On Tue, Mar 07, 2023 at 09:33:13AM -0800, Paul E. McKenney wrote: > On Tue, Mar 07, 2023 at 08:48:52AM -0500, Joel Fernandes wrote: > > On Tue, Mar 7, 2023 at 8:40 AM Uladzislau Rezki <urezki@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > > On Tue, Mar 07, 2023 at 02:01:54PM +0100, Frederic Weisbecker wrote: > > > > On Fri, Mar 03, 2023 at 09:38:51PM +0000, Joel Fernandes (Google) wrote: > > > > > On many systems, a great deal of boot (in userspace) happens after the > > > > > kernel thinks the boot has completed. It is difficult to determine if > > > > > the system has really booted from the kernel side. Some features like > > > > > lazy-RCU can risk slowing down boot time if, say, a callback has been > > > > > added that the boot synchronously depends on. Further expedited callbacks > > > > > can get unexpedited way earlier than it should be, thus slowing down > > > > > boot (as shown in the data below). > > > > > > > > > > For these reasons, this commit adds a config option > > > > > 'CONFIG_RCU_BOOT_END_DELAY' and a boot parameter rcupdate.boot_end_delay. > > > > > Userspace can also make RCU's view of the system as booted, by writing the > > > > > time in milliseconds to: /sys/module/rcupdate/parameters/rcu_boot_end_delay > > > > > Or even just writing a value of 0 to this sysfs node. > > > > > However, under no circumstance will the boot be allowed to end earlier > > > > > than just before init is launched. > > > > > > > > > > The default value of CONFIG_RCU_BOOT_END_DELAY is chosen as 15s. This > > > > > suites ChromeOS and also a PREEMPT_RT system below very well, which need > > > > > no config or parameter changes, and just a simple application of this patch. A > > > > > system designer can also choose a specific value here to keep RCU from marking > > > > > boot completion. As noted earlier, RCU's perspective of the system as booted > > > > > will not be marker until at least rcu_boot_end_delay milliseconds have passed > > > > > or an update is made via writing a small value (or 0) in milliseconds to: > > > > > /sys/module/rcupdate/parameters/rcu_boot_end_delay. > > > > > > > > > > One side-effect of this patch is, there is a risk that a real-time workload > > > > > launched just after the kernel boots will suffer interruptions due to expedited > > > > > RCU, which previous ended just before init was launched. However, to mitigate > > > > > such an issue (however unlikely), the user should either tune > > > > > CONFIG_RCU_BOOT_END_DELAY to a smaller value than 15 seconds or write a value > > > > > of 0 to /sys/module/rcupdate/parameters/rcu_boot_end_delay, once userspace > > > > > boots, and before launching the real-time workload. > > > > > > > > > > Qiuxu also noted impressive boot-time improvements with earlier version > > > > > of patch. An excerpt from the data he shared: > > > > > > > > > > 1) Testing environment: > > > > > OS : CentOS Stream 8 (non-RT OS) > > > > > Kernel : v6.2 > > > > > Machine : Intel Cascade Lake server (2 sockets, each with 44 logical threads) > > > > > Qemu args : -cpu host -enable-kvm, -smp 88,threads=2,sockets=2, … > > > > > > > > > > 2) OS boot time definition: > > > > > The time from the start of the kernel boot to the shell command line > > > > > prompt is shown from the console. [ Different people may have > > > > > different OS boot time definitions. ] > > > > > > > > > > 3) Measurement method (very rough method): > > > > > A timer in the kernel periodically prints the boot time every 100ms. > > > > > As soon as the shell command line prompt is shown from the console, > > > > > we record the boot time printed by the timer, then the printed boot > > > > > time is the OS boot time. > > > > > > > > > > 4) Measured OS boot time (in seconds) > > > > > a) Measured 10 times w/o this patch: > > > > > 8.7s, 8.4s, 8.6s, 8.2s, 9.0s, 8.7s, 8.8s, 9.3s, 8.8s, 8.3s > > > > > The average OS boot time was: ~8.7s > > > > > > > > > > b) Measure 10 times w/ this patch: > > > > > 8.5s, 8.2s, 7.6s, 8.2s, 8.7s, 8.2s, 7.8s, 8.2s, 9.3s, 8.4s > > > > > The average OS boot time was: ~8.3s. > > > > > > > > > > Tested-by: Qiuxu Zhuo <qiuxu.zhuo@xxxxxxxxx> > > > > > Signed-off-by: Joel Fernandes (Google) <joel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > > > > > > > > I still don't really like that: > > > > > > > > 1) It feels like we are curing a symptom for which we don't know