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Message-ID: <20090308220319.GA570@1wt.eu>
Date: Sun, 8 Mar 2009 23:03:19 +0100
From: Willy Tarreau <w@....eu>
To: Balazs Scheidler <bazsi@...abit.hu>
Cc: linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org
Subject: Re: scheduler oddity [bug?]
Hi Balazs,
On Sun, Mar 08, 2009 at 08:45:24PM +0100, Balazs Scheidler wrote:
> On Sat, 2009-03-07 at 19:47 +0100, Balazs Scheidler wrote:
> > On Sat, 2009-03-07 at 18:47 +0100, Balazs Scheidler wrote:
> > > Hi,
> > >
> > > I've tested this on 3 computers and each showed the same symptoms:
> > > * quad core Opteron, running Ubuntu kernel 2.6.27-13.29
> > > * Core 2 Duo, running Ubuntu kernel 2.6.27-11.27
> > > * Dual Core Opteron, Debian backports.org kernel 2.6.26-13~bpo40+1
> > >
> > > Is this a bug, or a feature?
> > >
> >
> > One new interesting information: I've retested with a 2.6.22 based
> > kernel, and it still works there, setting the CPU affinity does not
> > change the performance of the test program and mpstat nicely shows that
> > 2 cores are working, not just one.
> >
> > Maybe this is CFS related? That was merged for 2.6.23 IIRC.
> >
> > Also, I tried changing various scheduler knobs
> > in /proc/sys/kernel/sched_* but they didn't help. I've tried to change
> > these:
> >
> > * sched_migration_cost: changed from the default 500000 to 100000 and
> > then 10000 but neither helped.
> > * sched_nr_migrate: increased it to 64, but again nothing
> >
> > I'm starting to think that this is a regression that may or may not be
> > related to CFS.
> >
> > I don't have a box where I could bisect on, but the test program makes
> > the problem quite obvious.
>
> Some more test results:
>
> Latest tree from Linus seems to work, at least the program runs on both
> cores as it should. I bisected the patch that changed behaviour, and
> I've found this:
>
> commit 38736f475071b80b66be28af7b44c854073699cc
> Author: Gautham R Shenoy <ego@...ibm.com>
> Date: Sat Sep 6 14:50:23 2008 +0530
>
> sched: fix __load_balance_iterator() for cfq with only one task
>
> The __load_balance_iterator() returns a NULL when there's only one
> sched_entity which is a task. It is caused by the following code-path.
>
> /* Skip over entities that are not tasks */
> do {
> se = list_entry(next, struct sched_entity, group_node);
> next = next->next;
> } while (next != &cfs_rq->tasks && !entity_is_task(se));
>
> if (next == &cfs_rq->tasks)
> return NULL;
> ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
> This will return NULL even when se is a task.
>
> As a side-effect, there was a regression in sched_mc behavior since 2.6.25,
> since iter_move_one_task() when it calls load_balance_start_fair(),
> would not get any tasks to move!
>
> Fix this by checking if the last entity was a task or not.
>
> Signed-off-by: Gautham R Shenoy <ego@...ibm.com>
> Acked-by: Peter Zijlstra <a.p.zijlstra@...llo.nl>
> Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@...e.hu>
>
>
> This patch was integrated for 2.6.28. With the above patch, my test program uses
> two cores as it should. I could only test this in a virtual machine so I don't
> know exact performance metrics, but I'll test 2.6.27 + plus this patch on a real
> box tomorrow to see if this was the culprit.
Just tested right here and I can confirm it is the culprit. I can reliably
reproduce the issue here on my core2 duo, and this patch fixes it. With your
memset() loop at 20k iterations, I saw exactly 50% CPU usage, and a final
sum of 794. With the patch, I see 53% CPU and 909. Changing the loop to 80k
iterations shows 53% CPU usage and 541 loops without the patch, versus
639 loops and 63% CPU usage with the patch.
So there's clearly a big win.
On a related note, I've often noticed that my kernel builds with -j 2 often
only use once CPU. I'm wondering whether this could be related to the same
issue. Just testing, I don't notice this with the patch. I'll have to retry
without later.
> I'm not sure if this is related to the avg_overlap discussion (which I honestly
> don't really understand :)
neither do I :-)
Regards,
Willy
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