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In sched_ext API, a repeatedly reported pain point is the overuse of the verb "dispatch" and confusion around "consume": - ops.dispatch() - scx_bpf_dispatch[_vtime]() - scx_bpf_consume() - scx_bpf_dispatch[_vtime]_from_dsq*() This overloading of the term is historical. Originally, there were only built-in DSQs and moving a task into a DSQ always dispatched it for execution. Using the verb "dispatch" for the kfuncs to move tasks into these DSQs made sense. Later, user DSQs were added and scx_bpf_dispatch[_vtime]() updated to be able to insert tasks into any DSQ. The only allowed DSQ to DSQ transfer was from a non-local DSQ to a local DSQ and this operation was named "consume". This was already confusing as a task could be dispatched to a user DSQ from ops.enqueue() and then the DSQ would have to be consumed in ops.dispatch(). Later addition of scx_bpf_dispatch_from_dsq*() made the confusion even worse as "dispatch" in this context meant moving a task to an arbitrary DSQ from a user DSQ. Clean up the API with the following renames: 1. scx_bpf_dispatch[_vtime]() -> scx_bpf_dsq_insert[_vtime]() 2. scx_bpf_consume() -> scx_bpf_dsq_move_to_local() 3. scx_bpf_dispatch[_vtime]_from_dsq*() -> scx_bpf_dsq_move[_vtime]*() This patch performs the second rename. Compatibility is maintained by: - The previous kfunc names are still provided by the kernel so that old binaries can run. Kernel generates a warning when the old names are used. - compat.bpf.h provides wrappers for the new names which automatically fall back to the old names when running on older kernels. They also trigger build error if old names are used for new builds. The compat features will be dropped after v6.15. v2: Comment and documentation updates. Signed-off-by: Tejun Heo <tj@kernel.org> Acked-by: Andrea Righi <arighi@nvidia.com> Acked-by: Changwoo Min <changwoo@igalia.com> Acked-by: Johannes Bechberger <me@mostlynerdless.de> Acked-by: Giovanni Gherdovich <ggherdovich@suse.com> Cc: Dan Schatzberg <dschatzberg@meta.com> Cc: Ming Yang <yougmark94@gmail.com>
326 lines
12 KiB
ReStructuredText
326 lines
12 KiB
ReStructuredText
==========================
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Extensible Scheduler Class
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==========================
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sched_ext is a scheduler class whose behavior can be defined by a set of BPF
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programs - the BPF scheduler.
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* sched_ext exports a full scheduling interface so that any scheduling
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algorithm can be implemented on top.
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* The BPF scheduler can group CPUs however it sees fit and schedule them
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together, as tasks aren't tied to specific CPUs at the time of wakeup.
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* The BPF scheduler can be turned on and off dynamically anytime.
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* The system integrity is maintained no matter what the BPF scheduler does.
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The default scheduling behavior is restored anytime an error is detected,
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a runnable task stalls, or on invoking the SysRq key sequence
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:kbd:`SysRq-S`.
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* When the BPF scheduler triggers an error, debug information is dumped to
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aid debugging. The debug dump is passed to and printed out by the
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scheduler binary. The debug dump can also be accessed through the
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`sched_ext_dump` tracepoint. The SysRq key sequence :kbd:`SysRq-D`
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triggers a debug dump. This doesn't terminate the BPF scheduler and can
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only be read through the tracepoint.
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Switching to and from sched_ext
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===============================
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``CONFIG_SCHED_CLASS_EXT`` is the config option to enable sched_ext and
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``tools/sched_ext`` contains the example schedulers. The following config
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options should be enabled to use sched_ext:
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.. code-block:: none
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CONFIG_BPF=y
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CONFIG_SCHED_CLASS_EXT=y
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CONFIG_BPF_SYSCALL=y
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CONFIG_BPF_JIT=y
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CONFIG_DEBUG_INFO_BTF=y
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CONFIG_BPF_JIT_ALWAYS_ON=y
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CONFIG_BPF_JIT_DEFAULT_ON=y
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CONFIG_PAHOLE_HAS_SPLIT_BTF=y
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CONFIG_PAHOLE_HAS_BTF_TAG=y
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sched_ext is used only when the BPF scheduler is loaded and running.
