Message ID | 20190603225242.289109849@amt.cnet (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
Headers | show |
Series | cpuidle-haltpoll driver (v2) | expand |
On 6/4/2019 12:52 AM, Marcelo Tosatti wrote: > The cpuidle-haltpoll driver allows the guest vcpus to poll for a specified > amount of time before halting. This provides the following benefits > to host side polling: > > 1) The POLL flag is set while polling is performed, which allows > a remote vCPU to avoid sending an IPI (and the associated > cost of handling the IPI) when performing a wakeup. > > 2) The HLT VM-exit cost can be avoided. > > The downside of guest side polling is that polling is performed > even with other runnable tasks in the host. > > Results comparing halt_poll_ns and server/client application > where a small packet is ping-ponged: > > host --> 31.33 > halt_poll_ns=300000 / no guest busy spin --> 33.40 (93.8%) > halt_poll_ns=0 / guest_halt_poll_ns=300000 --> 32.73 (95.7%) > > For the SAP HANA benchmarks (where idle_spin is a parameter > of the previous version of the patch, results should be the > same): > > hpns == halt_poll_ns > > idle_spin=0/ idle_spin=800/ idle_spin=0/ > hpns=200000 hpns=0 hpns=800000 > DeleteC06T03 (100 thread) 1.76 1.71 (-3%) 1.78 (+1%) > InsertC16T02 (100 thread) 2.14 2.07 (-3%) 2.18 (+1.8%) > DeleteC00T01 (1 thread) 1.34 1.28 (-4.5%) 1.29 (-3.7%) > UpdateC00T03 (1 thread) 4.72 4.18 (-12%) 4.53 (-5%) > > V2: > > - Move from x86 to generic code (Paolo/Christian). > - Add auto-tuning logic (Paolo). > - Add MSR to disable host side polling (Paolo). > > > First of all, please CC power management patches (including cpuidle, cpufreq etc) to linux-pm@vger.kernel.org (there are people on that list who may want to see your changes before they go in) and CC cpuidle material (in particular) to Peter Zijlstra. Second, I'm not a big fan of this approach to be honest, as it kind of is a driver trying to play the role of a governor. We have a "polling state" already that could be used here in principle so I wonder what would be wrong with that. Also note that there seems to be at least some code duplication between your code and the "polling state" implementation, so maybe it would be possible to do some things in a common way?
On Fri, Jun 07, 2019 at 11:49:51AM +0200, Rafael J. Wysocki wrote: > On 6/4/2019 12:52 AM, Marcelo Tosatti wrote: > >The cpuidle-haltpoll driver allows the guest vcpus to poll for a specified > >amount of time before halting. This provides the following benefits > >to host side polling: > > > > 1) The POLL flag is set while polling is performed, which allows > > a remote vCPU to avoid sending an IPI (and the associated > > cost of handling the IPI) when performing a wakeup. > > > > 2) The HLT VM-exit cost can be avoided. > > > >The downside of guest side polling is that polling is performed > >even with other runnable tasks in the host. > > > >Results comparing halt_poll_ns and server/client application > >where a small packet is ping-ponged: > > > >host --> 31.33 > >halt_poll_ns=300000 / no guest busy spin --> 33.40 (93.8%) > >halt_poll_ns=0 / guest_halt_poll_ns=300000 --> 32.73 (95.7%) > > > >For the SAP HANA benchmarks (where idle_spin is a parameter > >of the previous version of the patch, results should be the > >same): > > > >hpns == halt_poll_ns > > > > idle_spin=0/ idle_spin=800/ idle_spin=0/ > > hpns=200000 hpns=0 hpns=800000 > >DeleteC06T03 (100 thread) 1.76 1.71 (-3%) 1.78 (+1%) > >InsertC16T02 (100 thread) 2.14 2.07 (-3%) 2.18 (+1.8%) > >DeleteC00T01 (1 thread) 1.34 1.28 (-4.5%) 1.29 (-3.7%) > >UpdateC00T03 (1 thread) 4.72 4.18 (-12%) 4.53 (-5%) > > > >V2: > > > >- Move from x86 to generic code (Paolo/Christian). > >- Add auto-tuning logic (Paolo). > >- Add MSR to disable host side polling (Paolo). > > > > > > > First of all, please CC power management patches (including cpuidle, > cpufreq etc) to linux-pm@vger.kernel.org (there are people on that > list who may want to see your changes before they go in) and CC > cpuidle material (in particular) to Peter Zijlstra. Ok, Peter is CC'ed, will include linux-pm@vger in the next patches. > Second, I'm not a big fan of this approach to be honest, as it kind > of is a driver trying to play the role of a governor. Well, its not trying to choose which idle state to enter, because there is only one idle state to enter when virtualized (HLT). > We have a "polling state" already that could be used here in > principle so I wonder what would be wrong with that. There is no "target residency" concept in the virtualized use-case (which is what poll_state.c uses to calculate the poll time). Moreover the cpuidle-haltpoll driver uses an adaptive logic to tune poll time (which appparently does not make sense for poll_state). The only thing they share is the main loop structure: "while (!need_resched()) { cpu_relax(); now = ktime_get(); }" > Also note that > there seems to be at least some code duplication between your code > and the "polling state" implementation, so maybe it would be > possible to do some things in a common way? Again, its just the main loop structure that is shared: there is no target residency in the virtualized case, and we want an adaptive scheme. Lets think about deduplication: you would have a cpuidle driver, with a fake "target residency". Now, it makes no sense to use a governor for the virtualized case (again, there is only one idle state: HLT, the host governor is used for the actual idle state decision in the host). So i fail to see how i would go about integrating these two and what are the advantages of doing so ?
