On Fri, 08 Feb 2019 14:48:03 +0100 Thomas Gleixner <tglx@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Waiman reported that on large systems with a large amount of interrupts the > readout of /proc/stat takes a long time to sum up the interrupt > statistics. In principle this is not a problem. but for unknown reasons > some enterprise quality software reads /proc/stat with a high frequency. > > The reason for this is that interrupt statistics are accounted per cpu. So > the /proc/stat logic has to sum up the interrupt stats for each interrupt. > > This can be largely avoided for interrupts which are not marked as > 'PER_CPU' interrupts by simply adding a per interrupt summation counter > which is incremented along with the per interrupt per cpu counter. > > The PER_CPU interrupts need to avoid that and use only per cpu accounting > because they share the interrupt number and the interrupt descriptor and > concurrent updates would conflict or require unwanted synchronization. > > ... > > --- a/include/linux/irqdesc.h > +++ b/include/linux/irqdesc.h > @@ -65,6 +65,7 @@ struct irq_desc { > unsigned int core_internal_state__do_not_mess_with_it; > unsigned int depth; /* nested irq disables */ > unsigned int wake_depth; /* nested wake enables */ > + unsigned int tot_count; Confused. Isn't this going to quickly overflow?