These patches implement CPU usage rate limits for tasks.
Although the rlimit mechanism already has a CPU usage limit (RLIMIT_CPU)
it is a total usage limit and therefore (to my mind) not very useful.
These patches provide an alternative whereby the (recent) average CPU
usage rate of a task can be limited to a (per task) specified proportion
of a single CPU's capacity. The limits are specified in parts per
thousand and come in two varieties -- hard and soft. The difference
between the two is that the system tries to enforce hard caps regardless
of the other demand for CPU resources but allows soft caps to be
exceeded if there are spare CPU resources available. By default, tasks
will have both caps set to 1000 (i.e. no limit) but newly forked tasks
will inherit any caps that have been imposed on their parent from the
parent. The mimimim soft cap allowed is 0 (which effectively puts the
task in the background) and the minimim hard cap allowed is 1.
Care has been taken to minimize the overhead inflicted on tasks that
have no caps and my tests using kernbench indicate that it is hidden in
the noise.
Note:
1. Caps are not enforced for SCHED_FIFO and SCHED_RR tasks.
2. This versions incorporates improvements and bug fixes as a result of
feedback from an earlier post. Special thanks to Con Kolivas whose
suggestions with respect to improved methods for avoiding starvation
and priority inversion have enabled cap enforcement to be stricter.
3. To reduce overhead for uncapped tasks, no CPU usage rate statistics
are kept for tasks that have a hard or soft cap less than 1000 parts
per thousand. However, these statistics in conjunction with the
weighted load values for tasks and run queues can be used to determine
if a task is getting a "fair" share of CPU i.e. the ratio of the tasks
load to the run queues total load weight should be the same as the
ratio of its average on cpu time per cycle to the average length of
its cycle. This could be of use to the normal scheduling code.
4. This patch is against 2.6.17-mm1.
5. Overhead Measurements. To measure the implications for overhead
introduced by these patches kernbench was used on a dual 500Mhz
Centrino SMP system. Runs were done for a kernel without these
patches applied, one with the patches applied but no caps being used
and one with the patches applied and running kernbench with a soft cap
of zero (which would be inherited by all its children).
Average Optimal -j 8 Load Run:
Vanilla Patch Applied Soft Cap 0%
Elapsed Time 1056.1 (1.92) 1048.2 (0.62) 1064.1 (1.59)
User Time 1908.1 (1.09) 1895.2 (1.30) 1926.6 (1.39)
System Time 181.7 (0.60) 177.5 (0.74) 173.8 (1.07)
Total 2089.8 2072.7 2100.4
Percent CPU 197.6 (0.55) 197.0 (0) 197.0 (0)
Context Switches 49253.6 (136.31) 48881.4 (92.03) 92490.8 (163.71)
Sleeps 28038.8 (228.11) 28136.0 (250.65) 25769.4 (280.40)
As can be seen there is no significant overhead penalty for having
these patches applied and leaving them unused (in fact, based on
these numbers, there's actually a small improvement). Similarly,
the overhead for running kernbench as a background (soft cap of
zero) job is not significant. As expected, the context switches for
the background run are double (due to the fact that ANY OTHER task
running on the machine would be able to preempt the kernbench tasks)
but have not seriously effected the CPU usage statistics. The
similarity of the "Percent CPU" numbers indicate that load balancing
hasn't been adversely effected.
6. Code size measurements:
Vanilla kernel:
text data bss dec hex filename
30305 4881 704 35890 8c32 kernel/sched.o
907 0 0 907 38b kernel/mutex.o
10183 3424 0 13607 3527 fs/proc/base.o
Patches applied:
text data bss dec hex filename
33027 4913 704 38644 96f4 kernel/sched.o
979 0 0 979 3d3 kernel/mutex.o
10962 3712 0 14674 3952 fs/proc/base.o
Indicating that the size cost of the patch proper is about
2.7 kilobytes and the procfs costs about another 0.8 kilobytes.
This is a reduction of 0.7 kilobytes on the previous version and
is due to a rationalization of the interface code.
7. A patch to use task watchers to implement per process (as opposed to
per task) caps is under development to demonstrate the suitability of
these mechanisms for implementing higher level capping from outside the
scheduling code.
Signed-off-by: Peter Williams <[email protected]>
--
Peter Williams [email protected]
"Learning, n. The kind of ignorance distinguishing the studious."
-- Ambrose Bierce
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