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Message-Id: <1261195412.8240.153.camel@marge.simson.net>
Date: Sat, 19 Dec 2009 05:03:32 +0100
From: Mike Galbraith <efault@....de>
To: Con Kolivas <kernel@...ivas.org>
Cc: Jason Garrett-Glaser <darkshikari@...il.com>,
Kasper Sandberg <lkml@...anurb.dk>,
Ingo Molnar <mingo@...e.hu>,
Peter Zijlstra <a.p.zijlstra@...llo.nl>,
LKML Mailinglist <linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org>,
Linus Torvalds <torvalds@...ux-foundation.org>
Subject: Re: x264 benchmarks BFS vs CFS
On Sat, 2009-12-19 at 12:08 +1100, Con Kolivas wrote:
> On Fri, 18 Dec 2009 22:05:34 Jason Garrett-Glaser wrote:
> > On Fri, Dec 18, 2009 at 2:57 AM, Kasper Sandberg <lkml@...anurb.dk> wrote:
> > > On Fri, 2009-12-18 at 08:30 +0100, Mike Galbraith wrote:
> > >> On Fri, 2009-12-18 at 06:23 +0100, Ingo Molnar wrote:
> > >> > Having said that, we generally try to make things perform well without
> > >> > apps having to switch themselves to SCHED_BATCH. Mike, do you think we
> > >> > can make x264 perform as well (or nearly as well) under SCHED_OTHER as
> > >> > under SCHED_BATCH?
> > >>
> > >> It's not bad as is, except for ultrafast mode. START_DEBIT is the
> > >> biggest problem there. I don't think SCHED_OTHER will ever match
> > >> SCHED_BATCH for this load, though I must say I haven't full-spectrum
> > >> tested. This load really wants RR scheduling, and wakeup preemption
> > >> necessarily perturbs run order.
> > >>
> > >> I'll probably piddle with it some more, it's an interesting load.
> > >
> > > Yes, i must say, very interresting, its very complicated and... oh wait,
> > > its just encoding a movie!
> >
> > Your trolling is becoming a bit over-the-top at this point. You
> > should also considering replying to multiple people in one email as
> > opposed to spamming a whole bunch in sequence.
> >
> > Perhaps as the lead x264 developer I'm qualified to say that it
> > certainly is a very complicated load due to the strict ordering
> > requirements of the threading model--and that you should tone down the
> > whining just a tad and perhaps read a bit more about how BFS and CFS
> > work before complaining about them.
>
> Your workload is interesting because it is a well written real world
> application with a solid threading model written in a cross platform portable
> way. Your code is valuable as a measure for precisely this reason, and
> there's a trap in trying to program in a way that "the scheduler might like".
> That's presumably what Kasper is trying to point out, albeit in a much blunter
> fashion.
If using a different kernel facility gives better results, go for what
works best. Programmers have been doing that since day one. I doubt
you'd call it a trap to trade a pipe for a socketpair if one produced
better results than the other.
Mind you, we should be able to better service the load with plain
SCHED_OTHER, no argument there.
> The only workloads I'm remotely interested in are real world workloads
> involving real applications like yours, software compilation, video playback,
> audio playback, gaming, apache page serving, mysql performance and so on that
> people in the real world use on real hardware all day every day. These are, of
> course, measurable even above and beyond the elusive and impossible to measure
> and quantify interactivity and responsiveness.
>
> I couldn't care less about some artificial benchmark involving LTP, timing
> mplayer playing in the presence of 100,000 pipes, volanomark which is just a
> sched_yield benchmark, dbench and hackbench which even their original
> programmers don't like them being used as a meaningful measure, and so on, and
> normal users should also not care about the values returned by these artificial
> benchmarks when they bear no resemblance to their real world performance cases
> as above.
I find all programs interesting and valid in their own right, whether
they be a benchmark or not, though I agree that vmark and hackbench are
a bit over the top.
> I have zero interest in adding any "tweaks" to BFS to perform well in X
> benchmark, for there be a path where dragons lie. I've always maintained that,
> and still stick to it, that the more tweaks you add for corner cases, the more
> corner cases you introduce yourself. BFS will remain for a targeted audience
> and I care not to appeal to any artificial benchmarketing obsessed population
> that drives mainline, since I don't -have- to. Mainline can do what it wants,
> and hopefully uses BFS as a yardstick for comparison when appropriate.
