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lf-6.6.y
3886 Commits
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7d0583cf9e |
sched/fair, cpufreq: Introduce 'runnable boosting'
The responsiveness of the Per Entity Load Tracking (PELT) util_avg in mobile devices is still considered too low for utilization changes during task ramp-up. In Android this manifests in the fact that the first frames of a UI activity are very prone to be jankframes (a frame which doesn't meet the required frame rendering time, e.g. 16ms@60Hz) since the CPU frequency is normally low at this point and has to ramp up quickly. The beginning of an UI activity is also characterized by the occurrence of CPU contention, especially on little CPUs. Current little CPUs can have an original CPU capacity of only ~ 150 which means that the actual CPU capacity at lower frequency can even be much smaller. Schedutil maps CPU util_avg into CPU frequency request via: util = effective_cpu_util(..., cpu_util_cfs(cpu), ...) -> util = map_util_perf(util) -> freq = map_util_freq(util, ...) CPU contention for CFS tasks can be detected by 'CPU runnable > CPU utililization' in cpu_util_cfs_boost() -> cpu_util(..., boost = 1). Schedutil uses 'runnable boosting' by calling cpu_util_cfs_boost(). To be in sync with schedutil's CPU frequency selection, Energy Aware Scheduling (EAS) also calls cpu_util(..., boost = 1) during max util detection. Moreover, 'runnable boosting' is also used in load-balance for busiest CPU selection when the migration type is 'migrate_util', i.e. only at sched domains which don't have the SD_SHARE_PKG_RESOURCES flag set. Suggested-by: Vincent Guittot <vincent.guittot@linaro.org> Signed-off-by: Dietmar Eggemann <dietmar.eggemann@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Reviewed-by: Vincent Guittot <vincent.guittot@linaro.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230515115735.296329-3-dietmar.eggemann@arm.com |
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3eb6d6ecec |
sched/fair: Refactor CPU utilization functions
There is a lot of code duplication in cpu_util_next() & cpu_util_cfs(). Remove this by allowing cpu_util_next() to be called with p = NULL. Rename cpu_util_next() to cpu_util() since the '_next' suffix is no longer necessary to distinct cpu utilization related functions. Implement cpu_util_cfs(cpu) as cpu_util(cpu, p = NULL, -1). This will allow to code future related cpu util changes only in one place, namely in cpu_util(). Signed-off-by: Dietmar Eggemann <dietmar.eggemann@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Reviewed-by: Vincent Guittot <vincent.guittot@linaro.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230515115735.296329-2-dietmar.eggemann@arm.com |
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fb7d4948c4 |
sched/clock: Provide local_clock_noinstr()
Now that all ARCH_WANTS_NO_INSTR architectures (arm64, loongarch, s390, x86) provide sched_clock_noinstr(), use this to provide local_clock_noinstr(). This local_clock_noinstr() will be safe to use from noinstr code with the assumption that any such noinstr code is non-preemptible (it had better be, entry code will have IRQs disabled while __cpuidle must have preemption disabled). Specifically, preempt_enable_notrace(), a common part of many a sched_clock() implementation calls out to schedule() -- even though, per the above, it will never trigger -- which frustrates noinstr validation. vmlinux.o: warning: objtool: local_clock+0xb5: call to preempt_schedule_notrace_thunk() leaves .noinstr.text section Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Tested-by: Michael Kelley <mikelley@microsoft.com> # Hyper-V Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230519102715.978624636@infradead.org |
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1c06918788 |
sched: Consider task_struct::saved_state in wait_task_inactive()
With the introduction of task_struct::saved_state in commit
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d5e1586617 |
sched: Unconditionally use full-fat wait_task_inactive()
While modifying wait_task_inactive() for PREEMPT_RT; the build robot noted that UP got broken. This led to audit and consideration of the UP implementation of wait_task_inactive(). It looks like the UP implementation is also broken for PREEMPT; consider task_current_syscall() getting preempted between the two calls to wait_task_inactive(). Therefore move the wait_task_inactive() implementation out of CONFIG_SMP and unconditionally use it. Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20230602103731.GA630648%40hirez.programming.kicks-ass.net |
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0dd37d6dd3 |
sched/fair: Don't balance task to its current running CPU
We've run into the case that the balancer tries to balance a migration disabled task and trigger the warning in set_task_cpu() like below: ------------[ cut here ]------------ WARNING: CPU: 7 PID: 0 at kernel/sched/core.c:3115 set_task_cpu+0x188/0x240 Modules linked in: hclgevf xt_CHECKSUM ipt_REJECT nf_reject_ipv4 <...snip> CPU: 7 PID: 0 Comm: swapper/7 Kdump: loaded Tainted: G O 6.1.0-rc4+ #1 Hardware name: Huawei TaiShan 2280 V2/BC82AMDC, BIOS 2280-V2 CS V5.B221.01 12/09/2021 pstate: 604000c9 (nZCv daIF +PAN -UAO -TCO -DIT -SSBS BTYPE=--) pc : set_task_cpu+0x188/0x240 lr : load_balance+0x5d0/0xc60 sp : ffff80000803bc70 x29: ffff80000803bc70 x28: ffff004089e190e8 x27: ffff004089e19040 x26: ffff007effcabc38 x25: 0000000000000000 x24: 0000000000000001 x23: ffff80000803be84 x22: 000000000000000c x21: ffffb093e79e2a78 x20: 000000000000000c x19: ffff004089e19040 x18: 0000000000000000 x17: 0000000000001fad x16: 0000000000000030 x15: 0000000000000000 x14: 0000000000000003 x13: 0000000000000000 x12: 0000000000000000 x11: 0000000000000001 x10: 0000000000000400 x9 : ffffb093e4cee530 x8 : 00000000fffffffe x7 : 0000000000ce168a x6 : 000000000000013e x5 : 00000000ffffffe1 x4 : 0000000000000001 x3 : 0000000000000b2a x2 : 0000000000000b2a x1 : ffffb093e6d6c510 x0 : 0000000000000001 Call trace: set_task_cpu+0x188/0x240 load_balance+0x5d0/0xc60 rebalance_domains+0x26c/0x380 _nohz_idle_balance.isra.0+0x1e0/0x370 run_rebalance_domains+0x6c/0x80 __do_softirq+0x128/0x3d8 ____do_softirq+0x18/0x24 call_on_irq_stack+0x2c/0x38 do_softirq_own_stack+0x24/0x3c __irq_exit_rcu+0xcc/0xf4 irq_exit_rcu+0x18/0x24 el1_interrupt+0x4c/0xe4 el1h_64_irq_handler+0x18/0x2c el1h_64_irq+0x74/0x78 arch_cpu_idle+0x18/0x4c default_idle_call+0x58/0x194 do_idle+0x244/0x2b0 cpu_startup_entry+0x30/0x3c secondary_start_kernel+0x14c/0x190 __secondary_switched+0xb0/0xb4 ---[ end trace 0000000000000000 ]--- Further investigation shows that the warning is superfluous, the migration disabled task is just going to be migrated to its current running CPU. This is because that on load balance if the dst_cpu is not allowed by the task, we'll re-select a new_dst_cpu as a candidate. If no task can be balanced to dst_cpu we'll try to balance the task to the new_dst_cpu instead. In this case when the migration disabled task is not on CPU it only allows to run on its current CPU, load balance will select its current CPU as new_dst_cpu and later triggers the warning above. The new_dst_cpu is chosen from the env->dst_grpmask. Currently it contains CPUs in sched_group_span() and if we have overlapped groups it's possible to run into this case. This patch makes env->dst_grpmask of group_balance_mask() which exclude any CPUs from the busiest group and solve the issue. For balancing in a domain with no overlapped groups the behaviour keeps same as before. Suggested-by: Vincent Guittot <vincent.guittot@linaro.org> Signed-off-by: Yicong Yang <yangyicong@hisilicon.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Reviewed-by: Vincent Guittot <vincent.guittot@linaro.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230530082507.10444-1-yangyicong@huawei.com |
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0f613bfa82 |
locking/atomic: treewide: use raw_atomic*_<op>()
Now that we have raw_atomic*_<op>() definitions, there's no need to use arch_atomic*_<op>() definitions outside of the low-level atomic definitions. Move treewide users of arch_atomic*_<op>() over to the equivalent raw_atomic*_<op>(). There should be no functional change as a result of this patch. Signed-off-by: Mark Rutland <mark.rutland@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Reviewed-by: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230605070124.3741859-19-mark.rutland@arm.com |
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3f4bf7aa31 |
sched/deadline: remove unused dl_bandwidth
The default deadline bandwidth control structure has been removed since
commit
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7aa55f2a59 |
sched/fair: Move unused stub functions to header
These four functions have a normal definition for CONFIG_FAIR_GROUP_SCHED, and empty one that is only referenced when FAIR_GROUP_SCHED is disabled but CGROUP_SCHED is still enabled. If both are turned off, the functions are still defined but the misisng prototype causes a W=1 warning: kernel/sched/fair.c:12544:6: error: no previous prototype for 'free_fair_sched_group' kernel/sched/fair.c:12546:5: error: no previous prototype for 'alloc_fair_sched_group' kernel/sched/fair.c:12553:6: error: no previous prototype for 'online_fair_sched_group' kernel/sched/fair.c:12555:6: error: no previous prototype for 'unregister_fair_sched_group' Move the alternatives into the header as static inline functions with the correct combination of #ifdef checks to avoid the warning without adding even more complexity. Signed-off-by: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@arndb.de> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Reviewed-by: Vincent Guittot <vincent.guittot@linaro.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230522195021.3456768-6-arnd@kernel.org |
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f7df852ad6 |
sched: Make task_vruntime_update() prototype visible
Having the prototype next to the caller but not visible to the callee causes a W=1 warning: kernel/sched/fair.c:11985:6: error: no previous prototype for 'task_vruntime_update' [-Werror=missing-prototypes] Move this to a header, as we do for all other function declarations. Signed-off-by: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@arndb.de> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Reviewed-by: Vincent Guittot <vincent.guittot@linaro.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230522195021.3456768-5-arnd@kernel.org |
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c0bdfd72fb |
sched/fair: Hide unused init_cfs_bandwidth() stub
init_cfs_bandwidth() is only used when CONFIG_FAIR_GROUP_SCHED is enabled, and without this causes a W=1 warning for the missing prototype: kernel/sched/fair.c:6131:6: error: no previous prototype for 'init_cfs_bandwidth' The normal implementation is only defined for CONFIG_CFS_BANDWIDTH, so the stub exists when CFS_BANDWIDTH is disabled but FAIR_GROUP_SCHED is enabled. Signed-off-by: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@arndb.de> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Reviewed-by: Vincent Guittot <vincent.guittot@linaro.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230522195021.3456768-4-arnd@kernel.org |
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378be384e0 |
sched: Add schedule_user() declaration
The schedule_user() function is used on powerpc and sparc architectures, but only ever called from assembler, so it has no prototype, causing a harmless W=1 warning: kernel/sched/core.c:6730:35: error: no previous prototype for 'schedule_user' [-Werror=missing-prototypes] Add a prototype in sched/sched.h to shut up the warning. Signed-off-by: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@arndb.de> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Reviewed-by: Vincent Guittot <vincent.guittot@linaro.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230522195021.3456768-3-arnd@kernel.org |
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d55ebae3f3 |
sched: Hide unused sched_update_scaling()
This function is only used when CONFIG_SMP is enabled, without that there
is no caller and no prototype:
kernel/sched/fair.c:688:5: error: no previous prototype for 'sched_update_scaling' [-Werror=missing-prototypes
Hide the definition in the same #ifdef check as the declaration.
Fixes:
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e2a1f85bf9 |
sched/psi: Avoid resetting the min update period when it is unnecessary
Psi_group's poll_min_period is determined by the minimum window size of psi_trigger when creating new triggers. While destroying a psi_trigger, there is no need to reset poll_min_period if the psi_trigger being destroyed did not have the minimum window size, since in this condition poll_min_period will remain the same as before. Signed-off-by: Yang Yang <yang.yang29@zte.com.cn> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Acked-by: Suren Baghdasaryan <surenb@google.com> Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20230514163338.834345-1-surenb@google.com |
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616db8779b |
workqueue: Automatically mark CPU-hogging work items CPU_INTENSIVE
If a per-cpu work item hogs the CPU, it can prevent other work items from starting through concurrency management. A per-cpu workqueue which intends to host such CPU-hogging work items can choose to not participate in concurrency management by setting %WQ_CPU_INTENSIVE; however, this can be error-prone and difficult to debug when missed. This patch adds an automatic CPU usage based detection. If a concurrency-managed work item consumes more CPU time than the threshold (10ms by default) continuously without intervening sleeps, wq_worker_tick() which is called from scheduler_tick() will detect the condition and automatically mark it CPU_INTENSIVE. The mechanism isn't foolproof: * Detection depends on tick hitting the work item. Getting preempted at the right timings may allow a violating work item to evade detection at least temporarily. * nohz_full CPUs may not be running ticks and thus can fail detection. * Even when detection is working, the 10ms detection delays can add up if many CPU-hogging work items are queued at the same time. However, in vast majority of cases, this should be able to detect violations reliably and provide reasonable protection with a small increase in code complexity. If some work items trigger this condition repeatedly, the bigger problem likely is the CPU being saturated with such per-cpu work items and the solution would be making them UNBOUND. The next patch will add a debug mechanism to help spot such cases. v4: Documentation for workqueue.cpu_intensive_thresh_us added to kernel-parameters.txt. v3: Switch to use wq_worker_tick() instead of hooking into preemptions as suggested by Peter. v2: Lai pointed out that wq_worker_stopping() also needs to be called from preemption and rtlock paths and an earlier patch was updated accordingly. This patch adds a comment describing the risk of infinte recursions and how they're avoided. Signed-off-by: Tejun Heo <tj@kernel.org> Acked-by: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> Cc: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> Cc: Lai Jiangshan <jiangshanlai@gmail.com> |
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2ef269ef1a |
cgroup/cpuset: Free DL BW in case can_attach() fails
cpuset_can_attach() can fail. Postpone DL BW allocation until all tasks have been checked. DL BW is not allocated per-task but as a sum over all DL tasks migrating. If multiple controllers are attached to the cgroup next to the cpuset controller a non-cpuset can_attach() can fail. In this case free DL BW in cpuset_cancel_attach(). Finally, update cpuset DL task count (nr_deadline_tasks) only in cpuset_attach(). Suggested-by: Waiman Long <longman@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Dietmar Eggemann <dietmar.eggemann@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Juri Lelli <juri.lelli@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Waiman Long <longman@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Tejun Heo <tj@kernel.org> |
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85989106fe |
sched/deadline: Create DL BW alloc, free & check overflow interface
While moving a set of tasks between exclusive cpusets, cpuset_can_attach() -> task_can_attach() calls dl_cpu_busy(..., p) for DL BW overflow checking and per-task DL BW allocation on the destination root_domain for the DL tasks in this set. This approach has the issue of not freeing already allocated DL BW in the following error cases: (1) The set of tasks includes multiple DL tasks and DL BW overflow checking fails for one of the subsequent DL tasks. (2) Another controller next to the cpuset controller which is attached to the same cgroup fails in its can_attach(). To address this problem rework dl_cpu_busy(): (1) Split it into dl_bw_check_overflow() & dl_bw_alloc() and add a dedicated dl_bw_free(). (2) dl_bw_alloc() & dl_bw_free() take a `u64 dl_bw` parameter instead of a `struct task_struct *p` used in dl_cpu_busy(). This allows to allocate DL BW for a set of tasks too rather than only for a single task. Signed-off-by: Dietmar Eggemann <dietmar.eggemann@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Juri Lelli <juri.lelli@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Tejun Heo <tj@kernel.org> |
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6c24849f55 |
sched/cpuset: Keep track of SCHED_DEADLINE task in cpusets
Qais reported that iterating over all tasks when rebuilding root domains for finding out which ones are DEADLINE and need their bandwidth correctly restored on such root domains can be a costly operation (10+ ms delays on suspend-resume). To fix the problem keep track of the number of DEADLINE tasks belonging to each cpuset and then use this information (followup patch) to only perform the above iteration if DEADLINE tasks are actually present in the cpuset for which a corresponding root domain is being rebuilt. Reported-by: Qais Yousef <qyousef@layalina.io> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20230206221428.2125324-1-qyousef@layalina.io/ Signed-off-by: Juri Lelli <juri.lelli@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Waiman Long <longman@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Tejun Heo <tj@kernel.org> |
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111cd11bbc |
sched/cpuset: Bring back cpuset_mutex
Turns out percpu_cpuset_rwsem - commit
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a6fcdd8d95 |
sched/debug: Correct printing for rq->nr_uninterruptible
Commit
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bf2dc42d6b |
sched/topology: Propagate SMT flags when removing degenerate domain
When a degenerate cluster domain for core with SMT CPUs is removed, the SD_SHARE_CPUCAPACITY flag in the local child sched group was not propagated to the new parent. We need this flag to properly determine whether the local sched group is SMT. Set the flag in the local child sched group of the new parent sched domain. Signed-off-by: Tim Chen <tim.c.chen@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Reviewed-by: Ricardo Neri <ricardo.neri-calderon@linux.intel.com> Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/73cf0959eafa53c02e7ef6bf805d751d9190e55d.1683156492.git.tim.c.chen@linux.intel.com |
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519fabc7aa |
psi: remove 500ms min window size limitation for triggers
Current 500ms min window size for psi triggers limits polling interval to 50ms to prevent polling threads from using too much cpu bandwidth by polling too frequently. However the number of cgroups with triggers is unlimited, so this protection can be defeated by creating multiple cgroups with psi triggers (triggers in each cgroup are served by a single "psimon" kernel thread). Instead of limiting min polling period, which also limits the latency of psi events, it's better to limit psi trigger creation to authorized users only, like we do for system-wide psi triggers (/proc/pressure/* files can be written only by processes with CAP_SYS_RESOURCE capability). This also makes access rules for cgroup psi files consistent with system-wide ones. Add a CAP_SYS_RESOURCE capability check for cgroup psi file writers and remove the psi window min size limitation. Suggested-by: Sudarshan Rajagopalan <quic_sudaraja@quicinc.com> Signed-off-by: Suren Baghdasaryan <surenb@google.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Acked-by: Michal Hocko <mhocko@suse.com> Acked-by: Johannes Weiner <hannes@cmpxchg.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/all/cover.1676067791.git.quic_sudaraja@quicinc.com/ |
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40b4d3dc32 |
sched/topology: Check SDF_SHARED_CHILD in highest_flag_domain()
Do not assume that all the children of a scheduling domain have a given flag. Check whether it has the SDF_SHARED_CHILD meta flag. Suggested-by: Ionela Voinescu <ionela.voinescu@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Ricardo Neri <ricardo.neri-calderon@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230406203148.19182-9-ricardo.neri-calderon@linux.intel.com |
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c9ca07886a |
sched/fair: Do not even the number of busy CPUs via asym_packing
Now that find_busiest_group() triggers load balancing between a fully_ busy SMT2 core and an idle non-SMT core, it is no longer needed to force balancing via asym_packing. Use asym_packing only as intended: when there is high-priority CPU that is idle. After this change, the same logic apply to SMT and non-SMT local groups. It makes less sense having a separate function to deal specifically with SMT. Fold the logic in asym_smt_can_pull_tasks() into sched_asym(). Signed-off-by: Ricardo Neri <ricardo.neri-calderon@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Tested-by: Zhang Rui <rui.zhang@intel.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230406203148.19182-8-ricardo.neri-calderon@linux.intel.com |
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43726bdedd |
sched/fair: Use the busiest group to set prefer_sibling
The prefer_sibling setting acts on the busiest group to move excess tasks to the local group. This should be done as per request of the child of the busiest group's sched domain, not the local group's. Using the flags of the child domain of the local group works fortuitously if both groups have child domains. There are cases, however, in which the busiest group's sched domain has child but the local group's does not. Consider, for instance a non-SMT core (or an SMT core with only one online sibling) doing load balance with an SMT core at the MC level. SD_PREFER_SIBLING of the busiest group's child domain will not be honored. We are left with a fully busy SMT core and an idle non-SMT core. Suggested-by: Dietmar Eggemann <dietmar.eggemann@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Ricardo Neri <ricardo.neri-calderon@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Tested-by: Zhang Rui <rui.zhang@intel.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230406203148.19182-7-ricardo.neri-calderon@linux.intel.com |
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5fd6d7f439 |
sched/fair: Keep a fully_busy SMT sched group as busiest
When comparing two fully_busy scheduling groups, keep the current busiest group if it represents an SMT core. Tasks in such scheduling group share CPU resources and need more help than tasks in a non-SMT fully_busy group. Signed-off-by: Ricardo Neri <ricardo.neri-calderon@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Tested-by: Zhang Rui <rui.zhang@intel.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230406203148.19182-6-ricardo.neri-calderon@linux.intel.com |
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18ad345327 |
sched/fair: Let low-priority cores help high-priority busy SMT cores
Using asym_packing priorities within an SMT core is straightforward. Just follow the priorities that hardware indicates. When balancing load from an SMT core, also consider the idle state of its siblings. Priorities do not reflect that an SMT core divides its throughput among all its busy siblings. They only makes sense when exactly one sibling is busy. Indicate that active balance is needed if the destination CPU has lower priority than the source CPU but the latter has busy SMT siblings. Make find_busiest_queue() not skip higher-priority SMT cores with more than busy sibling. Suggested-by: Valentin Schneider <vschneid@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Ricardo Neri <ricardo.neri-calderon@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Tested-by: Zhang Rui <rui.zhang@intel.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230406203148.19182-5-ricardo.neri-calderon@linux.intel.com |
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ef7657d4d2 |
sched/fair: Simplify asym_packing logic for SMT cores
Callers of asym_smt_can_pull_tasks() check the idle state of the destination CPU and its SMT siblings, if any. No extra checks are needed in such function. Since SMT cores divide capacity among its siblings, priorities only really make sense if only one sibling is active. This is true for SMT2, SMT4, SMT8, etc. Do not use asym_packing load balance for this case. Instead, let find_busiest_group() handle imbalances. When balancing non-SMT cores or at higher scheduling domains (e.g., between MC scheduling groups), continue using priorities. Signed-off-by: Ricardo Neri <ricardo.neri-calderon@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Reviewed-by: Len Brown <len.brown@intel.com> Tested-by: Zhang Rui <rui.zhang@intel.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230406203148.19182-4-ricardo.neri-calderon@linux.intel.com |
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eefefa716c |
sched/fair: Only do asym_packing load balancing from fully idle SMT cores
When balancing load between cores, all the SMT siblings of the destination CPU, if any, must be idle. Otherwise, pulling new tasks degrades the throughput of the busy SMT siblings. The overall throughput of the system remains the same. When balancing load within an SMT core this consideration is not relevant. Follow the priorities that hardware indicates. Suggested-by: Valentin Schneider <vschneid@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Ricardo Neri <ricardo.neri-calderon@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Tested-by: Zhang Rui <rui.zhang@intel.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230406203148.19182-3-ricardo.neri-calderon@linux.intel.com |
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8b36d07f1d |
sched/fair: Move is_core_idle() out of CONFIG_NUMA
asym_packing needs this function to determine whether an SMT core is a suitable destination for load balancing. Signed-off-by: Ricardo Neri <ricardo.neri-calderon@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Tested-by: Zhang Rui <rui.zhang@intel.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230406203148.19182-2-ricardo.neri-calderon@linux.intel.com |
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0019a2d4b7 |
sched: fix cid_lock kernel-doc warnings
Fix kernel-doc warnings for cid_lock and use_cid_lock.
