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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH v7]xen: sched: convert RTDS from time to event driven model
On Thu, 2016-03-10 at 10:28 -0500, Meng Xu wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 10, 2016 at 5:38 AM, Dario Faggioli
> <dario.faggioli@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >
> > I don't think we really need to count anything. In fact, what I had
> > in
> > mind and tried to put down in pseudocode is that we traverse the
> > list
> > of replenishment events twice. During the first traversal, we do
> > not
> > remove the elements that we replenish (i.e., the ones that we call
> > rt_update_deadline() on). Therefore, we can just do the second
> > traversal, find them all in there, handle the tickling, and --in
> > this
> > case-- remove and re-insert them. Wouldn't this work?
> My concern is that:
> Once we run rt_update_deadline() in the first traversal of the list,
> we have updated the cur_deadline and cur_budget already.
> Since the replenish queue is sorted by the cur_deadline, how can we
> know which vcpu has been updated in the first traversal and need to
> be
> reinsert? We don't have to traverse the whole replq to reinsert all
> vcpus since some of them haven't been replenished yet.
>
Ah, you're right, doing all the rt_update_deadline() in the first loop,
we screw the stop condition of the second loop.
I still don't like counting, it looks fragile. :-/
This that you propose here...
> If we wan to avoid the counting, we can add a flag like
> #define __RTDS_delayed_reinsert_replq 4
> #define RTDS_delayed_reinsert_replq (1<<
> __RTDS_delayed_reinsert_replq)
> so that we know when we should stop at the second traversal.
>
...seems like it could work, but I also am not super happy about it, as
it does not look to me there should be the need of such a generic piece
of information such as a flag, for this very specific purpose.
I mean, I know we have plenty of free bits in flag, but it's something
that happens *all* *inside* one function (replenishment timer handler).
What about an internal (to the timer replenishment fucntion),
temporary, list. Something along the lines of:
...
LIST_HEAD(tmp_replq);
list_for_each_safe(iter, tmp, replq)
{
svc = replq_elem(iter);
if ( now < svc->cur_deadline )
break;
list_del(&svc->replq_elem);
rt_update_deadline(now, svc);
list_add(&svc->replq_elem, &tmp_replq);
}
list_for_each_safe(iter, tmp, tmp_replq)
{
svc = replq_elem(iter);
< tickling logic >
list_del(&svc->replq_elem);
deadline_queue_insert(&replq_elem, svc, &svc->replq_elem, replq);
}
...
So, basically, the idea is:
- first, we fetch all the vcpus that needs a replenishment, remove
them from replenishment queue, do the replenishment and stash them
in a temp list;
- second, for all the vcpus that we replenished (which we know which
ones they are: all the ones in the temp list!) we apply the proper
tickling logic, remove them from the temp list and queue their new
replenishment event.
It may look a bit convoluted, all these list moving, but I do like the
fact that is is super self-contained.
How does that sound / What did I forget this time ? :-)
BTW, I hope I got the code snippet right, but please, let's focus and
discuss the idea.
Regards,
Dario
--
<<This happens because I choose it to happen!>> (Raistlin Majere)
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Dario Faggioli, Ph.D, http://about.me/dario.faggioli
Senior Software Engineer, Citrix Systems R&D Ltd., Cambridge (UK)
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