Hi Joel, On Wed, 27 Jan 2021 at 19:43, Joel Fernandes <j...@joelfernandes.org> wrote: > > Hi Vincent, > > On Mon, Jan 25, 2021 at 03:42:41PM +0100, Vincent Guittot wrote: > > On Fri, 22 Jan 2021 at 20:10, Joel Fernandes <j...@joelfernandes.org> wrote: > > > On Fri, Jan 22, 2021 at 05:56:22PM +0100, Vincent Guittot wrote: > > > > On Fri, 22 Jan 2021 at 16:46, Joel Fernandes (Google) > > > > <j...@joelfernandes.org> wrote: > > > > > > > > > > On an octacore ARM64 device running ChromeOS Linux kernel v5.4, I > > > > > found > > > > > that there are a lot of calls to update_blocked_averages(). This > > > > > causes > > > > > the schedule loop to slow down to taking upto 500 micro seconds at > > > > > times (due to newidle load balance). I have also seen this manifest in > > > > > the periodic balancer. > > > > > > > > > > Closer look shows that the problem is caused by the following > > > > > ingredients: > > > > > 1. If the system has a lot of inactive CGroups (thanks Dietmar for > > > > > suggesting to inspect /proc/sched_debug for this), this can make > > > > > __update_blocked_fair() take a long time. > > > > > > > > Inactive cgroups are removed from the list so they should not impact > > > > the duration > > > > > > I meant blocked CGroups. According to this code, a cfs_rq can be partially > > > decayed and not have any tasks running on it but its load needs to be > > > decayed, correct? That's what I meant by 'inactive'. I can reword it to > > > 'blocked'. > > > > How many blocked cgroups have you got ? > > I put a counter in for_each_leaf_cfs_rq_safe() { } to count how many times > this loop runs per new idle balance. When the problem happens I see this loop > run 35-40 times (for one single instance of newidle balance). So in total > there are at least these many cfs_rq load updates.
Do you mean that you have 35-40 cgroups ? Or the 35-40 includes all CPUs ? > > I also see that new idle balance can be called 200-500 times per second. This is not surprising because newidle_balance() is called every time the CPU is about to become idle > > > > > > > * There can be a lot of idle CPU cgroups. Don't let > > > fully > > > * decayed cfs_rqs linger on the list. > > > */ > > > if (cfs_rq_is_decayed(cfs_rq)) > > > list_del_leaf_cfs_rq(cfs_rq); > > > > > > > > 2. The device has a lot of CPUs in a cluster which causes schedutil > > > > > in a > > > > > shared frequency domain configuration to be slower than usual. (the > > > > > load > > > > > > > > What do you mean exactly by it causes schedutil to be slower than usual > > > > ? > > > > > > sugov_next_freq_shared() is order number of CPUs in the a cluster. This > > > system is a 6+2 system with 6 CPUs in a cluster. schedutil shared policy > > > frequency update needs to go through utilization of other CPUs in the > > > cluster. I believe this could be adding to the problem but is not really > > > needed to optimize if we can rate limit the calls to > > > update_blocked_averages > > > to begin with. > > > > Qais mentioned half of the time being used by > > sugov_next_freq_shared(). Are there any frequency changes resulting in > > this call ? > > I do not see a frequency update happening at the time of the problem. However > note that sugov_iowait_boost() does run even if frequency is not being > updated. IIRC, this function is also not that light weight and I am not sure > if it is a good idea to call this that often. Scheduler can't make any assumption about how often schedutil/cpufreq wants to be called. Some are fast and straightforward and can be called very often to adjust frequency; Others can't handle much updates. The rate limit mechanism in schedutil and io-boost should be there for such purpose. > > > > > > average updates also try to update the frequency in schedutil). > > > > > > > > > > 3. The CPU is running at a low frequency causing the > > > > > scheduler/schedutil > > > > > code paths to take longer than when running at a high CPU frequency. > > > > > > > > Low frequency usually means low utilization so it should happen that > > > > much. > > > > > > It happens a lot as can be seen with schbench. It is super easy to > > > reproduce. > > > > Happening a lot in itself is not a problem if there is nothing else to > > do so it's not a argument in itself > > It is a problem - it shows up in the preempt off critical section latency But this point is not related to the point above which is about how often it happens. > tracer. Are you saying its Ok for preemption to be disabled on system for 500 > micro seconds? That hurts real-time applications (audio etc). So. Is your problem related to real-time applications (audio etc) ? > > > So why is it a problem for you ? You are mentioning newly idle load > > balance so I assume that your root problem is the scheduling delay > > generated by the newly idle load balance which then calls > > update_blocked_averages > > Yes, the new idle balance is when I see it happen quite often. I do see it > happen with other load balance as well, but it not that often as those LB > don't run as often as new idle balance. The update of average blocked load has been added in newidle_balance to take advantage of the cpu becoming idle but it seems to create a long preempt off sequence. I 'm going to prepare a patch to move it out the schedule path. > > > > > rate limiting the call to update_blocked_averages() will only reduce > > the number of time it happens but it will not prevent it to happen. > > Sure, but soft real-time issue can tolerate if the issue does not happen very > often. In this case though, it is frequent. Could you provide details of the problem that you are facing ? It's not clear for me what happens in your case at the end. Have you got an audio glitch as an example? "Not often" doesn't really give any clue. Also update_blocked_averages was supposed called in newlyidle_balance when the coming idle duration is expected to be long enough > > > IIUC, your real problem is that newidle_balance is running whereas a > > task is about to wake up on the cpu and we don't abort quickly during > > this load_balance > > Yes. > > > so we could also try to abort earlier in case of newly idle load balance > > I think interrupts are disabled when the load balance runs, so there's no way > for say an audio interrupt to even run in order to wake up a task. How would > you know to abort the new idle load balance? > > Could you elaborate more also on the drawback of the rate limiting patch we > posted? Do you see a side effect? Your patch just tries to hide your problem and not to solve the root cause. > > > > > > sometimes, which seems overkill. > > > > > > > > > > schbench shows a clear improvement with the change: > > > > > > > > Have you got more details about your test setup ? > > > > which platform ? > > > > which kernel ? > > > > > > I mentioned in the commit message it is a v5.4 kernel. > > > > I was not sure if the tests results done with this kernel because we > > usually ask for results against mainline to make sure you are not > > facing a problem that has solved since v5.4 has been released > > Ok, yes I have a userspace up and running only on 5.4 kernel unfortunately. I > was hoping that is recent enough for this debug. more than 14 months old is not really recent... It's always good to have a reproducer against mainline Regards, Vincent > > thanks, > > - Joel >