Re: schbench v1.0

From: Chen Yu
Date: Mon Aug 14 2023 - 08:31:41 EST


Hi Chris,

On 2023-04-21 at 14:14:10 -0400, Chris Mason wrote:
> On 4/20/23 11:05 AM, Peter Zijlstra wrote:
> > On Mon, Apr 17, 2023 at 10:10:25AM +0200, Chris Mason wrote:
> >
> >> F128 N10 EEVDF Linus
> >> Wakeup (usec): 99.0th: 755 1,266
> >> Request (usec): 99.0th: 25,632 22,304
> >> RPS (count): 50.0th: 4,280 4,376
> >>
> >> F128 N10 no-locking EEVDF Linus
> >> Wakeup (usec): 99.0th: 823 1,118
> >> Request (usec): 99.0th: 17,184 14,192
> >> RPS (count): 50.0th: 4,440 4,456
> >
> > With the below fixlet (against queue/sched/eevdf) on my measly IVB-EP
> > (2*10*2):
> >
> > ./schbench -F128 -n10 -C
> >
> > Request Latencies percentiles (usec) runtime 30 (s) (153800 total samples)
> > 90.0th: 6376 (35699 samples)
> > * 99.0th: 6440 (9055 samples)
> > 99.9th: 7048 (1345 samples)
> >
> > CFS
> >
> > schbench -m2 -F128 -n10 -r90 OTHER BATCH
> > Wakeup (usec): 99.0th: 6600 6328
> > Request (usec): 99.0th: 35904 14640
> > RPS (count): 50.0th: 5368 6104
> >
>
> Peter and I went back and forth a bit and now schbench git has a few fixes:
>
> - README.md updated
>
> - warmup time defaults to zero (disabling warmup). This was causing the
> stats inconsistency Peter noticed below.
>
> - RPS calculated more often. Every second instead of every reporting
> interval.
>
> - thread count scaled to CPU count when -m is used. The thread count is
> per messenge thread, so when you use -m2 like Peter did in these runs,
> he was ending up with 2xNUM_CPUs workers. That's why his wakeup
> latencies are so high, he had double the work that I did.
>
> I'll experiment with some of the suggestions he made too.
>

Sorry for popping up, while we are doing some eevdf tests and encountered
an issue using the latest schbench, we found this thread. It seems that
there is a minor corner case to be dealt with. Could you help take a look
if the following change make sense?

thanks,
Chenyu