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Message-ID: <20130408092558.GD25003@pengutronix.de>
Date: Mon, 8 Apr 2013 11:25:58 +0200
From: Steffen Trumtrar <s.trumtrar@...gutronix.de>
To: linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org
Cc: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@...uxfoundation.org>,
Jiri Slaby <jslaby@...e.cz>
Subject: [BUG] increased us/sys-load due to tty-layer in 2.6.38+ ?!
Hi!
I noticed a problem with the tty subsystem on ARM. Starting with 2.6.38+ load
on the serial connection causes a 10-15% increase in system/userspace load.
This doesn't change up to v3.9-rc4.
The following setup was used:
telnet && screen microcom -p /dev/ttyUSB0
| +--------+
|-------------->------------|----+ |
+-------+<---------<------------|----+ |
| | +------+ | |
| UUT |<-USB->| FTDI |<-UART->| |
| | +------+ | PC |
+-------+ +--------+
^
|
telnet && top -d1
The unit under test (UUT) is connected via USB->FTDI->UART to a PC. On the PC
a "while true; do find /; done" produces some random output.
I connect to the UUT via telnet and then open a serial connection to the PC
in a screen session, seeing the output produced on the PC. Then screen gets
detached. So, basically, what I'm trying to do is producing load only on the
USB->FTDI->UART connection and not on the UUT itself.
Then another telnet connection is opened, to monitor the UUT with "top -d1".
As UUT an imx27, kirkwood and an AT91 were used.
To find the "offending" code, I bisected v2.6.38..v3.0 which gave the following
top output (non-scientifically, I know. But the switch in load distribution is
obvious nevertheless):
2.6.38 Cpu(s): 3.8%us, 1.9%sy, 0.0%ni, 94.3%id
2.6.38+ Cpu(s): 1.9%us, 3.8%sy, 0.0%ni, 94.3%id
last good commit Cpu(s): 1.9%us, 2.8%sy, 0.0%ni, 95.3%id
first bad commit Cpu(s): 4.8%us, 14.5%sy, 0.0%ni, 80.6%id
2.6.39-rc4 Cpu(s): 10.5%us, 8.9%sy, 0.0%ni, 79.8%id
3.0 Cpu(s): 15.9%us, 19.6%sy, 0.0%ni, 62.3%id
This resulted in
f23eb2b2b28547fc70df82dd5049eb39bec5ba12
tty: stop using "delayed_work" in the tty layer
as possible cause. Reverting this commit by hand in v3.8 showed a load distribution
similar to 2.6.38.
What I haven't done, is measure if the load is really increasing or if top only
tells me so. Maybe the algorithm to calculate this somehow produces different
results because of the switch from schedule_delayed_work to schedule_work?
So, is this a bug, a feature, a symptom,...?
Regards,
Steffen
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