On Thu, Jan 24, 2019 at 12:38:35PM +0000, Patrick Bellasi wrote: > On 24-Jan 12:30, Patrick Bellasi wrote: > > On 23-Jan 21:11, Peter Zijlstra wrote: > > > On Wed, Jan 23, 2019 at 02:40:11PM +0000, Patrick Bellasi wrote: > > > > On 23-Jan 11:49, Peter Zijlstra wrote: > > > > > On Tue, Jan 15, 2019 at 10:15:06AM +0000, Patrick Bellasi wrote: > > [...] > > > > I'm thikning that if we haz a single bit, say: > > > > > > struct uclamp_se { > > > ... > > > unsigned int changed : 1; > > > }; > > > > > > We can update uclamp_se::value and set uclamp_se::changed, and then the > > > next enqueue will (unlikely) test-and-clear changed and recompute the > > > bucket_id. > > > > This mean will lazy update the "requested" bucket_id by deferring its > > computation at enqueue time. Which saves us a copy of the bucket_id, > > i.e. we will have only the "effective" value updated at enqueue time. > > > > But... > > > > > Would that not be simpler? > > > > ... although being simpler it does not fully exploit the slow-path, > > a syscall which is usually running from a different process context > > (system management software). > > > > It also fits better for lazy updates but, in the cgroup case, where we > > wanna enforce an update ASAP for RUNNABLE tasks, we will still have to > > do the updates from the slow-path. > > > > Will look better into this simplification while working on v7, perhaps > > the linear mapping can really help in that too. > > Actually, I forgot to mention that: > > uclamp_se::effective::{ > value, bucket_id > } > > will be still required to proper support the cgroup delegation model, > where a child group could be restricted by the parent but we want to > keep track of the original "requested" value for when the parent > should relax the restriction. > > Thus, since effective values are already there, why not using them > also to pre-compute the new requested bucket_id from the slow path?
Well, we need the orig_value; but I'm still not sure why you need more bucket_id's. Also, retaining orig_value is already required for the system limits, there's nothing cgroup-y about this afaict.