlock(&pairc->lock);
+
+ /*
+ * Pick the next cgroup. It'd be easier / cleaner to not drop
+ * pairc->lock and use stronger synchronization here especially
+ * given that we'll be switching cgroups significantly less
+ * frequently than tasks. Unfortunately, bpf_spin_lock can't
+ * really protect anything non-trivial. Let's do opportunistic
+ * operations instead.
+ */
+ bpf_repeat(BPF_MAX_LOOPS) {
+ u32 *q_idx;
+ u64 *cgq_len;
+
+ if (bpf_map_pop_elem(&top_q, &new_cgid)) {
+ /* no active cgroup, go idle */
+ __sync_fetch_and_add(&nr_exp_empty, 1);
+ return 0;
+ }
+
+ q_idx = bpf_map_lookup_elem(&cgrp_q_idx_hash, &new_cgid);
+ if (!q_idx)
+ continue;
+
+ /*
+ * This is the only place where empty cgroups are taken
+ * off the top_q.
+ */
+ cgq_len = MEMBER_VPTR(cgrp_q_len, [*q_idx]);
+ if (!cgq_len || !*cgq_len)
+ continue;
+
+ /*
+ * If it has any tasks, requeue as we may race and not
+ * execute it.
+ */
+ bpf_map_push_elem(&top_q, &new_cgid, 0);
+ break;
+ }
+
+ bpf_spin_lock(&pairc->lock);
+
+ /*
+ * The other CPU may already have started on a new cgroup while
+ * we dropped the lock. Make sure that we're still draining and
+ * start on the new cgroup.
+ */
+ if (pairc->draining && !pairc->active_mask) {
+ __sync_fetch_and_add(&nr_cgrp_next, 1);
+ pairc->cgid = new_cgid;
+ pairc->started_at = now;
+ pairc->draining = false;
+ kick_pair = true;
+ } else {
+ __sync_fetch_and_add(&nr_cgrp_coll, 1);
+ }
+ }
+
+ cgid = pairc->cgid;
+ pairc->active_mask |= in_pair_mask;
+ bpf_spin_unlock(&pairc->lock);
+
+ /* again, it'd be better to do all these with the lock held, oh well */
+ vptr = bpf_map_lookup_elem(&cgrp_q_idx_hash, &cgid);
+ if (!vptr) {
+ scx_bpf_error("failed to lookup q_idx for cgroup[%llu]", cgid);
+ return -ENOENT;
+ }
+ q_idx = *vptr;
+
+ /* claim one task from cgrp_q w/ q_idx */
+ bpf_repeat(BPF_MAX_LOOPS) {
+ u64 *cgq_len, len;
+
+ cgq_len = MEMBER_VPTR(cgrp_q_len, [q_idx]);
+ if (!cgq_len || !(len = *(volatile u64 *)cgq_len)) {
+ /* the cgroup must be empty, expire and repeat */
+ __sync_fetch_and_add(&nr_cgrp_empty, 1);
+ bpf_spin_lock(&pairc->lock);
+ pairc->draining = true;
+ pairc->active_mask &= ~in_pair_mask;
+ bpf_spin_unlock(&pairc->lock);
+ return -EAGAIN;
+ }
+
+ if (__sync_val_compare_and_swap(cgq_len, len, len - 1) != len)
+ continue;
+
+ break;
+ }
+
+ cgq_map = bpf_map_lookup_elem(&cgrp_q_arr, &q_idx);
+ if (!cgq_map) {
+ scx_bpf_error("failed to lookup cgq_map for cgroup[%llu] q_idx[%d]",
+ cgid, q_idx);
+ return -ENOENT;
+ }
+
+ if (bpf_map_pop_elem(cgq_map, &pid)) {
+ scx_bpf_error("cgq_map is empty for cgroup[%llu] q_idx[%d]",
+ cgid, q_idx);
+ return -ENOENT;
+ }
+
+ p = bpf_task_from_pid(pid);
+ if (p) {
+ __sync_fetch_and_add(&nr_dispatched, 1);
+ scx_bpf_dispatch(p, SCX_DSQ_GLOBAL, SCX_SLICE_DFL, 0);
+ bpf_task_release(p);
+ } else {
+ /* we don't handle dequeues, retry on lost tasks */
+ __sync_fetch_and_add(&nr_missing, 1);
+ return -EAGAIN;
+ }
+
+out_maybe_kick:
+ if (kick_pair) {
+ s32 *pair = (s32 *)MEMBER_VPTR(pair_cpu, [cpu]);
+ if (pair) {
+ __sync_fetch_and_add(&nr_kicks, 1);
