Hi Juri,
On Tue, Aug 19, 2025 at 04:02:04PM +0200 Juri Lelli wrote: > On 19/08/25 12:34, Gabriele Monaco wrote: > > > > > > On Tue, 2025-08-19 at 12:12 +0200, Peter Zijlstra wrote: > > > On Tue, Aug 19, 2025 at 11:56:57AM +0200, Juri Lelli wrote: > > > > Hi! > > > > > > > > On 14/08/25 17:08, Gabriele Monaco wrote: > > ... > > > > > > @@ -1482,6 +1486,7 @@ static void update_curr_dl_se(struct rq > > > > > *rq, struct sched_dl_entity *dl_se, s64 > > > > > > > > > > throttle: > > > > > if (dl_runtime_exceeded(dl_se) || dl_se->dl_yielded) { > > > > > + trace_sched_dl_throttle_tp(dl_se); > > > > > dl_se->dl_throttled = 1; > > > > > > > > I believe we also need to trace the dl_check_constrained_dl() > > > > throttle, please take a look. > > > > Probably yes, strangely I couldn't see failures without it, but it may > > be down to my test setup. I'm going to have a look. > > Not sure if you tested with constrained (deadline != period) tasks. > > > > > Also - we discussed this point a little already offline - but I > > > > still wonder if we have to do anything special for dl-server defer. > > > > Those entities are started as throttled until 0-lag, so maybe we > > > > should still trace them explicitly as so? > > > > The naming might need a bit of a consistency check here, but for the > > monitor, the server is running, armed or preempted. Before the 0-lag, > > it will never be running, so it will stay as armed (fair tasks running) > > or preempted (rt tasks running). > > > > armed and preempted have the _throttled version just to indicate an > > explicit throttle event occurred. > > > > We might want to start it in the armed_throttled if we are really > > guaranteed not to see a throttle event, but I think that would > > complicate the model considerably. > > > > We could instead validate the 0-lag concept in a separate, server- > > specific model. > > > > Does this initial model feel particularly wrong for the server case? > > No it doesn't atm. :-) Thanks for the additional information. > > > > > In addition, since it's related, maybe we should do something about > > > > sched_switch event, that is currently not aware of deadlines, > > > > runtimes, etc. > > > > I'm not sure I follow you here, what relation with switch and > > runtime/deadline should we enforce? > > > > We don't really force the switch to occur timely after throttling, is > > that what you mean? > > Or a switch must occur again timely after replenishing? > > Hummm, yeah I was wondering if we need something along these lines, but > we can also maybe leave it for the future. > > > > As per the whole _tp() thing, you can attach to the actual > > > sched_switch tracepoint with a module and read whatever you want. > > > > Yeah I believe Juri referred to model constraints on the already > > existing events rather than new tracepoints here. > > Separately from this series, maybe we should put such a module/bpf thing > somewhere shared, so it's easier to use it when needed. > > A few of us use: https://github.com/qais-yousef/sched_tp.git This has all the current scheduler raw tps exposed, I believe, but would need updates for these new ones, of course. I have a gitlab fork with our perf team uses to get at the ones they use (mostly the nr_running ones to make their heat maps). Fwiw... Cheers, Phil --