Re: [PATCH] io_uring: Use io_schedule* in cqring wait

From: Andres Freund
Date: Mon Jul 24 2023 - 12:17:10 EST


Hi,

On 2023-07-24 09:48:58 -0600, Jens Axboe wrote:
> On 7/24/23 9:35?AM, Phil Elwell wrote:
> > Hi Andres,
> >
> > With this commit applied to the 6.1 and later kernels (others not
> > tested) the iowait time ("wa" field in top) in an ARM64 build running
> > on a 4 core CPU (a Raspberry Pi 4 B) increases to 25%, as if one core
> > is permanently blocked on I/O. The change can be observed after
> > installing mariadb-server (no configuration or use is required). After
> > reverting just this commit, "wa" drops to zero again.
>
> There are a few other threads on this...
>
> > I can believe that this change hasn't negatively affected performance,
> > but the result is misleading. I also think it's pushing the boundaries
> > of what a back-port to stable should do.

FWIW, I think this partially just mpstat reporting something quite bogus. It
makes no sense to say that a cpu is 100% busy waiting for IO, when the one
process is doing IO is just waiting.


> +static bool current_pending_io(void)
> +{
> + struct io_uring_task *tctx = current->io_uring;
> +
> + if (!tctx)
> + return false;
> + return percpu_counter_read_positive(&tctx->inflight);
> +}
> +
> /* when returns >0, the caller should retry */
> static inline int io_cqring_wait_schedule(struct io_ring_ctx *ctx,
> struct io_wait_queue *iowq)
> {
> - int token, ret;
> + int io_wait, ret;
>
> if (unlikely(READ_ONCE(ctx->check_cq)))
> return 1;
> @@ -2511,17 +2520,19 @@ static inline int io_cqring_wait_schedule(struct io_ring_ctx *ctx,
> return 0;
>
> /*
> - * Use io_schedule_prepare/finish, so cpufreq can take into account
> - * that the task is waiting for IO - turns out to be important for low
> - * QD IO.
> + * Mark us as being in io_wait if we have pending requests, so cpufreq
> + * can take into account that the task is waiting for IO - turns out
> + * to be important for low QD IO.
> */
> - token = io_schedule_prepare();
> + io_wait = current->in_iowait;

I don't know the kernel "rules" around this, but ->in_iowait is only modified
in kernel/sched, so it seemed a tad "unfriendly" to scribble on it here...


Building a kernel to test with the patch applied, will reboot into it once the
call I am on has finished. Unfortunately the performance difference didn't
reproduce nicely in VM...

Greetings,

Andres Freund