Commit Graph

36 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
David Vernet
35b7dc95d0
rusty: Fix up the scheduler description
There were a few issues, e.g. us still mentioning the infeasible weights
problem, and arguments using underscores despite clap rendering them
with dashes. Let's fix them up.

Signed-off-by: David Vernet <void@manifault.com>
2024-03-14 11:21:03 -05:00
David Vernet
4520514fe8
rusty: Account for disabled but offline CPUs
As described in https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=218109,
https://github.com/sched-ext/scx/issues/147 and
https://github.com/sched-ext/sched_ext/issues/69, AMD chips can
sometimes report fully disabled CPUs as offline, which causes us to
count them when looking at /sys/devices/system/cpu/possible.

Additionally, systems can have holes in their active CPU maps. For
example, a system with CPUs 0, 1, 2, 3 possible, may have only 0 and 2
active. To address this, we need to do a few things:

1. Update topology.rs to be clear that it's returning the number of
   _possible_ CPUs in the system. Also update Topology to only record
   online CPUs when creating its span and iterating over sysfs when
   creating domains. It was previously trying to record when a CPU was
   online, but this was actually broken as the topology directory isn't
   present in sysfs when the CPU is offline.

2. Schedulers should not be relying on nr_possible_cpus for anything
   other than interacting with per-CPU data (e.g. for stats extraction),
   or e.g. verifying maximum sizes of statically sized arrays in BPF. It
   should _not_ be used for e.g. performing load calculations, etc. With
   that said, we'll also need to update schedulers to not rely on the
   nr_possible_cpus figure being exported by the topology crate. We do
   that for rusty in this patch, but don't fix any of the others other
   than updating how they call topology.rs.

3. Account for the fact that LLC IDs may be non-contiguous. For example,
   if there is a single core in an LLC, then if we assign LLC IDs to
   domains, then the domain IDs won't be contiguous. This doesn't fit
   our current model which is used by e.g. infeasible_weights.rs. We'll
   update some of the code in rusty to accomodate this, but we'll need
   to do more.

4. Update schedulers to properly reset themselves in the event of a
   hotplug event. We'll take care of that in a follow-on change.

Signed-off-by: David Vernet <void@manifault.com>
2024-03-14 11:15:28 -05:00
David Vernet
2b8a3ea984
rusty: Iterate over domains, not IDs
If a CPU is offline, it could cause an LLC to go offline, which could
cause us to have non-contiguous domain IDs. Right now, a few places in
code assume contiguous domain IDs, such as in the infeasible weights
crate. Let's update domain.rs and load_balaance.rs to do the right
thing. We'll fix the others later.

Signed-off-by: David Vernet <void@manifault.com>
2024-03-14 11:02:01 -05:00
David Vernet
4e9cf5181e
rusty: Fix domain weight() function
We were looking at the domain cpumask length, instead of its weight.
Correct the oversight.

Signed-off-by: David Vernet <void@manifault.com>
2024-03-14 11:02:01 -05:00
David Vernet
bc0336d727
cpumask: Add bitwise ops for cpumask
We implement functions or(), and(), and xor() for cpumasks, but we
should also implement the bitwise ops for those operations in case
people prefer that syntax.

Signed-off-by: David Vernet <void@manifault.com>
2024-03-14 11:02:01 -05:00
David Vernet
91cb5ce8ab
Merge pull request #178 from sched-ext/multi_numa_rusty
rusty: Implement NUMA-aware load balancing
2024-03-12 15:50:27 -05:00
David Vernet
c8d841d50b rusty: Add comments + use VecDeque
Given the complexity of migrating load between nodes (we're doing four
nested loops), we should add a comment explaining what we're doing. This
commit does that. In addition, we use a VecDeque to store (and then
restore) push nodes and push domains so that we can re-add them to their
respective lists in load-sorted order rather than reverse-load-sorted
order. This allows us to avoid having to do unnecessary right-shifts
every time a push object is re-added to its containing list.

Signed-off-by: David Vernet <void@manifault.com>
2024-03-12 13:49:14 -07:00
David Vernet
03f68092ee rusty: Fix a few remaining issues
Fixing alignment, moving a couple bail! calls around, and adding a
missing break from move_between_nodes() that lets us bail out of a loop
early.