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If a task explicitly sets its scheduling policy to ``SCHED_EXT``, it will be
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treated as ``SCHED_NORMAL`` and scheduled by CFS until the BPF scheduler is
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loaded.
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When the BPF scheduler is loaded and ``SCX_OPS_SWITCH_PARTIAL`` is not set
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in ``ops->flags``, all ``SCHED_NORMAL``, ``SCHED_BATCH``, ``SCHED_IDLE``, and
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``SCHED_EXT`` tasks are scheduled by sched_ext.
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However, when the BPF scheduler is loaded and ``SCX_OPS_SWITCH_PARTIAL`` is
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set in ``ops->flags``, only tasks with the ``SCHED_EXT`` policy are scheduled
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by sched_ext, while tasks with ``SCHED_NORMAL``, ``SCHED_BATCH`` and
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``SCHED_IDLE`` policies are scheduled by CFS.
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Terminating the sched_ext scheduler program, triggering :kbd:`SysRq-S`, or
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detection of any internal error including stalled runnable tasks aborts the
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BPF scheduler and reverts all tasks back to CFS.
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.. code-block:: none
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# make -j16 -C tools/sched_ext
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# tools/sched_ext/build/bin/scx_simple
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local=0 global=3
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local=5 global=24
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local=9 global=44
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local=13 global=56
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local=17 global=72
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^CEXIT: BPF scheduler unregistered
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The current status of the BPF scheduler can be determined as follows:
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.. code-block:: none
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# cat /sys/kernel/sched_ext/state
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enabled
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# cat /sys/kernel/sched_ext/root/ops
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simple
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You can check if any BPF scheduler has ever been loaded since boot by examining
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this monotonically incrementing counter (a value of zero indicates that no BPF
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scheduler has been loaded):
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.. code-block:: none
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# cat /sys/kernel/sched_ext/enable_seq
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1
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``tools/sched_ext/scx_show_state.py`` is a drgn script which shows more
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detailed information:
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.. code-block:: none
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# tools/sched_ext/scx_show_state.py
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ops : simple
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enabled : 1
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switching_all : 1
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switched_all : 1
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enable_state : enabled (2)
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bypass_depth : 0
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nr_rejected : 0
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enable_seq : 1
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If ``CONFIG_SCHED_DEBUG`` is set, whether a given task is on sched_ext can
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be determined as follows:
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.. code-block:: none
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# grep ext /proc/self/sched
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ext.enabled : 1
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The Basics
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==========
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Userspace can implement an arbitrary BPF scheduler by loading a set of BPF
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programs that implement ``struct sched_ext_ops``. The only mandatory field
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is ``ops.name`` which must be a valid BPF object name. All operations are
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optional. The following modified excerpt is from
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``tools/sched_ext/scx_simple.bpf.c`` showing a minimal global FIFO scheduler.
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.. code-block:: c
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/*
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* Decide which CPU a task should be migrated to before being
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* enqueued (either at wakeup, fork time, or exec time). If an
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* idle core is found by the default ops.select_cpu() implementation,
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* then insert the task directly into SCX_DSQ_LOCAL and skip the
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* ops.enqueue() callback.
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*
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* Note that this implementation has exactly the same behavior as the
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* default ops.select_cpu implementation. The behavior of the scheduler
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* would be exactly same if the implementation just didn't define the
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* simple_select_cpu() struct_ops prog.
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*/
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s32 BPF_STRUCT_OPS(simple_select_cpu, struct task_struct *p,
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s32 prev_cpu, u64 wake_flags)
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{
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s32 cpu;
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/* Need to initialize or the BPF verifier will reject the program */
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bool direct = false;
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cpu = scx_bpf_select_cpu_dfl(p, prev_cpu, wake_flags, &direct);
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if (direct)
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scx_bpf_dsq_insert(p, SCX_DSQ_LOCAL, SCX_SLICE_DFL, 0);
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return cpu;
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}
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/*
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* Do a direct insertion of a task to the global DSQ. This ops.enqueue()
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* callback will only be invoked if we failed to find a core to insert
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* into in ops.select_cpu() above.
