| /* |
| * kernel/sched/proc.c |
| * |
| * Kernel load calculations, forked from sched/core.c |
| */ |
| |
| #include <linux/export.h> |
| |
| #include "sched.h" |
| |
| unsigned long this_cpu_load(void) |
| { |
| struct rq *this = this_rq(); |
| return this->cpu_load[0]; |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* |
| * Global load-average calculations |
| * |
| * We take a distributed and async approach to calculating the global load-avg |
| * in order to minimize overhead. |
| * |
| * The global load average is an exponentially decaying average of nr_running + |
| * nr_uninterruptible. |
| * |
| * Once every LOAD_FREQ: |
| * |
| * nr_active = 0; |
| * for_each_possible_cpu(cpu) |
| * nr_active += cpu_of(cpu)->nr_running + cpu_of(cpu)->nr_uninterruptible; |
| * |
| * avenrun[n] = avenrun[0] * exp_n + nr_active * (1 - exp_n) |
| * |
| * Due to a number of reasons the above turns in the mess below: |
| * |
| * - for_each_possible_cpu() is prohibitively expensive on machines with |
| * serious number of cpus, therefore we need to take a distributed approach |
| * to calculating nr_active. |
| * |
| * \Sum_i x_i(t) = \Sum_i x_i(t) - x_i(t_0) | x_i(t_0) := 0 |
| * = \Sum_i { \Sum_j=1 x_i(t_j) - x_i(t_j-1) } |
| * |
| * So assuming nr_active := 0 when we start out -- true per definition, we |
| * can simply take per-cpu deltas and fold those into a global accumulate |
| * to obtain the same result. See calc_load_fold_active(). |
| * |
| * Furthermore, in order to avoid synchronizing all per-cpu delta folding |
| * across the machine, we assume 10 ticks is sufficient time for every |
| * cpu to have completed this task. |
| * |
| * This places an upper-bound on the IRQ-off latency of the machine. Then |
| * again, being late doesn't loose the delta, just wrecks the sample. |
| * |
| * - cpu_rq()->nr_uninterruptible isn't accurately tracked per-cpu because |
| * this would add another cross-cpu cacheline miss and atomic operation |
| * to the wakeup path. Instead we increment on whatever cpu the task ran |
| * when it went into uninterruptible state and decrement on whatever cpu |
| * did the wakeup. This means that only the sum of nr_uninterruptible over |
| * all cpus yields the correct result. |
| * |
| * This covers the NO_HZ=n code, for extra head-aches, see the comment below. |
| */ |
| |
| /* Variables and functions for calc_load */ |
| atomic_long_t calc_load_tasks; |
| unsigned long calc_load_update; |
| unsigned long avenrun[3]; |
| EXPORT_SYMBOL(avenrun); /* should be removed */ |
| |
| /** |
| * get_avenrun - get the load average array |
| * @loads: pointer to dest load array |
| * @offset: offset to add |
| * @shift: shift count to shift the result left |
| * |
| * These values are estimates at best, so no need for locking. |
| */ |
| void get_avenrun(unsigned long *loads, unsigned long offset, int shift) |
| { |
| loads[0] = (avenrun[0] + offset) << shift; |
| loads[1] = (avenrun[1] + offset) << shift; |
| loads[2] = (avenrun[2] + offset) << shift; |
| } |
| |
| long calc_load_fold_active(struct rq *this_rq) |
| { |
| long nr_active, delta = 0; |
| |
| nr_active = this_rq->nr_running; |
| nr_active += (long) this_rq->nr_uninterruptible; |
| |
| if (nr_active != this_rq->calc_load_active) { |
| delta = nr_active - this_rq->calc_load_active; |
| this_rq->calc_load_active = nr_active; |
| } |
| |
| return delta; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * a1 = a0 * e + a * (1 - e) |
| */ |
| static unsigned long |
| calc_load(unsigned long load, unsigned long exp, unsigned long active) |
| { |
| load *= exp; |
| load += active * (FIXED_1 - exp); |
| load += 1UL << (FSHIFT - 1); |
| return load >> FSHIFT; |
| } |
| |
| #ifdef CONFIG_NO_HZ_COMMON |
| /* |