These comments are not in kernel-doc format.
kernel/sched/core.c:11496: warning: Cannot understand * @cid_lock: Guarantee forward-progress of cid allocation.
on line 11496 - I thought it was a doc line
kernel/sched/core.c:11505: warning: Cannot understand * @use_cid_lock: Select cid allocation behavior: lock-free vs spinlock.
on line 11505 - I thought it was a doc line
Fixes:
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f20730efbd |
SMP cross-CPU function-call updates for v6.4:
- Remove diagnostics and adjust config for CSD lock diagnostics - Add a generic IPI-sending tracepoint, as currently there's no easy way to instrument IPI origins: it's arch dependent and for some major architectures it's not even consistently available. Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- iQJFBAABCgAvFiEEBpT5eoXrXCwVQwEKEnMQ0APhK1gFAmRK438RHG1pbmdvQGtl cm5lbC5vcmcACgkQEnMQ0APhK1jJ5Q/5AZ0HGpyqwdFK8GmGznyu5qjP5HwV9pPq gZQScqSy4tZEeza4TFMi83CoXSg9uJ7GlYJqqQMKm78LGEPomnZtXXC7oWvTA9M5 M/jAvzytmvZloSCXV6kK7jzSejMHhag97J/BjTYhZYQpJ9T+hNC87XO6J6COsKr9 lPIYqkFrIkQNr6B0U11AQfFejRYP1ics2fnbnZL86G/zZAc6x8EveM3KgSer2iHl KbrO+xcYyGY8Ef9P2F72HhEGFfM3WslpT1yzqR3sm4Y+fuMG0oW3qOQuMJx0ZhxT AloterY0uo6gJwI0P9k/K4klWgz81Tf/zLb0eBAtY2uJV9Fo3YhPHuZC7jGPGAy3 JusW2yNYqc8erHVEMAKDUsl/1KN4TE2uKlkZy98wno+KOoMufK5MA2e2kPPqXvUi Jk9RvFolnWUsexaPmCftti0OCv3YFiviVAJ/t0pchfmvvJA2da0VC9hzmEXpLJVF 25nBTV/1uAOrWvOpCyo3ElrC2CkQVkFmK5rXMDdvf6ib0Nid4vFcCkCSLVfu+ePB 11mi7QYro+CcnOug1K+yKogUDmsZgV/u1kUwgQzTIpZ05Kkb49gUiXw9L2RGcBJh yoDoiI66KPR7PWQ2qBdQoXug4zfEEtWG0O9HNLB0FFRC3hu7I+HHyiUkBWs9jasK PA5+V7HcQRk= =Wp7f -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- Merge tag 'smp-core-2023-04-27' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tip/tip Pull SMP cross-CPU function-call updates from Ingo Molnar: - Remove diagnostics and adjust config for CSD lock diagnostics - Add a generic IPI-sending tracepoint, as currently there's no easy way to instrument IPI origins: it's arch dependent and for some major architectures it's not even consistently available. * tag 'smp-core-2023-04-27' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tip/tip: trace,smp: Trace all smp_function_call*() invocations trace: Add trace_ipi_send_cpu() sched, smp: Trace smp callback causing an IPI smp: reword smp call IPI comment treewide: Trace IPIs sent via smp_send_reschedule() irq_work: Trace self-IPIs sent via arch_irq_work_raise() smp: Trace IPIs sent via arch_send_call_function_ipi_mask() sched, smp: Trace IPIs sent via send_call_function_single_ipi() trace: Add trace_ipi_send_cpumask() kernel/smp: Make csdlock_debug= resettable locking/csd_lock: Remove per-CPU data indirection from CSD lock debugging locking/csd_lock: Remove added data from CSD lock debugging locking/csd_lock: Add Kconfig option for csd_debug default |
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586b222d74 |
Scheduler changes for v6.4:
- Allow unprivileged PSI poll()ing - Fix performance regression introduced by mm_cid - Improve livepatch stalls by adding livepatch task switching to cond_resched(), this resolves livepatching busy-loop stalls with certain CPU-bound kthreads. - Improve sched_move_task() performance on autogroup configs. - On core-scheduling CPUs, avoid selecting throttled tasks to run - Misc cleanups, fixes and improvements. Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- iQJFBAABCgAvFiEEBpT5eoXrXCwVQwEKEnMQ0APhK1gFAmRK39cRHG1pbmdvQGtl cm5lbC5vcmcACgkQEnMQ0APhK1hXPhAAk2WqOV2cW4BjSCHjWWE05IfTb0HMn8si mFGBAnr1GIkJRvICAusAwDU3FcmP5mWyXA+LK110d3x4fKJP15vCD5ru5lHnBfX7 fSD+Ml8uM4Xlp8iUoQspilbQwmWkQSwhudbDs3Nj7XGUzJCvNgm1sM3xPRDlqSJ5 6zumfVOPTfzSGcZY3a8sMuJnCepZHLRR6NkLzo/DuI1NMy2Jw1dK43dh77AO1mBF M53PF2IQgm6Wu/67p2k5eDq4c0AKL4PyIb4dRTGOPyljWMf41n28jwMv1tjlvu+Y uT0JD8MJSrFiylyT41x7Asr7orAGXj3cPhShK5R0vrutx/SbqBiaaE1MO9U3aC3B 7xVXEORHWD6KIDqTvzmWGrMBkIdyWB6CLk6EJKr3MqM9hUtP2ift7bkAgIad9h+4 G9DdVePGoCyh/TQtJ9EPIULAYeu9mmDZe8rTQ8C5MCSg//05/CTMgBbb0NiFWhnd 0JQl1B0nNUA87whVUxK8Hfu4DLh7m9jrzgQr9Ww8/FwQ6tQHBOKWgDdbv45ckkaG cJIQt/+vLilddazc8u8E+BGaD5w2uIYF0uL7kvG6Q5oARX06AZ5dj1m06vhZe/Ym laOVZEpJsbQnxviY6jwj1n+CSB9aK7feiQfDePBPbpJGGUHyZoKrnLN6wmW2se+H VCHtdgsEl5I= =Hgci -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- Merge tag 'sched-core-2023-04-27' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tip/tip Pull scheduler updates from Ingo Molnar: - Allow unprivileged PSI poll()ing - Fix performance regression introduced by mm_cid - Improve livepatch stalls by adding livepatch task switching to cond_resched(). This resolves livepatching busy-loop stalls with certain CPU-bound kthreads - Improve sched_move_task() performance on autogroup configs - On core-scheduling CPUs, avoid selecting throttled tasks to run - Misc cleanups, fixes and improvements * tag 'sched-core-2023-04-27' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tip/tip: sched/clock: Fix local_clock() before sched_clock_init() sched/rt: Fix bad task migration for rt tasks sched: Fix performance regression introduced by mm_cid sched/core: Make sched_dynamic_mutex static sched/psi: Allow unprivileged polling of N*2s period sched/psi: Extract update_triggers side effect sched/psi: Rename existing poll members in preparation sched/psi: Rearrange polling code in preparation sched/fair: Fix inaccurate tally of ttwu_move_affine vhost: Fix livepatch timeouts in vhost_worker() livepatch,sched: Add livepatch task switching to cond_resched() livepatch: Skip task_call_func() for current task livepatch: Convert stack entries array to percpu sched: Interleave cfs bandwidth timers for improved single thread performance at low utilization sched/core: Reduce cost of sched_move_task when config autogroup sched/core: Avoid selecting the task that is throttled to run when core-sched enable sched/topology: Make sched_energy_mutex,update static |
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2aff7c706c |
Objtool changes for v6.4:
- Mark arch_cpu_idle_dead() __noreturn, make all architectures & drivers that did this inconsistently follow this new, common convention, and fix all the fallout that objtool can now detect statically. - Fix/improve the ORC unwinder becoming unreliable due to UNWIND_HINT_EMPTY ambiguity, split it into UNWIND_HINT_END_OF_STACK and UNWIND_HINT_UNDEFINED to resolve it. - Fix noinstr violations in the KCSAN code and the lkdtm/stackleak code. - Generate ORC data for __pfx code - Add more __noreturn annotations to various kernel startup/shutdown/panic functions. - Misc improvements & fixes. Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- iQJFBAABCgAvFiEEBpT5eoXrXCwVQwEKEnMQ0APhK1gFAmRK1x0RHG1pbmdvQGtl cm5lbC5vcmcACgkQEnMQ0APhK1ghxQ/+IkCynMYtdF5OG9YwbcGJqsPSfOPMEcEM pUSFYg+gGPBDT/fJfcVSqvUtdnWbLC2kXt9yiswXz3X3J2nmNkBk5YKQftsNDcul TmKeqIIAK51XTncpegKH0EGnOX63oZ9Vxa8CTPdDlb+YF23Km2FoudGRI9F5qbUd LoraXqGYeiaeySkGyWmZVl6Uc8dIxnMkTN3H/oI9aB6TOrsi059hAtFcSaFfyemP c4LqXXCH7k2baiQt+qaLZ8cuZVG/+K5r2N2cmjO5kmJc6ynIaFnfMe4XxZLjp5LT /PulYI15bXkvSARKx5CRh/CDHMOx5Blw+ASO0RhWbdy0WH4ZhhcaVF5AeIpPW86a 1LBcz97rMp72WmvKgrJeVO1r9+ll4SI6/YKGJRsxsCMdP3hgFpqntXyVjTFNdTM1 0gH6H5v55x06vJHvhtTk8SR3PfMTEM2fRU5jXEOrGowoGifx+wNUwORiwj6LE3KQ SKUdT19RNzoW3VkFxhgk65ThK1S7YsJUKRoac3YdhttpqqqtFV//erenrZoR4k/p vzvKy68EQ7RCNyD5wNWNFe0YjeJl5G8gQ8bUm4Xmab7djjgz+pn4WpQB8yYKJLAo x9dqQ+6eUbw3Hcgk6qQ9E+r/svbulnAL0AeALAWK/91DwnZ2mCzKroFkLN7napKi fRho4CqzrtM= =NwEV -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- Merge tag 'objtool-core-2023-04-27' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tip/tip Pull objtool updates from Ingo Molnar: - Mark arch_cpu_idle_dead() __noreturn, make all architectures & drivers that did this inconsistently follow this new, common convention, and fix all the fallout that objtool can now detect statically - Fix/improve the ORC unwinder becoming unreliable due to UNWIND_HINT_EMPTY ambiguity, split it into UNWIND_HINT_END_OF_STACK and UNWIND_HINT_UNDEFINED to resolve it - Fix noinstr violations in the KCSAN code and the lkdtm/stackleak code - Generate ORC data for __pfx code - Add more __noreturn annotations to various kernel startup/shutdown and panic functions - Misc improvements & fixes * tag 'objtool-core-2023-04-27' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tip/tip: (52 commits) x86/hyperv: Mark hv_ghcb_terminate() as noreturn scsi: message: fusion: Mark mpt_halt_firmware() __noreturn x86/cpu: Mark {hlt,resume}_play_dead() __noreturn btrfs: Mark btrfs_assertfail() __noreturn objtool: Include weak functions in global_noreturns check cpu: Mark nmi_panic_self_stop() __noreturn cpu: Mark panic_smp_self_stop() __noreturn arm64/cpu: Mark cpu_park_loop() and friends __noreturn x86/head: Mark *_start_kernel() __noreturn init: Mark start_kernel() __noreturn init: Mark [arch_call_]rest_init() __noreturn objtool: Generate ORC data for __pfx code x86/linkage: Fix padding for typed functions objtool: Separate prefix code from stack validation code objtool: Remove superfluous dead_end_function() check objtool: Add symbol iteration helpers objtool: Add WARN_INSN() scripts/objdump-func: Support multiple functions context_tracking: Fix KCSAN noinstr violation objtool: Add stackleak instrumentation to uaccess safe list ... |
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33afd4b763 |
Mainly singleton patches all over the place. Series of note are:
- updates to scripts/gdb from Glenn Washburn - kexec cleanups from Bjorn Helgaas -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- iHUEABYIAB0WIQTTMBEPP41GrTpTJgfdBJ7gKXxAjgUCZEr+6wAKCRDdBJ7gKXxA jn4NAP4u/hj/kR2dxYehcVLuQqJspCRZZBZlAReFJyHNQO6voAEAk0NN9rtG2+/E r0G29CJhK+YL0W6mOs8O1yo9J1rZnAM= =2CUV -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- Merge tag 'mm-nonmm-stable-2023-04-27-16-01' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/akpm/mm Pull non-MM updates from Andrew Morton: "Mainly singleton patches all over the place. Series of note are: - updates to scripts/gdb from Glenn Washburn - kexec cleanups from Bjorn Helgaas" * tag 'mm-nonmm-stable-2023-04-27-16-01' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/akpm/mm: (50 commits) mailmap: add entries for Paul Mackerras libgcc: add forward declarations for generic library routines mailmap: add entry for Oleksandr ocfs2: reduce ioctl stack usage fs/proc: add Kthread flag to /proc/$pid/status ia64: fix an addr to taddr in huge_pte_offset() checkpatch: introduce proper bindings license check epoll: rename global epmutex scripts/gdb: add GDB convenience functions $lx_dentry_name() and $lx_i_dentry() scripts/gdb: create linux/vfs.py for VFS related GDB helpers uapi/linux/const.h: prefer ISO-friendly __typeof__ delayacct: track delays from IRQ/SOFTIRQ scripts/gdb: timerlist: convert int chunks to str scripts/gdb: print interrupts scripts/gdb: raise error with reduced debugging information scripts/gdb: add a Radix Tree Parser lib/rbtree: use '+' instead of '|' for setting color. proc/stat: remove arch_idle_time() checkpatch: check for misuse of the link tags checkpatch: allow Closes tags with links ... |
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7fa8a8ee94 |
- Nick Piggin's "shoot lazy tlbs" series, to improve the peformance of
switching from a user process to a kernel thread. - More folio conversions from Kefeng Wang, Zhang Peng and Pankaj Raghav. - zsmalloc performance improvements from Sergey Senozhatsky. - Yue Zhao has found and fixed some data race issues around the alteration of memcg userspace tunables. - VFS rationalizations from Christoph Hellwig: - removal of most of the callers of write_one_page(). - make __filemap_get_folio()'s return value more useful - Luis Chamberlain has changed tmpfs so it no longer requires swap backing. Use `mount -o noswap'. - Qi Zheng has made the slab shrinkers operate locklessly, providing some scalability benefits. - Keith Busch has improved dmapool's performance, making part of its operations O(1) rather than O(n). - Peter Xu adds the UFFD_FEATURE_WP_UNPOPULATED feature to userfaultd, permitting userspace to wr-protect anon memory unpopulated ptes. - Kirill Shutemov has changed MAX_ORDER's meaning to be inclusive rather than exclusive, and has fixed a bunch of errors which were caused by its unintuitive meaning. - Axel Rasmussen give userfaultfd the UFFDIO_CONTINUE_MODE_WP feature, which causes minor faults to install a write-protected pte. - Vlastimil Babka has done some maintenance work on vma_merge(): cleanups to the kernel code and improvements to our userspace test harness. - Cleanups to do_fault_around() by Lorenzo Stoakes. - Mike Rapoport has moved a lot of initialization code out of various mm/ files and into mm/mm_init.c. - Lorenzo Stoakes removd vmf_insert_mixed_prot(), which was added for DRM, but DRM doesn't use it any more. - Lorenzo has also coverted read_kcore() and vread() to use iterators and has thereby removed the use of bounce buffers in some cases. - Lorenzo has also contributed further cleanups of vma_merge(). - Chaitanya Prakash provides some fixes to the mmap selftesting code. - Matthew Wilcox changes xfs and afs so they no longer take sleeping locks in ->map_page(), a step towards RCUification of pagefaults. - Suren Baghdasaryan has improved mmap_lock scalability by switching to per-VMA locking. - Frederic Weisbecker has reworked the percpu cache draining so that it no longer causes latency glitches on cpu isolated workloads. - Mike Rapoport cleans up and corrects the ARCH_FORCE_MAX_ORDER Kconfig logic. - Liu Shixin has changed zswap's initialization so we no longer waste a chunk of memory if zswap is not being used. - Yosry Ahmed has improved the performance of memcg statistics flushing. - David Stevens has fixed several issues involving khugepaged, userfaultfd and shmem. - Christoph Hellwig has provided some cleanup work to zram's IO-related code paths. - David Hildenbrand has fixed up some issues in the selftest code's testing of our pte state changing. - Pankaj Raghav has made page_endio() unneeded and has removed it. - Peter Xu contributed some rationalizations of the userfaultfd selftests. - Yosry Ahmed has fixed an issue around memcg's page recalim accounting. - Chaitanya Prakash has fixed some arm-related issues in the selftests/mm code. - Longlong Xia has improved the way in which KSM handles hwpoisoned pages. - Peter Xu fixes a few issues with uffd-wp at fork() time. - Stefan Roesch has changed KSM so that it may now be used on a per-process and per-cgroup basis. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- iHUEABYIAB0WIQTTMBEPP41GrTpTJgfdBJ7gKXxAjgUCZEr3zQAKCRDdBJ7gKXxA jlLoAP0fpQBipwFxED0Us4SKQfupV6z4caXNJGPeay7Aj11/kQD/aMRC2uPfgr96 eMG3kwn2pqkB9ST2QpkaRbxA//eMbQY= =J+Dj -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- Merge tag 'mm-stable-2023-04-27-15-30' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/akpm/mm Pull MM updates from Andrew Morton: - Nick Piggin's "shoot lazy tlbs" series, to improve the peformance of switching from a user process to a kernel thread. - More folio conversions from Kefeng Wang, Zhang Peng and Pankaj Raghav. - zsmalloc performance improvements from Sergey Senozhatsky. - Yue Zhao has found and fixed some data race issues around the alteration of memcg userspace tunables. - VFS rationalizations from Christoph Hellwig: - removal of most of the callers of write_one_page() - make __filemap_get_folio()'s return value more useful - Luis Chamberlain has changed tmpfs so it no longer requires swap backing. Use `mount -o noswap'. - Qi Zheng has made the slab shrinkers operate locklessly, providing some scalability benefits. - Keith Busch has improved dmapool's performance, making part of its operations O(1) rather than O(n). - Peter Xu adds the UFFD_FEATURE_WP_UNPOPULATED feature to userfaultd, permitting userspace to wr-protect anon memory unpopulated ptes. - Kirill Shutemov has changed MAX_ORDER's meaning to be inclusive rather than exclusive, and has fixed a bunch of errors which were caused by its unintuitive meaning. - Axel Rasmussen give userfaultfd the UFFDIO_CONTINUE_MODE_WP feature, which causes minor faults to install a write-protected pte. - Vlastimil Babka has done some maintenance work on vma_merge(): cleanups to the kernel code and improvements to our userspace test harness. - Cleanups to do_fault_around() by Lorenzo Stoakes. - Mike Rapoport has moved a lot of initialization code out of various mm/ files and into mm/mm_init.c. - Lorenzo Stoakes removd vmf_insert_mixed_prot(), which was added for DRM, but DRM doesn't use it any more. - Lorenzo has also coverted read_kcore() and vread() to use iterators and has thereby removed the use of bounce buffers in some cases. - Lorenzo has also contributed further cleanups of vma_merge(). - Chaitanya Prakash provides some fixes to the mmap selftesting code. - Matthew Wilcox changes xfs and afs so they no longer take sleeping locks in ->map_page(), a step towards RCUification of pagefaults. - Suren Baghdasaryan has improved mmap_lock scalability by switching to per-VMA locking. - Frederic Weisbecker has reworked the percpu cache draining so that it no longer causes latency glitches on cpu isolated workloads. - Mike Rapoport cleans up and corrects the ARCH_FORCE_MAX_ORDER Kconfig logic. - Liu Shixin has changed zswap's initialization so we no longer waste a chunk of memory if zswap is not being used. - Yosry Ahmed has improved the performance of memcg statistics flushing. - David Stevens has fixed several issues involving khugepaged, userfaultfd and shmem. - Christoph Hellwig has provided some cleanup work to zram's IO-related code paths. - David Hildenbrand has fixed up some issues in the selftest code's testing of our pte state changing. - Pankaj Raghav has made page_endio() unneeded and has removed it. - Peter Xu contributed some rationalizations of the userfaultfd selftests. - Yosry Ahmed has fixed an issue around memcg's page recalim accounting. - Chaitanya Prakash has fixed some arm-related issues in the selftests/mm code. - Longlong Xia has improved the way in which KSM handles hwpoisoned pages. - Peter Xu fixes a few issues with uffd-wp at fork() time. - Stefan Roesch has changed KSM so that it may now be used on a per-process and per-cgroup basis. * tag 'mm-stable-2023-04-27-15-30' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/akpm/mm: (369 commits) mm,unmap: avoid flushing TLB in batch if PTE is inaccessible shmem: restrict noswap option to initial user namespace mm/khugepaged: fix conflicting mods to collapse_file() sparse: remove unnecessary 0 values from rc mm: move 'mmap_min_addr' logic from callers into vm_unmapped_area() hugetlb: pte_alloc_huge() to replace huge pte_alloc_map() maple_tree: fix allocation in mas_sparse_area() mm: do not increment pgfault stats when page fault handler retries zsmalloc: allow only one active pool compaction context selftests/mm: add new selftests for KSM mm: add new KSM process and sysfs knobs mm: add new api to enable ksm per process mm: shrinkers: fix debugfs file permissions mm: don't check VMA write permissions if the PTE/PMD indicates write permissions migrate_pages_batch: fix statistics for longterm pin retry userfaultfd: use helper function range_in_vma() lib/show_mem.c: use for_each_populated_zone() simplify code mm: correct arg in reclaim_pages()/reclaim_clean_pages_from_list() fs/buffer: convert create_page_buffers to folio_create_buffers fs/buffer: add folio_create_empty_buffers helper ... |
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556eb8b791 |
Driver core changes for 6.4-rc1
Here is the large set of driver core changes for 6.4-rc1. Once again, a busy development cycle, with lots of changes happening in the driver core in the quest to be able to move "struct bus" and "struct class" into read-only memory, a task now complete with these changes. This will make the future rust interactions with the driver core more "provably correct" as well as providing more obvious lifetime rules for all busses and classes in the kernel. The changes required for this did touch many individual classes and busses as many callbacks were changed to take const * parameters instead. All of these changes have been submitted to the various subsystem maintainers, giving them plenty of time to review, and most of them actually did so. Other than those changes, included in here are a small set of other things: - kobject logging improvements - cacheinfo improvements and updates - obligatory fw_devlink updates and fixes - documentation updates - device property cleanups and const * changes - firwmare loader dependency fixes. All of these have been in linux-next for a while with no reported problems. Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- iG0EABECAC0WIQT0tgzFv3jCIUoxPcsxR9QN2y37KQUCZEp7Sw8cZ3JlZ0Brcm9h aC5jb20ACgkQMUfUDdst+ykitQCfamUHpxGcKOAGuLXMotXNakTEsxgAoIquENm5 LEGadNS38k5fs+73UaxV =7K4B -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- Merge tag 'driver-core-6.4-rc1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/gregkh/driver-core Pull driver core updates from Greg KH: "Here is the large set of driver core changes for 6.4-rc1. Once again, a busy development cycle, with lots of changes happening in the driver core in the quest to be able to move "struct bus" and "struct class" into read-only memory, a task now complete with these changes. This will make the future rust interactions with the driver core more "provably correct" as well as providing more obvious lifetime rules for all busses and classes in the kernel. The changes required for this did touch many individual classes and busses as many callbacks were changed to take const * parameters instead. All of these changes have been submitted to the various subsystem maintainers, giving them plenty of time to review, and most of them actually did so. Other than those changes, included in here are a small set of other things: - kobject logging improvements - cacheinfo improvements and updates - obligatory fw_devlink updates and fixes - documentation updates - device property cleanups and const * changes - firwmare loader dependency fixes. All of these have been in linux-next for a while with no reported problems" * tag 'driver-core-6.4-rc1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/gregkh/driver-core: (120 commits) device property: make device_property functions take const device * driver core: update comments in device_rename() driver core: Don't require dynamic_debug for initcall_debug probe timing firmware_loader: rework crypto dependencies firmware_loader: Strip off \n from customized path zram: fix up permission for the hot_add sysfs file cacheinfo: Add use_arch[|_cache]_info field/function arch_topology: Remove early cacheinfo error message if -ENOENT cacheinfo: Check cache properties are present in DT cacheinfo: Check sib_leaf in cache_leaves_are_shared() cacheinfo: Allow early level detection when DT/ACPI info is missing/broken cacheinfo: Add arm64 early level initializer implementation cacheinfo: Add arch specific early level initializer tty: make tty_class a static const structure driver core: class: remove struct class_interface * from callbacks driver core: class: mark the struct class in struct class_interface constant driver core: class: make class_register() take a const * driver core: class: mark class_release() as taking a const * driver core: remove incorrect comment for device_create* MIPS: vpe-cmp: remove module owner pointer from struct class usage. ... |
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f31dcb152a |
sched/clock: Fix local_clock() before sched_clock_init()
Have local_clock() return sched_clock() if sched_clock_init() has not
yet run. sched_clock_cpu() has this check but it was not included in the
new noinstr implementation of local_clock().
