Srivatsa Vaddagiri wrote:
On Thu, May 12, 2005 at 08:08:26PM +0200, Martin Schwidefsky wrote:
I would prefer a solution where the busy CPU wakes up an idle CPU if the
imbalance is too large. Any scheme that requires an idle CPU to poll at
some intervals will have one of two problem: either the poll intervall
is large then the imbalance will stay around for a long time, or the
poll intervall is small then this will behave badly in a heavily
virtualized environment with many images.
I guess all the discussions we are having boils down to this: what is the max
time one can afford to have an imbalanced system because of sleeping idle CPU
not participating in load balance? 10ms, 100ms, 1 sec or more?
Exactly. Any scheme that requires a busy CPU to poll at some intervals
will also have problems: you are putting more work on the busy CPUs,
there will be superfluous IPIs, and there will be cases where the
imbalance is allowed to get too large. Not really much different from
doing the work with the idle CPUs really, *except* that it will introduce
a lot of complexity that nobody has shown is needed.
Maybe the answer depends on how much imbalance it is that we are talking of
here. A high order of imbalance would mean that the sleeping idle CPUs have
to be woken up quickly, while a low order imbalance could mean that
we can let it sleep longer.
From all the discussions we have been having, I think a watchdog
implementation makes more sense. Nick/Ingo, what do you think
should be our final decision on this?
Well the complex solution won't go in until it is shown that the
simple version has fundamental failure cases - but I don't think
we need to make a final decision yet do we?
--
SUSE Labs, Novell Inc.
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