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Re: upreempt_pri
hi,
> hi,
>
> On 02/21/2012 08:11 AM, YAMAMOTO Takashi wrote:
>> hi,
>>
>>> On 01/10/2012 03:30 AM, YAMAMOTO Takashi wrote:
>>>> hi,
>>>>
>>>>> Hi,
>>>>>
>>>>> I would like to change upreempt_pri to default to 0 as this
>>>>> makes wakeups where the interrupted cpu schedules a thread on
>>>>> another cpu behave like as if it where scheduled on the
>>>>> interrupted cpu.
>>>>>
>>>>> For the case that the to be scheduled on cpu is the
>>>>> interrupted one, the behavior is like having upreempt_pri set
>>>>> to 0, as rescheduling happens on return too usermode while in
>>>>> the cross cpu case this might be delayed until the next timer
>>>>> interrupt.
>>>>>
>>>>> This change makes some sluggishness regarding X to go a way.
>>>>> (Solaris defaults to 0 here as well, I think the only reason
>>>>> to set it higher is on very big SMP machines where throughput
>>>>> is more important then latency)
>>>>>
>>>>> Lars
>>>>
>>>> i'm not sure how it can make much differences given that
>>>> l_kpribase is normally PRI_KERNEL.
>>>>
>>>
>>> isn't eprio in that case a user space priority if the thread was
>>> preempted during user space execution?
>>
>> on a preemption, sched_enqueue is called with swtch=true and
>> sched_upreempt_pri is not used. after that, if the lwp is moved to
>> another cpu, sched_upreempt_pri might matter. is it the case you
>> are talking about?
>>
>
> yes, that is the case I have in mind, the behavior if the process is
> schedule on another cpu differs from the local one, it's dispatch
> might be delayed braking the contract that the process/lwp with
> highest priority should run for user preemption slightly.
given that netbsd-6 has been branched, it's probably a good time to
make the change and see.
YAMAMOTO Takashi
>
> Lars
>
>> YAMAMOTO Takashi
>>
>>>
>>>> can you explain a little more? or, even better, can you try to
>>>> create a smaller test program to demonstrate the sluggishness?
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>> The rational behind this is that the highest priority thread
>>> should run which is not always the case if user space preemption
>>> had happened. On my machine the behavior is quite obvious with
>>> compiles running in the background and moving windows in X.
>>>
>>> Lars
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