From: "Paul E. McKenney" <paulmck@linux.ibm.com>
To: Nicholas Piggin <npiggin@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de>,
Frederic Weisbecker <fweisbec@gmail.com>,
linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org, Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com>,
Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org>,
"Rafael J . Wysocki" <rafael.j.wysocki@intel.com>
Subject: Re: [PATCH 0/4] Allow CPU0 to be nohz full
Date: Thu, 11 Apr 2019 08:42:39 -0700 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20190411154239.GA29448@linux.ibm.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <1554800737.v126tflazd.astroid@bobo.none>
On Tue, Apr 09, 2019 at 07:21:54PM +1000, Nicholas Piggin wrote:
> Thomas Gleixner's on April 6, 2019 3:54 am:
> > On Fri, 5 Apr 2019, Nicholas Piggin wrote:
> >> Thomas Gleixner's on April 5, 2019 12:36 am:
> >> > On Thu, 4 Apr 2019, Nicholas Piggin wrote:
> >> >
> >> >> I've been looking at ways to fix suspend breakage with CPU0 as a
> >> >> nohz CPU. I started looking at various things like allowing CPU0
> >> >> to take over do_timer again temporarily or allowing nohz full
> >> >> to be stopped at runtime (that is quite a significant change for
> >> >> little real benefit). The problem then was having the housekeeping
> >> >> CPU go offline.
> >> >>
> >> >> So I decided to try just allowing the freeze to occur on non-zero
> >> >> CPU. This seems to be a lot simpler to get working, but I guess
> >> >> some archs won't be able to deal with this? Would it be okay to
> >> >> make it opt-in per arch?
> >> >
> >> > It needs to be opt in. x86 will fall on its nose with that.
> >>
> >> Okay I can add that.
> >>
> >> > Now the real interesting question is WHY do we need that at all?
> >>
> >> Why full nohz for CPU0? Basically this is how their job system was
> >> written and used, testing nohz full was a change that came much later
> >> as an optimisation.
> >>
> >> I don't think there is a fundamental reason an equivalent system
> >> could not be made that uses a different CPU for housekeeping, but I
> >> was assured the change would be quite difficult for them.
> >>
> >> If we can support it, it seems nice if you can take a particular
> >> configuration and just apply nohz_full to your application processors
> >> without any other changes.
> >
> > This wants an explanation in the patches.
>
> Okay.
>
> > And patch 4 has in the changelog:
> >
> > nohz_full has been successful at significantly reducing jitter for a
> > large supercomputer customer, but their job control system requires CPU0
> > to be for housekeeping.
> >
> > which just makes me dazed and confused :)
> >
> > Other than some coherent explanation and making it opt in, I don't think
> > there is a fundamental issue with that.
>
> I will try to make the changelogs less jibberish then :)
Maybe this is all taken care of now, but do the various clocks stay
synchronized with wall-clock time if all CPUs are in nohz_full mode?
At one time, at least one CPU needed to keep its scheduler-clock
interrupt going in order to keep things in sync.
The ppc timebase register might make it possible to do this without any
scheduler-clock interrupts, but figured I should check. ;-)
Thanx, Paul
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2019-04-11 15:42 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 12+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2019-04-04 12:07 [PATCH 0/4] Allow CPU0 to be nohz full Nicholas Piggin
2019-04-04 12:07 ` [PATCH 1/4] sched/core: allow the remote scheduler tick to be started on CPU0 Nicholas Piggin
2019-04-04 12:07 ` [PATCH 2/4] kernel/cpu: Allow non-zero CPU to be primary for suspend / kexec freeze Nicholas Piggin
2019-04-04 12:07 ` [PATCH 3/4] kernel/sched/isolation: require a present CPU in housekeeping mask Nicholas Piggin
2019-04-04 12:07 ` [PATCH 4/4] nohz_full: Allow the boot CPU to be full nohz Nicholas Piggin
2019-04-04 14:36 ` [PATCH 0/4] Allow CPU0 to be nohz full Thomas Gleixner
2019-04-04 16:02 ` Nicholas Piggin
2019-04-05 17:54 ` Thomas Gleixner
2019-04-09 9:21 ` Nicholas Piggin
2019-04-11 15:42 ` Paul E. McKenney [this message]
2019-04-12 3:16 ` Nicholas Piggin
2019-04-12 11:30 ` Paul E. McKenney
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