Previously, to probe the working set of a task, we'd use a very simple and crude method: mark all of its address space PROT_NONE. That method has various (obvious) disadvantages: - it samples the working set at dissimilar rates, giving some tasks a sampling quality advantage over others. - creates performance problems for tasks with very large working sets - over-samples processes with large address spaces but which only very rarely execute Improve that method by keeping a rotating offset into the address space that marks the current position of the scan, and advance it by a constant rate (in a CPU cycles execution proportional manner). If the offset reaches the last mapped address of the mm then it then it starts over at the first address. The per-task nature of the working set sampling functionality in this tree allows such constant rate, per task, execution-weight proportional sampling of the working set, with an adaptive sampling interval/frequency that goes from once per 100 msecs up to just once per 1.6 seconds. The current sampling volume is 256 MB per interval. As tasks mature and converge their working set, so does the sampling rate slow down to just a trickle, 256 MB per 1.6 seconds of CPU time executed. This, beyond being adaptive, also rate-limits rarely executing systems and does not over-sample on overloaded systems. [ In AutoNUMA speak, this patch deals with the effective sampling rate of the 'hinting page fault'. AutoNUMA's scanning is currently rate-limited, but it is also fundamentally single-threaded, executing in the knuma_scand kernel thread, so the limit in AutoNUMA is global and does not scale up with the number of CPUs, nor does it scan tasks in an execution proportional manner. So the idea of rate-limiting the scanning was first implemented in the AutoNUMA tree via a global rate limit. This patch goes beyond that by implementing an execution rate proportional working set sampling rate that is not implemented via a single global scanning daemon. ] [ Dan Carpenter pointed out a possible NULL pointer dereference in the first version of this patch. ] Based-on-idea-by: Andrea Arcangeli Bug-Found-By: Dan Carpenter Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra Cc: Linus Torvalds Cc: Andrew Morton Cc: Peter Zijlstra Cc: Andrea Arcangeli Cc: Rik van Riel Cc: Mel Gorman [ Wrote changelog and fixed bug. ] Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar --- include/linux/mm_types.h | 1 + include/linux/sched.h | 1 + kernel/sched/fair.c | 43 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++------------- kernel/sysctl.c | 7 +++++++ 4 files changed, 39 insertions(+), 13 deletions(-) Index: linux/include/linux/mm_types.h =================================================================== --- linux.orig/include/linux/mm_types.h +++ linux/include/linux/mm_types.h @@ -405,6 +405,7 @@ struct mm_struct { #endif #ifdef CONFIG_SCHED_NUMA unsigned long numa_next_scan; + unsigned long numa_scan_offset; int numa_scan_seq; #endif struct uprobes_state uprobes_state; Index: linux/include/linux/sched.h =================================================================== --- linux.orig/include/linux/sched.h +++ linux/include/linux/sched.h @@ -2047,6 +2047,7 @@ extern enum sched_tunable_scaling sysctl extern unsigned int sysctl_sched_numa_scan_period_min; extern unsigned int sysctl_sched_numa_scan_period_max; +extern unsigned int sysctl_sched_numa_scan_size; extern unsigned int sysctl_sched_numa_settle_count; #ifdef CONFIG_SCHED_DEBUG Index: linux/kernel/sched/fair.c =================================================================== --- linux.orig/kernel/sched/fair.c +++ linux/kernel/sched/fair.c @@ -825,8 +825,9 @@ static void account_numa_dequeue(struct /* * numa task sample period in ms: 5s */ -unsigned int sysctl_sched_numa_scan_period_min = 5000; -unsigned int sysctl_sched_numa_scan_period_max = 5000*16; +unsigned int sysctl_sched_numa_scan_period_min = 100; +unsigned int sysctl_sched_numa_scan_period_max = 100*16; +unsigned int sysctl_sched_numa_scan_size = 256; /* MB */ /* * Wait for the 2-sample stuff to settle before migrating again @@ -912,6 +913,9 @@ void task_numa_work(struct callback_head unsigned long migrate, next_scan, now = jiffies; struct task_struct *p = current; struct mm_struct *mm = p->mm; + struct vm_area_struct *vma; + unsigned long offset, end; + long length; WARN_ON_ONCE(p != container_of(work, struct task_struct, numa_work)); @@ -938,18 +942,31 @@ void task_numa_work(struct callback_head if (cmpxchg(&mm->numa_next_scan, migrate, next_scan) != migrate) return; - ACCESS_ONCE(mm->numa_scan_seq)++; - { - struct vm_area_struct *vma; - - down_write(&mm->mmap_sem); - for (vma = mm->mmap; vma; vma = vma->vm_next) { - if (!vma_migratable(vma)) - continue; - change_protection(vma, vma->vm_start, vma->vm_end, vma_prot_none(vma), 0); - } - up_write(&mm->mmap_sem); + offset = mm->numa_scan_offset; + length = sysctl_sched_numa_scan_size; + length <<= 20; + + down_write(&mm->mmap_sem); + vma = find_vma(mm, offset); + if (!vma) { + ACCESS_ONCE(mm->numa_scan_seq)++; + offset = 0; + vma = mm->mmap; + } + for (; vma && length > 0; vma = vma->vm_next) { + if (!vma_migratable(vma)) + continue; + + offset = max(offset, vma->vm_start); + end = min(ALIGN(offset + length, HPAGE_SIZE), vma->vm_end); + length -= end - offset; + + change_prot_none(vma, offset, end); + + offset = end; } + mm->numa_scan_offset = offset; + up_write(&mm->mmap_sem); } /* Index: linux/kernel/sysctl.c =================================================================== --- linux.orig/kernel/sysctl.c +++ linux/kernel/sysctl.c @@ -367,6 +367,13 @@ static struct ctl_table kern_table[] = { .proc_handler = proc_dointvec, }, { + .procname = "sched_numa_scan_size_mb", + .data = &sysctl_sched_numa_scan_size, + .maxlen = sizeof(unsigned int), + .mode = 0644, + .proc_handler = proc_dointvec, + }, + { .procname = "sched_numa_settle_count", .data = &sysctl_sched_numa_settle_count, .maxlen = sizeof(unsigned int), -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/