* Davide Libenzi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > That's one reason why i dont think it's necessarily a good idea to > > group-schedule threads, we dont really want to do a per thread group > > percpu_alloc(). > > I still do not have clear how much overhead this will bring into the > table, but I think (like Linus was pointing out) the hierarchy should > look like: > > Top (VCPU maybe?) > User > Process > Thread > > The "run_queue" concept (and data) that now is bound to a CPU, need to be > replicated in: > > ROOT <- VCPUs add themselves here > VCPU <- USERs add themselves here > USER <- PROCs add themselves here > PROC <- THREADs add themselves here > THREAD (ultimate fine grained scheduling unit) > > So ROOT, VCPU, USER and PROC will have their own "run_queue". Picking > up a new task would mean: > > VCPU = ROOT->lookup(); > USER = VCPU->lookup(); > PROC = USER->lookup(); > THREAD = PROC->lookup(); > > Run-time statistics should propagate back the other way around.
yeah, but this looks quite bad from an overhead POV ... i think we can do alot simpler to solve X and kernel threads prioritization. > > In fact for threads the _reverse_ problem exists, threaded apps tend > > to _strive_ for more performance - hence their desperation of using > > the threaded programming model to begin with ;) (just think of media > > playback apps which are typically multithreaded) > > The same user nicing two different multi-threaded processes would > expect a predictable CPU distribution too. [...] i disagree that the user 'would expect' this. Some users might. Others would say: 'my 10-thread rendering engine is more important than a 1-thread job because it's using 10 threads for a reason'. And the CFS feedback so far strengthens this point: the default behavior of treating the thread as a single scheduling (and CPU time accounting) unit works pretty well on the desktop. think about it in another, 'kernel policy' way as well: we'd like to _encourage_ more parallel user applications. Hurting them by accounting all threads together sends the exact opposite message. > [...] Doing that efficently (the old per-cpu run-queue is pretty nice > from many POVs) is the real challenge. yeah. Ingo - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/