The effect can be seen on x86 with CONFIG_PRINTK_TIME enabled, for
instance. scd->clock quickly reaches the value of TICK_NSEC and that
value is returned until sched_clock_init() runs.
dmesg without this patch:
[ 0.000000] kvm-clock: ...
[ 0.000002] kvm-clock: ...
[ 0.000672] clocksource: ...
[ 0.001000] tsc: ...
[ 0.001000] e820: ...
[ 0.001000] e820: ...
...
[ 0.001000] ..TIMER: ...
[ 0.001000] clocksource: ...
[ 0.378956] Calibrating delay loop ...
[ 0.379955] pid_max: ...
dmesg with this patch:
[ 0.000000] kvm-clock: ...
[ 0.000001] kvm-clock: ...
[ 0.000675] clocksource: ...
[ 0.002685] tsc: ...
[ 0.003331] e820: ...
[ 0.004190] e820: ...
...
[ 0.421939] ..TIMER: ...
[ 0.422842] clocksource: ...
[ 0.424582] Calibrating delay loop ...
[ 0.425580] pid_max: ...
Fixes:
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feffe5bb27 |
sched/rt: Fix bad task migration for rt tasks
Commit |
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223baf9d17 |
sched: Fix performance regression introduced by mm_cid
Introduce per-mm/cpu current concurrency id (mm_cid) to fix a PostgreSQL
sysbench regression reported by Aaron Lu.
Keep track of the currently allocated mm_cid for each mm/cpu rather than
freeing them immediately on context switch. This eliminates most atomic
operations when context switching back and forth between threads
belonging to different memory spaces in multi-threaded scenarios (many
processes, each with many threads). The per-mm/per-cpu mm_cid values are
serialized by their respective runqueue locks.
Thread migration is handled by introducing invocation to
sched_mm_cid_migrate_to() (with destination runqueue lock held) in
activate_task() for migrating tasks. If the destination cpu's mm_cid is
unset, and if the source runqueue is not actively using its mm_cid, then
the source cpu's mm_cid is moved to the destination cpu on migration.
Introduce a task-work executed periodically, similarly to NUMA work,
which delays reclaim of cid values when they are unused for a period of
time.
Keep track of the allocation time for each per-cpu cid, and let the task
work clear them when they are observed to be older than
SCHED_MM_CID_PERIOD_NS and unused. This task work also clears all
mm_cids which are greater or equal to the Hamming weight of the mm
cidmask to keep concurrency ids compact.
Because we want to ensure the mm_cid converges towards the smaller
values as migrations happen, the prior optimization that was done when
context switching between threads belonging to the same mm is removed,
because it could delay the lazy release of the destination runqueue
mm_cid after it has been replaced by a migration. Removing this prior
optimization is not an issue performance-wise because the introduced
per-mm/per-cpu mm_cid tracking also covers this more specific case.
Fixes:
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5a4d3b38ed |
Linux 6.3-rc7
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Merge branch 'v6.3-rc7'
Sync with the urgent patches; in particular:
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a3b2aeac9d |
delayacct: track delays from IRQ/SOFTIRQ
Delay accounting does not track the delay of IRQ/SOFTIRQ. While IRQ/SOFTIRQ could have obvious impact on some workloads productivity, such as when workloads are running on system which is busy handling network IRQ/SOFTIRQ. Get the delay of IRQ/SOFTIRQ could help users to reduce such delay. Such as setting interrupt affinity or task affinity, using kernel thread for NAPI etc. This is inspired by "sched/psi: Add PSI_IRQ to track IRQ/SOFTIRQ pressure"[1]. Also fix some code indent problems of older code. And update tools/accounting/getdelays.c: / # ./getdelays -p 156 -di print delayacct stats ON printing IO accounting PID 156 CPU count real total virtual total delay total delay average 15 15836008 16218149 275700790 18.380ms IO count delay total delay average 0 0 0.000ms SWAP count delay total delay average 0 0 0.000ms RECLAIM count delay total delay average 0 0 0.000ms THRASHING count delay total delay average 0 0 0.000ms COMPACT count delay total delay average 0 0 0.000ms WPCOPY count delay total delay average 36 7586118 0.211ms IRQ count delay total delay average 42 929161 0.022ms [1] commit 52b1364ba0b1("sched/psi: Add PSI_IRQ to track IRQ/SOFTIRQ pressure") Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/202304081728353557233@zte.com.cn Signed-off-by: Yang Yang <yang.yang29@zte.com.cn> Cc: Jiang Xuexin <jiang.xuexin@zte.com.cn> Cc: wangyong <wang.yong12@zte.com.cn> Cc: junhua huang <huang.junhua@zte.com.cn> Cc: Balbir Singh <bsingharora@gmail.com> Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com> Cc: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net> Cc: Juri Lelli <juri.lelli@redhat.com> Cc: Peter Zijlstra <a.p.zijlstra@chello.nl> Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org> |
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9b8e17813a |
sched/core: Make sched_dynamic_mutex static
The sched_dynamic_mutex is only used within the file. Make it static.
Fixes:
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91dcf1e806 |
sched/fair: Fix imbalance overflow
When local group is fully busy but its average load is above system load,
computing the imbalance will overflow and local group is not the best
target for pulling this load.
Fixes:
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d46031f40e |
sched/numa: use hash_32 to mix up PIDs accessing VMA
before: last 6 bits of PID is used as index to store information about tasks accessing VMA's. after: hash_32 is used to take of cases where tasks are created over a period of time, and thus improve collision probability. Result: The patch series overall improves autonuma cost. Kernbench around more than 5% improvement and system time in mmtest autonuma showed more than 80% improvement Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/d5a9f75513300caed74e5c8570bba9317b963c2b.1677672277.git.raghavendra.kt@amd.com Signed-off-by: Raghavendra K T <raghavendra.kt@amd.com> Suggested-by: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> Cc: Bharata B Rao <bharata@amd.com> Cc: David Hildenbrand <david@redhat.com> Cc: Disha Talreja <dishaa.talreja@amd.com> Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com> Cc: Mel Gorman <mgorman@techsingularity.net> Cc: Mike Rapoport <rppt@kernel.org> Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org> |
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20f586486b |
sched/numa: implement access PID reset logic
This helps to ensure that only recently accessed PIDs scan the VMAs. Current implementation: (idea supported by PeterZ) 1. Accessing PID information is maintained in two windows. access_pids[1] being newest. 2. Reset old access PID info i.e. access_pid[0] every (4 * sysctl_numa_balancing_scan_delay) interval after initial scan delay period expires. The above interval seemed to be experimentally optimum since it avoids frequent reset of access info as well as helps clearing the old access info regularly. The reset logic is implemented in scan path. Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/f7a675f66d1442d048b4216b2baf94515012c405.1677672277.git.raghavendra.kt@amd.com Signed-off-by: Raghavendra K T <raghavendra.kt@amd.com> Suggested-by: Mel Gorman <mgorman@techsingularity.net> Cc: Bharata B Rao <bharata@amd.com> Cc: David Hildenbrand <david@redhat.com> Cc: Disha Talreja <dishaa.talreja@amd.com> Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com> Cc: Mike Rapoport <rppt@kernel.org> Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org> |
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fc137c0dda |
sched/numa: enhance vma scanning logic
During Numa scanning make sure only relevant vmas of the tasks are scanned. Before: All the tasks of a process participate in scanning the vma even if they do not access vma in it's lifespan. Now: Except cases of first few unconditional scans, if a process do not touch vma (exluding false positive cases of PID collisions) tasks no longer scan all vma Logic used: 1) 6 bits of PID used to mark active bit in vma numab status during fault to remember PIDs accessing vma. (Thanks Mel) 2) Subsequently in scan path, vma scanning is skipped if current PID had not accessed vma. 3) First two times we do allow unconditional scan to preserve earlier behaviour of scanning. Acknowledgement to Bharata B Rao <bharata@amd.com> for initial patch to store pid information and Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> (Usage of test and set bit) Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/092f03105c7c1d3450f4636b1ea350407f07640e.1677672277.git.raghavendra.kt@amd.com Signed-off-by: Raghavendra K T <raghavendra.kt@amd.com> Suggested-by: Mel Gorman <mgorman@techsingularity.net> Cc: David Hildenbrand <david@redhat.com> Cc: Disha Talreja <dishaa.talreja@amd.com> Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com> Cc: Mike Rapoport <rppt@kernel.org> Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org> |
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ef6a22b70f |
sched/numa: apply the scan delay to every new vma
Pach series "sched/numa: Enhance vma scanning", v3. The patchset proposes one of the enhancements to numa vma scanning suggested by Mel. This is continuation of [3]. Reposting the rebased patchset to akpm mm-unstable tree (March 1) Existing mechanism of scan period involves, scan period derived from per-thread stats. Process Adaptive autoNUMA [1] proposed to gather NUMA fault stats at per-process level to capture aplication behaviour better. During that course of discussion, Mel proposed several ideas to enhance current numa balancing. One of the suggestion was below Track what threads access a VMA. The suggestion was to use an unsigned long pid_mask and use the lower bits to tag approximately what threads access a VMA. Skip VMAs that did not trap a fault. This would be approximate because of PID collisions but would reduce scanning of areas the thread is not interested in. The above suggestion intends not to penalize threads that has no interest in the vma, thus reduce scanning overhead. V3 changes are mostly based on PeterZ comments (details below in changes) Summary of patchset: Current patchset implements: 1. Delay the vma scanning logic for newly created VMA's so that additional overhead of scanning is not incurred for short lived tasks (implementation by Mel) 2. Store the information of tasks accessing VMA in 2 windows. It is regularly cleared in (4*sysctl_numa_balancing_scan_delay) interval. The above time is derived from experimenting (Suggested by PeterZ) to balance between frequent clearing vs obsolete access data 3. hash_32 used to encode task index accessing VMA information 4. VMA's acess information is used to skip scanning for the tasks which had not accessed VMA Changes since V2: patch1: - Renaming of structure, macro to function, - Add explanation to heuristics - Adding more details from result (PeterZ) Patch2: - Usage of test and set bit (PeterZ) - Move storing access PID info to numa_migrate_prep() - Add a note on fainess among tasks allowed to scan (PeterZ) Patch3: - Maintain two windows of access PID information (PeterZ supported implementation and Gave idea to extend to N if needed) Patch4: - Apply hash_32 function to track VMA accessing PIDs (PeterZ) Changes since RFC V1: - Include Mel's vma scan delay patch - Change the accessing pid store logic (Thanks Mel) - Fencing structure / code to NUMA_BALANCING (David, Mel) - Adding clearing access PID logic (Mel) - Descriptive change log ( Mike Rapoport) Things to ponder over: ========================================== - Improvement to clearing accessing PIDs logic (discussed in-detail in patch3 itself (Done in this patchset by implementing 2 window history) - Current scan period is not changed in the patchset, so we do see frequent tries to scan. Relaxing scan period dynamically could improve results further. [1] sched/numa: Process Adaptive autoNUMA Link: https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20220128052851.17162-1-bharata@amd.com/T/ [2] RFC V1 Link: https://lore.kernel.org/all/cover.1673610485.git.raghavendra.kt@amd.com/ [3] V2 Link: https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/cover.1675159422.git.raghavendra.kt@amd.com/ Results: Summary: Huge autonuma cost reduction seen in mmtest. Kernbench improvement is more than 5% and huge system time (80%+) improvement from mmtest autonuma. (dbench had huge std deviation to post) kernbench =========== 6.2.0-mmunstable-base 6.2.0-mmunstable-patched Amean user-256 22002.51 ( 0.00%) 22649.95 * -2.94%* Amean syst-256 10162.78 ( 0.00%) 8214.13 * 19.17%* Amean elsp-256 160.74 ( 0.00%) 156.92 * 2.38%* Duration User 66017.43 67959.84 Duration System 30503.15 24657.03 Duration Elapsed 504.61 493.12 6.2.0-mmunstable-base 6.2.0-mmunstable-patched Ops NUMA alloc hit 1738835089.00 1738780310.00 Ops NUMA alloc local 1738834448.00 1738779711.00 Ops NUMA base-page range updates 477310.00 392566.00 Ops NUMA PTE updates 477310.00 392566.00 Ops NUMA hint faults 96817.00 87555.00 Ops NUMA hint local faults % 10150.00 2192.00 Ops NUMA hint local percent 10.48 2.50 Ops NUMA pages migrated 86660.00 85363.00 Ops AutoNUMA cost 489.07 442.14 autonumabench =============== 6.2.0-mmunstable-base 6.2.0-mmunstable-patched Amean syst-NUMA01 399.50 ( 0.00%) 52.05 * 86.97%* Amean syst-NUMA01_THREADLOCAL 0.21 ( 0.00%) 0.22 * -5.41%* Amean syst-NUMA02 0.80 ( 0.00%) 0.78 * 2.68%* Amean syst-NUMA02_SMT 0.65 ( 0.00%) 0.68 * -3.95%* Amean elsp-NUMA01 313.26 ( 0.00%) 313.11 * 0.05%* Amean elsp-NUMA01_THREADLOCAL 1.06 ( 0.00%) 1.08 * -1.76%* Amean elsp-NUMA02 3.19 ( 0.00%) 3.24 * -1.52%* Amean elsp-NUMA02_SMT 3.72 ( 0.00%) 3.61 * 2.92%* Duration User 396433.47 324835.96 Duration System 2808.70 376.66 Duration Elapsed 2258.61 2258.12 6.2.0-mmunstable-base 6.2.0-mmunstable-patched Ops NUMA alloc hit 59921806.00 49623489.00 Ops NUMA alloc miss 0.00 0.00 Ops NUMA interleave hit 0.00 0.00 Ops NUMA alloc local 59920880.00 49622594.00 Ops NUMA base-page range updates 152259275.00 50075.00 Ops NUMA PTE updates 152259275.00 50075.00 Ops NUMA PMD updates 0.00 0.00 Ops NUMA hint faults 154660352.00 39014.00 Ops NUMA hint local faults % 138550501.00 23139.00 Ops NUMA hint local percent 89.58 59.31 Ops NUMA pages migrated 8179067.00 14147.00 Ops AutoNUMA cost 774522.98 195.69 This patch (of 4): Currently whenever a new task is created we wait for sysctl_numa_balancing_scan_delay to avoid unnessary scanning overhead. Extend the same logic to new or very short-lived VMAs. [raghavendra.kt@amd.com: add initialization in vm_area_dup())] Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/cover.1677672277.git.raghavendra.kt@amd.com Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/7a6fbba87c8b51e67efd3e74285bb4cb311a16ca.1677672277.git.raghavendra.kt@amd.com Signed-off-by: Mel Gorman <mgorman@techsingularity.net> Signed-off-by: Raghavendra K T <raghavendra.kt@amd.com> Cc: Bharata B Rao <bharata@amd.com> Cc: David Hildenbrand <david@redhat.com> Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com> Cc: Mike Rapoport <rppt@kernel.org> Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> Cc: Disha Talreja <dishaa.talreja@amd.com> Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org> |
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d82caa2735 |
sched/psi: Allow unprivileged polling of N*2s period
PSI offers 2 mechanisms to get information about a specific resource pressure. One is reading from /proc/pressure/<resource>, which gives average pressures aggregated every 2s. The other is creating a pollable fd for a specific resource and cgroup. The trigger creation requires CAP_SYS_RESOURCE, and gives the possibility to pick specific time window and threshold, spawing an RT thread to aggregate the data. Systemd would like to provide containers the option to monitor pressure on their own cgroup and sub-cgroups. For example, if systemd launches a container that itself then launches services, the container should have the ability to poll() for pressure in individual services. But neither the container nor the services are privileged. This patch implements a mechanism to allow unprivileged users to create pressure triggers. The difference with privileged triggers creation is that unprivileged ones must have a time window that's a multiple of 2s. This is so that we can avoid unrestricted spawning of rt threads, and use instead the same aggregation mechanism done for the averages, which runs independently of any triggers. Suggested-by: Johannes Weiner <hannes@cmpxchg.org> Signed-off-by: Domenico Cerasuolo <cerasuolodomenico@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Acked-by: Johannes Weiner <hannes@cmpxchg.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230330105418.77061-5-cerasuolodomenico@gmail.com |
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4468fcae49 |
sched/psi: Extract update_triggers side effect
This change moves update_total flag out of update_triggers function, currently called only in psi_poll_work. In the next patch, update_triggers will be called also in psi_avgs_work, but the total update information is specific to psi_poll_work. Returning update_total value to the caller let us avoid differentiating the implementation of update_triggers for different aggregators. Suggested-by: Johannes Weiner <hannes@cmpxchg.org> Signed-off-by: Domenico Cerasuolo <cerasuolodomenico@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Acked-by: Johannes Weiner <hannes@cmpxchg.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230330105418.77061-4-cerasuolodomenico@gmail.com |
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65457b74aa |
sched/psi: Rename existing poll members in preparation
Renaming in PSI implementation to make a clear distinction between privileged and unprivileged triggers code to be implemented in the next patch. Suggested-by: Johannes Weiner <hannes@cmpxchg.org> Signed-off-by: Domenico Cerasuolo <cerasuolodomenico@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Acked-by: Johannes Weiner <hannes@cmpxchg.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230330105418.77061-3-cerasuolodomenico@gmail.com |
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7fab21fa0d |
sched/psi: Rearrange polling code in preparation
Move a few functions up in the file to avoid forward declaration needed in the patch implementing unprivileged PSI triggers. Suggested-by: Johannes Weiner <hannes@cmpxchg.org> Signed-off-by: Domenico Cerasuolo <cerasuolodomenico@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Acked-by: Johannes Weiner <hannes@cmpxchg.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230330105418.77061-2-cerasuolodomenico@gmail.com |
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39afe5d6fc |
sched/fair: Fix inaccurate tally of ttwu_move_affine
There are scenarios where non-affine wakeups are incorrectly counted as
affine wakeups by schedstats.