Signed-off-by: David Vernet <void@manifault.com>
2024-03-12 12:44:38 -07:00
David Vernet
24d798c2ff rusty: Use a flat list of NumaNodes during LB
As Tejun pointed out in review, the disadvantage of using
push/pull/balanced lists is that if the domains inside the nodes are
balanced, we won't be able to push load between them. I'd originally
done it that way both as an optimization, but also to allow me to
iterate over the lists of pushable and pullable domains mutably. That
was addressed in the prior commit, but the nodes themselves were still
put into 3 buckets.

I think this is generally just a cleaner way of doing things, so let's
just collapse the nodes into a flat list as well. This prevents us from
having to coalesce the lists, std::mem::swap them, etc.

Signed-off-by: David Vernet <void@manifault.com>
2024-03-11 21:04:10 -07:00
David Vernet
829b1d3ced rusty: Don't use multiple SortedVec's in struct NumaNode
Tejun pointed out that a possible issue exists in the current
implementation, wherein if you have two NUMA nodes that are imbalanced,
but their domains are internally balanced, we'll fail to migrate between
them if all nodes are in the balanced_nodes list.

To address this, let's just use a single global list for all types of
domains, and do checking internally for imbalances. The reason it was
done this way in the first place was to allow me to mutably iterate over
both vectors in a nested loop. The way around that is to just use loop
{} and push/pop domains from the list.

We could do the same thing for the NUMA nodes themselves, which are also
in 3 separate lists in the LoadBalancer. We'll do that in a subsequent
commit.

Signed-off-by: David Vernet <void@manifault.com>
2024-03-11 21:04:10 -07:00
David Vernet
3d2507e6f2 rusty: Add separate flag for x NUMA greedy task stealing
In scx_rusty, a CPU that is going to go idle will attempt to steal tasks
from remote domains when its domain has no tasks to run, and a remote
domain has at least greedy_threshold enqueued tasks. This stealing is
temporary, but of course has a cost in that the CPU that's stealing the
task may cause it to suffer from cache misses, or in the case of
multi-node machines, remote NUMA accesses and working sets split across
multiple domains.

Given the higher cost of x NUMA work stealing, let's add a separate flag
that lets users tune the threshold for doing cross NUMA greedy task
stealing.

Signed-off-by: David Vernet <void@manifault.com>
2024-03-11 21:02:23 -07:00
Jordan Rome
ffc7b7dc4a Fetch and build bpftool by default
This pairs with the new default behavior to fetch and build libbpf
and is mostly being used so we can use the latest bpftool and libbpf.
2024-03-11 10:00:01 -07:00
David Vernet
26a94b1b14
rusty: Add debug! logging to load_balance.rs
We removed the debug!() output that was previously present in main.rs. Let's
add more debug!() output that helps debug the current LB hierarchy.

Signed-off-by: David Vernet <void@manifault.com>
2024-03-08 15:13:46 -06:00
David Vernet
0d0b101398
rusty: Add load balancing statistics to rusty
The scx_rusty load balancer is currently no longer exporting statistics such as
domain load averages, load sums, etc. Now that we're also balancing by NUMA,
we'll need a way to hierarchically illustrate load balancing statistics. This
patch adds support for that.

Signed-off-by: David Vernet <void@manifault.com>

updating stats printing

Signed-off-by: David Vernet <void@manifault.com>
2024-03-08 15:13:36 -06:00
David Vernet
0871a9525d
rusty: Add direct_greedy_numa flag
Users may want to toggle whether tasks can be temporarily sent to idle CPUs on
remote NUMA nodes. By default, we want it to be disabled as a task spanning
multiple NUMA nodes will end up having its working set spanning both nodes,
which is probably not desirable. However, in case a workload really wants to
encourage work conservation, let's add a flag that allows them to toggle it.

