[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] CPU and scheduler init, Part 2
On 09/12/2010 14:35, "George Dunlap" <George.Dunlap@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > That could work, if you want. ATM I don't allocate anything; if I > need to in the future, I should be able to do it allocation in > alloc_pdata(). > > I don't strictly need it to run on the processor that's coming up; I just > need: > * The function to happen after the cpu ID stuff, so that (for example) > cpu_to_socket() returns a reasonable value > * The function to finish before the cpu tries to run the scheduler > > But if you'd rather add CPU_STARTING than an interlock for CPU_ONLINE > for technical reasons, that's fine. CPU_ONLINE means that cpu is already in cpu_online_map. I doubt you'd want to delay this scheduler stuff until then -- at that point other cpus can see you and poke your runqueue. So I think a new notifier type is required, and we may as well stick with Linux-ish semantics with CPU_STARTING. -- Keir > Thanks, > -George > > > On Thu, Dec 9, 2010 at 2:16 PM, Keir Fraser <keir@xxxxxxx> wrote: >> On 09/12/2010 12:49, "George Dunlap" <dunlapg@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >>> Keir, >>> >>> I made a cpu status notifier for sched_credit2() to actually read an >>> arrange the runqueue information, and found the next niggle: the >>> callbacks are not guaranteed to finish before the cpu tried to go >>> through the scheduler. The callback notifiers are handled on the cpu >>> that issues the boot command (i.e., cpu 0 during boot), and there's no >>> interlock to prevent the booted cpu from continuing until the >>> notifiers have completed execution. >>> >>> Making a simple interlock (similar to the one in __cpu_up()) allows >>> the system to boot properly. Another possibility would be to run the >>> notifiers on the freshly booted cpu before calling into the scheduler, >>> rather than on the cpu that issued the cpu boot sequence. >> >> I could bring Linux's CPU_STARTING notifier over into Xen. Runs in context >> of new CPU before it is fully online (e.g., before interrupts are enabled). >> So you couldn't do any allocations there, or anything else that can fail. >> This might require some juggling to pre-allocate memory (e.g., for >> possibly-required new runqueue) on CPU_UP_PREPARE/alloc_pdata, and >> potentially free that memory if unused on CPU_ONLINE. Or not, if actually >> you require no dynamic memory allocation. >> >> This might be the best solution overall I think? I can knock up a patch for >> CPU_STARTING if that sounds good. >> >> -- Keir >> >>> Thoughts? >>> >>> -George >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> Xen-devel mailing list >>> Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx >>> http://lists.xensource.com/xen-devel >> >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Xen-devel mailing list >> Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx >> http://lists.xensource.com/xen-devel >> _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xensource.com/xen-devel
|
Lists.xenproject.org is hosted with RackSpace, monitoring our |