When wake_affine_idle() returns prev_cpu which doesn't equal to
nr_cpumask_bits, it will slip through the check: target == nr_cpumask_bits
in wake_affine() and be counted as if target == this_cpu in schedstats.
Replace target == nr_cpumask_bits with target != this_cpu to make sure
affine wakeups are accurately tallied.
Fixes:
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cd8fe5b6db |
Merge 6.3-rc5 into driver-core-next
We need the fixes in here for testing, as well as the driver core changes for documentation updates to build on. Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org> |
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aa464ba9a1 |
lazy tlb: introduce lazy tlb mm refcount helper functions
Add explicit _lazy_tlb annotated functions for lazy tlb mm refcounting. This makes the lazy tlb mm references more obvious, and allows the refcounting scheme to be modified in later changes. There is no functional change with this patch. Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20230203071837.1136453-3-npiggin@gmail.com Signed-off-by: Nicholas Piggin <npiggin@gmail.com> Acked-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> Cc: Andy Lutomirski <luto@kernel.org> Cc: Catalin Marinas <catalin.marinas@arm.com> Cc: Christophe Leroy <christophe.leroy@csgroup.eu> Cc: Dave Hansen <dave.hansen@linux.intel.com> Cc: Michael Ellerman <mpe@ellerman.id.au> Cc: Nadav Amit <nadav.amit@gmail.com> Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> Cc: Rik van Riel <riel@redhat.com> Cc: Will Deacon <will@kernel.org> Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org> |
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68e2d17c9e |
trace: Add trace_ipi_send_cpu()
Because copying cpumasks around when targeting a single CPU is a bit daft... Tested-and-reviewed-by: Valentin Schneider <vschneid@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20230322103004.GA571242%40hirez.programming.kicks-ass.net |
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68f4ff04db |
sched, smp: Trace smp callback causing an IPI
Context ======= The newly-introduced ipi_send_cpumask tracepoint has a "callback" parameter which so far has only been fed with NULL. While CSD_TYPE_SYNC/ASYNC and CSD_TYPE_IRQ_WORK share a similar backing struct layout (meaning their callback func can be accessed without caring about the actual CSD type), CSD_TYPE_TTWU doesn't even have a function attached to its struct. This means we need to check the type of a CSD before eventually dereferencing its associated callback. This isn't as trivial as it sounds: the CSD type is stored in __call_single_node.u_flags, which get cleared right before the callback is executed via csd_unlock(). This implies checking the CSD type before it is enqueued on the call_single_queue, as the target CPU's queue can be flushed before we get to sending an IPI. Furthermore, send_call_function_single_ipi() only has a CPU parameter, and would need to have an additional argument to trickle down the invoked function. This is somewhat silly, as the extra argument will always be pushed down to the function even when nothing is being traced, which is unnecessary overhead. Changes ======= send_call_function_single_ipi() is only used by smp.c, and is defined in sched/core.c as it contains scheduler-specific ops (set_nr_if_polling() of a CPU's idle task). Split it into two parts: the scheduler bits remain in sched/core.c, and the actual IPI emission is moved into smp.c. This lets us define an __always_inline helper function that can take the related callback as parameter without creating useless register pressure in the non-traced path which only gains a (disabled) static branch. Do the same thing for the multi IPI case. Signed-off-by: Valentin Schneider <vschneid@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230307143558.294354-8-vschneid@redhat.com |
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cc9cb0a717 |
sched, smp: Trace IPIs sent via send_call_function_single_ipi()
send_call_function_single_ipi() is the thing that sends IPIs at the bottom of smp_call_function*() via either generic_exec_single() or smp_call_function_many_cond(). Give it an IPI-related tracepoint. Note that this ends up tracing any IPI sent via __smp_call_single_queue(), which covers __ttwu_queue_wakelist() and irq_work_queue_on() "for free". Signed-off-by: Valentin Schneider <vschneid@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Reviewed-by: Steven Rostedt (Google) <rostedt@goodmis.org> Acked-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230307143558.294354-3-vschneid@redhat.com |
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e3ff7c609f |
livepatch,sched: Add livepatch task switching to cond_resched()
There have been reports [1][2] of live patches failing to complete within a reasonable amount of time due to CPU-bound kthreads. Fix it by patching tasks in cond_resched(). There are four different flavors of cond_resched(), depending on the kernel configuration. Hook into all of them. A more elegant solution might be to use a preempt notifier. However, non-ORC unwinders can't unwind a preempted task reliably. [1] https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20220507174628.2086373-1-song@kernel.org/ [2] https://lkml.kernel.org/lkml/20230120-vhost-klp-switching-v1-0-7c2b65519c43@kernel.org Signed-off-by: Josh Poimboeuf <jpoimboe@kernel.org> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Reviewed-by: Petr Mladek <pmladek@suse.com> Tested-by: Seth Forshee (DigitalOcean) <sforshee@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/4ae981466b7814ec221014fc2554b2f86f3fb70b.1677257135.git.jpoimboe@kernel.org |
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41abdba937 |
sched: Interleave cfs bandwidth timers for improved single thread performance at low utilization
CPU cfs bandwidth controller uses hrtimer. Currently there is no initial value set. Hence all period timers would align at expiry. This happens when there are multiple CPU cgroup's. There is a performance gain that can be achieved here if the timers are interleaved when the utilization of each CPU cgroup is low and total utilization of all the CPU cgroup's is less than 50%. If the timers are interleaved, then the unthrottled cgroup can run freely without many context switches and can also benefit from SMT Folding. This effect will be further amplified in SPLPAR environment. This commit adds a random offset after initializing each hrtimer. This would result in interleaving the timers at expiry, which helps in achieving the said performance gain. This was tested on powerpc platform with 8 core SMT=8. Socket power was measured when the workload. Benchmarked the stress-ng with power information. Throughput oriented benchmarks show significant gain up to 25% while power consumption increases up to 15%. Workload: stress-ng --cpu=32 --cpu-ops=50000. 1CG - 1 cgroup is running. 2CG - 2 cgroups are running together. Time taken to complete stress-ng in seconds and power is in watts. each cgroup is throttled at 25% with 100ms as the period value. 6.2-rc6 | with patch 8 core 1CG power 2CG power | 1CG power 2 CG power 27.5 80.6 40 90 | 27.3 82 32.3 104 27.5 81 40.2 91 | 27.5 81 38.7 96 27.7 80 40.1 89 | 27.6 80 29.7 106 27.7 80.1 40.3 94 | 27.6 80 31.5 105 Latency might be affected by this change. That could happen if the CPU was in a deep idle state which is possible if we interleave the timers. Used schbench for measuring the latency. Each cgroup is throttled at 25% with period value is set to 100ms. Numbers are when both the cgroups are running simultaneously. Latency values don't degrade much. Some improvement is seen in tail latencies. 6.2-rc6 with patch Groups: 16 50.0th: 39.5 42.5 75.0th: 924.0 922.0 90.0th: 972.0 968.0 95.0th: 1005.5 994.0 99.0th: 4166.0 2287.0 99.5th: 7314.0 7448.0 99.9th: 15024.0 13600.0 Groups: 32 50.0th: 819.0 463.0 75.0th: 1596.0 918.0 90.0th: 5992.0 1281.5 95.0th: 13184.0 2765.0 99.0th: 21792.0 14240.0 99.5th: 25696.0 18920.0 99.9th: 33280.0 35776.0 Groups: 64 50.0th: 4806.0 3440.0 75.0th: 31136.0 33664.0 90.0th: 54144.0 58752.0 95.0th: 66176.0 67200.0 99.0th: 84736.0 91520.0 99.5th: 97408.0 114048.0 99.9th: 136448.0 140032.0 Initial RFC PATCH, discussions and details on the problem: Link1: https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/5ae3cb09-8c9a-11e8-75a7-cc774d9bc283@linux.vnet.ibm.com/ Link2: https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/9c57c92c-3e0c-b8c5-4be9-8f4df344a347@linux.vnet.ibm.com/ Suggested-by: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> Suggested-by: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de> Signed-off-by: Shrikanth Hegde<sshegde@linux.vnet.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Reviewed-by: Ben Segall <bsegall@google.com> Reviewed-by: Vincent Guittot <vincent.guittot@linaro.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230223185153.1499710-1-sshegde@linux.vnet.ibm.com |
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eff6c8ce8d |
sched/core: Reduce cost of sched_move_task when config autogroup
Some sched_move_task calls are useless because that task_struct->sched_task_group maybe not changed (equals task_group of cpu_cgroup) when system enable autogroup. So do some checks in sched_move_task. sched_move_task eg: task A belongs to cpu_cgroup0 and autogroup0, it will always belong to cpu_cgroup0 when do_exit. So there is no need to do {de|en}queue. The call graph is as follow. do_exit sched_autogroup_exit_task sched_move_task dequeue_task sched_change_group A.sched_task_group = sched_get_task_group (=cpu_cgroup0) enqueue_task Performance results: =========================== 1. env cpu: bogomips=4600.00 kernel: 6.3.0-rc3 cpu_cgroup: 6:cpu,cpuacct:/user.slice 2. cmds do_exit script: for i in {0..10000}; do sleep 0 & done wait Run the above script, then use the following bpftrace cmd to get the cost of sched_move_task: bpftrace -e 'k:sched_move_task { @ts[tid] = nsecs; } kr:sched_move_task /@ts[tid]/ { @ns += nsecs - @ts[tid]; delete(@ts[tid]); }' 3. cost time(ns): without patch: 43528033 with patch: 18541416 diff:-24986617 -57.4% As the result show, the patch will save 57.4% in the scenario. Signed-off-by: wuchi <wuchi.zero@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20230321064459.39421-1-wuchi.zero@gmail.com |
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530bfad1d5 |
sched/core: Avoid selecting the task that is throttled to run when core-sched enable
When {rt, cfs}_rq or dl task is throttled, since cookied tasks are not dequeued from the core tree, So sched_core_find() and sched_core_next() may return throttled task, which may cause throttled task to run on the CPU. So we add checks in sched_core_find() and sched_core_next() to make sure that the return is a runnable task that is not throttled. Co-developed-by: Cruz Zhao <CruzZhao@linux.alibaba.com> Signed-off-by: Cruz Zhao <CruzZhao@linux.alibaba.com> Signed-off-by: Hao Jia <jiahao.os@bytedance.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20230316081806.69544-1-jiahao.os@bytedance.com |
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d91e15a21d |
sched/topology: Make sched_energy_mutex,update static
smatch reports kernel/sched/topology.c:212:1: warning: symbol 'sched_energy_mutex' was not declared. Should it be static? kernel/sched/topology.c:213:6: warning: symbol 'sched_energy_update' was not declared. Should it be static? These variables are only used in topology.c, so should be static Signed-off-by: Tom Rix <trix@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Reviewed-by: Valentin Schneider <vschneid@redhat.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230314144818.1453523-1-trix@redhat.com |
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a53ce18cac |
sched/fair: Sanitize vruntime of entity being migrated
Commit |
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34320745df |
sched/debug: Put sched/domains files under the verbose flag
The debug files under sched/domains can take a long time to regenerate, especially when updates are done one at a time. Move these files under the sched verbose debug flag. Allow changes to verbose to trigger generation of the files. This lets a user batch the updates but still have the information available. The detailed topology printk messages are also under verbose. Discussion that lead to this approach can be found in the link below. Simplified code to maintain use of debugfs bool routines suggested by Michael Ellerman <mpe@ellerman.id.au>. Signed-off-by: Phil Auld <pauld@redhat.com> Acked-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org> Reviewed-by: Valentin Schneider <vschneid@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Srikar Dronamraju <srikar@linux.vnet.ibm.com> Tested-by: Vishal Chourasia <vishalc@linux.vnet.ibm.com> Cc: Michael Ellerman <mpe@ellerman.id.au> Cc: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org> Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com> Cc: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Cc: Srikar Dronamraju <srikar@linux.vnet.ibm.com> Cc: Valentin Schneider <vschneid@redhat.com> Cc: Vishal Chourasia <vishalc@linux.vnet.ibm.com> Cc: Vincent Guittot <vincent.guittot@linaro.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/all/Y01UWQL2y2r69sBX@li-05afa54c-330e-11b2-a85c-e3f3aa0db1e9.ibm.com/ Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230303183754.3076321-1-pauld@redhat.com Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org> |
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6015b1aca1 |
sched_getaffinity: don't assume 'cpumask_size()' is fully initialized
The getaffinity() system call uses 'cpumask_size()' to decide how big the CPU mask is - so far so good. It is indeed the allocation size of a cpumask. But the code also assumes that the whole allocation is initialized without actually doing so itself. That's wrong, because we might have fixed-size allocations (making copying and clearing more efficient), but not all of it is then necessarily used if 'nr_cpu_ids' is smaller. Having checked other users of 'cpumask_size()', they all seem to be ok, either using it purely for the allocation size, or explicitly zeroing the cpumask before using the size in bytes to copy it. See for example the ublk_ctrl_get_queue_affinity() function that uses the proper 'zalloc_cpumask_var()' to make sure that the whole mask is cleared, whether the storage is on the stack or if it was an external allocation. Fix this by just zeroing the allocation before using it. Do the same for the compat version of sched_getaffinity(), which had the same logic. Also, for consistency, make sched_getaffinity() use 'cpumask_bits()' to access the bits. For a cpumask_var_t, it ends up being a pointer to the same data either way, but it's just a good idea to treat it like you would a 'cpumask_t'. The compat case already did that. Reported-by: Ryan Roberts <ryan.roberts@arm.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/7d026744-6bd6-6827-0471-b5e8eae0be3f@arm.com/ Cc: Yury Norov <yury.norov@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> |
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071c44e427 |
sched/idle: Mark arch_cpu_idle_dead() __noreturn
Before commit 076cbf5d2163 ("x86/xen: don't let xen_pv_play_dead() return"), in Xen, when a previously offlined CPU was brought back online, it unexpectedly resumed execution where it left off in the middle of the idle loop. There were some hacks to make that work, but the behavior was surprising as do_idle() doesn't expect an offlined CPU to return from the dead (in arch_cpu_idle_dead()). Now that Xen has been fixed, and the arch-specific implementations of arch_cpu_idle_dead() also don't return, give it a __noreturn attribute. This will cause the compiler to complain if an arch-specific implementation might return. It also improves code generation for both caller and callee. Also fixes the following warning: vmlinux.o: warning: objtool: do_idle+0x25f: unreachable instruction Reported-by: Paul E. McKenney <paulmck@kernel.org> Tested-by: Paul E. McKenney <paulmck@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/60d527353da8c99d4cf13b6473131d46719ed16d.1676358308.git.jpoimboe@kernel.org Signed-off-by: Josh Poimboeuf <jpoimboe@kernel.org> |
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dfb0f170ca |
sched/idle: Make sure weak version of arch_cpu_idle_dead() doesn't return
arch_cpu_idle_dead() should never return. Make it so. Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/cf5ad95eef50f7704bb30e7770c59bfe23372af7.1676358308.git.jpoimboe@kernel.org Signed-off-by: Josh Poimboeuf <jpoimboe@kernel.org> |
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c8b4accf86 |
More power management updates for 6.3-rc1
- Fix error handling in the apple-soc cpufreq driver (Dan Carpenter). - Change the log level of a message in the amd-pstate cpufreq driver so it is more visible to users (Kai-Heng Feng). - Adjust the balance_performance EPP value for Sapphire Rapids in the intel_pstate cpufreq driver (Srinivas Pandruvada). - Remove MODULE_LICENSE from 3 pieces of non-modular code (Nick Alcock). - Make a read-only kobj_type structure in the schedutil cpufreq governor constant (Thomas Weißschuh). - Add Add Power Limit4 support for Meteor Lake SoC to the Intel RAPL power capping driver (Sumeet Pawnikar). -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- iQJGBAABCAAwFiEE4fcc61cGeeHD/fCwgsRv/nhiVHEFAmQCNm0SHHJqd0Byand5 c29ja2kubmV0AAoJEILEb/54YlRx0P8QAJdcjEg4cY/OJq9VTqiUo92mt63aqWXr vOMYgp5QDuDRPKiVMMuCJNCJSrA/xPwAz4pcSOj/59CZn1UZqzg6Ap/vdmV7pQV1 vDp6N9E2sgCL0QMQqueyv3yEN9meleGrQPnAulOZf29Q9PC0rGiAUdivvgDXZq/9 9wo+/11EzZpKyaDTfLzotIvNOkmmkp5FtxaCR64D5w3e6gehGrL/wL3FgSefDnsa fNlhxgi66FYuamSgXqQTkuIuig0Rbvlp0fmhllPaIOkNMI4o7rvP5rB7FbAKZm1E XI+M3aVlZsImPpEEJ1dTqbc4y9WU9HakLfRRSiUnnWHSXpwBI8ncEwP0oulqqVoF elA9kd7Sv1DwLiUGMy3GaOwscTN6NDUwICH4UJeISWlMZfrP7YR3Bb7gVtzlCrKC b99oA92OFazzWliYPSzzSsFQTI1PczNLZKnelzgF1+5g76q3sIUa3tu6Ts6Z84UK rHCLDVw8TUFpsEQxKOvM3oLUdpvE0mmQpdG8fSeHVxon47jVzmkbDjgOBFp1i19F HBI7LfOhDkkzO35qb6+DfkQoij0mpn8ldbVVLd1XQe4F0WjfSe8D4oGTgB3ErTK7 8cOKGoez9FsQRHbSVCaZcaTSemDHdB3UMRUHG2hvU1jbwXOaQcLfMAF5McyECJiN U8uI28JVGVPI =lRKS -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- Merge tag 'pm-6.3-rc1-2' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/rafael/linux-pm Pull more power management updates from Rafael Wysocki: "These update power capping (new hardware support and cleanup) and cpufreq (bug fixes, cleanups and intel_pstate adjustment for a new platform). Specifics: - Fix error handling in the apple-soc cpufreq driver (Dan Carpenter) - Change the log level of a message in the amd-pstate cpufreq driver so it is more visible to users (Kai-Heng Feng) - Adjust the balance_performance EPP value for Sapphire Rapids in the intel_pstate cpufreq driver (Srinivas Pandruvada) - Remove MODULE_LICENSE from 3 pieces of non-modular code (Nick Alcock) - Make a read-only kobj_type structure in the schedutil cpufreq governor constant (Thomas Weißschuh) - Add Add Power Limit4 support for Meteor Lake SoC to the Intel RAPL power capping driver (Sumeet Pawnikar)" * tag 'pm-6.3-rc1-2' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/rafael/linux-pm: cpufreq: apple-soc: Fix an IS_ERR() vs NULL check powercap: remove MODULE_LICENSE in non-modules cpufreq: intel_pstate: remove MODULE_LICENSE in non-modules powercap: RAPL: Add Power Limit4 support for Meteor Lake SoC cpufreq: amd-pstate: remove MODULE_LICENSE in non-modules cpufreq: schedutil: make kobj_type structure constant cpufreq: amd-pstate: Let user know amd-pstate is disabled cpufreq: intel_pstate: Adjust balance_performance EPP for Sapphire Rapids |
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3822a7c409 |
- Daniel Verkamp has contributed a memfd series ("mm/memfd: add
