On Mon, Aug 15, 2016 at 04:01:34PM +0100, Morten Rasmussen wrote: > On Mon, Aug 15, 2016 at 03:39:49PM +0200, Peter Zijlstra wrote: > > > +static int wake_cap(struct task_struct *p, int cpu, int prev_cpu) > > > +{ > > > + long min_cap, max_cap; > > > + > > > + min_cap = min(capacity_orig_of(prev_cpu), capacity_orig_of(cpu)); > > > + max_cap = cpu_rq(cpu)->rd->max_cpu_capacity; > > > > There's a tiny hole here, which I'm fairly sure we don't care about. If > > @p last ran on @prev_cpu before @prev_cpu was split from @rd this > > doesn't 'work' right. > > I hadn't considered that. What is 'working right' in this scenario? > Ignoring @prev_cpu as it isn't a valid option anymore?
Probably, yeah. > In that case, since @prev_cpu is only used as part the min() it should > only cause min_cap to be potentially smaller than it should be, not > larger. It could lead us to let BALANCE_WAKE take over in scenarios > where select_idle_sibling() would have been sufficient, but it should > harm. +not, right? > However, as you say, I'm not sure if we care that much. Yeah, don't think so, its extremely unlikely to happen, almost nobody mucks about with root_domains anyway. And those that do, do so once to setup things and then leave them be. > Talking about @rd, I discussed with Juri and Dietmar the other week > whether the root_domain is RCU protected, and if we therefore have to > move the call to wake_cap() after the rcu_read_lock() below. I haven't > yet done thorough investigation to find the answer. Should it be > protected? Yeah, I think either RCU or RCU-sched, I forever forget.