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sched: Add documentation for bandwidth control
Basic description of usage and effect for CFS Bandwidth Control. Signed-off-by: Bharata B Rao <bharata@linux.vnet.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Paul Turner <pjt@google.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra <a.p.zijlstra@chello.nl> Link: http://lkml.kernel.org/r/20110721184758.498036116@google.com Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@elte.hu>
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CFS Bandwidth Control | ||
===================== | ||
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[ This document only discusses CPU bandwidth control for SCHED_NORMAL. | ||
The SCHED_RT case is covered in Documentation/scheduler/sched-rt-group.txt ] | ||
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CFS bandwidth control is a CONFIG_FAIR_GROUP_SCHED extension which allows the | ||
specification of the maximum CPU bandwidth available to a group or hierarchy. | ||
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The bandwidth allowed for a group is specified using a quota and period. Within | ||
each given "period" (microseconds), a group is allowed to consume only up to | ||
"quota" microseconds of CPU time. When the CPU bandwidth consumption of a | ||
group exceeds this limit (for that period), the tasks belonging to its | ||
hierarchy will be throttled and are not allowed to run again until the next | ||
period. | ||
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A group's unused runtime is globally tracked, being refreshed with quota units | ||
above at each period boundary. As threads consume this bandwidth it is | ||
transferred to cpu-local "silos" on a demand basis. The amount transferred | ||
within each of these updates is tunable and described as the "slice". | ||
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Management | ||
---------- | ||
Quota and period are managed within the cpu subsystem via cgroupfs. | ||
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cpu.cfs_quota_us: the total available run-time within a period (in microseconds) | ||
cpu.cfs_period_us: the length of a period (in microseconds) | ||
cpu.stat: exports throttling statistics [explained further below] | ||
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The default values are: | ||
cpu.cfs_period_us=100ms | ||
cpu.cfs_quota=-1 | ||
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A value of -1 for cpu.cfs_quota_us indicates that the group does not have any | ||
bandwidth restriction in place, such a group is described as an unconstrained | ||
bandwidth group. This represents the traditional work-conserving behavior for | ||
CFS. | ||
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Writing any (valid) positive value(s) will enact the specified bandwidth limit. | ||
The minimum quota allowed for the quota or period is 1ms. There is also an | ||
upper bound on the period length of 1s. Additional restrictions exist when | ||
bandwidth limits are used in a hierarchical fashion, these are explained in | ||
more detail below. | ||
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Writing any negative value to cpu.cfs_quota_us will remove the bandwidth limit | ||
and return the group to an unconstrained state once more. | ||
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Any updates to a group's bandwidth specification will result in it becoming | ||
unthrottled if it is in a constrained state. | ||
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System wide settings | ||
-------------------- | ||
For efficiency run-time is transferred between the global pool and CPU local | ||
"silos" in a batch fashion. This greatly reduces global accounting pressure | ||
on large systems. The amount transferred each time such an update is required | ||
is described as the "slice". | ||
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This is tunable via procfs: | ||
/proc/sys/kernel/sched_cfs_bandwidth_slice_us (default=5ms) | ||
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Larger slice values will reduce transfer overheads, while smaller values allow | ||
for more fine-grained consumption. | ||
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Statistics | ||
---------- | ||
A group's bandwidth statistics are exported via 3 fields in cpu.stat. | ||
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cpu.stat: | ||
- nr_periods: Number of enforcement intervals that have elapsed. | ||
- nr_throttled: Number of times the group has been throttled/limited. | ||
- throttled_time: The total time duration (in nanoseconds) for which entities | ||
of the group have been throttled. | ||
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This interface is read-only. | ||
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Hierarchical considerations | ||
--------------------------- | ||
The interface enforces that an individual entity's bandwidth is always | ||
attainable, that is: max(c_i) <= C. However, over-subscription in the | ||
aggregate case is explicitly allowed to enable work-conserving semantics | ||
within a hierarchy. | ||
e.g. \Sum (c_i) may exceed C | ||
[ Where C is the parent's bandwidth, and c_i its children ] | ||
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There are two ways in which a group may become throttled: | ||
a. it fully consumes its own quota within a period | ||
b. a parent's quota is fully consumed within its period | ||
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In case b) above, even though the child may have runtime remaining it will not | ||
be allowed to until the parent's runtime is refreshed. | ||
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Examples | ||
-------- | ||
1. Limit a group to 1 CPU worth of runtime. | ||
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If period is 250ms and quota is also 250ms, the group will get | ||
1 CPU worth of runtime every 250ms. | ||
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# echo 250000 > cpu.cfs_quota_us /* quota = 250ms */ | ||
# echo 250000 > cpu.cfs_period_us /* period = 250ms */ | ||
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2. Limit a group to 2 CPUs worth of runtime on a multi-CPU machine. | ||
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With 500ms period and 1000ms quota, the group can get 2 CPUs worth of | ||
runtime every 500ms. | ||
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# echo 1000000 > cpu.cfs_quota_us /* quota = 1000ms */ | ||
# echo 500000 > cpu.cfs_period_us /* period = 500ms */ | ||
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The larger period here allows for increased burst capacity. | ||
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3. Limit a group to 20% of 1 CPU. | ||
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With 50ms period, 10ms quota will be equivalent to 20% of 1 CPU. | ||
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# echo 10000 > cpu.cfs_quota_us /* quota = 10ms */ | ||
# echo 50000 > cpu.cfs_period_us /* period = 50ms */ | ||
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By using a small period here we are ensuring a consistent latency | ||
response at the expense of burst capacity. | ||
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