[PATCH 2/2] powerpc: implement arch_scale_smt_power for Power7
Joel Schopp
jschopp at austin.ibm.com
Thu Jan 21 09:36:24 EST 2010
>> +
>> +static inline int thread_in_smt4core(int x)
>> +{
>> + return x % 4;
>> +}
>>
>
> Needs a whitespace here though I don't really like the above. Any reason
> why you can't use the existing cpu_thread_in_core() ?
>
I will change it to cpu_thread_in_core()
>
>> +unsigned long arch_scale_smt_power(struct sched_domain *sd, int cpu)
>> +{
>> + int cpu2;
>> + int idle_count = 0;
>> +
>> + struct cpumask *cpu_map = sched_domain_span(sd);
>> +
>> + unsigned long weight = cpumask_weight(cpu_map);
>> + unsigned long smt_gain = sd->smt_gain;
>>
>
> More whitespace damage above.
>
You are better than checkpatch.pl, will fix.
>
>> + if (cpu_has_feature(CPU_FTRS_POWER7) && weight == 4) {
>> + for_each_cpu(cpu2, cpu_map) {
>> + if (idle_cpu(cpu2))
>> + idle_count++;
>> + }
>>
>
> I'm not 100% sure about the use of the CPU feature above. First I wonder
> if the right approach is to instead do something like
>
> if (!cpu_has_feature(...) !! weigth < 4)
> return default_scale_smt_power(sd, cpu);
>
> Though we may be better off using a ppc_md. hook here to avoid
> calculating the weight etc... on processors that don't need any
> of that.
>
> I also dislike your naming. I would suggest you change cpu_map to
> sibling_map() and cpu2 to sibling (or just c). One thing I wonder is how
> sure we are that sched_domain_span() is always going to give us the
> threads btw ? If we introduce another sched domain level for NUMA
> purposes can't we get confused ?
>
Right now it's 100% always giving us threads. My development version of
the patch had a BUG_ON() to check this. I expect this to stay the case
in the future as the name of the function is arch_scale_smt_power(),
which clearly denotes threads are expected.
I am not stuck on the names, I'll change it to sibling instead of cpu2
and sibling_map instead of cpu_map. It seems clear to me either way.
As for testing the ! case it seems funcationally equivalent, and mine
seems less confusing.
Having a ppc.md hook with exactly 1 user is pointless, especially since
you'll still have to calculate the weight with the ability to
dynamically disable smt.
> Also, how hot is this code path ?
>
It's every load balance, which is to say not hot, but fairly frequent.
I haven't been able to measure an impact from doing very hairy
calculations (without actually changing the weights) here vs not having
it at all in actual end workloads.
>
>> + /* the following section attempts to tweak cpu power based
>> + * on current idleness of the threads dynamically at runtime
>> + */
>> + if (idle_count == 2 || idle_count == 3 || idle_count == 4) {
>>
>
> if (idle_count > 1) ? :-)
>
Yes :) Originally I had done different weightings for each of the 3
cases, which gained in some workloads but regressed some others. But
since I'm not doing that anymore I'll fold it down to > 1
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