On Sat, Jun 11, 2005 at 05:54:59PM +0200, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:
> On Fri, Jun 10, 2005 at 06:41:33PM -0700, Paul E. McKenney wrote:
> > I just -know- I am going to regret stepping into the middle of
> > this one...
>
> Never mind, I keep regretting it myself. Perhaps it was better if I
> avoided posting here, and by now people would think preempt-RT was the
> holy grail of hard-RT and that would obsolete RTAI/rtlinux, when infact
> it's an inferior solution from from a reliability/guarantee standpoint
> and from a performance standpoint too (as some measurements showed
> already too) [and local_irq_disable would still be not emulated in
> software]
Well, I probably should have edited the "TO" and "CC" lines to make it
clear that I was not singling you out. Please accept my apologies for
making it appear that I was singling you out.
But at least we all know that both you and Bill care deeply about Linux! ;-)
> > All I have seen Ingo claim is that -some- hardware configurations running
> > -some- specific workloads had excellent -measured- maximum scheduling
> > latencies. I have not seen Ingo claim that he has mathematically proven
> > that CONFIG_PREEMPT_RT's worst-case scheduling latency is bounded, let
> > alone make any claim of what such a mathematically proven bound might be.
>
> Indeed. As I stated in my first relevant post to this thread on "Tue, 31
> May 2005 18:11:57 +0200" _before_ most of the other quotes that I received
> today, and before realizing the _irq part of the spin_lock_irq was
> already emulated in software and before realizing that the rtlinux
> patent doesn't forbid to emulate in software the _irq part of the
> spin_lock_irq because I'm not really good at reading all the patent
> claims but I focused only on the patent concept (and regardless there is
> apparently somebody who rightfully paid lawyers for research in that area):
CONFIG_PREEMPT_RT continues to be a bit of a learning experience for me
as well. As to patent claims, don't get me started...
> For the determinism, you could do what Ingo did so far, that is to
> "measure" but there's no way a "measurement" can provide an hard-RT
> guarantee. The "measure" way is great for the lowlatency patches, and to
> try to eliminate the bad-latencies paths, but it _can't_ guarantee a
> "worst-case-latency".
>
> This is what I posted in my _second_ email to this thread. Of course
> nobody is quoting the above, they picked other later emails, but if you
> go back to the second email (and first relevant one) I posted here,
> you'll see this text at the end. Sorry for that mistake about the _irq
> part and the related patent claims that I'm not good at reading cause
> it's written by lawyers, but that mistake made no difference to the
> bottom line cause local_irq_disable was still disable the hard irqs
> without being emulated in software. I was reading local_irq_disable that
> wasn't touched (local_irq_disable is the _first_ thing I check in every
> RT patch on earth) and so I assumed no _irq disable was emulated. My bad
> but it didn't change the bottom line.
>
> Now even local_irq_disable can be emulated in software (incidentally
> happened after my suggestions last week) but that still leaves the above
> issue in my second email unsolved.
>
> It's not like I made up this "guarante" of worst case latency argument
> after realizing that _irq was emulated and after local_irq_disable has
> been emulated too, as somebody apparently seems to have described today
> by providing a list of quotes ignoring the above argument that was the
> core of my first relevant email to this thread.
Yep, I do remember several emails in the earlier thread that seemed
to claim hard-realtime response. One might be able to create some
sort of software tool that scanned the required code to produce such
guarantee, but I have not heard of anyone actually doing this with
any Linux-based realtime scheme.
> If you check the timestamp, I mentioned the above core issue, way
> _before_ going into the _irq details.
This does indeed match my memory of the earlier thread.
> > Ingo -has- greatly reduced the amount of kernel code that must
> > be inspected to guarantee realtime response, and this is a great
> > accomplishment and a great contribution. I believe that his approach
>
> Indeed.
>
> > is more than "good enough" for a great number of applications that are
> > traditionally thought of as "hard realtime". But, unless I missed
> > something, it is not mathematically proven, nor is it in any way
> > "certified".
>
> Yes, it could be that 99% of the app that traditionally claims to need
> hard-RT will be fully covered by preempt-RT (assuming the cpu can keep
> up with the slowdown), but when I talk about hard-RT I only think at
> those apps like the linuxdevices article that beats at 50usec. To me
> hard-RT is all about guaranteeing to provide a deadline, the rest I call
> it lowlatency patches. preempt-RT is obviously a very great improvement
> to the lowlatency soft-RT approach and I agree a lot of those apps
> thought to need hard-RT will be fine with it.
>
> But one should evaluate if an hard-RT guarantee is truly needed or not
> before picking preempt-RT, the performance should be evaluated as well
> cause irq handling is much faster than a context switch.
