Re: Time, where did it go?

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On Mon, 3 Aug 2020 at 05:36, Chris Wilson <chris@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> Quoting Dave Airlie (2020-08-02 18:56:44)
> > On Mon, 3 Aug 2020 at 02:44, Chris Wilson <chris@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > >
> > > Lots of small incremental improvements to reduce execution latency
> > > which basically offsets the small regressions incurred when compared to
> > > 5.7. And then there are some major fixes found while staring agape at
> > > lockstat.
> >
> > What introduced the 5.7 regressions? are they documented somewhere.
>
> No. There's a 5.8-rc1 bisect (to the merge but not into rc1) for
> something in the core causing perf fluctuations, but I have not yet
> reproduced that one to bisect into the rc1 merge. [The system that showed
> the issue has historically seen strong swings from p-state setup, might
> be that again?]. This is from measuring simulated transcode workloads that
> we've built up to track KPI. That we can then compare against the real
> workloads run by other groups.
>
> > What is the goal here, is there a benchmark or application that this
> > benefits that you can quantify the benefits?
>
> Entirely motivated by not wanting to have to explain why there's even a
> 1% regression in their client metrics. They wouldn't even notice for a
> few releases by which point the problem is likely compounded and we
> suddenly have crisis meetings.
>
> > Is the lack of userspace command submission a problem vs other vendors here?
>
> If you mean HW scheduling (which is the bit that we are most in dire need
> of for replacing this series), not really, our closest equivalent has not
> yet proven itself, at least in previous incarnations, adequate to their
> requirements.

I don't think this sort of thing is acceptable for upstream. This is
the platform problem going crazy.
Something regresses in the kernel core, and you refactor the i915
driver to get horribly more complicated to avoid fixing the core
kernel regressions?

This has to stop, if Intel can't stop it internally, i.e. the GEM
kernel team hasn't got the sort of power, then it has to stop
upstream.

This is a hard NAK for this sort of refactoring, now and in the future.

Dave.
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