On Wed, 18 Sep 2019 at 17:46, Patrick Bellasi <patrick.bell...@arm.com> wrote: > > > On Wed, Sep 18, 2019 at 16:22:32 +0100, Vincent Guittot wrote... > > > On Wed, 18 Sep 2019 at 16:19, Patrick Bellasi <patrick.bell...@arm.com> > > wrote: > > [...] > > >> $> Wakeup path tunings > >> ========================== > >> > >> Some additional possible use-cases was already discussed in [3]: > >> > >> - dynamically tune the policy of a task among SCHED_{OTHER,BATCH,IDLE} > >> depending on crossing certain pre-configured threshold of latency > >> niceness. > >> > >> - dynamically bias the vruntime updates we do in place_entity() > >> depending on the actual latency niceness of a task. > >> > >> PeterZ thinks this is dangerous but that we can "(carefully) fumble a > >> bit there." > > > > I agree with Peter that we can easily break the fairness if we bias vruntime > > Just to be more precise here and also to better understand, here I'm > talking about turning the tweaks we already have for: > > - START_DEBIT > - GENTLE_FAIR_SLEEPERS
ok. So extending these 2 features could make sense > > a bit more parametric and proportional to the latency-nice of a task. > > In principle, if a task declares a positive latency niceness, could we > not read this also as "I accept to be a bit penalised in terms of > fairness at wakeup time"? I would say no. It's not because you declare a positive latency niceness that you should lose some fairness and runtime. If task accept long latency because it's only care about throughput, it doesn't want to lost some running time > > Whatever tweaks we do there should affect anyway only one sched_latency > period... although I'm not yet sure if that's possible and how. > > >> - bias the decisions we take in check_preempt_tick() still depending > >> on a relative comparison of the current and wakeup task latency > >> niceness values. > > > > This one seems possible as it will mainly enable a task to preempt > > "earlier" the running task but will not break the fairness > > So the main impact will be the number of context switch between tasks > > to favor or not the scheduling latency > > Preempting before is definitively a nice-to-have feature. > > At the same time it's interesting a support where a low latency-nice > task (e.g. TOP_APP) RUNNABLE on a CPU has better chances to be executed > up to completion without being preempted by an high latency-nice task > (e.g. BACKGROUND) waking up on its CPU. > > For that to happen, we need a mechanism to "delay" the execution of a > less important RUNNABLE task up to a certain period. > > It's impacting the fairness, true, but latency-nice in this case will > means that we want to "complete faster", not just "start faster". you TOP_APP task will have to set both nice and latency-nice if it wants to make (almost) sure to have time to finish before BACKGROUND > > Is this definition something we can reason about? > > Best, > Patrick > > -- > #include <best/regards.h> > > Patrick Bellasi