On Ср, 2015-01-07 at 08:01 +0100, Luca Abeni wrote: > Hi Kirill, > > On Tue, 06 Jan 2015 02:07:21 +0300 > Kirill Tkhai <tk...@yandex.ru> wrote: > > > On Пн, 2015-01-05 at 16:21 +0100, Luca Abeni wrote: > [...] > > > For reference, I attach the patch I am using locally (based on what > > > I suggested in my previous mail) and seems to work fine here. > > > > > > Based on your comments, I suspect my patch can be further > > > simplified by moving the call to init_dl_task_timer() in > > > __sched_fork(). > > > > It seems this way has problems. The first one is that task may become > > throttled again, and we will start dl_timer again. > Well, in my understanding if I change the parameters of a > SCHED_DEADLINE task when it is throttled, it stays throttled... So, the > task might not become throttled again before the dl timer fires. > So, I hoped this problem does not exist. But I might be wrong.
You keep zeroing of dl_se->dl_throttled, and further enqueue_task() places it on the dl_rq. So, further update_curr_dl() may make it throttled again, and it will try to start dl_timer (which is already set). > > The second is that > > it's better to minimize number of combination of situations we have. > > Let's keep only one combination: timer is set <-> task is throttled. > Yes, this was my goal too... So, if I change the parameters of a task > when it is throttled, I leave dl_throttled set to 1 and I leave the > timer active. As I see, dl_se->dl_throttled = 0; is still in __setparam_dl() after your patch, so you do not leave it set to 1. > > [...] > > > > @@ -3250,16 +3251,19 @@ static void > > > > __setparam_dl(struct task_struct *p, const struct sched_attr > > > > *attr) { > > > > struct sched_dl_entity *dl_se = &p->dl; > > > > + struct hrtimer *timer = &dl_se->dl_timer; > > > > + > > > > + if (!hrtimer_active(timer) || > > > > hrtimer_try_to_cancel(timer) != -1) { > > > Just for the sake of curiosity, why trying to cancel the timer > > > ("|| hrtimer_try_to_cancel(timer)") here? If it is active, cannot > > > we leave it active (without touching dl_throttled, dl_new and > > > dl_yielded)? > > > > > > I mean: if I try to change the parameters of a task when it is > > > throttled, I'd like it to stay throttled until the end of the > > > reservation period... Or am I missing something? > > > > I think that when people change task's parameters, they want the > > kernel reacts on this immediately. For example, you want to kill > > throttled deadline task. You change parameters, but nothing happens. > > I think all developers had this use case when they were debugging > > deadline class. > I see... Different people have different requirements :) > My goal was to do something like adaptive scheduling (or scheduling > tasks with mode changes), so I did not want that changing the > scheduling parameters of a task affected the scheduling of the other > tasks... But if a task exits the throttled state when I change its > parameters, it might consume much more than the reserved CPU time. > Also, I suspect this kind of approach can be exploited by malicious > users: if I create a task with runtime 30ms and period 100ms, and I > change its scheduling parameters (to runtime=29ms and back) frequently > enough, I can consume much more than 30% of the CPU time... > > Anyway, I am fine with every patch that fixes the bug :) Deadline class requires root privileges. So, I do not see a problem here. Please, see __sched_setscheduler(). If in the future we allow non-privileged users to increase deadline, we will reflect that in __setparam_dl() too. Thanks, Kirill. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majord...@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/