sched_lock && thread_lock() (fwd)
Jeff Roberson
jroberson at chesapeake.net
Sun May 20 23:11:33 UTC 2007
In case any of you missed it, I sent this mail to arch at . Please keep the
discussion there.
Thanks,
Jeff
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Sun, 20 May 2007 16:07:53 -0700 (PDT)
From: Jeff Roberson <jroberson at chesapeake.net>
To: arch at freebsd.org
Subject: sched_lock && thread_lock()
Attilio and I have been working on addressing the increasing problem of
sched_lock contention on -CURRENT. Attilio has been addressing the parts of
the kernel which do not need to fall under the scheduler lock and moving them
into seperate locks. For example, the ldt/gdt lock and clock lock which were
committed earlier. Also, using atomics for the vmcnt structure.
I have been working on an approach to using thread locks rather than a global
scheduler lock. The design is similar to Solaris's container locks, but the
details are different. The basic idea is to have a pointer in the thread
structure that points at a spinlock that protects the thread. This spinlock
may be one of the scheduler lock, a turnstile lock, or a sleep queue lock. As
the thread changes state from running to blocked on a lock or sleeping the lock
changes with it.
This has several advantages. The majority of the kernel simply calls
thread_lock() which figures out the details. The kernel then knows nothing of
the particulars of the scheduler locks, and the schedulers are free to
implement them in any way that they like. Furthermore, in some cases the
locking is reduced, because locking the thread has the side effect of locking
the container.
This patch does not implement per-cpu scheduler locks. It just changes the
kernel to support this model. I have a fork of ULE in development that runs
with per-cpu locks, but it is not ready yet. This means that there should be
very little change in system performance until the scheduler catches up. In
fact, on a 2cpu system the difference is immeasurable or almost so on every
workload I have tested. On an 8way opteron system the results vary between
+10% on some reasonable workloads and -15% on super-smack, which has some
inherent problems that I believe are not exposing real performance problems
with this patch.
This has also been tested extensively by Kris and myself on a variety of
machines and I believe it to be fairly solid. The only thing remaining to do
is fix rusage so that it does not rely on a global scheduler lock.
I am posting the patch here in case anyone with specific knowledge of
turnstiles, sleepqueues, or signals would like to review it, and as a general
heads up to people interested in where the kernel is headed.
This will apply to current just prior to my kern_clock.c commits. I will
re-merge and update again in the next few days, probably after we sort out
rusage.
http://people.freebsd.org/~jeff/threadlock.diff
Thanks,
Jeff
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