From: Paolo Ornati <ornati@fastwebnet.it>
To: Linux Kernel Mailing List <linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org>
Cc: Con Kolivas <kernel@kolivas.org>, Ingo Molnar <mingo@elte.hu>,
Nick Piggin <nickpiggin@yahoo.com.au>,
Peter Williams <pwil3058@bigpond.net.au>
Subject: [SCHED] wrong priority calc - SIMPLE test case
Date: Fri, 30 Dec 2005 14:52:21 +0100 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20051230145221.301faa40@localhost> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <200512281027.00252.kernel@kolivas.org>
WAS: [SCHED] Totally WRONG prority calculation with specific test-case
(since 2.6.10-bk12)
http://lkml.org/lkml/2005/12/27/114/index.html
On Wed, 28 Dec 2005 10:26:58 +1100
Con Kolivas <kernel@kolivas.org> wrote:
> The issue is that the scheduler interactivity estimator is a state machine and
> can be fooled to some degree, and a cpu intensive task that just happens to
> sleep a little bit gets significantly better priority than one that is fully
> cpu bound all the time. Reverting that change is not a solution because it
> can still be fooled by the same process sleeping lots for a few seconds or so
> at startup and then changing to the cpu mostly-sleeping slightly behaviour.
> This "fluctuating" behaviour is in my opinion worse which is why I removed
> it.
Trying to find a "as simple as possible" test case for this problem
(that I consider a BUG in priority calculation) I've come up with this
very simple program:
------ sched_fooler.c -------------------------------
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <unistd.h>
static void burn_cpu(unsigned int x)
{
static char buf[1024];
int i;
for (i=0; i < x; ++i)
buf[i%sizeof(buf)] = (x-i)*3;
}
int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
unsigned long burn;
if (argc != 2)
return 1;
burn = (unsigned long)atoi(argv[1]);
while(1) {
burn_cpu(burn*1000);
usleep(1);
}
return 0;
}
----------------------------------------------
paolo@tux ~/tmp/sched_fooler $ gcc sched_fooler.c
paolo@tux ~/tmp/sched_fooler $ ./a.out 5000
PID USER PR NI VIRT RES SHR S %CPU %MEM TIME+ COMMAND
5633 paolo 15 0 2392 320 252 S 77.7 0.1 0:18.84 a.out
5225 root 15 0 169m 19m 2956 S 2.0 3.9 0:13.17 X
5307 paolo 15 0 100m 22m 13m S 2.0 4.4 0:04.32 kicker
paolo@tux ~/tmp/sched_fooler $ ./a.out 10000
PID USER PR NI VIRT RES SHR S %CPU %MEM TIME+ COMMAND
5637 paolo 16 0 2396 320 252 R 87.4 0.1 0:13.38 a.out
5312 paolo 16 0 86636 22m 15m R 0.1 4.5 0:02.02 konsole
1 root 16 0 2552 560 468 S 0.0 0.1 0:00.71 init
If I only run 2 of these together the system becomes everything but
interactive ;)
./a.out 10000 & ./a.out 4000
PID USER PR NI VIRT RES SHR S %CPU %MEM TIME+ COMMAND
5714 paolo 15 0 2392 320 252 S 59.2 0.1 0:12.28 a.out
5713 paolo 16 0 2396 320 252 S 37.1 0.1 0:07.63 a.out
DD TEST: the usual DD test (to read 128 MB from a non-cached file =
disk bounded) says everything, numbers with 2.6.15-rc7:
paolo@tux /mnt $ mount space/; time dd if=space/bigfile of=/dev/null bs=1M count=128; umount space/
128+0 records in
128+0 records out
real 0m4.052s
user 0m0.004s
sys 0m0.180s
START 2 OF THEM "./a.out 10000 & ./a.out 4000"
paolo@tux /mnt $ mount space/; time dd if=space/bigfile of=/dev/null bs=1M count=128; umount space/
128+0 records in
128+0 records out
real 2m4.578s
user 0m0.000s
sys 0m0.244s
This does't surprise me anymore, since DD gets priority 18 and these
two CPU eaters get 15/16.
