Re: [PATCH 1/7] CPU controller V1 - split runqueue

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On Fri, Aug 25, 2006 at 04:38:00PM +0400, Kirill Korotaev wrote:
> Srivatsa,
> 
> I suggest to split existing runqueue structure
> into 2 pieces: physical cpu (sd, ...) and
> virtual cpu (essentially a runqueue - array, nr_running, loac etc.)
> 
> Then replace all references to cpu as int with vcpu_t pointer.

That's going to be a massive change! If I understand you correctly,
things like get_cpu() return virtual CPU number rather than the
corresponding "physical" CPU (the later is anyway a misnomer on
virtualized platforms)? Also we have get_cpu() now reading some structure and be
able to tell which CPU a task is running. Now with virtual CPUs, another
level of translation is needed? Wonder what the performance impact of
that would be ..

> What advantages does it give?
> 1. it isolates Linux std scheduler code for scheduling
>   tasks inside runqueues, while adds possibility
>   to add cleanly more high-level scheduler, which can select
>   runqueues to run (lets call it "process groups scheduler" - PGS).
> 2. runqueues can run on arbitrary physical CPUs if needed
>   which helps to solve balancing problem on SMP.

How do you see the relation between load-balance done thr sched-domain
heirarchy today and what will be done thr' virtal runqueues? 

> 3. it allows naturally to use different PGS algorithms
>   on top of Linux one. e.g. yours algorithm (probobalistic) or
>   fair scheduling algorithms like SFQ, EEVDF, BVT with more 
>   predictable parameters of QoS.
> 4. it will help us to get to the consensus and commit this work
>   into mainstream, because different PGS with different properties
>   will be possible.
> 
> Part of this idea is implemented in OpenVZ scheduler and in some
> regards looks very much like your work, so I think if you like the idea
> we can eloborate.
> 
> What do you think?

I believe hypervisors like Xen have a similar approach (virtualing CPU
resource and running a virtual CPU on any available physical CPU). The 
worry I have applying this to Linux kernel scheduler is in terms of its 
invasiveness and thus general acceptability. I will however let the maintainers 
decide on that. Sending some patches also probably will help measure this 
"invasiveness/acceptability".

I had another question related to real-time tasks. How do you control
CPU usage of real-time tasks in different containers (especially if they
are SCHED_FIFO types)? Do they get capped at the bandwidth provided to
the container?

Also do you take any special steps to retain interactivity?

-- 
Regards,
vatsa
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