On 01/07/2013 02:31 AM, Linus Torvalds wrote: > On Sat, Jan 5, 2013 at 11:54 PM, Alex Shi <alex....@intel.com> wrote: >> >> I just looked into the aim9 benchmark, in this case it forks 2000 tasks, >> after all tasks ready, aim9 give a signal than all tasks burst waking up >> and run until all finished. >> Since each of tasks are finished very quickly, a imbalanced empty cpu >> may goes to sleep till a regular balancing give it some new tasks. That >> causes the performance dropping. cause more idle entering. > > Sounds like for AIM (and possibly for other really bursty loads), we > might want to do some load-balancing at wakeup time by *just* looking > at the number of running tasks, rather than at the load average. Hmm?
Millions thanks for your suggestions! :) It's worth to try use instant load -- nr_running in waking balancing, I will try this. but in this case, I tried to print sleeping tasks by print_task() in sched/debug.c. Find the 2000 tasks were forked on just 2 LCPUs which in different cpu sockets whenever with/without this load avg patch. So, I am wondering if it's worth to consider the sleeping tasks' load in fork/wake balancing. Does anyone consider this in history? === print_task(struct seq_file *m, struct rq *rq, struct task_struct *p) { if (rq->curr == p) SEQ_printf(m, "R"); + else if (!p->on_rq) + SEQ_printf(m, "S"); else SEQ_printf(m, " "); ... @@ -166,13 +170,14 @@ static void print_rq(struct seq_file *m, struct rq *rq, int rq_cpu) read_lock_irqsave(&tasklist_lock, flags); do_each_thread(g, p) { - if (!p->on_rq || task_cpu(p) != rq_cpu) + if (task_cpu(p) != rq_cpu) continue; === > > The load average is fundamentally always going to run behind a bit, > and while you want to use it for long-term balancing, a short-term you > might want to do just a "if we have a huge amount of runnable > processes, do a load balancing *now*". Where "huge amount" should > probably be relative to the long-term load balancing (ie comparing the > number of runnable processes on this CPU right *now* with the load > average over the last second or so would show a clear spike, and a > reason for quick action). Many thanks for suggestion! Will try it. :) > > Linus > -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majord...@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/