| * Handle NO_HZ for the global load-average. |
| * |
| * Since the above described distributed algorithm to compute the global |
| * load-average relies on per-cpu sampling from the tick, it is affected by |
| * NO_HZ. |
| * |
| * The basic idea is to fold the nr_active delta into a global idle-delta upon |
| * entering NO_HZ state such that we can include this as an 'extra' cpu delta |
| * when we read the global state. |
| * |
| * Obviously reality has to ruin such a delightfully simple scheme: |
| * |
| * - When we go NO_HZ idle during the window, we can negate our sample |
| * contribution, causing under-accounting. |
| * |
| * We avoid this by keeping two idle-delta counters and flipping them |
| * when the window starts, thus separating old and new NO_HZ load. |
| * |
| * The only trick is the slight shift in index flip for read vs write. |
| * |
| * 0s 5s 10s 15s |
| * +10 +10 +10 +10 |
| * |-|-----------|-|-----------|-|-----------|-| |
| * r:0 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 |
| * w:0 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 |
| * |
| * This ensures we'll fold the old idle contribution in this window while |
| * accumlating the new one. |
| * |
| * - When we wake up from NO_HZ idle during the window, we push up our |
| * contribution, since we effectively move our sample point to a known |
| * busy state. |
| * |
| * This is solved by pushing the window forward, and thus skipping the |
| * sample, for this cpu (effectively using the idle-delta for this cpu which |
| * was in effect at the time the window opened). This also solves the issue |
| * of having to deal with a cpu having been in NOHZ idle for multiple |
| * LOAD_FREQ intervals. |
| * |
| * When making the ILB scale, we should try to pull this in as well. |
| */ |
| static atomic_long_t calc_load_idle[2]; |
| static int calc_load_idx; |
| |
| static inline int calc_load_write_idx(void) |
| { |
| int idx = calc_load_idx; |
| |
| /* |
| * See calc_global_nohz(), if we observe the new index, we also |
| * need to observe the new update time. |
| */ |
| smp_rmb(); |
| |
| /* |
| * If the folding window started, make sure we start writing in the |
| * next idle-delta. |
| */ |
| if (!time_before(jiffies, calc_load_update)) |
| idx++; |
| |
| return idx & 1; |
| } |
| |
| static inline int calc_load_read_idx(void) |
| { |
| return calc_load_idx & 1; |
| } |
| |
| void calc_load_enter_idle(void) |
| { |
| struct rq *this_rq = this_rq(); |
| long delta; |
| |
| /* |
| * We're going into NOHZ mode, if there's any pending delta, fold it |
| * into the pending idle delta. |
| */ |
| delta = calc_load_fold_active(this_rq); |
| if (delta) { |
| int idx = calc_load_write_idx(); |
| atomic_long_add(delta, &calc_load_idle[idx]); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| void calc_load_exit_idle(void) |
| { |
| struct rq *this_rq = this_rq(); |
| |
| /* |
| * If we're still before the sample window, we're done. |
| */ |
| if (time_before(jiffies, this_rq->calc_load_update)) |
| return; |
| |
| /* |
| * We woke inside or after the sample window, this means we're already |
| * accounted through the nohz accounting, so skip the entire deal and |
| * sync up for the next window. |
| */ |
| this_rq->calc_load_update = calc_load_update; |
| if (time_before(jiffies, this_rq->calc_load_update + 10)) |
| this_rq->calc_load_update += LOAD_FREQ; |
| } |
| |
| static long calc_load_fold_idle(void) |
| { |
| int idx = calc_load_read_idx(); |
| long delta = 0; |
| |
| if (atomic_long_read(&calc_load_idle[idx])) |
| delta = atomic_long_xchg(&calc_load_idle[idx], 0); |
| |
| return delta; |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * fixed_power_int - compute: x^n, in O(log n) time |
| * |
| * @x: base of the power |
