• M
    sched/numa: Delay retrying placement for automatic NUMA balance after wake_affine() · 7347fc87
    Mel Gorman 提交于
    If wake_affine() pulls a task to another node for any reason and the node is
    no longer preferred then temporarily stop automatic NUMA balancing pulling
    the task back. Otherwise, tasks with a strong waker/wakee relationship
    may constantly fight automatic NUMA balancing over where a task should
    be placed.
    
    Once again netperf is interesting here. The performance barely changes
    but automatic NUMA balancing is interesting:
    
     Hmean     send-64         354.67 (   0.00%)      352.15 (  -0.71%)
     Hmean     send-128        702.91 (   0.00%)      693.84 (  -1.29%)
     Hmean     send-256       1350.07 (   0.00%)     1344.19 (  -0.44%)
     Hmean     send-1024      5124.38 (   0.00%)     4941.24 (  -3.57%)
     Hmean     send-2048      9687.44 (   0.00%)     9624.45 (  -0.65%)
     Hmean     send-3312     14577.64 (   0.00%)    14514.35 (  -0.43%)
     Hmean     send-4096     16393.62 (   0.00%)    16488.30 (   0.58%)
     Hmean     send-8192     26877.26 (   0.00%)    26431.63 (  -1.66%)
     Hmean     send-16384    38683.43 (   0.00%)    38264.91 (  -1.08%)
     Hmean     recv-64         354.67 (   0.00%)      352.15 (  -0.71%)
     Hmean     recv-128        702.91 (   0.00%)      693.84 (  -1.29%)
     Hmean     recv-256       1350.07 (   0.00%)     1344.19 (  -0.44%)
     Hmean     recv-1024      5124.38 (   0.00%)     4941.24 (  -3.57%)
     Hmean     recv-2048      9687.43 (   0.00%)     9624.45 (  -0.65%)
     Hmean     recv-3312     14577.59 (   0.00%)    14514.35 (  -0.43%)
     Hmean     recv-4096     16393.55 (   0.00%)    16488.20 (   0.58%)
     Hmean     recv-8192     26876.96 (   0.00%)    26431.29 (  -1.66%)
     Hmean     recv-16384    38682.41 (   0.00%)    38263.94 (  -1.08%)
    
     NUMA alloc hit                 1465986     1423090
     NUMA alloc miss                      0           0
     NUMA interleave hit                  0           0
     NUMA alloc local               1465897     1423003
     NUMA base PTE updates             1473        1420
     NUMA huge PMD updates                0           0
     NUMA page range updates           1473        1420
     NUMA hint faults                  1383        1312
     NUMA hint local faults             451         124
     NUMA hint local percent             32           9
    
    There is a slight degrading in performance but there are slightly fewer
    NUMA faults. There is a large drop in the percentage of local faults but
    the bulk of migrations for netperf are in small shared libraries so it's
    reflecting the fact that automatic NUMA balancing has backed off. This is
    a case where despite wake_affine() and automatic NUMA balancing fighting
    for placement that there is a marginal benefit to rescheduling to local
    data quickly. However, it should be noted that wake_affine() and automatic
    NUMA balancing fighting each other constantly is undesirable.
    
    However, the benefit in other cases is large. This is the result for NAS
    with the D class sizing on a 4-socket machine:
    
     nas-mpi
                               4.15.0                 4.15.0
                         sdnuma-v1r23       delayretry-v1r23
     Time cg.D      557.00 (   0.00%)      431.82 (  22.47%)
     Time ep.D       77.83 (   0.00%)       79.01 (  -1.52%)
     Time is.D       26.46 (   0.00%)       26.64 (  -0.68%)
     Time lu.D      727.14 (   0.00%)      597.94 (  17.77%)
     Time mg.D      191.35 (   0.00%)      146.85 (  23.26%)
    
                   4.15.0      4.15.0
             sdnuma-v1r23delayretry-v1r23
     User        75665.20    70413.30
     System      20321.59     8861.67
     Elapsed       766.13      634.92
    
