The existing nohz_full mode does a nice job of suppressing extraneous kernel interrupts for cores that desire it. However, there is a need for a more deterministic mode that rigorously disallows kernel interrupts, even at a higher cost in user/kernel transition time: for example, high-speed networking applications running userspace drivers that will drop packets if they are ever interrupted. These changes attempt to provide an initial draft of such a framework; the changes do not add any overhead to the usual non-nohz_full mode, and only very small overhead to the typical nohz_full mode. A prctl() option (PR_SET_CPU_ISOLATED) is added to control whether processes have requested this stricter semantics, and within that prctl() option we provide a number of different bits for more precise control. Additionally, we add a new command-line boot argument to facilitate debugging where unexpected interrupts are being delivered from. Code that is conceptually similar has been in use in Tilera's Multicore Development Environment since 2008, known as Zero-Overhead Linux, and has seen wide adoption by a range of customers. This patch series represents the first serious attempt to upstream that functionality. Although the current state of the kernel isn't quite ready to run with absolutely no kernel interrupts (for example, workqueues on cpu_isolated cores still remain to be dealt with), this patch series provides a way to make dynamic tradeoffs between avoiding kernel interrupts on the one hand, and making voluntary calls in and out of the kernel more expensive, for tasks that want it. The series (based currently on my arch/tile master tree for 4.2, in turn based on 4.1-rc1) is available at: git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/cmetcalf/linux-tile.git dataplane v2: rename "dataplane" to "cpu_isolated" drop ksoftirqd suppression changes (believed no longer needed) merge previous "QUIESCE" functionality into baseline functionality explicitly track syscalls and exceptions for "STRICT" functionality allow configuring a signal to be delivered for STRICT mode failures move debug tracking to irq_enter(), not irq_exit() Note: I have not yet removed the hack to disable the 1Hz timer tick fallback that was nack'ed by PeterZ, pending a decision on that thread as to what to do (https://lkml.org/lkml/2015/5/8/555). Chris Metcalf (5): nohz_full: add support for "cpu_isolated" mode nohz: support PR_CPU_ISOLATED_STRICT mode nohz: cpu_isolated strict mode configurable signal nohz: add cpu_isolated_debug boot flag nohz: cpu_isolated: allow tick to be fully disabled Documentation/kernel-parameters.txt | 6 +++ arch/tile/kernel/ptrace.c | 6 ++- arch/tile/mm/homecache.c | 5 +- arch/x86/kernel/ptrace.c | 2 + include/linux/context_tracking.h | 11 +++-- include/linux/sched.h | 3 ++ include/linux/tick.h | 28 +++++++++++ include/uapi/linux/prctl.h | 8 +++ kernel/context_tracking.c | 12 +++-- kernel/irq_work.c | 4 +- kernel/sched/core.c | 18 +++++++ kernel/signal.c | 5 ++ kernel/smp.c | 4 ++ kernel/softirq.c | 6 +++ kernel/sys.c | 8 +++ kernel/time/tick-sched.c | 98 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++- 16 files changed, 214 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-) -- 2.1.2 -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-api" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html