F_SEAL_EXEC") which permits the setting of the memfd execute bit at memfd creation time, with the option of sealing the state of the X bit. - Peter Xu adds a patch series ("mm/hugetlb: Make huge_pte_offset() thread-safe for pmd unshare") which addresses a rare race condition related to PMD unsharing. - Several folioification patch serieses from Matthew Wilcox, Vishal Moola, Sidhartha Kumar and Lorenzo Stoakes - Johannes Weiner has a series ("mm: push down lock_page_memcg()") which does perform some memcg maintenance and cleanup work. - SeongJae Park has added DAMOS filtering to DAMON, with the series "mm/damon/core: implement damos filter". These filters provide users with finer-grained control over DAMOS's actions. SeongJae has also done some DAMON cleanup work. - Kairui Song adds a series ("Clean up and fixes for swap"). - Vernon Yang contributed the series "Clean up and refinement for maple tree". - Yu Zhao has contributed the "mm: multi-gen LRU: memcg LRU" series. It adds to MGLRU an LRU of memcgs, to improve the scalability of global reclaim. - David Hildenbrand has added some userfaultfd cleanup work in the series "mm: uffd-wp + change_protection() cleanups". - Christoph Hellwig has removed the generic_writepages() library function in the series "remove generic_writepages". - Baolin Wang has performed some maintenance on the compaction code in his series "Some small improvements for compaction". - Sidhartha Kumar is doing some maintenance work on struct page in his series "Get rid of tail page fields". - David Hildenbrand contributed some cleanup, bugfixing and generalization of pte management and of pte debugging in his series "mm: support __HAVE_ARCH_PTE_SWP_EXCLUSIVE on all architectures with swap PTEs". - Mel Gorman and Neil Brown have removed the __GFP_ATOMIC allocation flag in the series "Discard __GFP_ATOMIC". - Sergey Senozhatsky has improved zsmalloc's memory utilization with his series "zsmalloc: make zspage chain size configurable". - Joey Gouly has added prctl() support for prohibiting the creation of writeable+executable mappings. The previous BPF-based approach had shortcomings. See "mm: In-kernel support for memory-deny-write-execute (MDWE)". - Waiman Long did some kmemleak cleanup and bugfixing in the series "mm/kmemleak: Simplify kmemleak_cond_resched() & fix UAF". - T.J. Alumbaugh has contributed some MGLRU cleanup work in his series "mm: multi-gen LRU: improve". - Jiaqi Yan has provided some enhancements to our memory error statistics reporting, mainly by presenting the statistics on a per-node basis. See the series "Introduce per NUMA node memory error statistics". - Mel Gorman has a second and hopefully final shot at fixing a CPU-hog regression in compaction via his series "Fix excessive CPU usage during compaction". - Christoph Hellwig does some vmalloc maintenance work in the series "cleanup vfree and vunmap". - Christoph Hellwig has removed block_device_operations.rw_page() in ths series "remove ->rw_page". - We get some maple_tree improvements and cleanups in Liam Howlett's series "VMA tree type safety and remove __vma_adjust()". - Suren Baghdasaryan has done some work on the maintainability of our vm_flags handling in the series "introduce vm_flags modifier functions". - Some pagemap cleanup and generalization work in Mike Rapoport's series "mm, arch: add generic implementation of pfn_valid() for FLATMEM" and "fixups for generic implementation of pfn_valid()" - Baoquan He has done some work to make /proc/vmallocinfo and /proc/kcore better represent the real state of things in his series "mm/vmalloc.c: allow vread() to read out vm_map_ram areas". - Jason Gunthorpe rationalized the GUP system's interface to the rest of the kernel in the series "Simplify the external interface for GUP". - SeongJae Park wishes to migrate people from DAMON's debugfs interface over to its sysfs interface. To support this, we'll temporarily be printing warnings when people use the debugfs interface. See the series "mm/damon: deprecate DAMON debugfs interface". - Andrey Konovalov provided the accurately named "lib/stackdepot: fixes and clean-ups" series. - Huang Ying has provided a dramatic reduction in migration's TLB flush IPI rates with the series "migrate_pages(): batch TLB flushing". - Arnd Bergmann has some objtool fixups in "objtool warning fixes". -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- iHUEABYIAB0WIQTTMBEPP41GrTpTJgfdBJ7gKXxAjgUCY/PoPQAKCRDdBJ7gKXxA jlvpAPsFECUBBl20qSue2zCYWnHC7Yk4q9ytTkPB/MMDrFEN9wD/SNKEm2UoK6/K DmxHkn0LAitGgJRS/W9w81yrgig9tAQ= =MlGs -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- Merge tag 'mm-stable-2023-02-20-13-37' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/akpm/mm Pull MM updates from Andrew Morton: - Daniel Verkamp has contributed a memfd series ("mm/memfd: add F_SEAL_EXEC") which permits the setting of the memfd execute bit at memfd creation time, with the option of sealing the state of the X bit. - Peter Xu adds a patch series ("mm/hugetlb: Make huge_pte_offset() thread-safe for pmd unshare") which addresses a rare race condition related to PMD unsharing. - Several folioification patch serieses from Matthew Wilcox, Vishal Moola, Sidhartha Kumar and Lorenzo Stoakes - Johannes Weiner has a series ("mm: push down lock_page_memcg()") which does perform some memcg maintenance and cleanup work. - SeongJae Park has added DAMOS filtering to DAMON, with the series "mm/damon/core: implement damos filter". These filters provide users with finer-grained control over DAMOS's actions. SeongJae has also done some DAMON cleanup work. - Kairui Song adds a series ("Clean up and fixes for swap"). - Vernon Yang contributed the series "Clean up and refinement for maple tree". - Yu Zhao has contributed the "mm: multi-gen LRU: memcg LRU" series. It adds to MGLRU an LRU of memcgs, to improve the scalability of global reclaim. - David Hildenbrand has added some userfaultfd cleanup work in the series "mm: uffd-wp + change_protection() cleanups". - Christoph Hellwig has removed the generic_writepages() library function in the series "remove generic_writepages". - Baolin Wang has performed some maintenance on the compaction code in his series "Some small improvements for compaction". - Sidhartha Kumar is doing some maintenance work on struct page in his series "Get rid of tail page fields". - David Hildenbrand contributed some cleanup, bugfixing and generalization of pte management and of pte debugging in his series "mm: support __HAVE_ARCH_PTE_SWP_EXCLUSIVE on all architectures with swap PTEs". - Mel Gorman and Neil Brown have removed the __GFP_ATOMIC allocation flag in the series "Discard __GFP_ATOMIC". - Sergey Senozhatsky has improved zsmalloc's memory utilization with his series "zsmalloc: make zspage chain size configurable". - Joey Gouly has added prctl() support for prohibiting the creation of writeable+executable mappings. The previous BPF-based approach had shortcomings. See "mm: In-kernel support for memory-deny-write-execute (MDWE)". - Waiman Long did some kmemleak cleanup and bugfixing in the series "mm/kmemleak: Simplify kmemleak_cond_resched() & fix UAF". - T.J. Alumbaugh has contributed some MGLRU cleanup work in his series "mm: multi-gen LRU: improve". - Jiaqi Yan has provided some enhancements to our memory error statistics reporting, mainly by presenting the statistics on a per-node basis. See the series "Introduce per NUMA node memory error statistics". - Mel Gorman has a second and hopefully final shot at fixing a CPU-hog regression in compaction via his series "Fix excessive CPU usage during compaction". - Christoph Hellwig does some vmalloc maintenance work in the series "cleanup vfree and vunmap". - Christoph Hellwig has removed block_device_operations.rw_page() in ths series "remove ->rw_page". - We get some maple_tree improvements and cleanups in Liam Howlett's series "VMA tree type safety and remove __vma_adjust()". - Suren Baghdasaryan has done some work on the maintainability of our vm_flags handling in the series "introduce vm_flags modifier functions". - Some pagemap cleanup and generalization work in Mike Rapoport's series "mm, arch: add generic implementation of pfn_valid() for FLATMEM" and "fixups for generic implementation of pfn_valid()" - Baoquan He has done some work to make /proc/vmallocinfo and /proc/kcore better represent the real state of things in his series "mm/vmalloc.c: allow vread() to read out vm_map_ram areas". - Jason Gunthorpe rationalized the GUP system's interface to the rest of the kernel in the series "Simplify the external interface for GUP". - SeongJae Park wishes to migrate people from DAMON's debugfs interface over to its sysfs interface. To support this, we'll temporarily be printing warnings when people use the debugfs interface. See the series "mm/damon: deprecate DAMON debugfs interface". - Andrey Konovalov provided the accurately named "lib/stackdepot: fixes and clean-ups" series. - Huang Ying has provided a dramatic reduction in migration's TLB flush IPI rates with the series "migrate_pages(): batch TLB flushing". - Arnd Bergmann has some objtool fixups in "objtool warning fixes". * tag 'mm-stable-2023-02-20-13-37' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/akpm/mm: (505 commits) include/linux/migrate.h: remove unneeded externs mm/memory_hotplug: cleanup return value handing in do_migrate_range() mm/uffd: fix comment in handling pte markers mm: change to return bool for isolate_movable_page() mm: hugetlb: change to return bool for isolate_hugetlb() mm: change to return bool for isolate_lru_page() mm: change to return bool for folio_isolate_lru() objtool: add UACCESS exceptions for __tsan_volatile_read/write kmsan: disable ftrace in kmsan core code kasan: mark addr_has_metadata __always_inline mm: memcontrol: rename memcg_kmem_enabled() sh: initialize max_mapnr m68k/nommu: add missing definition of ARCH_PFN_OFFSET mm: percpu: fix incorrect size in pcpu_obj_full_size() maple_tree: reduce stack usage with gcc-9 and earlier mm: page_alloc: call panic() when memoryless node allocation fails mm: multi-gen LRU: avoid futile retries migrate_pages: move THP/hugetlb migration support check to simplify code migrate_pages: batch flushing TLB migrate_pages: share more code between _unmap and _move ... |
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70ba26cbe0 |
cpufreq: schedutil: make kobj_type structure constant
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5b7c4cabbb |
Networking changes for 6.3.
Core ---- - Add dedicated kmem_cache for typical/small skb->head, avoid having to access struct page at kfree time, and improve memory use. - Introduce sysctl to set default RPS configuration for new netdevs. - Define Netlink protocol specification format which can be used to describe messages used by each family and auto-generate parsers. Add tools for generating kernel data structures and uAPI headers. - Expose all net/core sysctls inside netns. - Remove 4s sleep in netpoll if carrier is instantly detected on boot. - Add configurable limit of MDB entries per port, and port-vlan. - Continue populating drop reasons throughout the stack. - Retire a handful of legacy Qdiscs and classifiers. Protocols --------- - Support IPv4 big TCP (TSO frames larger than 64kB). - Add IP_LOCAL_PORT_RANGE socket option, to control local port range on socket by socket basis. - Track and report in procfs number of MPTCP sockets used. - Support mixing IPv4 and IPv6 flows in the in-kernel MPTCP path manager. - IPv6: don't check net.ipv6.route.max_size and rely on garbage collection to free memory (similarly to IPv4). - Support Penultimate Segment Pop (PSP) flavor in SRv6 (RFC8986). - ICMP: add per-rate limit counters. - Add support for user scanning requests in ieee802154. - Remove static WEP support. - Support minimal Wi-Fi 7 Extremely High Throughput (EHT) rate reporting. - WiFi 7 EHT channel puncturing support (client & AP). BPF --- - Add a rbtree data structure following the "next-gen data structure" precedent set by recently added linked list, that is, by using kfunc + kptr instead of adding a new BPF map type. - Expose XDP hints via kfuncs with initial support for RX hash and timestamp metadata. - Add BPF_F_NO_TUNNEL_KEY extension to bpf_skb_set_tunnel_key to better support decap on GRE tunnel devices not operating in collect metadata. - Improve x86 JIT's codegen for PROBE_MEM runtime error checks. - Remove the need for trace_printk_lock for bpf_trace_printk and bpf_trace_vprintk helpers. - Extend libbpf's bpf_tracing.h support for tracing arguments of kprobes/uprobes and syscall as a special case. - Significantly reduce the search time for module symbols by livepatch and BPF. - Enable cpumasks to be used as kptrs, which is useful for tracing programs tracking which tasks end up running on which CPUs in different time intervals. - Add support for BPF trampoline on s390x and riscv64. - Add capability to export the XDP features supported by the NIC. - Add __bpf_kfunc tag for marking kernel functions as kfuncs. - Add cgroup.memory=nobpf kernel parameter option to disable BPF memory accounting for container environments. Netfilter --------- - Remove the CLUSTERIP target. It has been marked as obsolete for years, and we still have WARN splats wrt. races of the out-of-band /proc interface installed by this target. - Add 'destroy' commands to nf_tables. They are identical to the existing 'delete' commands, but do not return an error if the referenced object (set, chain, rule...) did not exist. Driver API ---------- - Improve cpumask_local_spread() locality to help NICs set the right IRQ affinity on AMD platforms. - Separate C22 and C45 MDIO bus transactions more clearly. - Introduce new DCB table to control DSCP rewrite on egress. - Support configuration of Physical Layer Collision Avoidance (PLCA) Reconciliation Sublayer (RS) (802.3cg-2019). Modern version of shared medium Ethernet. - Support for MAC Merge layer (IEEE 802.3-2018 clause 99). Allowing preemption of low priority frames by high priority frames. - Add support for controlling MACSec offload using netlink SET. - Rework devlink instance refcounts to allow registration and de-registration under the instance lock. Split the code into multiple files, drop some of the unnecessarily granular locks and factor out common parts of netlink operation handling. - Add TX frame aggregation parameters (for USB drivers). - Add a new attr TCA_EXT_WARN_MSG to report TC (offload) warning messages with notifications for debug. - Allow offloading of UDP NEW connections via act_ct. - Add support for per action HW stats in TC. - Support hardware miss to TC action (continue processing in SW from a specific point in the action chain). - Warn if old Wireless Extension user space interface is used with modern cfg80211/mac80211 drivers. Do not support Wireless Extensions for Wi-Fi 7 devices at all. Everyone should switch to using nl80211 interface instead. - Improve the CAN bit timing configuration. Use extack to return error messages directly to user space, update the SJW handling, including the definition of a new default value that will benefit CAN-FD controllers, by increasing their oscillator tolerance. New hardware / drivers ---------------------- - Ethernet: - nVidia BlueField-3 support (control traffic driver) - Ethernet support for imx93 SoCs - Motorcomm yt8531 gigabit Ethernet PHY - onsemi NCN26000 10BASE-T1S PHY (with support for PLCA) - Microchip LAN8841 PHY (incl. cable diagnostics and PTP) - Amlogic gxl MDIO mux - WiFi: - RealTek RTL8188EU (rtl8xxxu) - Qualcomm Wi-Fi 7 devices (ath12k) - CAN: - Renesas R-Car V4H Drivers ------- - Bluetooth: - Set Per Platform Antenna Gain (PPAG) for Intel controllers. - Ethernet NICs: - Intel (1G, igc): - support TSN / Qbv / packet scheduling features of i226 model - Intel (100G, ice): - use GNSS subsystem instead of TTY - multi-buffer XDP support - extend support for GPIO pins to E823 devices - nVidia/Mellanox: - update the shared buffer configuration on PFC commands - implement PTP adjphase function for HW offset control - TC support for Geneve and GRE with VF tunnel offload - more efficient crypto key management method - multi-port eswitch support - Netronome/Corigine: - add DCB IEEE support - support IPsec offloading for NFP3800 - Freescale/NXP (enetc): - enetc: support XDP_REDIRECT for XDP non-linear buffers - enetc: improve reconfig, avoid link flap and waiting for idle - enetc: support MAC Merge layer - Other NICs: - sfc/ef100: add basic devlink support for ef100 - ionic: rx_push mode operation (writing descriptors via MMIO) - bnxt: use the auxiliary bus abstraction for RDMA - r8169: disable ASPM and reset bus in case of tx timeout - cpsw: support QSGMII mode for J721e CPSW9G - cpts: support pulse-per-second output - ngbe: add an mdio bus driver - usbnet: optimize usbnet_bh() by avoiding unnecessary queuing - r8152: handle devices with FW with NCM support - amd-xgbe: support 10Mbps, 2.5GbE speeds and rx-adaptation - virtio-net: support multi buffer XDP - virtio/vsock: replace virtio_vsock_pkt with sk_buff - tsnep: XDP support - Ethernet high-speed switches: - nVidia/Mellanox (mlxsw): - add support for latency TLV (in FW control messages) - Microchip (sparx5): - separate explicit and implicit traffic forwarding rules, make the implicit rules always active - add support for egress DSCP rewrite - IS0 VCAP support (Ingress Classification) - IS2 VCAP filters (protos, L3 addrs, L4 ports, flags, ToS etc.) - ES2 VCAP support (Egress Access Control) - support for Per-Stream Filtering and Policing (802.1Q, 8.6.5.1) - Ethernet embedded switches: - Marvell (mv88e6xxx): - add MAB (port auth) offload support - enable PTP receive for mv88e6390 - NXP (ocelot): - support MAC Merge layer - support for the the vsc7512 internal copper phys - Microchip: - lan9303: convert to PHYLINK - lan966x: support TC flower filter statistics - lan937x: PTP support for KSZ9563/KSZ8563 and LAN937x - lan937x: support Credit Based Shaper configuration - ksz9477: support Energy Efficient Ethernet - other: - qca8k: convert to regmap read/write API, use bulk operations - rswitch: Improve TX timestamp accuracy - Intel WiFi (iwlwifi): - EHT (Wi-Fi 7) rate reporting - STEP equalizer support: transfer some STEP (connection to radio on platforms with integrated wifi) related parameters from the BIOS to the firmware. - Qualcomm 802.11ax WiFi (ath11k): - IPQ5018 support - Fine Timing Measurement (FTM) responder role support - channel 177 support - MediaTek WiFi (mt76): - per-PHY LED support - mt7996: EHT (Wi-Fi 7) support - Wireless Ethernet Dispatch (WED) reset support - switch to using page pool allocator - RealTek WiFi (rtw89): - support new version of Bluetooth co-existance - Mobile: - rmnet: support TX aggregation. Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- iQIzBAABCAAdFiEE6jPA+I1ugmIBA4hXMUZtbf5SIrsFAmP1VIYACgkQMUZtbf5S IrvsChAApz0rNL/sPKxXTEfxZ1tN7D3sYxYKQPomxvl5BV+MvicrLddJy3KmzEFK nnJNO3nuRNuH422JQ/ylZ4mGX1opa6+5QJb0UINImXUI7Fm8HHBIuPGkv7d5CheZ 7JexFqjPJXUy9nPyh1Rra+IA9AcRd2U7jeGEZR38wb99bHJQj5Bzdk20WArEB0el n44aqg49LXH71bSeXRz77x5SjkwVtYiccQxLcnmTbjLU2xVraLvI2J+wAhHnVXWW 9lrU1+V4Ex2Xcd1xR0L0cHeK+meP1TrPRAeF+JDpVI3a/zJiE7cZjfHdG/jH5xWl leZJqghVozrZQNtewWWO7XhUFhMDgFu3W/1vNLjSHPZEqaz1JpM67J1+ql6s63l4 LMWoXbcYZz+SL9ZRCoPkbGue/5fKSHv8/Jl9Sh58+eTS+c/zgN8uFGRNFXLX1+EP n8uvt985PxMd6x1+dHumhOUzxnY4Sfi1vjitSunTsNFQ3Cmp4SO0IfBVJWfLUCuC xz5hbJGJJbSpvUsO+HWyCg83E5OWghRE/Onpt2jsQSZCrO9HDg4FRTEf3WAMgaqc edb5KfbRZPTJQM08gWdluXzSk1nw3FNP2tXW4XlgUrEbjb+fOk0V9dQg2gyYTxQ1 Nhvn8ZQPi6/GMMELHAIPGmmW1allyOGiAzGlQsv8EmL+OFM6WDI= =xXhC -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- Merge tag 'net-next-6.3' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/netdev/net-next Pull networking updates from Jakub Kicinski: "Core: - Add dedicated kmem_cache for typical/small skb->head, avoid having to access struct page at kfree time, and improve memory use. - Introduce sysctl to set default RPS configuration for new netdevs. - Define Netlink protocol specification format which can be used to describe messages used by each family and auto-generate parsers. Add tools for generating kernel data structures and uAPI headers. - Expose all net/core sysctls inside netns. - Remove 4s sleep in netpoll if carrier is instantly detected on boot. - Add configurable limit of MDB entries per port, and port-vlan. - Continue populating drop reasons throughout the stack. - Retire a handful of legacy Qdiscs and classifiers. Protocols: - Support IPv4 big TCP (TSO frames larger than 64kB). - Add IP_LOCAL_PORT_RANGE socket option, to control local port range on socket by socket basis. - Track and report in procfs number of MPTCP sockets used. - Support mixing IPv4 and IPv6 flows in the in-kernel MPTCP path manager. - IPv6: don't check net.ipv6.route.max_size and rely on garbage collection to free memory (similarly to IPv4). - Support Penultimate Segment Pop (PSP) flavor in SRv6 (RFC8986). - ICMP: add per-rate limit counters. - Add support for user scanning requests in ieee802154. - Remove static WEP support. - Support minimal Wi-Fi 7 Extremely High Throughput (EHT) rate reporting. - WiFi 7 EHT channel puncturing support (client & AP). BPF: - Add a rbtree data structure following the "next-gen data structure" precedent set by recently added linked list, that is, by using kfunc + kptr instead of adding a new BPF map type. - Expose XDP hints via kfuncs with initial support for RX hash and timestamp metadata. - Add BPF_F_NO_TUNNEL_KEY extension to bpf_skb_set_tunnel_key to better support decap on GRE tunnel devices not operating in collect metadata. - Improve x86 JIT's codegen for PROBE_MEM runtime error checks. - Remove the need for trace_printk_lock for bpf_trace_printk and bpf_trace_vprintk helpers. - Extend libbpf's bpf_tracing.h support for tracing arguments of kprobes/uprobes and syscall as a special case. - Significantly reduce the search time for module symbols by livepatch and BPF. - Enable cpumasks to be used as kptrs, which is useful for tracing programs tracking which tasks end up running on which CPUs in different time intervals. - Add support for BPF trampoline on s390x and riscv64. - Add capability to export the XDP features supported by the NIC. - Add __bpf_kfunc tag for marking kernel functions as kfuncs. - Add cgroup.memory=nobpf