Signed-off-by: David Vernet <void@manifault.com>
2024-03-08 15:12:00 -06:00
David Vernet
d0ebfb85ef
rusty: Disable direct greedy stealing between NUMA nodes
scx_rusty currently pushes tasks to idle cores if the direct greedy threshold
is exceeded, even if the core is on a remote NUMA node. This behavior is
probably not desired in most scenarios. The worst that will happen if a task is
pushed to an idle core in the same node is some L3 cache miss traffic, but for
multiple NUMA nodes, it could cause the task to have its working set span
multiple nodes.

Let's disable direct greedy work stealing across NUMA nodes. A future commit
will add a flag that's disabled by default, and let's users turn this on if
they really want to encourage work conservation.

Signed-off-by: David Vernet <void@manifault.com>
2024-03-08 15:11:59 -06:00
David Vernet
db152cfbe8
rusty: Implement NUMA-aware load balancing
Right now, scx_rusty has no notion of domains spanning NUMA nodes, and makes no
distinction when making load balancing decisions, or work stealing. This can
cause problems on multi-NUMA machines, as load balancing and work stealing
across NUMA nodes has significantly different cost from across L3 cache
boundaries.

In order to better support multi-NUMA machines, this commit adds another layer
to the rusty load balancer, which balances across NUMA nodes using a different
cost function from balancing across domains. Load balancing now takes place
over the span of two passes:

1. In the first pass, we fix imbalances across NUMA nodes by moving tasks
   between domains across those NUMA node boundaries. We require a load
   imbalance of at least 17% in order to move load at this stage. The ratio of
   load imbalance we attempt to adjust (50%) and the maximum amount of load
   we're allowed to push out of a domain (50%) is still the same as when
   balancing between domains inside a NUMA node, but this is easy to tune with
   the current setup.

2. Once we've balanced across NUMA nodes, we iterate over all nodes and balance
   between the domains within each NUMA node. The cost function here is the
   same as what it has been thus far: we require at least a 5% imbalance in
   order to trigger load balancing.

There are a few additional changes / improvements to load balancing in this
commit:

1. NUMA nodes and domains are now ordered according to their load by using
   SortedVec objects. We were previously using BTreeMap keyed by load, but this
   was suboptimal due to the fact that it doesn't allow duplicate entries.

2. We're no longer exporting load balancing statistics as a vector of data such
   as load sums, averages, and imbalances. This is instead all encapsulated in
   the load balancing hierarchy we setup in lb.load_balance(). These statistics
   are not yet exported, but they will be in a subsequent commit.

One of the issues with this commit is that it does introduce some
almost-identical logic that somehow begs to be deduplicated. For example, when
we balance between NUMA nodes, the logic for iterating over push nodes and
pushing to pull nodes is very similar to the logic of iterating over push
domains and pull domains when balancing within a node. It may be that this can
be improved.

The following are some benchmarks run on an Intel Xeon Gold 6138 (2 x 40 core
processor):

kcompile
--------

On Commit a27648c74210 ("afs: Fix setting of mtime when creating a
file/dir/symlink"):

1. make allyesconfig
2. make -j $(nproc) built-in.a
3. make -j clean
4. goto 2

Runtime
-------

         o-----------o-----------o----------o
         | scx_rusty |     CFS   |   Delta  |
---------o-----------o-----------o----------o
Mean     | 562.688s  | 566.085s  | -.6%     |
---------o-----------o-----------o----------o
Variance | 0.54387   | 0.72431   | -24.9%   |
---------o-----------o-----------o----------o

         o-----------o-----------o----------o
         | rusty NUMA| rusty ORIG|   Delta  |
---------o-----------o-----------o----------o
Mean     | 562.688s  | 563.209s  | -.092%   |
---------o-----------o-----------o----------o
Variance | 0.54387   | 0.42038   | 29.38%   |
---------o-----------o-----------o----------o

scx_rusty with NUMA awareness clearly beats CFS, but only barely beats
scx_rusty without it. This isn't necessarily super surprising given that
this is kcompile, which has very poor front-end CPU locality. Further
experimentation with toggling the cost function for performing
migrations may improve this further.

