static unsigned long cpu_load(struct rq *rq);
static unsigned long cpu_runnable(struct rq *rq);
-static unsigned long cpu_util(int cpu);
static inline long adjust_numa_imbalance(int imbalance,
int dst_running, int dst_weight);
ns->load += cpu_load(rq);
ns->runnable += cpu_runnable(rq);
- ns->util += cpu_util(cpu);
+ ns->util += cpu_util_cfs(cpu);
ns->nr_running += rq->cfs.h_nr_running;
ns->compute_capacity += capacity_of(cpu);
* As is, the util number is not freq-invariant (we'd have to
* implement arch_scale_freq_capacity() for that).
*
- * See cpu_util().
+ * See cpu_util_cfs().
*/
cpufreq_update_util(rq, flags);
}
#endif
#ifdef CONFIG_SMP
-static inline unsigned long cpu_util(int cpu);
-
static inline bool cpu_overutilized(int cpu)
{
- return !fits_capacity(cpu_util(cpu), capacity_of(cpu));
+ return !fits_capacity(cpu_util_cfs(cpu), capacity_of(cpu));
}
static inline void update_overutilized_status(struct rq *rq)
return target;
}
-/**
- * cpu_util - Estimates the amount of capacity of a CPU used by CFS tasks.
- * @cpu: the CPU to get the utilization of
- *
- * The unit of the return value must be the one of capacity so we can compare
- * the utilization with the capacity of the CPU that is available for CFS task
- * (ie cpu_capacity).
- *
- * cfs_rq.avg.util_avg is the sum of running time of runnable tasks plus the
- * recent utilization of currently non-runnable tasks on a CPU. It represents
- * the amount of utilization of a CPU in the range [0..capacity_orig] where
- * capacity_orig is the cpu_capacity available at the highest frequency
- * (arch_scale_freq_capacity()).
- * The utilization of a CPU converges towards a sum equal to or less than the
- * current capacity (capacity_curr <= capacity_orig) of the CPU because it is
- * the running time on this CPU scaled by capacity_curr.
- *
- * The estimated utilization of a CPU is defined to be the maximum between its
- * cfs_rq.avg.util_avg and the sum of the estimated utilization of the tasks
- * currently RUNNABLE on that CPU.
- * This allows to properly represent the expected utilization of a CPU which
- * has just got a big task running since a long sleep period. At the same time
- * however it preserves the benefits of the "blocked utilization" in
- * describing the potential for other tasks waking up on the same CPU.
- *
- * Nevertheless, cfs_rq.avg.util_avg can be higher than capacity_curr or even
- * higher than capacity_orig because of unfortunate rounding in
- * cfs.avg.util_avg or just after migrating tasks and new task wakeups until
- * the average stabilizes with the new running time. We need to check that the
- * utilization stays within the range of [0..capacity_orig] and cap it if
- * necessary. Without utilization capping, a group could be seen as overloaded
- * (CPU0 utilization at 121% + CPU1 utilization at 80%) whereas CPU1 has 20% of
- * available capacity. We allow utilization to overshoot capacity_curr (but not
- * capacity_orig) as it useful for predicting the capacity required after task
- * migrations (scheduler-driven DVFS).
- *
- * Return: the (estimated) utilization for the specified CPU
- */
-static inline unsigned long cpu_util(int cpu)
-{
- struct cfs_rq *cfs_rq;
- unsigned int util;
-
- cfs_rq = &cpu_rq(cpu)->cfs;
- util = READ_ONCE(cfs_rq->avg.util_avg);
-
- if (sched_feat(UTIL_EST))
- util = max(util, READ_ONCE(cfs_rq->avg.util_est.enqueued));
-
- return min_t(unsigned long, util, capacity_orig_of(cpu));
-}
-
/*
* cpu_util_without: compute cpu utilization without any contributions from *p
* @cpu: the CPU which utilization is requested
/* Task has no contribution or is new */
if (cpu != task_cpu(p) || !READ_ONCE(p->se.avg.last_update_time))
- return cpu_util(cpu);
+ return cpu_util_cfs(cpu);
cfs_rq = &cpu_rq(cpu)->cfs;
util = READ_ONCE(cfs_rq->avg.util_avg);
/*
* Utilization (estimated) can exceed the CPU capacity, thus let's
* clamp to the maximum CPU capacity to ensure consistency with
- * the cpu_util call.