kernel parameter option to disable BPF memory accounting for container environments. Netfilter: - Remove the CLUSTERIP target. It has been marked as obsolete for years, and we still have WARN splats wrt races of the out-of-band /proc interface installed by this target. - Add 'destroy' commands to nf_tables. They are identical to the existing 'delete' commands, but do not return an error if the referenced object (set, chain, rule...) did not exist. Driver API: - Improve cpumask_local_spread() locality to help NICs set the right IRQ affinity on AMD platforms. - Separate C22 and C45 MDIO bus transactions more clearly. - Introduce new DCB table to control DSCP rewrite on egress. - Support configuration of Physical Layer Collision Avoidance (PLCA) Reconciliation Sublayer (RS) (802.3cg-2019). Modern version of shared medium Ethernet. - Support for MAC Merge layer (IEEE 802.3-2018 clause 99). Allowing preemption of low priority frames by high priority frames. - Add support for controlling MACSec offload using netlink SET. - Rework devlink instance refcounts to allow registration and de-registration under the instance lock. Split the code into multiple files, drop some of the unnecessarily granular locks and factor out common parts of netlink operation handling. - Add TX frame aggregation parameters (for USB drivers). - Add a new attr TCA_EXT_WARN_MSG to report TC (offload) warning messages with notifications for debug. - Allow offloading of UDP NEW connections via act_ct. - Add support for per action HW stats in TC. - Support hardware miss to TC action (continue processing in SW from a specific point in the action chain). - Warn if old Wireless Extension user space interface is used with modern cfg80211/mac80211 drivers. Do not support Wireless Extensions for Wi-Fi 7 devices at all. Everyone should switch to using nl80211 interface instead. - Improve the CAN bit timing configuration. Use extack to return error messages directly to user space, update the SJW handling, including the definition of a new default value that will benefit CAN-FD controllers, by increasing their oscillator tolerance. New hardware / drivers: - Ethernet: - nVidia BlueField-3 support (control traffic driver) - Ethernet support for imx93 SoCs - Motorcomm yt8531 gigabit Ethernet PHY - onsemi NCN26000 10BASE-T1S PHY (with support for PLCA) - Microchip LAN8841 PHY (incl. cable diagnostics and PTP) - Amlogic gxl MDIO mux - WiFi: - RealTek RTL8188EU (rtl8xxxu) - Qualcomm Wi-Fi 7 devices (ath12k) - CAN: - Renesas R-Car V4H Drivers: - Bluetooth: - Set Per Platform Antenna Gain (PPAG) for Intel controllers. - Ethernet NICs: - Intel (1G, igc): - support TSN / Qbv / packet scheduling features of i226 model - Intel (100G, ice): - use GNSS subsystem instead of TTY - multi-buffer XDP support - extend support for GPIO pins to E823 devices - nVidia/Mellanox: - update the shared buffer configuration on PFC commands - implement PTP adjphase function for HW offset control - TC support for Geneve and GRE with VF tunnel offload - more efficient crypto key management method - multi-port eswitch support - Netronome/Corigine: - add DCB IEEE support - support IPsec offloading for NFP3800 - Freescale/NXP (enetc): - support XDP_REDIRECT for XDP non-linear buffers - improve reconfig, avoid link flap and waiting for idle - support MAC Merge layer - Other NICs: - sfc/ef100: add basic devlink support for ef100 - ionic: rx_push mode operation (writing descriptors via MMIO) - bnxt: use the auxiliary bus abstraction for RDMA - r8169: disable ASPM and reset bus in case of tx timeout - cpsw: support QSGMII mode for J721e CPSW9G - cpts: support pulse-per-second output - ngbe: add an mdio bus driver - usbnet: optimize usbnet_bh() by avoiding unnecessary queuing - r8152: handle devices with FW with NCM support - amd-xgbe: support 10Mbps, 2.5GbE speeds and rx-adaptation - virtio-net: support multi buffer XDP - virtio/vsock: replace virtio_vsock_pkt with sk_buff - tsnep: XDP support - Ethernet high-speed switches: - nVidia/Mellanox (mlxsw): - add support for latency TLV (in FW control messages) - Microchip (sparx5): - separate explicit and implicit traffic forwarding rules, make the implicit rules always active - add support for egress DSCP rewrite - IS0 VCAP support (Ingress Classification) - IS2 VCAP filters (protos, L3 addrs, L4 ports, flags, ToS etc.) - ES2 VCAP support (Egress Access Control) - support for Per-Stream Filtering and Policing (802.1Q, 8.6.5.1) - Ethernet embedded switches: - Marvell (mv88e6xxx): - add MAB (port auth) offload support - enable PTP receive for mv88e6390 - NXP (ocelot): - support MAC Merge layer - support for the the vsc7512 internal copper phys - Microchip: - lan9303: convert to PHYLINK - lan966x: support TC flower filter statistics - lan937x: PTP support for KSZ9563/KSZ8563 and LAN937x - lan937x: support Credit Based Shaper configuration - ksz9477: support Energy Efficient Ethernet - other: - qca8k: convert to regmap read/write API, use bulk operations - rswitch: Improve TX timestamp accuracy - Intel WiFi (iwlwifi): - EHT (Wi-Fi 7) rate reporting - STEP equalizer support: transfer some STEP (connection to radio on platforms with integrated wifi) related parameters from the BIOS to the firmware. - Qualcomm 802.11ax WiFi (ath11k): - IPQ5018 support - Fine Timing Measurement (FTM) responder role support - channel 177 support - MediaTek WiFi (mt76): - per-PHY LED support - mt7996: EHT (Wi-Fi 7) support - Wireless Ethernet Dispatch (WED) reset support - switch to using page pool allocator - RealTek WiFi (rtw89): - support new version of Bluetooth co-existance - Mobile: - rmnet: support TX aggregation" * tag 'net-next-6.3' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/netdev/net-next: (1872 commits) page_pool: add a comment explaining the fragment counter usage net: ethtool: fix __ethtool_dev_mm_supported() implementation ethtool: pse-pd: Fix double word in comments xsk: add linux/vmalloc.h to xsk.c sefltests: netdevsim: wait for devlink instance after netns removal selftest: fib_tests: Always cleanup before exit net/mlx5e: Align IPsec ASO result memory to be as required by hardware net/mlx5e: TC, Set CT miss to the specific ct action instance net/mlx5e: Rename CHAIN_TO_REG to MAPPED_OBJ_TO_REG net/mlx5: Refactor tc miss handling to a single function net/mlx5: Kconfig: Make tc offload depend on tc skb extension net/sched: flower: Support hardware miss to tc action net/sched: flower: Move filter handle initialization earlier net/sched: cls_api: Support hardware miss to tc action net/sched: Rename user cookie and act cookie sfc: fix builds without CONFIG_RTC_LIB sfc: clean up some inconsistent indentings net/mlx4_en: Introduce flexible array to silence overflow warning net: lan966x: Fix possible deadlock inside PTP net/ulp: Remove redundant ->clone() test in inet_clone_ulp(). ... |
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8cc01d43f8 |
RCU pull request for v6.3
This pull request contains the following branches: doc.2023.01.05a: Documentation updates. fixes.2023.01.23a: Miscellaneous fixes, perhaps most notably: o Throttling callback invocation based on the number of callbacks that are now ready to invoke instead of on the total number of callbacks. o Several patches that suppress false-positive boot-time diagnostics, for example, due to lockdep not yet being initialized. o Make expedited RCU CPU stall warnings dump stacks of any tasks that are blocking the stalled grace period. (Normal RCU CPU stall warnings have doen this for mnay years.) o Lazy-callback fixes to avoid delays during boot, suspend, and resume. (Note that lazy callbacks must be explicitly enabled, so this should not (yet) affect production use cases.) kvfree.2023.01.03a: Cause kfree_rcu() and friends to take advantage of polled grace periods, thus reducing memory footprint by almost two orders of magnitude, admittedly on a microbenchmark. This series also begins the transition from kfree_rcu(p) to kfree_rcu_mightsleep(p). This transition was motivated by bugs where kfree_rcu(p), which can block, was typed instead of the intended kfree_rcu(p, rh). srcu.2023.01.03a: SRCU updates, perhaps most notably fixing a bug that causes SRCU to fail when booted on a system with a non-zero boot CPU. This surprising situation actually happens for kdump kernels on the powerpc architecture. It also adds an srcu_down_read() and srcu_up_read(), which act like srcu_read_lock() and srcu_read_unlock(), but allow an SRCU read-side critical section to be handed off from one task to another. srcu-always.2023.02.02a: Cleans up the now-useless SRCU Kconfig option. There are a few more commits that are not yet acked or pulled into maintainer trees, and these will be in a pull request for a later merge window. tasks.2023.01.03a: RCU-tasks updates, perhaps most notably these fixes: o A strange interaction between PID-namespace unshare and the RCU-tasks grace period that results in a low-probability but very real hang. o A race between an RCU tasks rude grace period on a single-CPU system and CPU-hotplug addition of the second CPU that can result in a too-short grace period. o A race between shrinking RCU tasks down to a single callback list and queuing a new callback to some other CPU, but where that queuing is delayed for more than an RCU grace period. This can result in that callback being stranded on the non-boot CPU. torture.2023.01.05a: Torture-test updates and fixes. torturescript.2023.01.03a: Torture-test scripting updates and fixes. stall.2023.01.09a: Provide additional RCU CPU stall-warning information in kernels built with CONFIG_RCU_CPU_STALL_CPUTIME=y, and restore the full five-minute timeout limit for expedited RCU CPU stall warnings. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- iQJHBAABCgAxFiEEbK7UrM+RBIrCoViJnr8S83LZ+4wFAmPq29UTHHBhdWxtY2tA a2VybmVsLm9yZwAKCRCevxLzctn7jAhVEACEAKJY1VJ9IUqz7CwzAYkzgRJfiygh oDUXmlqtm6ew9pr2GdLUVCVsUSldzBc0K7Djb/G1niv4JPs+v7YwupIV33+UbStU Qxt6ztTdxc4lKospLm1+2vF9ZdzVEmiP4wVCc4iDarv5FM3FpWSTNc8+L7qmlC+X myjv+GqMTxkXZBvYJOgJGFjDwN8noTd7Fr3mCCVLFm3PXMDa7tcwD6HRP5AqD2N8 qC5M6LEqepKVGmz0mYMLlSN1GPaqIsEcexIFEazRsPEivPh/iafyQCQ/cqxwhXmV vEt7u+dXGZT/oiDq9cJ+/XRDS2RyKIS6dUE14TiiHolDCn1ONESahfA/gXWKykC2 BaGPfjWXrWv/hwbeZ+8xEdkAvTIV92tGpXir9Fby1Z5PjP3balvrnn6hs5AnQBJb NdhRPLzy/dCnEF+CweAYYm1qvTo8cd5nyiNwBZHn7rEAIu3Axrecag1rhFl3AJ07 cpVMQXZtkQVa2X8aIRTUC+ijX6yIqNaHlu0HqNXgIUTDzL4nv5cMjOMzpNQP9/dZ FwAMZYNiOk9IlMiKJ8ZiVcxeiA8ouIBlkYM3k6vGrmiONZ7a/EV/mSHoJqI8bvqr AxUIJ2Ayhg3bxPboL5oKgCiLql0A7ZVvz6quX6McitWGMgaSvel1fDzT3TnZd41e 4AFBFd/+VedUGg== =bBYK -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- Merge tag 'rcu.2023.02.10a' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/paulmck/linux-rcu Pull RCU updates from Paul McKenney: - Documentation updates - Miscellaneous fixes, perhaps most notably: - Throttling callback invocation based on the number of callbacks that are now ready to invoke instead of on the total number of callbacks - Several patches that suppress false-positive boot-time diagnostics, for example, due to lockdep not yet being initialized - Make expedited RCU CPU stall warnings dump stacks of any tasks that are blocking the stalled grace period. (Normal RCU CPU stall warnings have done this for many years) - Lazy-callback fixes to avoid delays during boot, suspend, and resume. (Note that lazy callbacks must be explicitly enabled, so this should not (yet) affect production use cases) - Make kfree_rcu() and friends take advantage of polled grace periods, thus reducing memory footprint by almost two orders of magnitude, admittedly on a microbenchmark This also begins the transition from kfree_rcu(p) to kfree_rcu_mightsleep(p). This transition was motivated by bugs where kfree_rcu(p), which can block, was typed instead of the intended kfree_rcu(p, rh) - SRCU updates, perhaps most notably fixing a bug that causes SRCU to fail when booted on a system with a non-zero boot CPU. This surprising situation actually happens for kdump kernels on the powerpc architecture This also adds an srcu_down_read() and srcu_up_read(), which act like srcu_read_lock() and srcu_read_unlock(), but allow an SRCU read-side critical section to be handed off from one task to another - Clean up the now-useless SRCU Kconfig option There are a few more commits that are not yet acked or pulled into maintainer trees, and these will be in a pull request for a later merge window - RCU-tasks updates, perhaps most notably these fixes: - A strange interaction between PID-namespace unshare and the RCU-tasks grace period that results in a low-probability but very real hang - A race between an RCU tasks rude grace period on a single-CPU system and CPU-hotplug addition of the second CPU that can result in a too-short grace period - A race between shrinking RCU tasks down to a single callback list and queuing a new callback to some other CPU, but where that queuing is delayed for more than an RCU grace period. This can result in that callback being stranded on the non-boot CPU - Torture-test updates and fixes - Torture-test scripting updates and fixes - Provide additional RCU CPU stall-warning information in kernels built with CONFIG_RCU_CPU_STALL_CPUTIME=y, and restore the full five-minute timeout limit for expedited RCU CPU stall warnings * tag 'rcu.2023.02.10a' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/paulmck/linux-rcu: (80 commits) rcu/kvfree: Add kvfree_rcu_mightsleep() and kfree_rcu_mightsleep() kernel/notifier: Remove CONFIG_SRCU init: Remove "select SRCU" fs/quota: Remove "select SRCU" fs/notify: Remove "select SRCU" fs/btrfs: Remove "select SRCU" fs: Remove CONFIG_SRCU drivers/pci/controller: Remove "select SRCU" drivers/net: Remove "select SRCU" drivers/md: Remove "select SRCU" drivers/hwtracing/stm: Remove "select SRCU" drivers/dax: Remove "select SRCU" drivers/base: Remove CONFIG_SRCU rcu: Disable laziness if lazy-tracking says so rcu: Track laziness during boot and suspend rcu: Remove redundant call to rcu_boost_kthread_setaffinity() rcu: Allow up to five minutes expedited RCU CPU stall-warning timeouts rcu: Align the output of RCU CPU stall warning messages rcu: Add RCU stall diagnosis information sched: Add helper nr_context_switches_cpu() ... |
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1f2d9ffc7a |
Scheduler updates in this cycle are:
- Improve the scalability of the CFS bandwidth unthrottling logic with large number of CPUs. - Fix & rework various cpuidle routines, simplify interaction with the generic scheduler code. Add __cpuidle methods as noinstr to objtool's noinstr detection and fix boatloads of cpuidle bugs & quirks. - Add new ABI: introduce MEMBARRIER_CMD_GET_REGISTRATIONS, to query previously issued registrations. - Limit scheduler slice duration to the sysctl_sched_latency period, to improve scheduling granularity with a large number of SCHED_IDLE tasks. - Debuggability enhancement on sys_exit(): warn about disabled IRQs, but also enable them to prevent a cascade of followup problems and repeat warnings. - Fix the rescheduling logic in prio_changed_dl(). - Micro-optimize cpufreq and sched-util methods. - Micro-optimize ttwu_runnable() - Micro-optimize the idle-scanning in update_numa_stats(), select_idle_capacity() and steal_cookie_task(). - Update the RSEQ code & self-tests - Constify various scheduler methods - Remove unused methods - Refine __init tags - Documentation updates - ... Misc other cleanups, fixes Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- iQJFBAABCgAvFiEEBpT5eoXrXCwVQwEKEnMQ0APhK1gFAmPzbJwRHG1pbmdvQGtl cm5lbC5vcmcACgkQEnMQ0APhK1iIvA//ZcEaB8Z6ChLRQjM+bsaudKJu3pdLQbPK iYbP8Da+LsAfxbEfYuGV3m+jIp0LlBOtsI/EezxQrXV+V7FvNyAX9Y00eEu/zlj8 7Jn3LMy/DBYTwH7LwVdcU0MyIVI8ZPc6WNnkx0LOtGZn8n+qfHPSDzcP3CW+a5AV UvllPYpYyEmsX0Eby7CF4Ue8mSmbViw/xR3rNr8ZSve0c25XzKabw8O9kE3jiHxP d/zERJoAYeDyYUEuZqhfn5dTlB4an4IjNEkAfRE5SQ09RA8Gkxsa5Ar8gob9e9M1 eQsdd4/bdhnrkM8L5qDZczqmgCTZ2bukQrxkBXhRDhLgoFxwAn77b+2ZjmIW3Lae AyGqRcDSg1q2oxaYm5ZiuO/t26aDOZu9vPHyHRDGt95EGbZlrp+GgeePyfCigJYz UmPdZAAcHdSymnnnlcvdG37WVvaVkpgWZzd8LbtBi23QR+Zc4WQ2IlgnUS5WKNNf VOBcAcP6E1IslDotZDQCc2dPFFQoQQEssVooyUc5oMytm7BsvxXLOeHG+Ncu/8uc H+U8Qn8jnqTxJbC5hkWQIJlhVKCq2FJrHxxySYTKROfUNcDgCmxboFeAcXTCIU1K T0S+sdoTS/CvtLklRkG0j6B8N4N98mOd9cFwUV3tX+/gMLMep3hCQs5L76JagvC5 skkQXoONNaM= =l1nN -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- Merge tag 'sched-core-2023-02-20' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tip/tip Pull scheduler updates from Ingo Molnar: - Improve the scalability of the CFS bandwidth unthrottling logic with large number of CPUs. - Fix & rework various cpuidle routines, simplify interaction with the generic scheduler code. Add __cpuidle methods as noinstr to objtool's noinstr detection and fix boatloads of cpuidle bugs & quirks. - Add new ABI: introduce MEMBARRIER_CMD_GET_REGISTRATIONS, to query previously issued registrations. - Limit scheduler slice duration to the sysctl_sched_latency period, to improve scheduling granularity with a large number of SCHED_IDLE tasks. - Debuggability enhancement on sys_exit(): warn about disabled IRQs, but also enable them to prevent a cascade of followup problems and repeat warnings. - Fix the rescheduling logic in prio_changed_dl(). - Micro-optimize cpufreq and sched-util methods. - Micro-optimize ttwu_runnable() - Micro-optimize the idle-scanning in update_numa_stats(), select_idle_capacity() and steal_cookie_task(). - Update the RSEQ code & self-tests - Constify various scheduler methods - Remove unused methods - Refine __init tags - Documentation updates - Misc other cleanups, fixes * tag 'sched-core-2023-02-20' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tip/tip: (110 commits) sched/rt: pick_next_rt_entity(): check list_entry sched/deadline: Add more reschedule cases to prio_changed_dl() sched/fair: sanitize vruntime of entity being placed sched/fair: Remove capacity inversion detection sched/fair: unlink misfit task from cpu overutilized objtool: mem*() are not uaccess safe cpuidle: Fix poll_idle() noinstr annotation sched/clock: Make local_clock() noinstr sched/clock/x86: Mark sched_clock() noinstr x86/pvclock: Improve atomic update of last_value in pvclock_clocksource_read() x86/atomics: Always inline arch_atomic64*() cpuidle: tracing, preempt: Squash _rcuidle tracing cpuidle: tracing: Warn about !rcu_is_watching() cpuidle: lib/bug: Disable rcu_is_watching() during WARN/BUG cpuidle: drivers: firmware: psci: Dont instrument suspend code KVM: selftests: Fix build of rseq test exit: Detect and fix irq disabled state in oops cpuidle, arm64: Fix the ARM64 cpuidle logic cpuidle: mvebu: Fix duplicate flags assignment sched/fair: Limit sched slice duration ... |
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01bb11ad82 |
sched/topology: fix KASAN warning in hop_cmp()
Despite that prev_hop is used conditionally on cur_hop
is not the first hop, it's initialized unconditionally.
Because initialization implies dereferencing, it might happen
that the code dereferences uninitialized memory, which has been
spotted by KASAN. Fix it by reorganizing hop_cmp() logic.
Reported-by: Bruno Goncalves <bgoncalv@redhat.com>
Fixes:
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c2dbe32d5d |
sched/psi: Fix use-after-free in ep_remove_wait_queue()
If a non-root cgroup gets removed when there is a thread that registered trigger and is polling on a pressure file within the cgroup, the polling waitqueue gets freed in the following path: do_rmdir cgroup_rmdir kernfs_drain_open_files cgroup_file_release cgroup_pressure_release psi_trigger_destroy However, the polling thread still has a reference to the pressure file and will access the freed waitqueue when the file is closed or upon exit: fput ep_eventpoll_release ep_free ep_remove_wait_queue remove_wait_queue This results in use-after-free as pasted below. The fundamental problem here is that cgroup_file_release() (and consequently waitqueue's lifetime) is not tied to the file's real lifetime. Using wake_up_pollfree() here might be less than ideal, but it is in line with the comment at commit |
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df14b7f9ef |
sched/core: Fix a missed update of user_cpus_ptr
Since commit |
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7c4a5b89a0 |
sched/rt: pick_next_rt_entity(): check list_entry
Commit |
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7ea98dfa44 |
sched/deadline: Add more reschedule cases to prio_changed_dl()
I've been tracking down an issue on a ~5.17ish kernel where:
CPUx CPUy
<DL task p0 owns an rtmutex M>
<p0 depletes its runtime, gets throttled>
<rq switches to the idle task>
<DL task p1 blocks on M, boost/replenish p0>
<No call to resched_curr() happens here>
[idle task keeps running here until *something*
accidentally sets TIF_NEED_RESCHED]
On that kernel, it is quite easy to trigger using rt-tests's deadline_test
[1] with the test running on isolated CPUs (this reduces the chance of
something unrelated setting TIF_NEED_RESCHED on the idle tasks, making the
issue even more obvious as the hung task detector chimes in).
