On Tue, Apr 17, 2007 at 09:33:08AM +0200, Ingo Molnar wrote:
>
> * William Lee Irwin III <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > On Mon, Apr 16, 2007 at 11:50:03PM -0700, Davide Libenzi wrote:
> > > I had a quick look at Ingo's code yesterday. Ingo is always smart to
> > > prepare a main dish (feature) with a nice sider (code cleanup) to
> > > Linus ;) And even this code does that pretty nicely. The deadline
> > > designs looks good, although I think the final "key" calculation
> > > code will end up quite different from what it looks now.
> >
> > The additive nice_offset breaks nice levels. A multiplicative priority
> > weighting of a different, nonnegative metric of cpu utilization from
> > what's now used is required for nice levels to work. I've been trying
> > to point this out politely by strongly suggesting testing whether nice
> > levels work.
>
> granted, CFS's nice code is still incomplete, but you err quite
> significantly with this extreme statement that they are "broken".
>
> nice levels certainly work to a fair degree even in the current code and
> much of the focus is elsewhere - just try it. (In fact i claim that
> CFS's nice levels often work _better_ than the mainline scheduler's nice
> level support, for the testcases that matter to users.)
>
> The precise behavior of nice levels, as i pointed it out in previous
> mails, is largely 'uninteresting' and it has changed multiple times in
> the past 10 years.
>
> What matters to users is mainly: whether X reniced to -10 does get
> enough CPU time and whether stuff reniced to +19 doesnt take away too
> much CPU time from the rest of the system.
I agree there.
> _How_ a Linux scheduler
> achieves this is an internal matter and certainly CFS does it in a hacky
> way at the moment.
>
> All the rest, 'CPU bandwidth utilization' or whatever abstract metric we
> could come up with is just a fancy academic technicality that has no
> real significance to any of the testers who are trying CFS right now.
>
> Sure we prefer final solutions that are clean and make sense (because
> such things are the easiest to maintain long-term), and often such final
> solutions are quite close to academic concepts, and i think Davide
> correctly observed this by saying that "the final key calculation code
> will end up quite different from what it looks now", but your
> extreme-end claim of 'breakage' for something that is just plain
> incomplete is not really a fair characterisation at this point.
>
> Anyone who thinks that there exists only two kinds of code: 100% correct
> and 100% incorrect with no shades of grey inbetween is in reality a sort
> of an extremist: whom, depending on mood and affection, we could call
> either a 'coding purist' or a 'coding taliban' ;-)
Only if you are an extremist-naming extremist with no shades of grey.
Others, like myself, also include 'coding al-qaeda' and 'coding john
howard' in that scale.
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