+ scx_bpf_kick_cpu(*pair, SCX_KICK_PREEMPT);
+ }
+ }
+ return 0;
+}
+
+void BPF_STRUCT_OPS(pair_dispatch, s32 cpu, struct task_struct *prev)
+{
+ bpf_repeat(BPF_MAX_LOOPS) {
+ if (try_dispatch(cpu) != -EAGAIN)
+ break;
+ }
+}
+
+s32 BPF_STRUCT_OPS(pair_cgroup_init, struct cgroup *cgrp)
+{
+ u64 cgid = cgrp->kn->id;
+ s32 i, q_idx;
+
+ bpf_for(i, 0, MAX_CGRPS) {
+ q_idx = __sync_fetch_and_add(&cgrp_q_idx_cursor, 1) % MAX_CGRPS;
+ if (!__sync_val_compare_and_swap(&cgrp_q_idx_busy[q_idx], 0, 1))
+ break;
+ }
+ if (i == MAX_CGRPS)
+ return -EBUSY;
+
+ if (bpf_map_update_elem(&cgrp_q_idx_hash, &cgid, &q_idx, BPF_ANY)) {
+ u64 *busy = MEMBER_VPTR(cgrp_q_idx_busy, [q_idx]);
+ if (busy)
+ *busy = 0;
+ return -EBUSY;
+ }
+
+ return 0;
+}
+
+void BPF_STRUCT_OPS(pair_cgroup_exit, struct cgroup *cgrp)
+{
+ u64 cgid = cgrp->kn->id;
+ s32 *q_idx;
+
+ q_idx = bpf_map_lookup_elem(&cgrp_q_idx_hash, &cgid);
+ if (q_idx) {
+ u64 *busy = MEMBER_VPTR(cgrp_q_idx_busy, [*q_idx]);
+ if (busy)
+ *busy = 0;
+ bpf_map_delete_elem(&cgrp_q_idx_hash, &cgid);
+ }
+}
+
+s32 BPF_STRUCT_OPS(pair_init)
+{
+ if (!switch_partial)
+ scx_bpf_switch_all();
+ return 0;
+}
+
+void BPF_STRUCT_OPS(pair_exit, struct scx_exit_info *ei)
+{
+ uei_record(&uei, ei);
+}
+
+SEC(".struct_ops.link")
+struct sched_ext_ops pair_ops = {
+ .enqueue = (void *)pair_enqueue,
+ .dispatch = (void *)pair_dispatch,
+ .cgroup_init = (void *)pair_cgroup_init,
+ .cgroup_exit = (void *)pair_cgroup_exit,
+ .init = (void *)pair_init,
+ .exit = (void *)pair_exit,
+ .name = "pair",
+};
diff --git a/tools/sched_ext/scx_pair.c b/tools/sched_ext/scx_pair.c
new file mode 100644
index 000000000000..4d24fcedc2cd
--- /dev/null
+++ b/tools/sched_ext/scx_pair.c
@@ -0,0 +1,164 @@
+/* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 */
+/*
+ * Copyright (c) 2022 Meta Platforms, Inc. and affiliates.
+ * Copyright (c) 2022 Tejun Heo <tj@xxxxxxxxxx>
+ * Copyright (c) 2022 David Vernet <dvernet@xxxxxxxx>
+ */
+#define _GNU_SOURCE
+#include <stdio.h>
+#include <unistd.h>
+#include <signal.h>
+#include <assert.h>
+#include <libgen.h>
+#include <bpf/bpf.h>
+#include "user_exit_info.h"
+#include "scx_pair.h"
+#include "scx_pair.skel.h"
+
+const char help_fmt[] =
+"A demo sched_ext core-scheduler which always makes every sibling CPU pair\n"
+"execute from the same CPU cgroup.\n"
+"\n"
+"See the top-level comment in .bpf.c for more details.\n"
+"\n"
+"Usage: %s [-S STRIDE] [-p]\n"
+"\n"
+" -S STRIDE Override CPU pair stride (default: nr_cpus_ids / 2)\n"
+" -p Switch only tasks on SCHED_EXT policy intead of all\n"
+" -h Display this help and exit\n";
+
+static volatile int exit_req;
+
+static void sigint_handler(int dummy)
+{
+ exit_req = 1;
+}
+
+int main(int argc, char **argv)
+{
+ struct scx_pair *skel;
+ struct bpf_link *link;
+ u64 seq = 0;
+ s32 stride, i, opt, outer_fd;
+
+ signal(SIGINT, sigint_handler);
+ signal(SIGTERM, sigint_handler);
+
+ libbpf_set_strict_mode(LIBBPF_STRICT_ALL);
+
+ skel = scx_pair__open();
+ assert(skel);
+
+ skel->rodata->nr_cpu_ids = libbpf_num_possible_cpus();
+