Yep, much care is required when selecting a realtime OS approach,
whether on Linux or any other OS. Seems that care in selecting hardware
is required as well -- the PCI issue with X was a new one for me!
> The slowdown numbers posted so far are quite impressive as well.
Agreed!
> Think that in some recent research I'm doing, I'm looking to make the
> semaphore a spinlock to boost performance, preempt-RT is the opposite ;)
;-)
> > Some of the approaches involving separate RTOSes -can- legitimately claim
> > have mathematically proven worst-case scheduling latencies. For example,
> > the dual-OS/dual-core approach can do so, particularly in the case where
> > the "RTOS" is a tight loop written on bare metal in hand-coded assembly.
> > One might consider this to be a trivial example, perhaps even a stupid
> > example, but there are a lot of apps out there that use exactly this
> > approach.
> >
> > The migration-between-OSes approach, such as RTAI Fusion, might also be
> > able to mathematically guarantee RTOS scheduling latencies. And, unlike
> > the dual-OS/dual-core approaches, it does provide a single environment
> > to applications. However, it still results in two separate OS instances
> > to administer, and, as near as I can tell, the RTOS has to stick its
> > hands so deeply into Linux's internals that it might as well be part
> > of the Linux kernel. Unless I am missing something, any sort of bug
> > in the Linux kernel has a reasonable chance of messing up the RTOS,
> > since the RTOS must paw through Linux's tasks.
>
> Yes. I'm a beliver in the dual-OS/dual-core model, as the only one who
> can reasonably simply guarantee a deadline.
If your realtime application needs every scrap of realtime response that
the hardware can deliver, then I agree that the dual-OS/dual-core approach
is very likely the best choice. But it depends on what OS services the
realtime portion of the application needs. Beyond a certain point,
it might be better to accept some probability of scheduling failure
from Linux than to accept a perhaps-higher probability of bugs from a
less-throroughly-tested RTOS. Or maybe not. To decide, it is necessary
to look carefully at the details of the app, the RTOS, and Linux.
> The single image RTOS has much larger pieces of complex code involved in
> the RT equation (in your list you didn't mention the mutex code itself),
> plus this codes like the scheduler changes all the time (it's not like
> the irq code that pratically never changes in stable cycles), and it
> slowsdown quite a bit as well at emulating infinite cpus and
> overscheduling at every contention.
Excellent point, am adding "mutex code" to the list. How does the
following look?
e. Any code that holds a lock, mutex, semaphore, or other resource
that is needed by the code implementing your new feature, as
well as the code that actually implements the lock, mutex,
semaphore, or other resource.
> > Can we say that one of these approaches is definitely "good enough" for
> > all reasonable Linux RT work, and that we should therefore stop working on
> > the other approach?
> >
> > I might well be missing something, but I don't believe so, at least
> > not yet.
>
> I agree with you. Perhaps I didn't make my point of view clear enough on
> the good things of preempt-RT. preempt-RT is a great feature for some
> apps.
Or I could easily have misread or misunderstood your emails.
> I _only_ criticise people who wants to put preempt-RT on par with
> guaranteed hard-RT solutions like RTAI/rtlinux that can easily provide a
> guaranteed deadline, while preempt-RT can only proviede measurements
> backed by statistically signficance, which is quite far away from a
> guarantee. Plus it's much slower as well. But apparently some people
> here, wants you to believe that preempt-RT will be exactly guaranteed
> hard-RT as RTAI/rtlinux, and they can't handle it when I say this is not
> the case. This is the only thing I'm objecting as stated in my first
> relevant email of the thread partly quoted above.
>
> I'm sure I've ever said that preempt-RT is useless and there's no application
> for it, infact I stated _multiple_ times there are cases like alsa where
> preempt-RT is the very best that one can do.
The big thing that I learned in reviewing the thread and in doing the
writeup is that there are a lot of different things that a realtime app
might want from a OS and from the hardware. It seems to me that we
probably cannot do a simple linear ranking of the approaches -- some
will be better at one aspect, others will be better at another.
Though I would love to be proven wrong! It is always nice from a user's
point of view if you can just use the "best" one and spend more time
worrying about getting your app right instead of having to spend a lot
of time worrying about what OS approach to use! ;-)
> > In the meantime, the more time anyone spends sending flames on LKML, the
> > less time that person is putting into improving his/her favorite approach.
>
> Well, I'm not in RT development anyway so that's not my case, but of
> course I'm could spend my time much better anyway ;)
If you were -anywhere- at all near the worst example of misdirected
effort, the pace of Linux development would be terrifyingly fast! ;-)
> Thanks again for your appreciated RT efforts Paul!
Glad you liked it, and, again, please accept my apologies for appearing
to be singling you out.
Thanx, Paul
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