| * @frac_bits: fractional bits of @x |
| * @n: power to raise @x to. |
| * |
| * By exploiting the relation between the definition of the natural power |
| * function: x^n := x*x*...*x (x multiplied by itself for n times), and |
| * the binary encoding of numbers used by computers: n := \Sum n_i * 2^i, |
| * (where: n_i \elem {0, 1}, the binary vector representing n), |
| * we find: x^n := x^(\Sum n_i * 2^i) := \Prod x^(n_i * 2^i), which is |
| * of course trivially computable in O(log_2 n), the length of our binary |
| * vector. |
| */ |
| static unsigned long |
| fixed_power_int(unsigned long x, unsigned int frac_bits, unsigned int n) |
| { |
| unsigned long result = 1UL << frac_bits; |
| |
| if (n) for (;;) { |
| if (n & 1) { |
| result *= x; |
| result += 1UL << (frac_bits - 1); |
| result >>= frac_bits; |
| } |
| n >>= 1; |
| if (!n) |
| break; |
| x *= x; |
| x += 1UL << (frac_bits - 1); |
| x >>= frac_bits; |
| } |
| |
| return result; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * a1 = a0 * e + a * (1 - e) |
| * |
| * a2 = a1 * e + a * (1 - e) |
| * = (a0 * e + a * (1 - e)) * e + a * (1 - e) |
| * = a0 * e^2 + a * (1 - e) * (1 + e) |
| * |
| * a3 = a2 * e + a * (1 - e) |
| * = (a0 * e^2 + a * (1 - e) * (1 + e)) * e + a * (1 - e) |
| * = a0 * e^3 + a * (1 - e) * (1 + e + e^2) |
| * |
| * ... |
| * |
| * an = a0 * e^n + a * (1 - e) * (1 + e + ... + e^n-1) [1] |
| * = a0 * e^n + a * (1 - e) * (1 - e^n)/(1 - e) |
| * = a0 * e^n + a * (1 - e^n) |
| * |
| * [1] application of the geometric series: |
| * |
| * n 1 - x^(n+1) |
| * S_n := \Sum x^i = ------------- |
| * i=0 1 - x |
| */ |
| static unsigned long |
| calc_load_n(unsigned long load, unsigned long exp, |
| unsigned long active, unsigned int n) |
| { |
| |
| return calc_load(load, fixed_power_int(exp, FSHIFT, n), active); |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * NO_HZ can leave us missing all per-cpu ticks calling |
| * calc_load_account_active(), but since an idle CPU folds its delta into |
| * calc_load_tasks_idle per calc_load_account_idle(), all we need to do is fold |
| * in the pending idle delta if our idle period crossed a load cycle boundary. |
| * |
| * Once we've updated the global active value, we need to apply the exponential |
| * weights adjusted to the number of cycles missed. |
| */ |
| static void calc_global_nohz(void) |
| { |
| long delta, active, n; |
| |
| if (!time_before(jiffies, calc_load_update + 10)) { |
| /* |
| * Catch-up, fold however many we are behind still |
| */ |
| delta = jiffies - calc_load_update - 10; |
| n = 1 + (delta / LOAD_FREQ); |
| |
| active = atomic_long_read(&calc_load_tasks); |
| active = active > 0 ? active * FIXED_1 : 0; |
| |
| avenrun[0] = calc_load_n(avenrun[0], EXP_1, active, n); |
| avenrun[1] = calc_load_n(avenrun[1], EXP_5, active, n); |
| avenrun[2] = calc_load_n(avenrun[2], EXP_15, active, n); |
| |
| calc_load_update += n * LOAD_FREQ; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Flip the idle index... |
| * |
| * Make sure we first write the new time then flip the index, so that |
| * calc_load_write_idx() will see the new time when it reads the new |
| * index, this avoids a double flip messing things up. |
| */ |
| smp_wmb(); |
| calc_load_idx++; |
| } |
| #else /* !CONFIG_NO_HZ_COMMON */ |
| |
| static inline long calc_load_fold_idle(void) { return 0; } |
| static inline void calc_global_nohz(void) { } |
| |
| #endif /* CONFIG_NO_HZ_COMMON */ |
| |
| /* |
| * calc_load - update the avenrun load estimates 10 ticks after the |
| * CPUs have updated calc_load_tasks. |
| */ |
| void calc_global_load(unsigned long ticks) |
| { |
| long active, delta; |
| |
| if (time_before(jiffies, calc_load_update + 10)) |
| return; |
| |
| /* |
