On 27/07/2023 12:54, Maarten Lankhorst wrote:
Hey,
On 2023-07-26 13:41, Tvrtko Ursulin wrote:
On 26/07/2023 11:14, Maarten Lankhorst wrote:
Hey,
On 2023-07-22 00:21, Tejun Heo wrote:
On Wed, Jul 12, 2023 at 12:46:04PM +0100, Tvrtko Ursulin wrote:
$ cat drm.memory.stat
card0 region=system total=12898304 shared=0 active=0
resident=12111872 purgeable=167936
card0 region=stolen-system total=0 shared=0 active=0 resident=0
purgeable=0
Data is generated on demand for simplicty of implementation ie. no
running
totals are kept or accounted during migrations and such. Various
optimisations such as cheaper collection of data are possible but
deliberately left out for now.
Overall, the feature is deemed to be useful to container orchestration
software (and manual management).
Limits, either soft or hard, are not envisaged to be implemented on
top of
this approach due on demand nature of collecting the stats.
So, yeah, if you want to add memory controls, we better think
through how
the fd ownership migration should work.
I've taken a look at the series, since I have been working on cgroup
memory eviction.
The scheduling stuff will work for i915, since it has a purely
software execlist scheduler, but I don't think it will work for GuC
(firmware) scheduling or other drivers that use the generic drm
scheduler.
It actually works - I used to have a blurb in the cover letter about
it but apparently I dropped it. Just a bit less well with many
clients, since there are fewer priority levels.
All that the design requires from the invididual drivers is some way
to react to the "you are over budget by this much" signal. The rest is
driver and backend specific.
What I mean is that this signal may not be applicable since the drm
scheduler just schedules jobs that run. Adding a weight might be done in
hardware, since it's responsible for scheduling which context gets to
run. The over budget signal is useless in that case, and you just need
to set a scheduling priority for the hardware instead.
The over budget callback lets the driver know its assigned budget and
its current utilisation. Already with that data drivers could implement
something smarter than what I did in my RFC. So I don't think callback
is completely useless even for some smarter implementation which
potentially ties into firmware scheduling.
Anyway, I maintain this is implementation details.
For something like this, you would probably want it to work inside
the drm scheduler first. Presumably, this can be done by setting a
weight on each runqueue, and perhaps adding a callback to update one
for a running queue. Calculating the weights hierarchically might be
fun..
It is not needed to work in drm scheduler first. In fact drm scheduler
based drivers can plug into what I have since it already has the
notion of scheduling priorities.
They would only need to implement a hook which allow the cgroup
controller to query client GPU utilisation and another to received the
over budget signal.
Amdgpu and msm AFAIK could be easy candidates because they both
support per client utilisation and priorities.
Looks like I need to put all this info back into the cover letter.
Also, hierarchic weights and time budgets are all already there. What
could be done later is make this all smarter and respect the time
budget with more precision. That would however, in many cases
including Intel, require co-operation with the firmware. In any case
it is only work in the implementation, while the cgroup control
interface remains the same.
I have taken a look at how the rest of cgroup controllers change
ownership when moved to a different cgroup, and the answer was: not
at all. If we attempt to create the scheduler controls only on the
first time the fd is used, you could probably get rid of all the
tracking.
Can you send a CPU file descriptor from process A to process B and
have CPU usage belonging to process B show up in process' A cgroup, or
vice-versa? Nope, I am not making any sense, am I? My point being it
is not like-to-like, model is different.
No ownership transfer would mean in wide deployments all GPU
utilisation would be assigned to Xorg and so there is no point to any
of this. No way to throttle a cgroup with un-important GPU clients for
instance.
If you just grab the current process' cgroup when a drm_sched_entity is
created, you don't have everything charged to X.org. No need for
complicated ownership tracking in drm_file. The same equivalent should
be done in i915 as well when a context is created as it's not using the
drm scheduler.
Okay so essentially nuking the concept of DRM clients belongs to one
cgroup and instead tracking at the context level. That is an interesting
idea. I suspect implementation could require somewhat generalizing the
concept of an "execution context", or at least expressing it via the DRM
cgroup controller.
I can give this a spin, or at least some more detailed thought, once we
close on a few more details regarding charging in general.
This can be done very easily with the drm scheduler.
WRT memory, I think the consensus is to track system memory like
normal memory. Stolen memory doesn't need to be tracked. It's kernel
only memory, used for internal bookkeeping only.
The only time userspace can directly manipulate stolen memory, is by
mapping the pinned initial framebuffer to its own address space. The
only allocation it can do is when a framebuffer is displayed, and
framebuffer compression creates some stolen memory. Userspace is not
aware of this though, and has no way to manipulate those contents.
Stolen memory is irrelevant and not something cgroup controller knows
about. Point is drivers say which memory regions they have and their
utilisation.
Imagine instead of stolen it said vram0, or on Intel multi-tile it
shows local0 and local1. People working with containers are interested
to see this breakdown. I guess the parallel and use case here is
closer to memory.numa_stat.
Correct, but for the same reason, I think it might be more useful to
split up the weight too.
A single scheduling weight for the global GPU might be less useful than
per engine, or per tile perhaps..
Yeah, there is some complexity there for sure and could be a larger
write up. In short per engine stuff tends to work out in practice as is
given how each driver can decide upon receiving the signal what to do.
In the i915 RFC for instance if it gets "over budget" signal from the
group, but it sees that the physical engines belonging to this specific
GPU are not over-subscribed, it simply omits any throttling. Which in
practice works out fine for two clients competing for different engines.
Same would be for multiple GPUs (or tiles with our stuff) in the same
cgroup.
Going back to the single scheduling weight or more fine grained. We
could choose to follow for instance io.weight format? Start with
drm.weight being "default 1000" and later extend to per card (or more):
"""
default 100
card0 20
card1 50
"""
In this case I would convert drm.weight to this format straight away for
the next respin, just wouldn't support per card just yet.
Regards,
Tvrtko