+ * cpu_util.
*/
return min_t(unsigned long, util, capacity_orig_of(cpu));
}
* During wake-up, the task isn't enqueued yet and doesn't
* appear in the cfs_rq->avg.util_est.enqueued of any rq,
* so just add it (if needed) to "simulate" what will be
- * cpu_util() after the task has been enqueued.
+ * cpu_util after the task has been enqueued.
*/
if (dst_cpu == cpu)
util_est += _task_util_est(p);
struct rq *rq = cpu_rq(i);
sgs->group_load += cpu_load(rq);
- sgs->group_util += cpu_util(i);
+ sgs->group_util += cpu_util_cfs(i);
sgs->group_runnable += cpu_runnable(rq);
sgs->sum_h_nr_running += rq->cfs.h_nr_running;
break;
case migrate_util:
- util = cpu_util(cpu_of(rq));
+ util = cpu_util_cfs(i);
/*
* Don't try to pull utilization from a CPU with one
return READ_ONCE(rq->avg_dl.util_avg);
}
-static inline unsigned long cpu_util_cfs(struct rq *rq)
+/**
+ * cpu_util_cfs() - Estimates the amount of CPU capacity used by CFS tasks.
+ * @cpu: the CPU to get the utilization for.
+ *
+ * The unit of the return value must be the same as the one of CPU capacity
+ * so that CPU utilization can be compared with CPU capacity.
+ *
+ * CPU utilization is the sum of running time of runnable tasks plus the
+ * recent utilization of currently non-runnable tasks on that CPU.
+ * It represents the amount of CPU capacity currently used by CFS tasks in
+ * the range [0..max CPU capacity] with max CPU capacity being the CPU
+ * capacity at f_max.
+ *
+ * The estimated CPU utilization is defined as the maximum between CPU
+ * utilization and sum of the estimated utilization of the currently
+ * runnable tasks on that CPU. It preserves a utilization "snapshot" of
+ * previously-executed tasks, which helps better deduce how busy a CPU will
+ * be when a long-sleeping task wakes up. The contribution to CPU utilization
+ * of such a task would be significantly decayed at this point of time.
+ *
+ * CPU utilization can be higher than the current CPU capacity
+ * (f_curr/f_max * max CPU capacity) or even the max CPU capacity because
+ * of rounding errors as well as task migrations or wakeups of new tasks.
+ * CPU utilization has to be capped to fit into the [0..max CPU capacity]
+ * range. Otherwise a group of CPUs (CPU0 util = 121% + CPU1 util = 80%)
+ * could be seen as over-utilized even though CPU1 has 20% of spare CPU
+ * capacity. CPU utilization is allowed to overshoot current CPU capacity
+ * though since this is useful for predicting the CPU capacity required
+ * after task migrations (scheduler-driven DVFS).
+ *
+ * Return: (Estimated) utilization for the specified CPU.
+ */
+static inline unsigned long cpu_util_cfs(int cpu)
{
- unsigned long util = READ_ONCE(rq->cfs.avg.util_avg);
+ struct cfs_rq *cfs_rq;
+ unsigned long util;
+
+ cfs_rq = &cpu_rq(cpu)->cfs;
+ util = READ_ONCE(cfs_rq->avg.util_avg);
if (sched_feat(UTIL_EST)) {
util = max_t(unsigned long, util,
- READ_ONCE(rq->cfs.avg.util_est.enqueued));
+ READ_ONCE(cfs_rq->avg.util_est.enqueued));
}
- return util;
+ return min(util, capacity_orig_of(cpu));
}
static inline unsigned long cpu_util_rt(struct rq *rq)