| * Fold the 'old' idle-delta to include all NO_HZ cpus. |
| */ |
| delta = calc_load_fold_idle(); |
| if (delta) |
| atomic_long_add(delta, &calc_load_tasks); |
| |
| active = atomic_long_read(&calc_load_tasks); |
| active = active > 0 ? active * FIXED_1 : 0; |
| |
| avenrun[0] = calc_load(avenrun[0], EXP_1, active); |
| avenrun[1] = calc_load(avenrun[1], EXP_5, active); |
| avenrun[2] = calc_load(avenrun[2], EXP_15, active); |
| |
| calc_load_update += LOAD_FREQ; |
| |
| /* |
| * In case we idled for multiple LOAD_FREQ intervals, catch up in bulk. |
| */ |
| calc_global_nohz(); |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Called from update_cpu_load() to periodically update this CPU's |
| * active count. |
| */ |
| static void calc_load_account_active(struct rq *this_rq) |
| { |
| long delta; |
| |
| if (time_before(jiffies, this_rq->calc_load_update)) |
| return; |
| |
| delta = calc_load_fold_active(this_rq); |
| if (delta) |
| atomic_long_add(delta, &calc_load_tasks); |
| |
| this_rq->calc_load_update += LOAD_FREQ; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * End of global load-average stuff |
| */ |
| |
| /* |
| * The exact cpuload at various idx values, calculated at every tick would be |
| * load = (2^idx - 1) / 2^idx * load + 1 / 2^idx * cur_load |
| * |
| * If a cpu misses updates for n-1 ticks (as it was idle) and update gets called |
| * on nth tick when cpu may be busy, then we have: |
| * load = ((2^idx - 1) / 2^idx)^(n-1) * load |
| * load = (2^idx - 1) / 2^idx) * load + 1 / 2^idx * cur_load |
| * |
| * decay_load_missed() below does efficient calculation of |
| * load = ((2^idx - 1) / 2^idx)^(n-1) * load |
| * avoiding 0..n-1 loop doing load = ((2^idx - 1) / 2^idx) * load |
| * |
| * The calculation is approximated on a 128 point scale. |
| * degrade_zero_ticks is the number of ticks after which load at any |
| * particular idx is approximated to be zero. |
| * degrade_factor is a precomputed table, a row for each load idx. |
| * Each column corresponds to degradation factor for a power of two ticks, |
| * based on 128 point scale. |
| * Example: |
| * row 2, col 3 (=12) says that the degradation at load idx 2 after |
| * 8 ticks is 12/128 (which is an approximation of exact factor 3^8/4^8). |
| * |
| * With this power of 2 load factors, we can degrade the load n times |
| * by looking at 1 bits in n and doing as many mult/shift instead of |
| * n mult/shifts needed by the exact degradation. |
| */ |
| #define DEGRADE_SHIFT 7 |
| static const unsigned char |
| degrade_zero_ticks[CPU_LOAD_IDX_MAX] = {0, 8, 32, 64, 128}; |
| static const unsigned char |
| degrade_factor[CPU_LOAD_IDX_MAX][DEGRADE_SHIFT + 1] = { |
| {0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0}, |
| {64, 32, 8, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0}, |
| {96, 72, 40, 12, 1, 0, 0}, |
| {112, 98, 75, 43, 15, 1, 0}, |
| {120, 112, 98, 76, 45, 16, 2} }; |
| |
| /* |
| * Update cpu_load for any missed ticks, due to tickless idle. The backlog |
| * would be when CPU is idle and so we just decay the old load without |
| * adding any new load. |
| */ |
| static unsigned long |
| decay_load_missed(unsigned long load, unsigned long missed_updates, int idx) |
| { |
| int j = 0; |
| |
| if (!missed_updates) |
| return load; |
| |
| if (missed_updates >= degrade_zero_ticks[idx]) |
| return 0; |
| |
| if (idx == 1) |
| return load >> missed_updates; |
| |
| while (missed_updates) { |
| if (missed_updates % 2) |
| load = (load * degrade_factor[idx][j]) >> DEGRADE_SHIFT; |
| |
| missed_updates >>= 1; |
| j++; |
| } |
| return load; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Update rq->cpu_load[] statistics. This function is usually called every |
| * scheduler tick (TICK_NSEC). With tickless idle this will not be called |
