Hi, a quick update on that feedback before I send out v4: On Fri, Aug 03, 2018 at 06:56:41PM +0200, Peter Zijlstra wrote: > On Wed, Aug 01, 2018 at 11:19:57AM -0400, Johannes Weiner wrote: > > +static bool test_state(unsigned int *tasks, int cpu, enum psi_states state) > > +{ > > + switch (state) { > > + case PSI_IO_SOME: > > + return tasks[NR_IOWAIT]; > > + case PSI_IO_FULL: > > + return tasks[NR_IOWAIT] && !tasks[NR_RUNNING]; > > + case PSI_MEM_SOME: > > + return tasks[NR_MEMSTALL]; > > + case PSI_MEM_FULL: > > + /* > > + * Since we care about lost potential, things are > > + * fully blocked on memory when there are no other > > + * working tasks, but also when the CPU is actively > > + * being used by a reclaimer and nothing productive > > + * could run even if it were runnable. > > + */ > > + return tasks[NR_MEMSTALL] && > > + (!tasks[NR_RUNNING] || > > + cpu_curr(cpu)->flags & PF_MEMSTALL); > > I don't think you can do this, there is nothing that guarantees > cpu_curr() still exists. As discussed later in this thread, I've replaced this with time sampling from inside scheduler_tick(): in the unlikely event that rq->curr is PF_MEMSTALL, it'll record TICK_NSEC worth of MEM_FULL. However: > > + for (s = PSI_NONIDLE; s >= 0; s--) { > > + u32 time, delta; > > + > > + time = READ_ONCE(groupc->times[s]); > > + /* > > + * In addition to already concluded states, we > > + * also incorporate currently active states on > > + * the CPU, since states may last for many > > + * sampling periods. > > + * > > + * This way we keep our delta sampling buckets > > + * small (u32) and our reported pressure close > > + * to what's actually happening. > > + */ > > + if (test_state(groupc->tasks, cpu, s)) { > > + /* > > + * We can race with a state change and > > + * need to make sure the state_start > > + * update is ordered against the > > + * updates to the live state and the > > + * time buckets (groupc->times). > > + * > > + * 1. If we observe task state that > > + * needs to be recorded, make sure we > > + * see state_start from when that > > + * state went into effect or we'll > > + * count time from the previous state. > > + * > > + * 2. If the time delta has already > > + * been added to the bucket, make sure > > + * we don't see it in state_start or > > + * we'll count it twice. > > + * > > + * If the time delta is out of > > + * state_start but not in the time > > + * bucket yet, we'll miss it entirely > > + * and handle it in the next period. > > + */ > > + smp_rmb(); > > + time += cpu_clock(cpu) - groupc->state_start; > > + } > > The alternative is adding an update to scheduler_tick(), that would > ensure you're never more than nr_cpu_ids * TICK_NSEC behind. I wasn't able to convert *all* states to tick updates like this. The reason is that, while testing rq->curr for PF_MEMSTALL is cheap, other tasks associated with the rq could be from any cgroup in the system. That means we'd have to do for_each_cgroup() on every tick to keep the groupc->times that closely uptodate, and that wouldn't scale. We tend to have hundreds of them, some setups have thousands. Since we don't need to be *that* current, I left the on-demand update inside the aggregator for now. It's a bit trickier, but much cheaper.