On 13-Sep 21:14, Peter Zijlstra wrote: > On Wed, Sep 12, 2018 at 06:52:02PM +0100, Patrick Bellasi wrote: > > On 12-Sep 19:42, Peter Zijlstra wrote: > > > On Wed, Sep 12, 2018 at 06:35:15PM +0100, Patrick Bellasi wrote: > > > > On 12-Sep 18:12, Peter Zijlstra wrote: > > > > > > > > No idea; but if you want to go all fancy you can replace he whole > > > > > uclamp_map thing with something like: > > > > > > > > > > struct uclamp_map { > > > > > union { > > > > > struct { > > > > > unsigned long v : 10; > > > > > unsigned long c : BITS_PER_LONG - 10; > > > > > }; > > > > > atomic_long_t s; > > > > > }; > > > > > }; > > > > > > > > That sounds really cool and scary at the same time :) > > > > > > > > The v:10 requires that we never set SCHED_CAPACITY_SCALE>1024 > > > > or that we use it to track a percentage value (i.e. [0..100]). > > > > > > Or we pick 11 bits, it seems unlikely that capacity be larger than 2k. > > > > Just remembered a past experience where we had unaligned access traps > > on some machine because... don't you see any potentially issue on > > using bitfleds like you suggest above ? > > > > I'm thinking to: > > > > commit 317d359df95d ("sched/core: Force proper alignment of 'struct > > util_est'") > > There should not be (and I'm still confused by that particular commit > you reference). If we access everything through the uclamp_map::s, and > only use the bitfields to interpret the results, it all 'works'.
Yes, the problem above was different... still I was wondering if there could be bitfields related alignment issue lurking somewhere. But, as you say, if we always R/W atomically via uclamp_map::s there should be none. > The tricky thing we did earlier was trying to use u64 accesses for 2 > u32 variables. And somehow ia64 didn't get the alignment right. Right, np... sorry for the noise. -- #include <best/regards.h> Patrick Bellasi