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Re: [Xen-devel] [RFC PATCH 21/24] ARM: vITS: handle INVALL command



On Tue, 6 Dec 2016, Dario Faggioli wrote:
> On Tue, 2016-12-06 at 13:53 -0800, Stefano Stabellini wrote:
> > On Tue, 6 Dec 2016, Dario Faggioli wrote:
> > > Sorry if I can't be more useful than this for now. :-/
> > 
> > We don't need scheduler support to implement interrupt migration. The
> > question was much simpler than that: moving a vCPU with interrupts
> > assigned to it is slower than moving a vCPU without interrupts
> > assigned
> > to it. You could say that the slowness is directly proportional do
> > the
> > number of interrupts assigned to the vCPU. Does the scheduler know
> > that?
> > Or blindly moves vCPUs around? Also see below.
> > 
> Ah, ok, it is indeed a simpler question than I thought! :-)
> 
> Answer: no, the scheduler does not use the information of how many or
> what interrupts are being routed to a vCPU in any way.
> 
> Just for the sake of correctness and precision, it does not "blindly
> moves vCPUs around", as in, it follows some criteria for deciding
> whether or not to move a vCPU, and if yes, where to, but among those
> criteria, there is no trace of anything related to routed interrupts.
> 
> Let me also add that the criteria are scheduler specific, so they're
> different, e.g., between Credit and Credit2.
> 
> Starting considering routed interrupt as a migration criteria in Credit
> would be rather difficult. Credit use a 'best effort' approach for
> migrating vCPUs, which is hard to augment.
> 
> Starting considering routed interrupt as a migration criteria in
> Credit2 would be much easier. Credit2's load balancer is specifically
> designed for being extendible with things like that. It would require
> some thinking, though, in order to figure out how important this
> particular aspect would be, wrt others that are considered.
> 
> E.g., if I have pCPU 0 loaded at 75% and pCPU 1 loaded at 25%, vCPU A
> has a lot of routed interrupts, and moving it gives me perfect load
> balancing (i.e., load will become 50% on pCPU 0 and 50% on pCPU 1)
> should I move it or not?
> Well, it depends if whether or not we think that the overhead we save
> by not migrating outweights the benefit of a perfectly balanced system.

Right. I don't know where to draw the line. I don't how much weight it
should have, but certainly it shouldn't be considered the same thing as
moving any other vCPU.

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