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*
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* Note that this implementation has exactly the same behavior as the
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* default ops.enqueue implementation, which just dispatches the task
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* to SCX_DSQ_GLOBAL. The behavior of the scheduler would be exactly same
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* if the implementation just didn't define the simple_enqueue struct_ops
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* prog.
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*/
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void BPF_STRUCT_OPS(simple_enqueue, struct task_struct *p, u64 enq_flags)
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{
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scx_bpf_dsq_insert(p, SCX_DSQ_GLOBAL, SCX_SLICE_DFL, enq_flags);
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}
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s32 BPF_STRUCT_OPS_SLEEPABLE(simple_init)
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{
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/*
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* By default, all SCHED_EXT, SCHED_OTHER, SCHED_IDLE, and
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* SCHED_BATCH tasks should use sched_ext.
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*/
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return 0;
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}
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void BPF_STRUCT_OPS(simple_exit, struct scx_exit_info *ei)
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{
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exit_type = ei->type;
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}
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SEC(".struct_ops")
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struct sched_ext_ops simple_ops = {
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.select_cpu = (void *)simple_select_cpu,
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.enqueue = (void *)simple_enqueue,
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.init = (void *)simple_init,
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.exit = (void *)simple_exit,
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.name = "simple",
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};
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Dispatch Queues
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---------------
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To match the impedance between the scheduler core and the BPF scheduler,
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sched_ext uses DSQs (dispatch queues) which can operate as both a FIFO and a
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priority queue. By default, there is one global FIFO (``SCX_DSQ_GLOBAL``),
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and one local dsq per CPU (``SCX_DSQ_LOCAL``). The BPF scheduler can manage
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an arbitrary number of dsq's using ``scx_bpf_create_dsq()`` and
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``scx_bpf_destroy_dsq()``.
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A CPU always executes a task from its local DSQ. A task is "inserted" into a
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DSQ. A task in a non-local DSQ is "move"d into the target CPU's local DSQ.
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When a CPU is looking for the next task to run, if the local DSQ is not
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empty, the first task is picked. Otherwise, the CPU tries to move a task
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from the global DSQ. If that doesn't yield a runnable task either,
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``ops.dispatch()`` is invoked.
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Scheduling Cycle
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----------------
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The following briefly shows how a waking task is scheduled and executed.
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1. When a task is waking up, ``ops.select_cpu()`` is the first operation
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invoked. This serves two purposes. First, CPU selection optimization
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hint. Second, waking up the selected CPU if idle.
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The CPU selected by ``ops.select_cpu()`` is an optimization hint and not
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binding. The actual decision is made at the last step of scheduling.
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However, there is a small performance gain if the CPU
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``ops.select_cpu()`` returns matches the CPU the task eventually runs on.
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A side-effect of selecting a CPU is waking it up from idle. While a BPF
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scheduler can wake up any cpu using the ``scx_bpf_kick_cpu()`` helper,
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using ``ops.select_cpu()`` judiciously can be simpler and more efficient.
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A task can be immediately inserted into a DSQ from ``ops.select_cpu()``
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by calling ``scx_bpf_dsq_insert()``. If the task is inserted into
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``SCX_DSQ_LOCAL`` from ``ops.select_cpu()``, it will be inserted into the
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local DSQ of whichever CPU is returned from ``ops.select_cpu()``.
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Additionally, inserting directly from ``ops.select_cpu()`` will cause the
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``ops.enqueue()`` callback to be skipped.
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Note that the scheduler core will ignore an invalid CPU selection, for
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example, if it's outside the allowed cpumask of the task.
