[Devel] Re: [RFC] [PATCH 0/3] Add group fairness to CFS

Srivatsa Vaddagiri vatsa at in.ibm.com
Fri May 25 00:59:36 PDT 2007


On Wed, May 23, 2007 at 08:32:52PM +0200, Ingo Molnar wrote:
> > Here's an attempt to extend CFS (v13) to be fair at a group level, 
> > rather than just at task level. The patch is in a very premature state 
> > (passes simple tests, smp load balance not supported yet) at this 
> > point. I am sending it out early to know if this is a good direction 
> > to proceed.
> 
> cool patch! :-)

Thanks!

> > 1. This patch reuses CFS core to achieve fairness at group level also.
> > 
> >    To make this possible, CFS core has been abstracted to deal with 
> >    generic schedulable "entities" (tasks, users etc).
> 
> yeah, i like this alot.
> 
> The "struct sched_entity" abstraction looks very clean, and that's the 
> main thing that matters: it allows for a design that will only cost us 
> performance if group scheduling is desired.
> 
> If you could do a -v14 port and at least add minimal SMP support: i.e. 
> it shouldnt crash on SMP, but otherwise no extra load-balancing logic is 
> needed for the first cut - then i could try to pick all these core 
> changes up for -v15. (I'll let you know about any other thoughts/details 
> when i do the integration.)

Sure ..I will work on a -v14 port. I would like to target for something which:

1. doesn't break performance/functionality of existing CFS scheduler
  -if- CONFIG_FAIR_USER_SCHEDULER is disabled. This also means load
  balance should work as it works today when the config option is
  disabled.

  Do you recommend a set of tests that I need to run to ensure there
  is no regression? I know that there is a bunch of scheduler
  tests floating around on lkml ..Just need to dig to them (or if
  someone has all these tests handy on a website, I will download from
  that site!)

2. Provides fairness at group (user) level at the cost of missing load
   balance functionaility (missing until I get around to work on it that
   is).

> kernel builds dont really push scheduling micro-costs, rather try 
> something like 'hackbench.c' to measure that. (kernel builds are of 
> course one of our primary benchmarks.)

sure i will try that on my next version.

-- 
Regards,
vatsa
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