I haven't been able to reproduce this using a mainline kernel, even if I
revert
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829c1651e9 |
sched/fair: sanitize vruntime of entity being placed
When a scheduling entity is placed onto cfs_rq, its vruntime is pulled to the base level (around cfs_rq->min_vruntime), so that the entity doesn't gain extra boost when placed backwards. However, if the entity being placed wasn't executed for a long time, its vruntime may get too far behind (e.g. while cfs_rq was executing a low-weight hog), which can inverse the vruntime comparison due to s64 overflow. This results in the entity being placed with its original vruntime way forwards, so that it will effectively never get to the cpu. To prevent that, ignore the vruntime of the entity being placed if it didn't execute for much longer than the characteristic sheduler time scale. [rkagan: formatted, adjusted commit log, comments, cutoff value] Signed-off-by: Zhang Qiao <zhangqiao22@huawei.com> Co-developed-by: Roman Kagan <rkagan@amazon.de> Signed-off-by: Roman Kagan <rkagan@amazon.de> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20230130122216.3555094-1-rkagan@amazon.de |
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a2e90611b9 |
sched/fair: Remove capacity inversion detection
Remove the capacity inversion detection which is now handled by util_fits_cpu() returning -1 when we need to continue to look for a potential CPU with better performance. This ends up almost reverting patches below except for some comments: commit |
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e5ed0550c0 |
sched/fair: unlink misfit task from cpu overutilized
By taking into account uclamp_min, the 1:1 relation between task misfit and cpu overutilized is no more true as a task with a small util_avg may not fit a high capacity cpu because of uclamp_min constraint. Add a new state in util_fits_cpu() to reflect the case that task would fit a CPU except for the uclamp_min hint which is a performance requirement. Use -1 to reflect that a CPU doesn't fit only because of uclamp_min so we can use this new value to take additional action to select the best CPU that doesn't match uclamp_min hint. When util_fits_cpu() returns -1, we will continue to look for a possible CPU with better performance, which replaces Capacity Inversion detection with capacity_orig_of() - thermal_load_avg to detect a capacity inversion. Signed-off-by: Vincent Guittot <vincent.guittot@linaro.org> Reviewed-and-tested-by: Qais Yousef <qyousef@layalina.io> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Reviewed-by: Dietmar Eggemann <dietmar.eggemann@arm.com> Tested-by: Kajetan Puchalski <kajetan.puchalski@arm.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230201143628.270912-2-vincent.guittot@linaro.org |
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214dbc4281 |
sched: convert to vma iterator
Use the vma iterator so that the iterator can be invalidated or updated to avoid each caller doing so. Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20230120162650.984577-23-Liam.Howlett@oracle.com Signed-off-by: Liam R. Howlett <Liam.Howlett@oracle.com> Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org> |
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9feae65845 |
sched/topology: Introduce sched_numa_hop_mask()
Tariq has pointed out that drivers allocating IRQ vectors would benefit from having smarter NUMA-awareness - cpumask_local_spread() only knows about the local node and everything outside is in the same bucket. sched_domains_numa_masks is pretty much what we want to hand out (a cpumask of CPUs reachable within a given distance budget), introduce sched_numa_hop_mask() to export those cpumasks. Link: http://lore.kernel.org/r/20220728191203.4055-1-tariqt@nvidia.com Signed-off-by: Valentin Schneider <vschneid@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Yury Norov <yury.norov@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Yury Norov <yury.norov@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org> |
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cd7f55359c |
sched: add sched_numa_find_nth_cpu()
The function finds Nth set CPU in a given cpumask starting from a given node. Leveraging the fact that each hop in sched_domains_numa_masks includes the same or greater number of CPUs than the previous one, we can use binary search on hops instead of linear walk, which makes the overall complexity of O(log n) in terms of number of cpumask_weight() calls. Signed-off-by: Yury Norov <yury.norov@gmail.com> Acked-by: Tariq Toukan <tariqt@nvidia.com> Reviewed-by: Jacob Keller <jacob.e.keller@intel.com> Reviewed-by: Peter Lafreniere <peter@n8pjl.ca> Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org> |
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776f22913b |
sched/clock: Make local_clock() noinstr
With sched_clock() noinstr, provide a noinstr implementation of local_clock(). Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230126151323.760767043@infradead.org |
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57a30218fa |
Linux 6.2-rc6
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- iQFSBAABCAA8FiEEq68RxlopcLEwq+PEeb4+QwBBGIYFAmPW7E8eHHRvcnZhbGRz QGxpbnV4LWZvdW5kYXRpb24ub3JnAAoJEHm+PkMAQRiGf7MIAI0JnHN9WvtEukSZ E6j6+cEGWxsvD6q0g3GPolaKOCw7hlv0pWcFJFcUAt0jebspMdxV2oUGJ8RYW7Lg nCcHvEVswGKLAQtQSWw52qotW6fUfMPsNYYB5l31sm1sKH4Cgss0W7l2HxO/1LvG TSeNHX53vNAZ8pVnFYEWCSXC9bzrmU/VALF2EV00cdICmfvjlgkELGXoLKJJWzUp s63fBHYGGURSgwIWOKStoO6HNo0j/F/wcSMx8leY8qDUtVKHj4v24EvSgxUSDBER ch3LiSQ6qf4sw/z7pqruKFthKOrlNmcc0phjiES0xwwGiNhLv0z3rAhc4OM2cgYh SDc/Y/c= =zpaD -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- Merge tag 'v6.2-rc6' into sched/core, to pick up fixes Pick up fixes before merging another batch of cpuidle updates. Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org> |
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5657c11678 |
sched/core: Fix NULL pointer access fault in sched_setaffinity() with non-SMP configs
The kernel commit |
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79ba1e607d |
sched/fair: Limit sched slice duration
In presence of a lot of small weight tasks like sched_idle tasks, normal or high weight tasks can see their ideal runtime (sched_slice) to increase to hundreds ms whereas it normally stays below sysctl_sched_latency. 2 normal tasks running on a CPU will have a max sched_slice of 12ms (half of the sched_period). This means that they will make progress every sysctl_sched_latency period. If we now add 1000 idle tasks on the CPU, the sched_period becomes 3006 ms and the ideal runtime of the normal tasks becomes 609 ms. It will even become 1500ms if the idle tasks belongs to an idle cgroup. This means that the scheduler will look for picking another waiting task after 609ms running time (1500ms respectively). The idle tasks change significantly the way the 2 normal tasks interleave their running time slot whereas they should have a small impact. Such long sched_slice can delay significantly the release of resources as the tasks can wait hundreds of ms before the next running slot just because of idle tasks queued on the rq. Cap the ideal_runtime to sysctl_sched_latency to make sure that tasks will regularly make progress and will not be significantly impacted by idle/background tasks queued on the rq. Signed-off-by: Vincent Guittot <vincent.guittot@linaro.org> Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org> Tested-by: Dietmar Eggemann <dietmar.eggemann@arm.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230113133613.257342-1-vincent.guittot@linaro.org |
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89b3098703 |
arch/idle: Change arch_cpu_idle() behavior: always exit with IRQs disabled
Current arch_cpu_idle() is called with IRQs disabled, but will return with IRQs enabled. However, the very first thing the generic code does after calling arch_cpu_idle() is raw_local_irq_disable(). This means that architectures that can idle with IRQs disabled end up doing a pointless 'enable-disable' dance. Therefore, push this IRQ disabling into the idle function, meaning that those architectures can avoid the pointless IRQ state flipping. Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org> Tested-by: Tony Lindgren <tony@atomide.com> Tested-by: Ulf Hansson <ulf.hansson@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Gautham R. Shenoy <gautham.shenoy@amd.com> Acked-by: Mark Rutland <mark.rutland@arm.com> [arm64] Acked-by: Rafael J. Wysocki <rafael.j.wysocki@intel.com> Acked-by: Guo Ren <guoren@kernel.org> Acked-by: Frederic Weisbecker <frederic@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230112195540.618076436@infradead.org |
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a01353cf18 |
cpuidle: Fix ct_idle_*() usage
The whole disable-RCU, enable-IRQS dance is very intricate since changing IRQ state is traced, which depends on RCU. Add two helpers for the cpuidle case that mirror the entry code: ct_cpuidle_enter() ct_cpuidle_exit() And fix all the cases where the enter/exit dance was buggy. Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org> Tested-by: Tony Lindgren <tony@atomide.com> Tested-by: Ulf Hansson <ulf.hansson@linaro.org> Acked-by: Rafael J. Wysocki <rafael.j.wysocki@intel.com> Acked-by: Frederic Weisbecker <frederic@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230112195540.130014793@infradead.org |
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da07d2f9c1 |
sched/fair: Fixes for capacity inversion detection
Traversing the Perf Domains requires rcu_read_lock() to be held and is
conditional on sched_energy_enabled(). Ensure right protections applied.
Also skip capacity inversion detection for our own pd; which was an
error.
Fixes:
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e26fd28db8 |
sched/uclamp: Fix a uninitialized variable warnings
Addresses the following warnings:
> config: riscv-randconfig-m031-20221111
> compiler: riscv64-linux-gcc (GCC) 12.1.0
>
> smatch warnings:
> kernel/sched/fair.c:7263 find_energy_efficient_cpu() error: uninitialized symbol 'util_min'.
> kernel/sched/fair.c:7263 find_energy_efficient_cpu() error: uninitialized symbol 'util_max'.
Fixes:
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9a5418bc48 |
sched/core: Use kfree_rcu() in do_set_cpus_allowed()
Commit |
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87ca4f9efb |
sched/core: Fix use-after-free bug in dup_user_cpus_ptr()
Since commit |
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7fb3ff22ad |
sched/core: Fix arch_scale_freq_tick() on tickless systems
In order for the scheduler to be frequency invariant we measure the
ratio between the maximum CPU frequency and the actual CPU frequency.
During long tickless periods of time the calculations that keep track
of that might overflow, in the function scale_freq_tick():
if (check_shl_overflow(acnt, 2*SCHED_CAPACITY_SHIFT, &acnt))
goto error;
eventually forcing the kernel to disable the feature for all CPUs,
and show the warning message:
"Scheduler frequency invariance went wobbly, disabling!".
Let's avoid that by limiting the frequency invariant calculations
to CPUs with regular tick.
Fixes:
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544a4f2ecd |
sched/membarrier: Introduce MEMBARRIER_CMD_GET_REGISTRATIONS
Provide a method to query previously issued registrations. Signed-off-by: Michal Clapinski <mclapinski@google.com> Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org> Acked-by: Mathieu Desnoyers <mathieu.desnoyers@efficios.com> Acked-by: Paul E. McKenney <paulmck@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20221207164338.1535591-2-mclapinski@google.com |
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948fb4c4e9 |
cpufreq, sched/util: Optimize operations with single CPU capacity lookup
The max CPU capacity is the same for all CPUs sharing frequency domain. There is a way to avoid heavy operations in a loop for each CPU by leveraging this knowledge. Thus, simplify the looping code in the sugov_next_freq_shared() and drop heavy multiplications. Instead, use simple max() to get the highest utilization from these CPUs. This is useful for platforms with many (4 or 6) little CPUs. We avoid heavy 2*PD_CPU_NUM multiplications in that loop, which is called billions of times, since it's not limited by the schedutil time delta filter in sugov_should_update_freq(). When there was no need to change frequency the code bailed out, not updating the sg_policy::last_freq_update_time. Then every visit after delta_ns time longer than the sg_policy::freq_update_delay_ns goes through and triggers the next frequency calculation code. Although, if the next frequency, as outcome of that, would be the same as current frequency, we won't update the sg_policy::last_freq_update_time and the story will be repeated (in a very short period, sometimes a few microseconds). The max CPU capacity must be fetched every time we are called, due to difficulties during the policy setup, where we are not able to get the normalized CPU capacity at the right time. The fetched CPU capacity value is than used in sugov_iowait_apply() to calculate the right boost. This required a few changes in the local functions and arguments. The capacity value should hopefully be fetched once when needed and then passed over CPU registers to those functions. Signed-off-by: Lukasz Luba <lukasz.luba@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20221208160256.859-2-lukasz.luba@arm.com Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> Cc: Patrick Bellasi <patrick.bellasi@arm.com> Cc: Vincent Guittot <vincent.guittot@linaro.org> Cc: Rafael J. Wysocki <rafael.j.wysocki@intel.com> Cc: Viresh Kumar <viresh.kumar@linaro.org> |
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160fb0d83f |
sched/core: Reorganize ttwu_do_wakeup() and ttwu_do_activate()
ttwu_do_activate() is used for a complete wakeup, in which we will activate_task() and use ttwu_do_wakeup() to mark the task runnable and perform wakeup-preemption, also call class->task_woken() callback and update the rq->idle_stamp. Since ttwu_runnable() is not a complete wakeup, don't need all those done in ttwu_do_wakeup(), so we can move those to ttwu_do_activate() to simplify ttwu_do_wakeup(), making it only mark the task runnable to be reused in ttwu_runnable() and try_to_wake_up(). This patch should not have any functional changes. Suggested-by: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> Signed-off-by: Chengming Zhou <zhouchengming@bytedance.com> Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20221223103257.4962-2-zhouchengming@bytedance.com |
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efe0938586 |
sched/core: Micro-optimize ttwu_runnable()
ttwu_runnable() is used as a fast wakeup path when the wakee task is running on CPU or runnable on RQ, in both cases we can just set its state to TASK_RUNNING to prevent a sleep. If the wakee task is on_cpu running, we don't need to update_rq_clock() or check_preempt_curr(). But if the wakee task is on_rq && !on_cpu (e.g. an IRQ hit before the task got to schedule() and the task been preempted), we should check_preempt_curr() to see if it can preempt the current running. This also removes the class->task_woken() callback from ttwu_runnable(), which wasn't required per the RT/DL implementations: any required push operation would have been queued during class->set_next_task() when p got preempted. ttwu_runnable() also loses the update to rq->idle_stamp, as by definition the rq cannot be idle in this scenario. Suggested-by: Valentin Schneider <vschneid@redhat.com> Suggested-by: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> Signed-off-by: Chengming Zhou <zhouchengming@bytedance.com> Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org> Reviewed-by: Valentin Schneider <vschneid@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Steven Rostedt (Google) <rostedt@goodmis.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20221223103257.4962-1-zhouchengming@bytedance.com |
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7c182722a0 |
sched: Add helper nr_context_switches_cpu()
Add a function nr_context_switches_cpu() that returns number of context switches since boot on the specified CPU. This information will be used to diagnose RCU CPU stalls. Signed-off-by: Zhen Lei <thunder.leizhen@huawei.com> Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com> Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> Cc: Juri Lelli <juri.lelli@redhat.com> Cc: Vincent Guittot <vincent.guittot@linaro.org> Cc: Dietmar Eggemann <dietmar.eggemann@arm.com> Cc: Steven Rostedt <rostedt@goodmis.org> Cc: Ben Segall <bsegall@google.com> Cc: Mel Gorman <mgorman@suse.de> Cc: Daniel Bristot de Oliveira <bristot@redhat.com> Cc: Valentin Schneider <vschneid@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Frederic Weisbecker <frederic@kernel.org> Signed-off-by: Paul E. McKenney <paulmck@kernel.org> |
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ef90cf2281 |
sched/topology: Add __init for sched_init_domains()
sched_init_domains() is only used in initialization Signed-off-by: Bing Huang <huangbing@kylinos.cn> Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230105014943.9857-1-huangbing775@126.com |
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bbd0b03150 |
sched/rseq: Fix concurrency ID handling of usermodehelper kthreads
sched_mm_cid_after_execve() does not expect NULL t->mm, but it may happen
if a usermodehelper kthread fails when attempting to execute a binary.
sched_mm_cid_fork() can be issued from a usermodehelper kthread, which
has t->flags PF_KTHREAD set.
