From: Nick Piggin <piggin@cyberone.com.au>
To: Mike Galbraith <efault@gmx.de>
Cc: Con Kolivas <kernel@kolivas.org>,
Andreas Boman <aboman@midgaard.us>,
linux kernel mailing list <linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org>
Subject: Re: [PATCH] 2.5.72 O(1) interactivity bugfix
Date: Thu, 19 Jun 2003 18:57:53 +1000 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <3EF17B11.1080002@cyberone.com.au> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <5.2.0.9.2.20030619103935.023f5648@pop.gmx.net>
Mike Galbraith wrote:
> At 05:33 PM 6/19/2003 +1000, Nick Piggin wrote:
>
>> Mike Galbraith wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> However, that will also send X and friends go off to the expired
>>> array _very_ quickly. This will certainly destroy interactive feel
>>> under load because your desktop can/will go away for seconds at a
>>> time. Try to drag a window while a make -j10 is running, and it'll
>>> get choppy as heck. AFAIKT, anything that you do to increase
>>> concurrency in a global manner is _going_ to have the side effect of
>>> damaging interactive feel to some extent. The one and only source
>>> of desktop responsiveness is the large repository of cpu ticks a
>>> task is allowed to save up for a rainy day.
>>>
>>> What I would love to figure out is a way to reintroduce back-boost
>>> without it having global impact. I think hogging the cpu is
>>> absolutely _wonderful_ when the hogs are the tasks I'm interacting
>>> with. Unfortunately, there seems to be no way to determine whether
>>> a human is intimately involved or not other than to specifically
>>> tell the scheduler this via renice.
>>
>>
>>
>> Could certian drivers or subsystems say they are interactive and
>> provide some input to the scheduler that way? Reads from input
>> devices for example could increase a processes "interactivity" a
>> lot, while writes to console or ... no, everything gets multiplexed
>> through X, doesn't it...
>
>
> The mouse and keyboard are wonderful candidates for this... there's
> always a human connected. It's too bad there's no way to tell if a
> human is staring at the display. If I'm mesmerized by xmms gl
> eye-candy, it's a highly interactive cpu hog.
Thats right, but console / DRI / whatever could probably provide a small
interactivity boost.
>
>> The backboost was quite a good idea. I didn't follow it closely
>> but what if you impemented the above idea, which increased
>> an "interactiveness" number, then X clients could simply have
>> their interactiveness value boosted by X?
>
>
> Sounds good. What I'm trying within the current framework is to let
> tasks which are extremely light weight (and not kernel threads) do
> backboost. Dunno if anything good will come out of it.
OK, the backboost is what? A dynamic priority boost? This is so
X for example can be made interactive through its clients even
if its hogging a lot of CPU, right?
I think it might be a good idea to introduce an "interactiveness"
measurement which could be boosted by interactive devices, and a
forwardboost would be able to increase an X client's interactivenss
through X.
in
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2003-06-19 8:44 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 15+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2003-06-18 14:43 [PATCH] 2.5.72 O(1) interactivity bugfix Con Kolivas
2003-06-18 17:59 ` Andreas Boman
2003-06-18 22:43 ` Con Kolivas
[not found] ` <1055977195.1077.41.camel@asgaard.midgaard.us>
2003-06-18 23:38 ` Con Kolivas
[not found] ` <1055983621.1753.23.camel@asgaard.midgaard.us>
2003-06-19 1:12 ` Con Kolivas
2003-06-19 2:00 ` Andreas Boman
2003-06-19 6:13 ` Mike Galbraith
2003-06-19 6:35 ` Con Kolivas
2003-06-19 8:11 ` Con Kolivas
2003-06-19 7:33 ` Nick Piggin
2003-06-19 8:51 ` Mike Galbraith
2003-06-19 8:57 ` Nick Piggin [this message]
2003-06-19 9:00 ` Nick Piggin
2003-06-19 9:18 ` Mike Galbraith
2003-06-18 18:05 ` Robert Love
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