On 11/9/23, Eric W. Biederman <ebiederm@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Mateusz Guzik <mjguzik@xxxxxxxxx> writes: >> sched_exec causes migration only for only few % of execs in the bench, >> but when it does happen there is tons of overhead elsewhere. >> >> I expect real programs which get past execve will be prone to >> migrating anyway, regardless of what sched_exec is doing. >> >> That is to say, while sched_exec buggering off here would be nice, I >> think for real-world wins the thing to investigate is the overhead >> which comes from migration to begin with. > > I have a vague memory that the idea is that there is a point during exec > when it should be much less expensive than normal to allow migration > between cpus because all of the old state has gone away. > > Assuming that is the rationale, if we are getting lock contention > then either there is a global lock in there, or there is the potential > to pick a less expensive location within exec. > Given the commit below I think the term "migration cost" is overloaded here. By migration cost in my previous mail I meant the immediate cost (stop_one_cpu and so on), but also the aftermath -- for example tlb flushes on another CPU when tearing down your now-defunct mm after you switched. For testing purposes I verified commenting out sched_exec and not using taskset still gives me about 9.5k ops/s. I 100% agree should the task be moved between NUMA domains, it makes sense to do it when it has the smallest footprint. I don't know what the original patch did, the current code just picks a CPU and migrates to it, regardless of NUMA considerations. I will note that the goal would still be achieved by comparing domains and doing nothing if they match. I think this would be nice to fix, but it is definitely not a big deal. I guess the question is to Peter Zijlstra if this sounds reasonable. > Just to confirm my memory I dug a little deeper and I found the original > commit that added sched_exec (in tglx's git tree of the bit keeper > history). > > commit f01419fd6d4e5b32fef19d206bc3550cc04567a9 > Author: Martin J. Bligh <mbligh@xxxxxxxxxxx> > Date: Wed Jan 15 19:46:10 2003 -0800 > > [PATCH] (2/3) Initial load balancing > > Patch from Michael Hohnbaum > > This adds a hook, sched_balance_exec(), to the exec code, to make it > place the exec'ed task on the least loaded queue. We have less state > to move at exec time than fork time, so this is the cheapest point > to cross-node migrate. Experience in Dynix/PTX and testing on Linux > has confirmed that this is the cheapest time to move tasks between > nodes. > > It also macro-wraps changes to nr_running, to allow us to keep track of > per-node nr_running as well. Again, no impact on non-NUMA machines. > > > Eric > > -- Mateusz Guzik <mjguzik gmail.com>