On 07/06/19 19:16, Marcelo Tosatti wrote: > There is no "target residency" concept in the virtualized use-case > (which is what poll_state.c uses to calculate the poll time). Actually there is: it is the cost of a vmexit, and it be calibrated with a very short CPUID loop (e.g. run 100 CPUID instructions and take the smallest TSC interval---it should take less than 50 microseconds, and less than a millisecond even on nested virt). I think it would make sense to improve poll_state.c to use an adaptive algorithm similar to the one you implemented, which includes optionally allowing to poll for an interval larger than the target residency. Paolo
On Fri, Jun 07, 2019 at 08:22:35PM +0200, Paolo Bonzini wrote: > On 07/06/19 19:16, Marcelo Tosatti wrote: > > There is no "target residency" concept in the virtualized use-case > > (which is what poll_state.c uses to calculate the poll time). > > Actually there is: it is the cost of a vmexit, and it be calibrated with > a very short CPUID loop (e.g. run 100 CPUID instructions and take the > smallest TSC interval---it should take less than 50 microseconds, and > less than a millisecond even on nested virt). For a given application, you want to configure the poll time to the maximum time an event happen after starting the idle procedure. For SAP HANA, that value is between 200us - 800us (most tests require less than 800us, but some require 800us, to significantly avoid the IPIs). "The target residency is the minimum time the hardware must spend in the given state, including the time needed to enter it (which may be substantial), in order to save more energy than it would save by entering one of the shallower idle states instead." Clearly these are two different things... > I think it would make sense to improve poll_state.c to use an adaptive > algorithm similar to the one you implemented, which includes optionally > allowing to poll for an interval larger than the target residency. > > Paolo Ok, so i'll move the adaptive code to poll_state.c, where the driver selects whether to use target_residency or the adaptive value (based on module parameters). Not sure if its an adaptible value is desirable for the non virtualized case.
On Fri, Jun 07, 2019 at 11:49:51AM +0200, Rafael J. Wysocki wrote: > On 6/4/2019 12:52 AM, Marcelo Tosatti wrote: > >The cpuidle-haltpoll driver allows the guest vcpus to poll for a specified > >amount of time before halting. This provides the following benefits > >to host side polling: > > > > 1) The POLL flag is set while polling is performed, which allows > > a remote vCPU to avoid sending an IPI (and the associated > > cost of handling the IPI) when performing a wakeup. > > > > 2) The HLT VM-exit cost can be avoided. > > > >The downside of guest side polling is that polling is performed > >even with other runnable tasks in the host. > > > >Results comparing halt_poll_ns and server/client application > >where a small packet is ping-ponged: > > > >host --> 31.33 > >halt_poll_ns=300000 / no guest busy spin --> 33.40 (93.8%) > >halt_poll_ns=0 / guest_halt_poll_ns=300000 --> 32.73 (95.7%) > > > >For the SAP HANA benchmarks (where idle_spin is a parameter > >of the previous version of the patch, results should be the > >same): > > > >hpns == halt_poll_ns > > > > idle_spin=0/ idle_spin=800/ idle_spin=0/ > > hpns=200000 hpns=0 hpns=800000 > >DeleteC06T03 (100 thread) 1.76 1.71 (-3%) 1.78 (+1%) > >InsertC16T02 (100 thread) 2.14 2.07 (-3%) 2.18 (+1.8%) > >DeleteC00T01 (1 thread) 1.34 1.28 (-4.5%) 1.29 (-3.7%) > >UpdateC00T03 (1 thread) 4.72 4.18 (-12%) 4.53 (-5%) > > > >V2: > > > >- Move from x86 to generic code (Paolo/Christian). > >- Add auto-tuning logic (Paolo). > >- Add MSR to disable host side polling (Paolo). > > > > > > > First of all, please CC power management patches (including cpuidle, > cpufreq etc) to linux-pm@vger.kernel.org (there are people on that > list who may want to see your changes before they go in) and CC > cpuidle material (in particular) to Peter Zijlstra. > > Second, I'm not a big fan of this approach to be honest, as it kind > of is a driver trying to play the role of a governor. > > We have a "polling state" already that could be used here in > principle so I wonder what would be wrong with that. Also note that > there seems