Dear Russell, On Sat, 4 Jul 2015 09:26:23 +0100 Russell King - ARM Linux <li...@arm.linux.org.uk> wrote:
> On Sat, Jul 04, 2015 at 01:19:30PM +0800, Jisheng Zhang wrote: > > On Marvell Berlin SoCs, the cpu's local timer is shutdown when the cpu > > goes to a deep idle state, then the timer framework will be notified to > > use a broadcast timer instead. The broadcast timer uses dw-apb-ictl as > > interrupt chip, this patch adds irq_set_affinity support so that the > > going to deep idle state cpu can set the interrupt affinity of the > > broadcast interrupt to avoid unnecessary wakeups and IPIs. > > NAK to this patch. > > The real question is - if CPU0 is the CPU going offline, why is it > still receiving _any_ interrupts - all interrupts should be migrated > off it, including the chained interrupts. I think it's due to broadcast timer interrupt. Let me describe the situation: 1. cpu1 is going offline 2. cpuidle notify timer framework to use a broadcast timer instead due to localtimer is CLOCK_EVT_FEAT_C3STOP 3. when timer is expired, CPU0 will be waken up by the timer interrupt if it has gone offline 4. CPU0 sends broadcast timer IPI to CPU1 As can be seen, both cpu0 waken up and the broadcast timer IPI are unnecessary. This patch tries to improve such situation. Here I copied my simple test result A simple test: ~ # rm /tmp/test.sh ~ # cat > /tmp/test.sh cat /proc/interrupts for i in `seq 10` ; do sleep $i; done cat /proc/interrupts ~ # chmod +x /tmp/test.sh ~ # taskset 0x2 /tmp/test.sh without the patch: CPU0 CPU1 27: 115 36 GIC 27 arch_timer 45: 62 0 GIC 45 mmc0 160: 88 0 interrupt-controller 8 timer 227: 0 0 interrupt-controller 4 f7e81400.i2c 228: 0 0 interrupt-controller 5 f7e81800.i2c 229: 0 0 interrupt-controller 7 dw_spi65535 230: 0 0 interrupt-controller 21 f7e84000.i2c 231: 0 0 interrupt-controller 20 f7e84800.i2c 265: 445 0 interrupt-controller 8 serial IPI0: 0 0 CPU wakeup interrupts IPI1: 0 11 Timer broadcast interrupts IPI2: 56 104 Rescheduling interrupts IPI3: 0 0 Function call interrupts IPI4: 0 4 Single function call interrupts IPI5: 0 0 CPU stop interrupts IPI6: 25 27 IRQ work interrupts IPI7: 0 0 completion interrupts IPI8: 0 0 CPU backtrace Err: 0 CPU0 CPU1 27: 115 38 GIC 27 arch_timer 45: 62 0 GIC 45 mmc0 160: 160 0 interrupt-controller 8 timer 227: 0 0 interrupt-controller 4 f7e81400.i2c 228: 0 0 interrupt-controller 5 f7e81800.i2c 229: 0 0 interrupt-controller 7 dw_spi65535 230: 0 0 interrupt-controller 21 f7e84000.i2c 231: 0 0 interrupt-controller 20 f7e84800.i2c 265: 514 0 interrupt-controller 8 serial IPI0: 0 0 CPU wakeup interrupts IPI1: 0 83 Timer broadcast interrupts IPI2: 56 104 Rescheduling interrupts IPI3: 0 0 Function call interrupts IPI4: 0 4 Single function call interrupts IPI5: 0 0 CPU stop interrupts IPI6: 25 46 IRQ work interrupts IPI7: 0 0 completion interrupts IPI8: 0 0 CPU backtrace Err: 0 cpu0 get 160-88=72 timer interrupts, CPU1 got 83-11=72 broadcast timer IPIs. So, overall system got 72+72=144 wake ups and 72 broadcast timer IPIs With the patch: CPU0 CPU1 27: 107 37 GIC 27 arch_timer 45: 62 0 GIC 45 mmc0 160: 66 7 interrupt-controller 8 timer 227: 0 0 interrupt-controller 4 f7e81400.i2c 228: 0 0 interrupt-controller 5 f7e81800.i2c 229: 0 0 interrupt-controller 7 dw_spi65535 230: 0 0 interrupt-controller 21 f7e84000.i2c 231: 0 0 interrupt-controller 20 f7e84800.i2c 265: 311 0 interrupt-controller 8 serial IPI0: 0 0 CPU wakeup interrupts IPI1: 2 4 Timer broadcast interrupts IPI2: 58 100 Rescheduling interrupts IPI3: 0 0 Function call interrupts IPI4: 0 4 Single function call interrupts IPI5: 0 0 CPU stop interrupts IPI6: 21 24 IRQ work interrupts IPI7: 0 0 completion interrupts IPI8: 0 0 CPU backtrace Err: 0 CPU0 CPU1 27: 107 39 GIC 27 arch_timer 45: 62 0 GIC 45 mmc0 160: 69 75 interrupt-controller 8 timer 227: 0 0 interrupt-controller 4 f7e81400.i2c 228: 0 0 interrupt-controller 5 f7e81800.i2c 229: 0 0 interrupt-controller 7 dw_spi65535 230: 0 0 interrupt-controller 21 f7e84000.i2c 231: 0 0 interrupt-controller 20 f7e84800.i2c 265: 380 0 interrupt-controller 8 serial IPI0: 0 0 CPU wakeup interrupts IPI1: 3 6 Timer broadcast interrupts IPI2: 60 100 Rescheduling interrupts IPI3: 0 0 Function call interrupts IPI4: 0 4 Single function call interrupts IPI5: 0 0 CPU stop interrupts IPI6: 21 45 IRQ work interrupts IPI7: 0 0 completion interrupts IPI8: 0 0 CPU backtrace Err: 0 cpu0 got 69-66=3, cpu1 got 75-7=68 timer interrupts. cpu0 got 3-2=1 broadcast timer IPIs, cpu1 got 6-4=2 broadcast timer IPIs. So, overall system got 3+68+1+2=74 wakeups and 1+2=3 broadcast timer IPIs. This patch removes 50% wakeups and almost 100% broadcast timer IPIs! What do you think? Thanks, Jisheng > > Sounds like there's a bug in the migration code which needs further > investigation, rather than hacking around the problem by introducing > lots of driver code. > -- 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/