From: Clark Williams <williams@redhat.com>
To: Matthieu Bec <mbec@gmto.org>
Cc: Steven Rostedt <rostedt@goodmis.org>, linux-rt-users@vger.kernel.org
Subject: Re: good load / stress suite?
Date: Wed, 16 May 2012 10:55:01 -0500 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20120516105501.17018110@redhat.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <1337133337.6724.24.camel@gandalf.stny.rr.com>
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On Tue, 15 May 2012 21:55:37 -0400
Steven Rostedt <rostedt@goodmis.org> wrote:
> On Tue, 2012-05-15 at 16:08 -0700, Matthieu Bec wrote:
> > Hello all,
> >
> > I was wondering what people used to check RT_PREEMPT behavior under
> > load/stress?
>
> There is a test suite that Red Hat uses called rt-eval (I believe).
> Clark can give you more info on that.
It's called rteval and I have a git tree here:
git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/clrkwllms/rteval.git
It's basically some python scripting to do much of what Steven describes
below. When it starts up it kicks off a kernel make with 2* the number
of available processors (make -j <n*2>) and runs hackbench, both in
loop. Then it kicks off cyclictest to measure the system latency under
load.
I usually run it like this:
$ sudo rteval --duration=12h
At the end it summarizes the results of the run.
>
> >
> > I'm trying to test the accuracy of my timers and have a test where I
> > setup a kernel module with an hr-timer flipping RTS bit on serial COM0
> > periodically, which I can look on an oscilloscope. the scope triggers on
> > rising edge, I call jitter what shows on the falling side:
> > under no specific load I get ~ 10 us (worst case waiting a long time)
> >
> >
> > My initial idea for stressing the system was to compile a kernel, make
> > -j 8 (#cores) that I thought would exercise CPU and IO if anything. As
> > it happens, it's "mostly good" but I do get occasional (but repeatable)
> > wild excursions (>100us)
>
> The tests I do is the following:
>
> I run "cyclictest -n -p 80 -t -i 250" then in another window I run a
> kernel compile using distcc (to stress the network as well) with make
> -j40, it basically does:
>
> while :; make clean; make -j40; done
>
> Then I also run hackbench (written by Rusty Russell), with:
>
> while :; hackbench 50 ; done
>
> I run the above on a single machine, while on another machine I run
> ktest against the -rt kernel to test different configs (with and without
> PREEMPT_RT enabled and such). I do this for both i386 and x86_64.
>
>
> >
> > Looking around, I found a tool called 'stress' -
> > http://weather.ou.edu/~apw/projects/stress/
> > Under these new conditions, the system behaves really well again ~20 us
> > stable all the way.
> >
> > So both tests give different result, I'm not sure which to trust.
> > I was thinking maybe there is some weird interaction with the kernel and
> > building the kernel that make the 'bad' test invalid?
> >
> > I have RT_PREEMPT 3.0.18-rt34 SMP x86_64
> >
>
> Now, I run the above stress tests that I mentioned for several hours
> before I release a stable kernel. I run this on a 2.6GHz xeon core2, and
> I may hit at most 70us latency with cyclictest. That's a high, it
> usually stays below 50us. We consider >100us on this type of hardware a
> bug which needs to be fixed.
>
> -- Steve
>
>
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next prev parent reply other threads:[~2012-05-16 15:55 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 4+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2012-05-15 23:08 good load / stress suite? Matthieu Bec
2012-05-16 1:55 ` Steven Rostedt
2012-05-16 15:55 ` Clark Williams [this message]
2012-05-19 0:17 ` Matthieu Bec
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