the cause. > > > > Which RCU write side caller is the source of this slow boot? Some tracepoints > > > > reporting the wait duration within synchronize_rcu() calls between the end of > > > > the kernel boot and the end of userspace boot may be helpful. > > > > > > > > 2) The kernel boot was already covered before this patch so this is about > > > > userspace code calling into the kernel. Is that piece of code also called > > > > after the boot? In that case are we missing a conversion from > > > > synchronize_rcu() to synchronize_rcu_expedited() somewhere? Because then > > > > the problem is more general than just boot. > > > > > > > > This needs to be analyzed first and if it happens that the issue really > > > > needs to be fixed with telling the kernel that userspace has completed > > > > booting, eg: because the problem is not in a few callsites that need conversion > > > > to expedited but instead in the accumulation of lots of calls that should stay > > > > as is: > > > > > > > > 3) This arbitrary timeout looks dangerous to me as latency sensitive code > > > > may run right after the boot. Either you choose a value that is too low > > > > and you miss the optimization or the value is too high and you may break > > > > things. > > > > > > > > 4) This should be fixed the way you did: > > > > a) a kernel parameter like you did > > > > b) The init process (systemd?) tells the kernel when it judges that userspace > > > > has completed booting. > > > > c) Make these interfaces more generic, maybe that information will be useful > > > > outside RCU. For example the kernel parameter should be > > > > "user_booted_reported" and the sysfs (should be sysctl?): > > > > kernel.user_booted = 1 > > > > d) But yuck, this means we must know if the init process supports that... > > > > > > > > For these reasons, let's make sure we know exactly what is going on first. > > > > > > > > Thanks. > > > Just add some notes and thoughts. There is a rcupdate.rcu_expedited=1 > > > parameter that can be used during the boot. For example on our devices > > > to speedup a boot we boot the kernel with rcu_expedited: > > > > > > XQ-DQ54:/ # cat /proc/cmdline > > > XQ-DQ54:/ # > > > > > > then a user space can decides if it is needed or not: > > > > > > <snip> > > > rcu_expedited rcu_normal > > > XQ-DQ54:/ # ls -al /sys/kernel/rcu_* > > > -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 4096 2023-02-16 09:27 /sys/kernel/rcu_expedited > > > -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 4096 2023-02-16 09:27 /sys/kernel/rcu_normal > > > XQ-DQ54:/ # > > > <snip> > > > > > > for lazy we can add "rcu_cb_lazy" parameter and boot the kernel with > > > true or false. So we can follow and be aligned with rcu_expedited and > > > rcu_normal parameters. > > > > Speaking of aligning, there is also the automated > > rcu_normal_after_boot boot option correct? I prefer the automated > > option of doing this. So the approach here is not really unprecedented > > and is much more robust than relying on userspace too much (I am ok > > with adding your suggestion *on top* of the automated toggle, but I > > probably would not have ChromeOS use it if the automated way exists). > > Or did I miss something? > > See this commit: > > 3705b88db0d7cc ("rcu: Add a module parameter to force use of expedited RCU primitives") > > Antti provided this commit precisely in order to allow Android devices > to expedite the boot process and to shut off the expediting at a time of > Android userspace's choosing. So Android has been making this work for > about ten years, which strikes me as an adequate proof of concept. ;-) Thanks for the pointer. That's true. Looking at Android sources, I find that Android Mediatek devices at least are setting rcu_expedited to 1 at late stage of their userspace boot (which is weird, it should be set to 1 as early as possible), and interestingly I cannot find them resetting it back to 0!. Maybe they set rcu_normal to 1? But I cannot find that either. Vlad? :P > Of course, Android has a rather tightly controlled userspace, as do > real-time embedded systems (I sure hope, anyway!). Which is why your > timeout-based fallback/backup makes a lot of sense. And why someone might > want an aggressive indication when that timeout-based backup is needed. Or someone designs a system but is unaware of RCU behavior during boot. ;-) thanks, - Joel