to be at least some code duplication between your code > and the "polling state" implementation, so maybe it would be > possible to do some things in a common way? Hi Rafael, After modifying poll_state.c to use a generic "poll time" driver callback [1] (since using a variable "target_residency" for that looks really ugly), would need a governor which does: haltpoll_governor_select_next_state() if (prev_state was poll and evt happened on prev poll window) -> POLL. if (prev_state == HLT) -> POLL otherwise -> HLT And a "default_idle" cpuidle driver that: defaultidle_idle() if (current_clr_polling_and_test()) { local_irq_enable(); return index; } default_idle(); return Using such governor with any other cpuidle driver would be pointless (since it would enter the first state only and therefore not save power). Not certain about using the default_idle driver with other governors: one would rather use a driver that supports all states on a given machine. This combination of governor/driver pair, for the sake of sharing the idle loop, seems awkward to me. And fails the governor/driver separation: one will use the pair in practice. But i have no problem with it, so i'll proceed with that. Let me know otherwise. Thanks.
On Mon, Jun 10, 2019 at 5:00 PM Marcelo Tosatti <mtosatti@redhat.com> wrote: > > On Fri, Jun 07, 2019 at 11:49:51AM +0200, Rafael J. Wysocki wrote: > > On 6/4/2019 12:52 AM, Marcelo Tosatti wrote: > > >The cpuidle-haltpoll driver allows the guest vcpus to poll for a specified > > >amount of time before halting. This provides the following benefits > > >to host side polling: > > > > > > 1) The POLL flag is set while polling is performed, which allows > > > a remote vCPU to avoid sending an IPI (and the associated > > > cost of handling the IPI) when performing a wakeup. > > > > > > 2) The HLT VM-exit cost can be avoided. > > > > > >The downside of guest side polling is that polling is performed > > >even with other runnable tasks in the host. > > > > > >Results comparing halt_poll_ns and server/client application > > >where a small packet is ping-ponged: > > > > > >host --> 31.33 > > >halt_poll_ns=300000 / no guest busy spin --> 33.40 (93.8%) > > >halt_poll_ns=0 / guest_halt_poll_ns=300000 --> 32.73 (95.7%) > > > > > >For the SAP HANA benchmarks (where idle_spin is a parameter > > >of the previous version of the patch, results should be the > > >same): > > > > > >hpns == halt_poll_ns > > > > > > idle_spin=0/ idle_spin=800/ idle_spin=0/ > > > hpns=200000 hpns=0 hpns=800000 > > >DeleteC06T03 (100 thread) 1.76 1.71 (-3%) 1.78 (+1%) > > >InsertC16T02 (100 thread) 2.14 2.07 (-3%) 2.18 (+1.8%) > > >DeleteC00T01 (1 thread) 1.34 1.28 (-4.5%) 1.29 (-3.7%) > > >UpdateC00T03 (1 thread) 4.72 4.18 (-12%) 4.53 (-5%) > > > > > >V2: > > > > > >- Move from x86 to generic code (Paolo/Christian). > > >- Add auto-tuning logic (Paolo). > > >- Add MSR to disable host side polling (Paolo). > > > > > > > > > > > First of all, please CC power management patches (including cpuidle, > > cpufreq etc) to linux-pm@vger.kernel.org (there are people on that > > list who may want to see your changes before they go in) and CC > > cpuidle material (in particular) to Peter Zijlstra. > > > > Second, I'm not a big fan of this approach to be honest, as it kind > > of is a driver trying to play the role of a governor. > > > > We have a "polling state" already that could be used here in > > principle so I wonder what would be wrong with that. Also note that > > there seems to be at least some code duplication between your code > > and the "polling state" implementation, so maybe it would be > > possible to do some things in a common way? > > Hi Rafael, > > After modifying poll_state.c to use a generic "poll time" driver > callback [1] (since using a variable "target_residency" for that > looks really ugly), would need a governor which does: > > haltpoll_governor_select_next_state() > if (prev_state was poll and evt happened on prev poll window) -> POLL. > if (prev_state == HLT) -> POLL > otherwise -> HLT > > And a "default_idle" cpuidle driver that: > > defaultidle_idle() > if (current_clr_polling_and_test()) { > local_irq_enable(); > return index; > } > default_idle(); > return > > Using such governor with any other cpuidle driver would > be pointless (since it would enter the first state only > and therefore not save power). > > Not certain about using the default_idle driver with > other governors: one would rather use a driver that > supports all states on a given machine. > > This combination of governor/driver pair, for the sake > of sharing the idle loop, seems awkward to me. > And fails the governor/driver separation: one will use the > pair in practice. > > But i have no problem with it, so i'll proceed with that. > > Let me know otherwise. If my understanding of your argumentation is correct, it is only necessary to take the default_idle_call() branch of cpuidle_idle_call() in the VM case, so it should be sufficient to provide a suitable default_idle_call() which is what you seem to be trying to do. I might have been confused by the terminology used in the patch series if that's the case. Also, if that's the case, this is not cpuidle matter really. It is a matter of providing a better default_idle_call() for the arch at hand. Thanks, Rafael
On Tue, Jun 11, 2019 at 12:03:26AM +0200, Rafael J. Wysocki wrote: > On Mon, Jun 10, 2019 at 5:00 PM Marcelo Tosatti <mtosatti@redhat.com> wrote: > > > > On Fri, Jun 07, 2019 at 11:49:51AM +0200, Rafael J. Wysocki wrote: > > > On 6/4/2019 12:52 AM, Marcelo Tosatti wrote: > > > >The cpuidle-haltpoll driver allows the guest vcpus to poll for a specified > > > >amount of time before halting. This provides the following benefits > > > >to host side polling: > > > > > > > > 1) The POLL flag is set while polling is performed, which allows > > > > a remote vCPU to avoid sending an IPI (and the associated > > > > cost of handling the IPI) when performing a wakeup. > > > > > > > > 2) The HLT VM-exit cost can be avoided. > > > > > > > >The downside of guest side polling is that polling is performed > > > >even with other runnable tasks in the host. > > > > > > > >Results comparing halt_poll_ns and server/client application > > > >where a small packet is ping-ponged: > > > > > > > >host --> 31.33 > > > >halt_poll_ns=300000 / no guest busy spin --> 33.40 (93.8%) > > > >halt_poll_ns=0 / guest_halt_poll_ns=300000 --> 32.73 (95.7%) > > > > > > > >For the SAP HANA benchmarks (where idle_spin is a parameter > > > >of the previous version of the patch, results should be the > > > >same): > > > > > > > >hpns == halt_poll_ns > > > > > > > > idle_spin=0/ idle_spin=800/ idle_spin=0/ > > > > hpns=200000 hpns=0 hpns=800000 > > > >DeleteC06T03 (100 thread) 1.76 1.71 (-3%) 1.78 (+1%) > > > >InsertC16T02 (100 thread) 2.14 2.07 (-3%) 2.18 (+1.8%) > > > >DeleteC00T01 (1 thread) 1.34 1.28 (-4.5%) 1.29 (-3.7%) > > > >UpdateC00T03 (1 thread) 4.72 4.18 (-12%) 4.53 (-5%) > > > > > > > >V2: > > > > > > > >- Move from x86 to generic code (Paolo/Christian). > > > >- Add auto-tuning logic (Paolo). > > > >- Add MSR to disable host side polling (Paolo). > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > First of all, please CC power management patches (including cpuidle, > > > cpufreq etc) to linux-pm@vger.kernel.org (there are people on that > > > list who may want to see your changes before they go in) and CC > > > cpuidle material (in particular) to Peter Zijlstra. > > > > > > Second, I'm not a big fan of this approach to be honest, as it kind > > > of is a driver trying to play the role of a governor. > > > > > > We have a "polling state" already that could be used here in > > > principle so I wonder what would be wrong with that. Also note that > > > there seems to be at least some code duplication between your code > > > and the "polling state" implementation, so maybe it would be > > > possible to do some things in a common way? > > > > Hi Rafael, > > > > After modifying poll_state.c to use a generic "poll time" driver > > callback [1] (since using a variable "target_residency" for that > > looks really ugly), would need a governor which does: > > > > haltpoll_governor_select_next_state() > > if (prev_state was poll and evt happened on prev poll window) -> POLL. > > if (prev_state == HLT) -> POLL > > otherwise -> HLT > > > > And a "default_idle" cpuidle driver that: > > > > defaultidle_idle() > > if (current_clr_polling_and_test()) { > > local_irq_enable(); > > return index; > > } > > default_idle(); > > return > > > > Using