| * every tick. We fix it up based on jiffies. |
| */ |
| static void __update_cpu_load(struct rq *this_rq, unsigned long this_load, |
| unsigned long pending_updates) |
| { |
| int i, scale; |
| |
| this_rq->nr_load_updates++; |
| |
| /* Update our load: */ |
| this_rq->cpu_load[0] = this_load; /* Fasttrack for idx 0 */ |
| for (i = 1, scale = 2; i < CPU_LOAD_IDX_MAX; i++, scale += scale) { |
| unsigned long old_load, new_load; |
| |
| /* scale is effectively 1 << i now, and >> i divides by scale */ |
| |
| old_load = this_rq->cpu_load[i]; |
| old_load = decay_load_missed(old_load, pending_updates - 1, i); |
| new_load = this_load; |
| /* |
| * Round up the averaging division if load is increasing. This |
| * prevents us from getting stuck on 9 if the load is 10, for |
| * example. |
| */ |
| if (new_load > old_load) |
| new_load += scale - 1; |
| |
| this_rq->cpu_load[i] = (old_load * (scale - 1) + new_load) >> i; |
| } |
| |
| sched_avg_update(this_rq); |
| } |
| |
| #ifdef CONFIG_SMP |
| static inline unsigned long get_rq_runnable_load(struct rq *rq) |
| { |
| return rq->cfs.runnable_load_avg; |
| } |
| #else |
| static inline unsigned long get_rq_runnable_load(struct rq *rq) |
| { |
| return rq->load.weight; |
| } |
| #endif |
| |
| #ifdef CONFIG_NO_HZ_COMMON |
| /* |
| * There is no sane way to deal with nohz on smp when using jiffies because the |
| * cpu doing the jiffies update might drift wrt the cpu doing the jiffy reading |
| * causing off-by-one errors in observed deltas; {0,2} instead of {1,1}. |
| * |
| * Therefore we cannot use the delta approach from the regular tick since that |
| * would seriously skew the load calculation. However we'll make do for those |
| * updates happening while idle (nohz_idle_balance) or coming out of idle |
| * (tick_nohz_idle_exit). |
| * |
| * This means we might still be one tick off for nohz periods. |
| */ |
| |
| /* |
| * Called from nohz_idle_balance() to update the load ratings before doing the |
| * idle balance. |
| */ |
| void update_idle_cpu_load(struct rq *this_rq) |
| { |
| unsigned long curr_jiffies = ACCESS_ONCE(jiffies); |
| unsigned long load = get_rq_runnable_load(this_rq); |
| unsigned long pending_updates; |
| |
| /* |
| * bail if there's load or we're actually up-to-date. |
| */ |
| if (load || curr_jiffies == this_rq->last_load_update_tick) |
| return; |
| |
| pending_updates = curr_jiffies - this_rq->last_load_update_tick; |
| this_rq->last_load_update_tick = curr_jiffies; |
| |
| __update_cpu_load(this_rq, load, pending_updates); |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Called from tick_nohz_idle_exit() -- try and fix up the ticks we missed. |
| */ |
| void update_cpu_load_nohz(void) |
| { |
| struct rq *this_rq = this_rq(); |
| unsigned long curr_jiffies = ACCESS_ONCE(jiffies); |
| unsigned long pending_updates; |
| |
| if (curr_jiffies == this_rq->last_load_update_tick) |
| return; |
| |
| raw_spin_lock(&this_rq->lock); |
| pending_updates = curr_jiffies - this_rq->last_load_update_tick; |
| if (pending_updates) { |
| this_rq->last_load_update_tick = curr_jiffies; |
| /* |
| * We were idle, this means load 0, the current load might be |
| * !0 due to remote wakeups and the sort. |
| */ |
| __update_cpu_load(this_rq, 0, pending_updates); |
| } |
| raw_spin_unlock(&this_rq->lock); |
| } |
| #endif /* CONFIG_NO_HZ */ |
| |
| /* |
| * Called from scheduler_tick() |
| */ |
| void update_cpu_load_active(struct rq *this_rq) |
| { |
| unsigned long load = get_rq_runnable_load(this_rq); |
| /* |
| * See the mess around update_idle_cpu_load() / update_cpu_load_nohz(). |
| */ |
| this_rq->last_load_update_tick = jiffies; |
| __update_cpu_load(this_rq, load, 1); |
| |
| calc_load_account_active(this_rq); |
| } |