CPU util
--------

         o-----------o-----------o----------o
         | scx_rusty |     CFS   |   Delta  |
---------o-----------o-----------o----------o
Mean     | 7654.25%  | 7551.67%  | 1.11%    |
---------o-----------o-----------o----------o
Variance | 165.35714 | 158.3333  | 4.436%   |
---------o-----------o-----------o----------o

         o-----------o-----------o----------o
         | rusty NUMA| rusty ORIG|   Delta  |
---------o-----------o-----------o----------o
Mean     | 7654.25%  | 7641.57%  | 0.1659%  |
---------o-----------o-----------o----------o
Variance | 165.35714 | 1230.619  | -86.5%   |
---------o-----------o-----------o----------o

As expected, CPU util is quite a bit higher with scx_rusty than it is
with CFS. Further experiments that could be interesting are always
enabling direct-greedy stealing between domains within a NUMA node, and
then comparing rusty NUMA and rusty ORIG. rusty NUMA prevents stealing
between NUMA nodes, so this would show whether the locality introduced
by NUMA awareness appropriately offsets the loss of work conservation.

Major PFs
---------

         o-----------o-----------o----------o
         | scx_rusty |     CFS   |   Delta  |
---------o-----------o-----------o----------o
Mean     | 5332      | 3950      | 36.566%  |
---------o-----------o-----------o----------o
Variance | 6975.5    | 5986.333  | 16.5237% |
---------o-----------o-----------o----------o

         o-----------o-----------o----------o
         | rusty NUMA| rusty ORIG|   Delta  |
---------o-----------o-----------o----------o
Mean     | 5332      | 5336.5    | -.084%   |
---------o-----------o-----------o----------o
Variance | 6975.5    | 955.5     | 630.03%  |
---------o-----------o-----------o----------o

Also as expected, major page faults are far highe higher with scx_rusty
than with CFS. This is expected even with NUMA awareness, given that
scx_rusty is still less sticky than CFS.

Further experiments that could be interesting are tuning the threshold
for which we perform x NUMA migrations to try and keep this value even
lower. The rate of major page faults between rusty NUMA and rusty ORIG
were very close, though rusty NUMA was a bit lower.

Signed-off-by: David Vernet <void@manifault.com>
2024-03-08 15:11:17 -06:00
David Vernet
0b1c3713b2
rusty: Remove lb_apply_weight param from lb_step()
Let's just query self.tuner.fully_utilized directly and save a few lines of
code.

Signed-off-by: David Vernet <void@manifault.com>
2024-03-08 15:11:17 -06:00
David Vernet
758f762058
rusty: Move LoadBalancer out of rusty.rs
More cleanup of scx_rusty. Let's move the LoadBalancer out of rusty.rs and into
its own file. It will soon be extended quite a bit to support multi-NUMA and
other multivariate LB cost functions, so it's time to clean things up and split
it out.

Signed-off-by: David Vernet <void@manifault.com>
2024-03-08 15:11:17 -06:00
David Vernet
94f75bcec6
rusty: Refactor Tuner and DomainGroup out of rusty.rs
rusty.rs is growing a bit unwieldy. We're going to want to update its load
balancing logic somewhat significantly to account for multi-NUMA and other cost
functions, so let's start cleaning the code up so that things are more
logically segmented and easier to work with.

To start, we move the Tuner and DomainGroup/Domain objects into their own
modules.

Signed-off-by: David Vernet <void@manifault.com>
2024-03-08 15:10:37 -06:00
Jordan Rome
499924ead8 Add libbpf as a submodule
This is to potentinally reduce issues with folks
using different versions of libbpf at runtime.

This also:
- makes static linking of libbpf the default
- adds steps in `meson setup` to fetch libbpf and make it
2024-03-01 12:39:35 -08:00
David Vernet
8b04a2687f
rusty: Use new infeasible crate
Now that we have a new 'infeasible' crate that abstracts the logic for
implementing the infeasible weights solution. Let's update rusty to use
it.

Signed-off-by: David Vernet <void@manifault.com>
2024-02-26 10:51:54 -06:00
David Vernet
43624a87ce
rusty: Use new topology crate
Now that we have this new Topology crate, let's update Rusty to use it
instead of using the old one.