such governor with any other cpuidle driver would > > be pointless (since it would enter the first state only > > and therefore not save power). > > > > Not certain about using the default_idle driver with > > other governors: one would rather use a driver that > > supports all states on a given machine. > > > > This combination of governor/driver pair, for the sake > > of sharing the idle loop, seems awkward to me. > > And fails the governor/driver separation: one will use the > > pair in practice. > > > > But i have no problem with it, so i'll proceed with that. > > > > Let me know otherwise. > > If my understanding of your argumentation is correct, it is only > necessary to take the default_idle_call() branch of > cpuidle_idle_call() in the VM case, so it should be sufficient to > provide a suitable default_idle_call() which is what you seem to be > trying to do. In the VM case, we need to poll before actually halting (this is because its tricky to implement MWAIT in guests, so polling for some amount of time allows the IPI avoidance optimization, see trace_sched_wake_idle_without_ipi, to take place). The amount of time we poll is variable and adjusted (see adjust_haltpoll_ns in the patchset). > I might have been confused by the terminology used in the patch series > if that's the case. > > Also, if that's the case, this is not cpuidle matter really. It is a > matter of providing a better default_idle_call() for the arch at hand. Peter Zijlstra suggested a cpuidle driver for this. Also, other architectures will use the same "poll before exiting to VM" logic (so we'd rather avoid duplicating this code): PPC, x86, S/390, MIPS... So in my POV it makes sense to unify this. So, back to your initial suggestion: Q) "Can you unify code with poll_state.c?" A) Yes, but it requires a new governor, which seems overkill and unfit for the purpose. Moreover, the logic in menu to decide whether its necessary or not to stop sched tick is useful for us (so a default_idle_call is not sufficient), because the cost of enabling/disabling the sched tick is high on VMs. So i'll fix the comments of the cpuidle driver (which everyone seems to agree with, except your understandable distate for it) and repost.
On Tue, Jun 11, 2019 at 4:27 PM Marcelo Tosatti <mtosatti@redhat.com> wrote: > > On Tue, Jun 11, 2019 at 12:03:26AM +0200, Rafael J. Wysocki wrote: > > On Mon, Jun 10, 2019 at 5:00 PM Marcelo Tosatti <mtosatti@redhat.com> wrote: > > > > > > On Fri, Jun 07, 2019 at 11:49:51AM +0200, Rafael J. Wysocki wrote: > > > > On 6/4/2019 12:52 AM, Marcelo Tosatti wrote: > > > > >The cpuidle-haltpoll driver allows the guest vcpus to poll for a specified > > > > >amount of time before halting. This provides the following benefits > > > > >to host side polling: > > > > > > > > > > 1) The POLL flag is set while polling is performed, which allows > > > > > a remote vCPU to avoid sending an IPI (and the associated > > > > > cost of handling the IPI) when performing a wakeup. > > > > > > > > > > 2) The HLT VM-exit cost can be avoided. > > > > > > > > > >The downside of guest side polling is that polling is performed > > > > >even with other runnable tasks in the host. > > > > > > > > > >Results comparing halt_poll_ns and server/client application > > > > >where a small packet is ping-ponged: > > > > > > > > > >host --> 31.33 > > > > >halt_poll_ns=300000 / no guest busy spin --> 33.40 (93.8%) > > > > >halt_poll_ns=0 / guest_halt_poll_ns=300000 --> 32.73 (95.7%) > > > > > > > > > >For the SAP HANA benchmarks (where idle_spin is a parameter > > > > >of the previous version of the patch, results should be the > > > > >same): > > > > > > > > > >hpns == halt_poll_ns > > > > > > > > > > idle_spin=0/ idle_spin=800/ idle_spin=0/ > > > > > hpns=200000 hpns=0 hpns=800000 > > > > >DeleteC06T03 (100 thread) 1.76 1.71 (-3%) 1.78 (+1%) > > > > >InsertC16T02 (100 thread) 2.14 2.07 (-3%) 2.18 (+1.8%) > > > > >DeleteC00T01 (1 thread) 1.34 1.28 (-4.5%) 1.29 (-3.7%) > > > > >UpdateC00T03 (1 thread) 4.72 4.18 (-12%) 4.53 (-5%) > > > > > > > > > >V2: > > > > > > > > > >- Move from x86 to generic code (Paolo/Christian). > > > > >- Add auto-tuning logic (Paolo). > > > > >- Add MSR to disable host side polling (Paolo). > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > First of all, please CC power management patches (including cpuidle, > > > > cpufreq etc) to linux-pm@vger.kernel.org (there are people on that > > > > list who may want to see your changes before they go in) and CC > > > > cpuidle material (in particular) to Peter Zijlstra. > > > > > > > > Second, I'm not a big fan of this approach to be honest, as it kind > > > > of is a driver trying to play the role of a governor. > > > > > > > > We have a "polling state" already that could be used here in > > > > principle so I wonder what would be wrong with that. Also note that > > > > there seems to be at least some code duplication between your code > > > > and the "polling state" implementation, so maybe it would be > > > > possible to do some things in a common way? > > > > > > Hi Rafael, > > > > > > After modifying poll_state.c to use a generic "poll time" driver > > > callback [1] (since using a variable "target_residency" for that > > > looks really ugly), would need a governor which does: > > > > > > haltpoll_governor_select_next_state() > > > if (prev_state was poll and evt happened on prev poll window) -> POLL. > > > if (prev_state == HLT) -> POLL > > > otherwise -> HLT > > > > > > And a "default_idle" cpuidle driver that: > > > > > > defaultidle_idle() > > > if (current_clr_polling_and_test()) { > > > local_irq_enable(); > > > return index; > > > } > > > default_idle(); > > > return > > > > > > Using such governor with any other cpuidle driver would > > > be pointless (since it would enter the first state only > > > and therefore not save power). > > > > > > Not certain about using the default_idle driver with > > > other governors: one would rather use a driver that > > > supports all states on a given machine. > > > > > > This combination of governor/driver pair, for the sake > > > of sharing the idle loop, seems awkward to me. > > > And fails the governor/driver separation: one will use the > > > pair in practice. > > > > > > But i have no problem with it, so i'll proceed with that. > > > > > > Let me know otherwise. > > > > If my understanding of your argumentation is correct, it is only > > necessary to take the default_idle_call() branch of > > cpuidle_idle_call() in the VM case, so it should be sufficient to > > provide a suitable default_idle_call() which is what you seem to be > > trying to do. > > In the VM case, we need to poll before actually halting (this is because > its tricky to implement MWAIT in guests, so polling for some amount > of time allows the IPI avoidance optimization, > see trace_sched_wake_idle_without_ipi, to take place). > > The amount of time we poll is variable and adjusted (see adjust_haltpoll_ns > in the patchset). > > > I might have been confused by the terminology used in the patch series > > if that's the case. > > > > Also, if that's the case, this is not cpuidle matter really. It is a > > matter of providing a better default_idle_call() for the arch at hand. > > Peter Zijlstra suggested a cpuidle driver for this. So I wonder what his rationale was. > Also, other architectures will use the same "poll before exiting to VM" > logic (so we'd rather avoid duplicating this code): PPC, x86, S/390, > MIPS... So in my POV it makes sense to unify this. The logic is fine IMO, but the implementation here is questionable. > So, back to your initial suggestion: > > Q) "Can you unify code with poll_state.c?" > A) Yes, but it requires a new governor, which seems overkill and unfit > for the purpose. > > Moreover, the logic in menu to decide whether its necessary or not > to stop sched tick is useful for us (so a default_idle_call is not > sufficient), because the cost of enabling/disabling the sched tick is > high on VMs. So in fact you need a governor, but you really only need it to decide whether or not to stop the tick for you. menu has a quite high overhead for that. :-) > So i'll fix the comments of the cpuidle driver (which everyone seems > to agree with, except your understandable distate for it) and repost.
On Tue, Jun 11, 2019 at 11:24:39PM +0200, Rafael J. Wysocki wrote: > > Peter Zijlstra suggested a cpuidle driver for this. > > So I wonder what his rationale was. I was thinking we don't need this hard-coded in the idle loop when virt can load a special driver.