As usual "nicksched" is NOT affected at all, IOW it gives to these CPU
eaters the priority that they deserve.
--
Paolo Ornati
Linux 2.6.15-rc7-g3603bc8d on x86_64
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2005-12-30 13:53 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 58+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2005-12-27 18:09 [SCHED] Totally WRONG prority calculation with specific test-case (since 2.6.10-bk12) Paolo Ornati
2005-12-27 21:48 ` Paolo Ornati
2005-12-27 23:26 ` Con Kolivas
2005-12-28 11:01 ` Paolo Ornati
2005-12-28 11:19 ` Con Kolivas
2005-12-28 11:35 ` Paolo Ornati
2005-12-28 17:23 ` Paolo Ornati
2005-12-28 17:39 ` Paolo Ornati
2005-12-30 13:52 ` Paolo Ornati [this message]
2005-12-31 2:06 ` [SCHED] wrong priority calc - SIMPLE test case Peter Williams
2005-12-31 10:34 ` Paolo Ornati
2005-12-31 10:52 ` Paolo Ornati
2005-12-31 11:12 ` Con Kolivas
2005-12-31 13:44 ` Peter Williams
2005-12-31 16:31 ` Paolo Ornati
2005-12-31 22:04 ` Peter Williams
2005-12-31 8:13 ` Mike Galbraith
2005-12-31 11:00 ` Paolo Ornati
2005-12-31 15:11 ` Paolo Ornati
2005-12-31 16:37 ` Mike Galbraith
2005-12-31 17:24 ` Paolo Ornati
2005-12-31 17:42 ` Paolo Ornati
2006-01-01 11:39 ` Paolo Ornati
2006-01-02 9:15 ` Mike Galbraith
2006-01-02 9:50 ` Paolo Ornati
2006-01-09 11:11 ` Mike Galbraith
2006-01-09 15:52 ` Mike Galbraith
2006-01-09 16:08 ` Con Kolivas
2006-01-09 18:14 ` Mike Galbraith
2006-01-09 20:00 ` Paolo Ornati
2006-01-09 20:23 ` Paolo Ornati
2006-01-10 7:08 ` Mike Galbraith
2006-01-10 12:07 ` Mike Galbraith
2006-01-10 12:56 ` Paolo Ornati
2006-01-10 13:01 ` Mike Galbraith
2006-01-10 13:53 ` Paolo Ornati
2006-01-10 15:18 ` Mike Galbraith
2006-01-13 1:13 ` Con Kolivas
2006-01-13 1:32 ` Con Kolivas
2006-01-13 10:46 ` Paolo Ornati
2006-01-13 10:51 ` Con Kolivas
2006-01-13 13:01 ` Mike Galbraith
2006-01-13 14:34 ` Con Kolivas
2006-01-13 16:15 ` Mike Galbraith
2006-01-14 2:05 ` Con Kolivas
2006-01-14 2:56 ` Mike Galbraith
2005-12-27 23:59 ` [SCHED] Totally WRONG prority calculation with specific test-case (since 2.6.10-bk12) Peter Williams
2005-12-28 10:20 ` Paolo Ornati
2005-12-28 13:38 ` Peter Williams
2005-12-28 19:45 ` Paolo Ornati
2005-12-29 3:13 ` Nick Piggin
2005-12-29 3:35 ` Peter Williams
2005-12-29 8:11 ` Nick Piggin
-- strict thread matches above, loose matches on Subject: below --
2006-01-27 16:57 [SCHED] wrong priority calc - SIMPLE test case Con Kolivas
2006-01-27 20:06 ` MIke Galbraith
2006-01-27 23:18 ` Con Kolivas
2006-01-28 0:01 ` Peter Williams
2006-01-28 3:43 ` MIke Galbraith
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