+ /* pair up the earlier half to the latter by default, override with -s */
+ stride = skel->rodata->nr_cpu_ids / 2;
+
+ while ((opt = getopt(argc, argv, "S:ph")) != -1) {
+ switch (opt) {
+ case 'S':
+ stride = strtoul(optarg, NULL, 0);
+ break;
+ case 'p':
+ skel->rodata->switch_partial = true;
+ break;
+ default:
+ fprintf(stderr, help_fmt, basename(argv[0]));
+ return opt != 'h';
+ }
+ }
+
+ printf("Pairs: ");
+ for (i = 0; i < skel->rodata->nr_cpu_ids; i++) {
+ int j = (i + stride) % skel->rodata->nr_cpu_ids;
+
+ if (skel->rodata->pair_cpu[i] >= 0)
+ continue;
+
+ if (i == j) {
+ printf("\n");
+ fprintf(stderr, "Invalid stride %d - CPU%d wants to be its own pair\n",
+ stride, i);
+ return 1;
+ }
+
+ if (skel->rodata->pair_cpu[j] >= 0) {
+ printf("\n");
+ fprintf(stderr, "Invalid stride %d - three CPUs (%d, %d, %d) want to be a pair\n",
+ stride, i, j, skel->rodata->pair_cpu[j]);
+ return 1;
+ }
+
+ skel->rodata->pair_cpu[i] = j;
+ skel->rodata->pair_cpu[j] = i;
+ skel->rodata->pair_id[i] = i;
+ skel->rodata->pair_id[j] = i;
+ skel->rodata->in_pair_idx[i] = 0;
+ skel->rodata->in_pair_idx[j] = 1;
+
+ printf("[%d, %d] ", i, j);
+ }
+ printf("\n");
+
+ assert(!scx_pair__load(skel));
+
+ /*
+ * Populate the cgrp_q_arr map which is an array containing per-cgroup
+ * queues. It'd probably be better to do this from BPF but there are too
+ * many to initialize statically and there's no way to dynamically
+ * populate from BPF.
+ */
+ outer_fd = bpf_map__fd(skel->maps.cgrp_q_arr);
+ assert(outer_fd >= 0);
+
+ printf("Initializing");
+ for (i = 0; i < MAX_CGRPS; i++) {
+ s32 inner_fd;
+
+ if (exit_req)
+ break;
+
+ inner_fd = bpf_map_create(BPF_MAP_TYPE_QUEUE, NULL, 0,
+ sizeof(u32), MAX_QUEUED, NULL);
+ assert(inner_fd >= 0);
+ assert(!bpf_map_update_elem(outer_fd, &i, &inner_fd, BPF_ANY));
+ close(inner_fd);
+
+ if (!(i % 10))
+ printf(".");
+ fflush(stdout);
+ }
+ printf("\n");
+
+ /*
+ * Fully initialized, attach and run.
+ */
+ link = bpf_map__attach_struct_ops(skel->maps.pair_ops);
+ assert(link);
+
+ while (!exit_req && !uei_exited(&skel->bss->uei)) {
+ printf("[SEQ %lu]\n", seq++);
+ printf(" total:%10lu dispatch:%10lu missing:%10lu\n",
+ skel->bss->nr_total,
+ skel->bss->nr_dispatched,
+ skel->bss->nr_missing);
+ printf(" kicks:%10lu preemptions:%7lu\n",
+ skel->bss->nr_kicks,
+ skel->bss->nr_preemptions);
+ printf(" exp:%10lu exp_wait:%10lu exp_empty:%10lu\n",
+ skel->bss->nr_exps,
+ skel->bss->nr_exp_waits,
+ skel->bss->nr_exp_empty);
+ printf("cgnext:%10lu cgcoll:%10lu cgempty:%10lu\n",
+ skel->bss->nr_cgrp_next,
+ skel->bss->nr_cgrp_coll,
+ skel->bss->nr_cgrp_empty);
+ fflush(stdout);
+ sleep(1);
+ }
+
+ bpf_link__destroy(link);
+ uei_print(&skel->bss->uei);
+ scx_pair__destroy(skel);
+ return 0;
+}
diff --git a/tools/sched_ext/scx_pair.h b/tools/sched_ext/scx_pair.h
new file mode 100644
index 000000000000..f60b824272f7
--- /dev/null
+++ b/tools/sched_ext/scx_pair.h
@@ -0,0 +1,10 @@
+#ifndef __SCX_EXAMPLE_PAIR_H
+#define __SCX_EXAMPLE_PAIR_H
+
+enum {
+ MAX_CPUS = 4096,
+ MAX_QUEUED = 4096,
+ MAX_CGRPS = 4096,
+};
+
+#endif /* __SCX_EXAMPLE_PAIR_H */
--
2.41.0