     Minor Faults                  16528502     7127941
     Major Faults                      4553        5068
     NUMA alloc local               6963197     6749135
     NUMA base PTE updates        366409093   107491434
     NUMA huge PMD updates           687556      198880
     NUMA page range updates      718437765   209317994
     NUMA hint faults              13643410     4601187
     NUMA hint local faults         9212593     3063996
     NUMA hint local percent             67          66
    
    Note the massive reduction in system CPU usage even though the percentage
    of local faults is barely affected. There is a massive reduction in the
    number of PTE updates showing that automatic NUMA balancing has backed off.
    A critical observation is also that there is a massive reduction in minor
    faults which is due to far fewer NUMA hinting faults being trapped.
    
    There were questions on NAS OMP and how it behaved related to threads
    being bound to CPUs. First, there are more gains than losses with this
    patch applied and a reduction in system CPU usage:
    
    nas-omp
                          4.16.0-rc1             4.16.0-rc1
                         sdnuma-v2r1        delayretry-v2r1
    Time bt.D      436.71 (   0.00%)      430.05 (   1.53%)
    Time cg.D      201.02 (   0.00%)      180.87 (  10.02%)
    Time ep.D       32.84 (   0.00%)       32.68 (   0.49%)
    Time is.D        9.63 (   0.00%)        9.64 (  -0.10%)
    Time lu.D      331.20 (   0.00%)      304.80 (   7.97%)
    Time mg.D       54.87 (   0.00%)       52.72 (   3.92%)
    Time sp.D     1108.78 (   0.00%)      917.10 (  17.29%)
    Time ua.D      378.81 (   0.00%)      398.83 (  -5.28%)
    
              4.16.0-rc1  4.16.0-rc1
             sdnuma-v2r1delayretry-v2r1
    User       305633.08   296751.91
    System        451.75      357.80
    Elapsed      2595.73     2368.13
    
    However, it does not close the gap between binding and being unbound. There
    is negligible difference between the performance of the baseline and a
    patched kernel when threads are bound so it is not presented here:
    
                          4.16.0-rc1             4.16.0-rc1
                     delayretry-bind     delayretry-unbound
    Time bt.D      385.02 (   0.00%)      430.05 ( -11.70%)
    Time cg.D      144.02 (   0.00%)      180.87 ( -25.59%)
    Time ep.D       32.85 (   0.00%)       32.68 (   0.52%)
    Time is.D       10.52 (   0.00%)        9.64 (   8.37%)
    Time lu.D      285.31 (   0.00%)      304.80 (  -6.83%)
    Time mg.D       43.21 (   0.00%)       52.72 ( -22.01%)
    Time sp.D      820.24 (   0.00%)      917.10 ( -11.81%)
    Time ua.D      337.09 (   0.00%)      398.83 ( -18.32%)
    
              4.16.0-rc1  4.16.0-rc1
            delayretry-binddelayretry-unbound
    User       277731.25   296751.91
    System        261.29      357.80
    Elapsed      2100.55     2368.13
    
    Unfortunately, while performance is improved by the patch, there is still
    quite a long way to go before it's equivalent to hard binding.
    
    Other workloads like hackbench, tbench, dbench and schbench are barely
    affected. dbench shows a mix of gains and losses depending on the machine
    although in general, the results are more stable.
    Signed-off-by: NMel Gorman <mgorman@techsingularity.net>
    Signed-off-by: NPeter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org>
    Cc: Giovanni Gherdovich <ggherdovich@suse.cz>
    Cc: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
    Cc: Matt Fleming <matt@codeblueprint.co.uk>
    Cc: Mike Galbraith <efault@gmx.de>
    Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org>
    Cc: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de>
    Link: http://lkml.kernel.org/r/20180213133730.24064-7-mgorman@techsingularity.netSigned-off-by: NIngo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org>
    7347fc87
fair.c 263.5 KB