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2. Once the target CPU is selected, ``ops.enqueue()`` is invoked (unless the
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task was inserted directly from ``ops.select_cpu()``). ``ops.enqueue()``
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can make one of the following decisions:
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* Immediately insert the task into either the global or local DSQ by
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calling ``scx_bpf_dsq_insert()`` with ``SCX_DSQ_GLOBAL`` or
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``SCX_DSQ_LOCAL``, respectively.
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* Immediately insert the task into a custom DSQ by calling
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``scx_bpf_dsq_insert()`` with a DSQ ID which is smaller than 2^63.
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* Queue the task on the BPF side.
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3. When a CPU is ready to schedule, it first looks at its local DSQ. If
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empty, it then looks at the global DSQ. If there still isn't a task to
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run, ``ops.dispatch()`` is invoked which can use the following two
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functions to populate the local DSQ.
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* ``scx_bpf_dsq_insert()`` inserts a task to a DSQ. Any target DSQ can be
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used - ``SCX_DSQ_LOCAL``, ``SCX_DSQ_LOCAL_ON | cpu``,
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``SCX_DSQ_GLOBAL`` or a custom DSQ. While ``scx_bpf_dsq_insert()``
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currently can't be called with BPF locks held, this is being worked on
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and will be supported. ``scx_bpf_dsq_insert()`` schedules insertion
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rather than performing them immediately. There can be up to
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``ops.dispatch_max_batch`` pending tasks.
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* ``scx_bpf_move_to_local()`` moves a task from the specified non-local
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DSQ to the dispatching DSQ. This function cannot be called with any BPF
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locks held. ``scx_bpf_move_to_local()`` flushes the pending insertions
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tasks before trying to move from the specified DSQ.
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4. After ``ops.dispatch()`` returns, if there are tasks in the local DSQ,
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the CPU runs the first one. If empty, the following steps are taken:
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* Try to move from the global DSQ. If successful, run the task.
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* If ``ops.dispatch()`` has dispatched any tasks, retry #3.
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* If the previous task is an SCX task and still runnable, keep executing
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it (see ``SCX_OPS_ENQ_LAST``).
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* Go idle.
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Note that the BPF scheduler can always choose to dispatch tasks immediately
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in ``ops.enqueue()`` as illustrated in the above simple example. If only the
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built-in DSQs are used, there is no need to implement ``ops.dispatch()`` as
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a task is never queued on the BPF scheduler and both the local and global
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DSQs are executed automatically.
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``scx_bpf_dsq_insert()`` inserts the task on the FIFO of the target DSQ. Use
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``scx_bpf_dsq_insert_vtime()`` for the priority queue. Internal DSQs such as
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``SCX_DSQ_LOCAL`` and ``SCX_DSQ_GLOBAL`` do not support priority-queue
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dispatching, and must be dispatched to with ``scx_bpf_dsq_insert()``. See
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the function documentation and usage in ``tools/sched_ext/scx_simple.bpf.c``
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for more information.
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Where to Look
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=============
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* ``include/linux/sched/ext.h`` defines the core data structures, ops table
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and constants.
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* ``kernel/sched/ext.c`` contains sched_ext core implementation and helpers.
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The functions prefixed with ``scx_bpf_`` can be called from the BPF
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scheduler.
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* ``tools/sched_ext/`` hosts example BPF scheduler implementations.
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* ``scx_simple[.bpf].c``: Minimal global FIFO scheduler example using a
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custom DSQ.
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* ``scx_qmap[.bpf].c``: A multi-level FIFO scheduler supporting five
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levels of priority implemented with ``BPF_MAP_TYPE_QUEUE``.
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ABI Instability
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===============
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The APIs provided by sched_ext to BPF schedulers programs have no stability
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guarantees. This includes the ops table callbacks and constants defined in
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``include/linux/sched/ext.h``, as well as the ``scx_bpf_`` kfuncs defined in
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``kernel/sched/ext.c``.
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While we will attempt to provide a relatively stable API surface when
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possible, they are subject to change without warning between kernel
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versions.
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