Interesting rant. IMO, benchmarks are all merely programs that do some
work and quantify. Whether you like what they measure or not, whether
they emit flattering numbers or not, they can all tell you something if
you're willing to listen.
Oh, and for the record, timing mplayer thing was NOT in the presence of
100000 pipes, it was in the presence of one cpu hog, as was the time
amarok loading thing. Those were UP tests showing you a weakness. All
of the results I sent you were intended to show you areas that could use
some improvement, but you don't want to hear, so label and hand-wave.
Below is a quote of the results I sent you.
<quote>
I've taken BFS out for a few spins while looking into BFS vs CFS latency
reports, and noticed a couple problems I'll share, comparison testing
has been healthy for CFS, so maybe BFS can profit as well. Below are
some bfs304 vs my working tree numbers from a run this morning, looking
to see if some issues seen in earlier releases were still present.
Comments on noted issues:
It looks like there may be some affinity troubles, and there definitely
seems to be a fairness bug still lurking. No idea what's up with that,
but see data below, it's pretty nasty. Any sleepy load competing with a
pure hog seems to be troublesome.
The pgsql+oltp test data is very interesting to me, pgsql+oltp hates
preemption with a passion, because of it's USERLAND spinlocks. Preempt
the lock holder, and watch the fun. Your preemption model suits it very
well at the low end, and does pretty well all the way though. Really
interesting to me is the difference in 1 and 2 client throughput, why
I'm including these.
msql+oltp and tbench look like they're griping about affinity to me, but
I haven't instrumented anything, so can't be sure. mysql+oltp I know is
a wakeup preemption and is very affinity sensitive. Too little wakeup
preemption, it suffers, any load balancing, it suffers.
What vmark is so upset about, I have no idea. I know it's very affinity
sensitive, and hates wakeup preemption passionately.
Numbers:
vmark
tip 108841 messages per second
tip++ 116260 messages per second
31.bfs304 28279 messages per second
tbench 8
tip 938.421 MB/sec 8 procs
tip++ 952.302 MB/sec 8 procs
31.bfs304 709.121 MB/sec 8 procs
mysql+oltp
clients 1 2 4 8 16 32 64 128 256
tip 9999.36 18493.54 34652.91 34253.13 32057.64 30297.43 28300.96 25450.14 20675.99
tip++ 10041.16 18531.16 34934.22 34192.65 32829.65 32010.55 30341.31 27340.65 22724.87
31.bfs304 9459.85 14952.44 32209.07 29724.03 28608.02 27051.10 24851.44 21223.15 15809.46
pgsql+oltp
clients 1 2 4 8 16 32 64 128 256
tip 13577.63 26510.67 51871.05 51374.62 50190.69 45494.64 37173.83 27767.09 22795.23
tip++ 13685.69 26693.42 52056.45 51733.30 50854.75 49790.95 48972.02 47517.34 44999.22
31.bfs304 15467.03 21126.57 52673.76 50972.41 49652.54 46015.73 44567.18 40419.90 33276.67
fairness bug in 31.bfs304?
prep:
set CPU governor to performance first, as in all benchmarking.
taskset -c 0 pert (100% CPU hog TSC perturbation measurement proggy)
taskset -p 0x1 `pidof Xorg`
perf stat taskset -c 0 konsole -e exit
31.bfs304 2.073724549 seconds time elapsed
tip++ 0.989323860 seconds time elapsed
note: amarok pins itself to CPU0, and is set up to use mysql database.
prep: cache warmup run.
perf stat amarokapp (quit after 12000 song mp3 collection is loaded)
31.bfs304 136.418518486 seconds time elapsed
tip++ 19.439268066 seconds time elapsed
prep: restart amarok, wait for load, start playing
perf stat taskset -c 0 mplayer -nosound 3DMark2000.mkv (exact 6 minute movie)
31.bfs304 432.712500554 seconds time elapsed
tip++ 363.622519583 seconds time elapsed
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