Signed-off-by: David Vernet <void@manifault.com>
2024-02-23 10:39:55 -06:00
Jordan Rome
7c32acece0 Add libbpf logging to the rust schedulers
This is to get better logs when failing to load, attach, etc.
2024-02-20 15:17:10 -08:00
David Vernet
ef8aa9ea31
add documentation
Signed-off-by: David Vernet <void@manifault.com>
2024-02-20 14:57:09 -06:00
David Vernet
8aba090d4f
rust: Add topology module to utils crate
scx_rusty has logic in the scheduler to inspect the host to
automatically build scheduling domains across every L3 cache. This would
be generically useful for many different types of schedulers, so let's
add it to the scx_utils crate so it can be used by others.

Signed-off-by: David Vernet <void@manifault.com>
2024-02-20 14:57:09 -06:00
David Vernet
e627176d90
scx: Implement solution to infeasible weights problem
As described in [0], there is an open problem in load balancing called
the "infeasible weights" problem. Essentially, the problem boils down to
the fact that a task with disproportionately high load can be granted
more CPU time than they can actually consume per their duty cycle.

This patch implements a solution to that problem, wherein we apply the
algorithm described in this paper to adjust all infeasible weights in
the system down to a feasible wight that gives them their full duty
cycle, while allowing the remaining feasible tasks on the system to
share the remaining compute capacity on the machine.

[0]: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1fAoWUlmW-HTp6akuATVpMxpUpvWcGSAv/view?usp=drive_link

Signed-off-by: David Vernet <void@manifault.com>
2024-02-09 16:23:12 -06:00
David Vernet
c574598dc7
scx_rusty: Fix typos
Signed-off-by: David Vernet <void@manifault.com>
2024-02-07 23:38:26 -06:00
Tejun Heo
965926f393 scx_rusty: Use scx_utils::user_exit_info
Instead of the bespoke implementation. This also makes scx_rusty to print
out debug dump if exists.

Signed-off-by: Tejun Heo <tj@kernel.org>
2024-01-31 11:08:17 -10:00
Tejun Heo
988b7d13c1 Bump versions
scx_exit_info change doesn't require code to be updated but breaks binary
compatbility. Bump versions and cut a new release.
2024-01-25 09:01:23 -10:00
Jordan Rome
9f9a97a97f Update descriptions in cargo toml files 2024-01-19 18:19:46 -08:00
Tejun Heo
942b0269b8 Bump versions
After updates to reflect the updated init and direct dispatch API, the
schedulers aren't compatible with older kernels. Bump versions and publish
releases.
2024-01-08 18:49:54 -10:00
Tejun Heo
552b75a9c7 scx: Build fix after kernel update
In the latest kernel, sched_ext API has changed in two areas:

- ops.prep_enable/cancel_enable/enable/disable() replaced with
  ops.init_task/enable/disable/exit_task().

- scx_bpf_dispatch() can now be called from ops.select_cpu(). Also,
  SCX_ENQ_LOCAL flag is removed. Instead, users can call
  scx_bpf_select_cpu_dfl() from ops.select_cpu() and use the @is_idle out
  param value to determine whether to dispatch directly.

This commit updates all schedules so that they build.

- Init functions renamed / merged / split.

- ops.select_cpu() is added to several schedulers and local direct
  disptching logic is moved there.

This is the minimum update which is need to make the schedulers build and
work. It needs further update to e.g. move vtime udpates to ops.enable().
2024-01-08 14:48:24 -10:00
Jordan Rome
661ea57c5c bump scx_rusty and scx_layered
These were supposed to be bumped in this commit:
fed1dae9da
2024-01-04 13:57:29 -08:00
Jordan Rome
5bacefcdbe Add README files for each rust scheduler
This because each scheduler has it's own Rust Crate
and it's better if they had a README associated with each one.

https://crates.io/crates/scx_layered
2024-01-04 07:35:44 -08:00
Jordan Rome
e9a9d32ab6 Restructure scheds folder names
- combine c and kernel-examples as it's confusing to have both
- rename 'rust-user' and 'c-user' to just 'rust' and 'c', which is simpler
- update and fix sync-to-kernel.sh
2023-12-17 13:14:31 -08:00