Fixes:
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c89970202a |
cputime: remove cputime_to_nsecs fallback
The archs that use cputime_to_nsecs() internally provide their own definition and don't need the fallback. cputime_to_usecs() unused except in this fallback, and is not defined anywhere. This removes the final remnant of the cputime_t code from the kernel. Signed-off-by: Nicholas Piggin <npiggin@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Acked-by: Alexander Gordeev <agordeev@linux.ibm.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20221220070705.2958959-1-npiggin@gmail.com |
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8589018acc |
sched/core: Adjusting the order of scanning CPU
When select_idle_capacity() starts scanning for an idle CPU, it starts with target CPU that has already been checked in select_idle_sibling(). So we start checking from the next CPU and try the target CPU at the end. Similarly for task_numa_assign(), we have just checked numa_migrate_on of dst_cpu, so start from the next CPU. This also works for steal_cookie_task(), the first scan must fail and start directly from the next one. Signed-off-by: Hao Jia <jiahao.os@bytedance.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Reviewed-by: Vincent Guittot <vincent.guittot@linaro.org> Acked-by: Mel Gorman <mgorman@techsingularity.net> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20221216062406.7812-3-jiahao.os@bytedance.com |
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feaed76376 |
sched/numa: Stop an exhastive search if an idle core is found
In update_numa_stats() we try to find an idle cpu on the NUMA node, preferably an idle core. we can stop looking for the next idle core or idle cpu after finding an idle core. But we can't stop the whole loop of scanning the CPU, because we need to calculate approximate NUMA stats at a point in time. For example, the src and dst nr_running is needed by task_numa_find_cpu(). Signed-off-by: Hao Jia <jiahao.os@bytedance.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Acked-by: Mel Gorman <mgorman@techsingularity.net> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20221216062406.7812-2-jiahao.os@bytedance.com |
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904cbab71d |
sched: Make const-safe
With a modified container_of() that preserves constness, the compiler finds some pointers which should have been marked as const. task_of() also needs to become const-preserving for the !FAIR_GROUP_SCHED case so that cfs_rq_of() can take a const argument. No change to generated code. Signed-off-by: Matthew Wilcox (Oracle) <willy@infradead.org> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20221212144946.2657785-1-willy@infradead.org |
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af7f588d8f |
sched: Introduce per-memory-map concurrency ID
This feature allows the scheduler to expose a per-memory map concurrency ID to user-space. This concurrency ID is within the possible cpus range, and is temporarily (and uniquely) assigned while threads are actively running within a memory map. If a memory map has fewer threads than cores, or is limited to run on few cores concurrently through sched affinity or cgroup cpusets, the concurrency IDs will be values close to 0, thus allowing efficient use of user-space memory for per-cpu data structures. This feature is meant to be exposed by a new rseq thread area field. The primary purpose of this feature is to do the heavy-lifting needed by memory allocators to allow them to use per-cpu data structures efficiently in the following situations: - Single-threaded applications, - Multi-threaded applications on large systems (many cores) with limited cpu affinity mask, - Multi-threaded applications on large systems (many cores) with restricted cgroup cpuset per container. One of the key concern from scheduler maintainers is the overhead associated with additional spin locks or atomic operations in the scheduler fast-path. This is why the following optimization is implemented. On context switch between threads belonging to the same memory map, transfer the mm_cid from prev to next without any atomic ops. This takes care of use-cases involving frequent context switch between threads belonging to the same memory map. Additional optimizations can be done if the spin locks added when context switching between threads belonging to different memory maps end up being a performance bottleneck. Those are left out of this patch though. A performance impact would have to be clearly demonstrated to justify the added complexity. The credit goes to Paul Turner (Google) for the original virtual cpu id idea. This feature is implemented based on the discussions with Paul Turner and Peter Oskolkov (Google), but I took the liberty to implement scheduler fast-path optimizations and my own NUMA-awareness scheme. The rumor has it that Google have been running a rseq vcpu_id extension internally in production for a year. The tcmalloc source code indeed has comments hinting at a vcpu_id prototype extension to the rseq system call [1]. The following benchmarks do not show any significant overhead added to the scheduler context switch by this feature: * perf bench sched messaging (process) Baseline: 86.5±0.3 ms With mm_cid: 86.7±2.6 ms * perf bench sched messaging (threaded) Baseline: 84.3±3.0 ms With mm_cid: 84.7±2.6 ms * hackbench (process) Baseline: 82.9±2.7 ms With mm_cid: 82.9±2.9 ms * hackbench (threaded) Baseline: 85.2±2.6 ms With mm_cid: 84.4±2.9 ms [1] https://github.com/google/tcmalloc/blob/master/tcmalloc/internal/linux_syscall_support.h#L26 Signed-off-by: Mathieu Desnoyers <mathieu.desnoyers@efficios.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20221122203932.231377-8-mathieu.desnoyers@efficios.com |
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8ad075c2eb |
sched: Async unthrottling for cfs bandwidth
CFS bandwidth currently distributes new runtime and unthrottles cfs_rq's inline in an hrtimer callback. Runtime distribution is a per-cpu operation, and unthrottling is a per-cgroup operation, since a tg walk is required. On machines with a large number of cpus and large cgroup hierarchies, this cpus*cgroups work can be too much to do in a single hrtimer callback: since IRQ are disabled, hard lockups may easily occur. Specifically, we've found this scalability issue on configurations with 256 cpus, O(1000) cgroups in the hierarchy being throttled, and high memory bandwidth usage. To fix this, we can instead unthrottle cfs_rq's asynchronously via a CSD. Each cpu is responsible for unthrottling itself, thus sharding the total work more fairly across the system, and avoiding hard lockups. Signed-off-by: Josh Don <joshdon@google.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20221117005418.3499691-1-joshdon@google.com |
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9a5322db46 |
sched/topology: Add __init for init_defrootdomain
init_defrootdomain is only used in initialization Signed-off-by: Bing Huang <huangbing@kylinos.cn> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Reviewed-by: Steven Rostedt (Google) <rostedt@goodmis.org> Reviewed-by: Randy Dunlap <rdunlap@infradead.org> Reviewed-by: Valentin Schneider <vschneid@redhat.com> Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20221118034208.267330-1-huangbing775@126.com |
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48ea09cdda |
hardening updates for v6.2-rc1
- Convert flexible array members, fix -Wstringop-overflow warnings, and fix KCFI function type mismatches that went ignored by maintainers (Gustavo A. R. Silva, Nathan Chancellor, Kees Cook). - Remove the remaining side-effect users of ksize() by converting dma-buf, btrfs, and coredump to using kmalloc_size_roundup(), add more __alloc_size attributes, and introduce full testing of all allocator functions. Finally remove the ksize() side-effect so that each allocation-aware checker can finally behave without exceptions. - Introduce oops_limit (default 10,000) and warn_limit (default off) to provide greater granularity of control for panic_on_oops and panic_on_warn (Jann Horn, Kees Cook). - Introduce overflows_type() and castable_to_type() helpers for cleaner overflow checking. - Improve code generation for strscpy() and update str*() kern-doc. - Convert strscpy and sigphash tests to KUnit, and expand memcpy tests. - Always use a non-NULL argument for prepare_kernel_cred(). - Disable structleak plugin in FORTIFY KUnit test (Anders Roxell). - Adjust orphan linker section checking to respect CONFIG_WERROR (Xin Li). - Make sure siginfo is cleared for forced SIGKILL (haifeng.xu). - Fix um vs FORTIFY warnings for always-NULL arguments. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- iQJKBAABCgA0FiEEpcP2jyKd1g9yPm4TiXL039xtwCYFAmOZSOoWHGtlZXNjb29r QGNocm9taXVtLm9yZwAKCRCJcvTf3G3AJjAAD/0YkvpU7f03f8hcQMJK6wv//24K AW41hEaBikq9RcmkuvkLLrJRibGgZ5O2xUkUkxRs/HxhkhrZ0kEw8sbwZe8MoWls F4Y9+TDjsrdHmjhfcBZdLnVxwcKK5wlaEcpjZXtbsfcdhx3TbgcDA23YELl5t0K+ I11j4kYmf9SLl4CwIrSP5iACml8CBHARDh8oIMF7FT/LrjNbM8XkvBcVVT6hTbOV yjgA8WP2e9GXvj9GzKgqvd0uE/kwPkVAeXLNFWopPi4FQ8AWjlxbBZR0gamA6/EB d7TIs0ifpVU2JGQaTav4xO6SsFMj3ntoUI0qIrFaTxZAvV4KYGrPT/Kwz1O4SFaG rN5lcxseQbPQSBTFNG4zFjpywTkVCgD2tZqDwz5Rrmiraz0RyIokCN+i4CD9S0Ds oEd8JSyLBk1sRALczkuEKo0an5AyC9YWRcBXuRdIHpLo08PsbeUUSe//4pe303cw 0ApQxYOXnrIk26MLElTzSMImlSvlzW6/5XXzL9ME16leSHOIfDeerPnc9FU9Eb3z ODv22z6tJZ9H/apSUIHZbMciMbbVTZ8zgpkfydr08o87b342N/ncYHZ5cSvQ6DWb jS5YOIuvl46/IhMPT16qWC8p0bP5YhxoPv5l6Xr0zq0ooEj0E7keiD/SzoLvW+Qs AHXcibguPRQBPAdiPQ== =yaaN -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- Merge tag 'hardening-v6.2-rc1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/kees/linux Pull kernel hardening updates from Kees Cook: - Convert flexible array members, fix -Wstringop-overflow warnings, and fix KCFI function type mismatches that went ignored by maintainers (Gustavo A. R. Silva, Nathan Chancellor, Kees Cook) - Remove the remaining side-effect users of ksize() by converting dma-buf, btrfs, and coredump to using kmalloc_size_roundup(), add more __alloc_size attributes, and introduce full testing of all allocator functions. Finally remove the ksize() side-effect so that each allocation-aware checker can finally behave without exceptions - Introduce oops_limit (default 10,000) and warn_limit (default off) to provide greater granularity of control for panic_on_oops and panic_on_warn (Jann Horn, Kees Cook) - Introduce overflows_type() and castable_to_type() helpers for cleaner overflow checking - Improve code generation for strscpy() and update str*() kern-doc - Convert strscpy and sigphash tests to KUnit, and expand memcpy tests - Always use a non-NULL argument for prepare_kernel_cred() - Disable structleak plugin in FORTIFY KUnit test (Anders Roxell) - Adjust orphan linker section checking to respect CONFIG_WERROR (Xin Li) - Make sure siginfo is cleared for forced SIGKILL (haifeng.xu) - Fix um vs FORTIFY warnings for always-NULL arguments * tag 'hardening-v6.2-rc1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/kees/linux: (31 commits) ksmbd: replace one-element arrays with flexible-array members hpet: Replace one-element array with flexible-array member um: virt-pci: Avoid GCC non-NULL warning signal: Initialize the info in ksignal lib: fortify_kunit: build without structleak plugin panic: Expose "warn_count" to sysfs panic: Introduce warn_limit panic: Consolidate open-coded panic_on_warn checks exit: Allow oops_limit to be disabled exit: Expose "oops_count" to sysfs exit: Put an upper limit on how often we can oops panic: Separate sysctl logic from CONFIG_SMP mm/pgtable: Fix multiple -Wstringop-overflow warnings mm: Make ksize() a reporting-only function kunit/fortify: Validate __alloc_size attribute results drm/sti: Fix return type of sti_{dvo,hda,hdmi}_connector_mode_valid() drm/fsl-dcu: Fix return type of fsl_dcu_drm_connector_mode_valid() driver core: Add __alloc_size hint to devm allocators overflow: Introduce overflows_type() and castable_to_type() coredump: Proactively round up to kmalloc bucket size ... |
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8fa37a6835 |
sysctl changes for v6.2-rc1
Only step forward on the sysctl cleanups for this cycle. This has been on linux-next since September and this time it goes with a "Yeah, think so, it just moves stuff around a bit" from Peter Zijlstra. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- iQJGBAABCgAwFiEENnNq2KuOejlQLZofziMdCjCSiKcFAmOYC3sSHG1jZ3JvZkBr ZXJuZWwub3JnAAoJEM4jHQowkoinVEYQAL6/3nRt854jULd3zRwrWDyJZd5yxbnc R8jJBTt3q4CKwtMqd59uQqVYLpSqOCx/GsArfsXkmY4x7KYhlaSKcC4LHmFS8Z/u dofyVKumIFqtXMI+hYuTyqNqfGoK9UKXUftrqYb8pK+K3h73uqYbrDgSex4G9GJo Au0/WeDjTzLlgqt7RPN7n0PL2jMtfWVQkr3001OCQOWW9sdrOjtprn/3bDTUnW5q KukKB5saU0CvUzrTn2DaweQiRCJxQfCQfy3DZfhDRHVuWFYMV9b1okaGEoVmQlQT I9/urfdf3aLCdBBxCQG5W6uRxZwZ2Yb93M+rijZNWNFMC6WHrMCmSiADwz9LJzIK iQV7LoolGe1TFTEVJbsde5xKSF6BeId0IF5mmPQuokAx3TPE9279HNgluaB/38c8 p3P4+mP6qE12mMPyhpwDwNOzEWgUnLsGSIE5n/WPwxCiGNa7UsN2lzMDP1cJejp5 NlRg1hRKmgt30d9+t9sHeKMcWhrjxyPGsyUMwBJTuMCHbjqizGyBsB8DzyK95OoF aN66pyRqwsK0+IUivd8VfLgfriE2gDrQD5VqkJ8lfWBx9pq8RMEq7zQ1eE9IbCff hzbfG+7k9R3o4SPfJYmCBXtp6fcq+ovjbLYSvGGCJk0zfFe6SQE21rZ3hCQPq3v5 xKFh05xUfbRF =M48U -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- Merge tag 'sysctl-6.2-rc1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mcgrof/linux Pull sysctl updates from Luis Chamberlain: "Only a small step forward on the sysctl cleanups for this cycle" * tag 'sysctl-6.2-rc1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mcgrof/linux: sched: Move numa_balancing sysctls to its own file |
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ce8a79d560 |
for-6.2/block-2022-12-08
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- iQJEBAABCAAuFiEEwPw5LcreJtl1+l5K99NY+ylx4KYFAmOScsgQHGF4Ym9lQGtl cm5lbC5kawAKCRD301j7KXHgpi5ID/9pLXFYOq1+uDjU0KO/MdjMjK8Ukr34lCnk WkajRLheE8JBKOFDE54XJk56sQSZHX9bTWqziar0h1fioh7FlQR/tVvzsERCm2M9 2y9THJNJygC68wgybStyiKlshFjl7TD7Kv5N9Y3xP3mkQygT+D6o8fXZk5xQbYyH YdFSoq4rJVHxRL03yzQiReGGIYdOUEQQh8l1FiLwLlKa3lXAey1KuxWIzksVN0KK aZB4QhiBpOiPgDHUVisq2XtyQjpZ2byoCImPzgrcqk9Jo4esvm/e6esrg4xlsvII LKFFkTmbVqjUZtFjqakFHmfuzVor4nU5f+xb90ZHExuuODYckkxWp5rWhf9QwqqI 0ik6WYgI1/5vnHnX8f2DYzOFQf9qa/rLgg0CshyUODlD6RfHa9vntqYvlIFkmOBd Q7KblIoK8YTzUS1M+v7X8JQ7gDR2KwygH37Da2KJS+vgvfIb8kJGr1ZORuhJuJJ7 Bl69gaNkHTHrqufp7UI64YXfueeuNu2J9z3zwzGoxeaFaofF/phDn0/2gCQE1fQI XBhsMw+ETqI6B2SPHMnzYDu2DM1S8ZTOYQlaD4G3uqgWnAM1tG707395uAy5yu4n D5azU1fVG4UocoNIyPujpaoSRs2zWZycEFEeUQkhyDDww/j4hlHi6H33eOnk0zsr wxzFGfvHfw== =k/vv -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- Merge tag 'for-6.2/block-2022-12-08' of git://git.kernel.dk/linux Pull block updates from Jens Axboe: - NVMe pull requests via Christoph: - Support some passthrough commands without CAP_SYS_ADMIN (Kanchan Joshi) - Refactor PCIe probing and reset (Christoph Hellwig) - Various fabrics authentication fixes and improvements (Sagi Grimberg) - Avoid fallback to sequential scan due to transient issues (Uday Shankar) - Implement support for the DEAC bit in Write Zeroes (Christoph Hellwig) - Allow overriding the IEEE OUI and firmware revision in configfs for nvmet (Aleksandr Miloserdov) - Force reconnect when number of queue changes in nvmet (Daniel Wagner) - Minor fixes and improvements (Uros Bizjak, Joel Granados, Sagi Grimberg, Christoph Hellwig, Christophe JAILLET) - Fix and cleanup nvme-fc req allocation (Chaitanya Kulkarni) - Use the common tagset helpers in nvme-pci driver (Christoph Hellwig) - Cleanup the nvme-pci removal path (Christoph Hellwig) - Use kstrtobool() instead of strtobool (Christophe JAILLET) - Allow unprivileged passthrough of Identify Controller (Joel Granados) - Support io stats on the mpath device (Sagi Grimberg) - Minor nvmet cleanup (Sagi Grimberg) - MD pull requests via Song: - Code cleanups (Christoph) - Various fixes - Floppy pull request from Denis: - Fix a memory leak in the init error path (Yuan) - Series fixing some batch wakeup issues with sbitmap (Gabriel) - Removal of the pktcdvd driver that was deprecated more than 5 years ago, and subsequent removal of the devnode callback in struct block_device_operations as no users are now left (Greg) - Fix for partition read on an exclusively opened bdev (Jan) - Series of elevator API cleanups (Jinlong, Christoph) - Series of fixes and cleanups for blk-iocost (Kemeng) - Series of fixes and cleanups for blk-throttle (Kemeng) - Series adding concurrent support for sync queues in BFQ (Yu) - Series bringing drbd a bit closer to the out-of-tree maintained version (Christian, Joel, Lars, Philipp) - Misc drbd fixes (Wang) - blk-wbt fixes and tweaks for enable/disable (Yu) - Fixes for mq-deadline for zoned devices (Damien) - Add support for read-only and offline zones for null_blk (Shin'ichiro) - Series fixing the delayed holder tracking, as used by DM (Yu, Christoph) - Series enabling bio alloc caching for IRQ based IO (Pavel) - Series enabling userspace peer-to-peer DMA (Logan) - BFQ waker fixes (Khazhismel) - Series fixing elevator refcount issues (Christoph, Jinlong) - Series cleaning up references around queue destruction (Christoph) - Series doing quiesce by tagset, enabling cleanups in drivers (Christoph, Chao) - Series untangling the queue kobject and queue references (Christoph) - Misc fixes and cleanups (Bart, David, Dawei, Jinlong, Kemeng, Ye, Yang, Waiman, Shin'ichiro, Randy, Pankaj, Christoph) * tag 'for-6.2/block-2022-12-08' of git://git.kernel.dk/linux: (247 commits) blktrace: Fix output non-blktrace event when blk_classic option enabled block: sed-opal: Don't include <linux/kernel.h> sed-opal: allow using IOC_OPAL_SAVE for locking too blk-cgroup: Fix typo in comment block: remove bio_set_op_attrs nvmet: don't open-code NVME_NS_ATTR_RO enumeration nvme-pci: use the tagset alloc/free helpers nvme: add the Apple shared tag workaround to nvme_alloc_io_tag_set nvme: only set reserved_tags in nvme_alloc_io_tag_set for fabrics controllers nvme: consolidate setting the tagset flags nvme: pass nr_maps explicitly to nvme_alloc_io_tag_set block: bio_copy_data_iter nvme-pci: split out a nvme_pci_ctrl_is_dead helper nvme-pci: return early on ctrl state mismatch in nvme_reset_work nvme-pci: rename nvme_disable_io_queues nvme-pci: cleanup nvme_suspend_queue nvme-pci: remove nvme_pci_disable nvme-pci: remove nvme_disable_admin_queue nvme: merge nvme_shutdown_ctrl into nvme_disable_ctrl nvme: use nvme_wait_ready in nvme_shutdown_ctrl ... |
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8702f2c611 |
Non-MM patches for 6.2-rc1.
- A ptrace API cleanup series from Sergey Shtylyov - Fixes and cleanups for kexec from ye xingchen - nilfs2 updates from Ryusuke Konishi - squashfs feature work from Xiaoming Ni: permit configuration of the filesystem's compression concurrency from the mount command line. - A series from Akinobu Mita which addresses bound checking errors when writing to debugfs files. - A series from Yang Yingliang to address rapido memory leaks - A series from Zheng Yejian to address possible overflow errors in encode_comp_t(). - And a whole shower of singleton patches all over the place. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- iHUEABYKAB0WIQTTMBEPP41GrTpTJgfdBJ7gKXxAjgUCY5efRgAKCRDdBJ7gKXxA jgvdAP0al6oFDtaSsshIdNhrzcMwfjt6PfVxxHdLmNhF1hX2dwD/SVluS1bPSP7y 0sZp7Ustu3YTb8aFkMl96Y9m9mY1Nwg= =ga5B -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- Merge tag 'mm-nonmm-stable-2022-12-12' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/akpm/mm Pull non-MM updates from Andrew Morton: - A ptrace API cleanup series from Sergey Shtylyov - Fixes and cleanups for kexec from ye xingchen - nilfs2 updates from Ryusuke Konishi - squashfs feature work from Xiaoming Ni: permit configuration of the filesystem's compression concurrency from the mount command line - A series from Akinobu Mita which addresses bound checking errors when writing to debugfs files - A series from Yang Yingliang to address rapidio memory leaks - A series from Zheng Yejian to address possible overflow errors in encode_comp_t() - And a whole shower of singleton patches all over the place * tag 'mm-nonmm-stable-2022-12-12' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/akpm/mm: (79 commits) ipc: fix memory leak in init_mqueue_fs() hfsplus: fix bug causing custom uid and gid being unable to be assigned with mount rapidio: devices: fix missing put_device in mport_cdev_open kcov: fix spelling typos in comments hfs: Fix OOB Write in hfs_asc2mac hfs: fix OOB Read in __hfs_brec_find relay: fix type mismatch when allocating memory in relay_create_buf() ocfs2: always read both high and low parts of dinode link count io-mapping: move some code within the include guarded section kernel: kcsan: kcsan_test: build without structleak plugin mailmap: update email for Iskren Chernev eventfd: change int to __u64 in eventfd_signal() ifndef CONFIG_EVENTFD rapidio: fix possible UAF when kfifo_alloc() fails relay: use strscpy() is more robust and safer cpumask: limit visibility of FORCE_NR_CPUS acct: fix potential integer overflow in encode_comp_t() acct: fix accuracy loss for input value of encode_comp_t() linux/init.h: include <linux/build_bug.h> and <linux/stringify.h> rapidio: rio: fix possible name leak in rio_register_mport() rapidio: fix possible name leaks when rio_add_device() fails ... |
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bf57ae2165 |
Scheduler changes for v6.2:
- Implement persistent user-requested affinity: introduce affinity_context::user_mask and unconditionally preserve the user-requested CPU affinity masks, for long-lived tasks to better interact with cpusets & CPU hotplug events over longer timespans, without destroying the original affinity intent if the underlying topology changes. - Uclamp updates: fix relationship between uclamp and fits_capacity() - PSI fixes - Misc fixes & updates. Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- iQJFBAABCgAvFiEEBpT5eoXrXCwVQwEKEnMQ0APhK1gFAmOXkmgRHG1pbmdvQGtl cm5lbC5vcmcACgkQEnMQ0APhK1j/dQ//WYW/JaBpydqnVxDu6C21z0w3+fHDdlsN nQ6jyLPlouFjI2Ink1E7i7Iq8C73sdewCgD7Jq3xGa1GhsPEJIrPAaBgacxYjOqc x9HHZoygSkAihTfrVvzq37YttD2t/gQQxc81tBziMBVP2A+gb9z44u+ezMlxjiGz irgE07qNfiLyTeD/dJhEU2EOsPJm/gestW3+Cd8uwYAe6pj0X4FE3n8ipmr0BzNZ 6nxFJaSspwAkREjpAIZVENEArq7XrkGqUFKgKpYqWn0HAnuTWgFcW8E2NrDw7Qbf 4aAdBuzimbWdbkqRoX9r7++r5wqc3KW+is8Y97aEUsc0zhrXHAW1Hn2w7en5XxiQ btaPi77Boi69sHvOrfMy3i6UZ895yh2sROIkYBDT485w57BR75HsMLkk2LNIm7qE mATrrZ65bbGAgAxZouqlnQk40BUlniIfDlfZyReyFtXkW8UH5tTNX6qtpWzzdwfy posrm+XvgDcP96/7DIczZwT6VEJE5GBZbPvk2Vw4GNq6/QeW7g9GPhYTaV6CXzzW lCk/MV1n+IWCUqjkGXXCTS53TIyC6WZh2ehegcsh1KYyWcVijEs42S6eqXZI9cO7 F4oU7sehg4vlhMm1uE5JgaABfYqqzzKlvZySdwXbne2Vjt4nsWlWoe6u6JAdA4EB PRwmUDRMyEE= =aao/ -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- Merge tag 'sched-core-2022-12-12' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tip/tip Pull scheduler updates from Ingo Molnar: - Implement persistent user-requested affinity: introduce affinity_context::user_mask and unconditionally preserve the user-requested CPU affinity masks, for long-lived tasks to better interact with cpusets & CPU hotplug events over longer timespans, without destroying the original affinity intent if the underlying topology changes. - Uclamp updates: fix relationship between uclamp and fits_capacity() - PSI fixes - Misc fixes & updates * tag 'sched-core-2022-12-12' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tip/tip: sched: Clear ttwu_pending after enqueue_task() sched/psi: Use task->psi_flags to clear in CPU migration sched/psi: Stop relying on timer_pending() for poll_work rescheduling sched/psi: Fix avgs_work re-arm in psi_avgs_work() sched/psi: Fix possible missing or delayed pending event sched: Always clear user_cpus_ptr in do_set_cpus_allowed() sched: Enforce user requested affinity sched: Always preserve the user requested cpumask sched: Introduce affinity_context sched: Add __releases annotations to affine_move_task() sched/fair: Check if prev_cpu has highest spare cap in feec() sched/fair: Consider capacity inversion in util_fits_cpu() sched/fair: Detect capacity inversion sched/uclamp: Cater for uclamp in find_energy_efficient_cpu()'s early exit condition sched/uclamp: Make cpu_overutilized() use util_fits_cpu() sched/uclamp: Make asym_fits_capacity() use util_fits_cpu() sched/uclamp: Make select_idle_capacity() use util_fits_cpu() sched/uclamp: Fix fits_capacity() check in feec() sched/uclamp: Make task_fits_capacity() use util_fits_cpu() sched/uclamp: Fix relationship between uclamp and migration margin |
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79cc1ba7ba |
panic: Consolidate open-coded panic_on_warn checks
Several run-time checkers (KASAN, UBSAN, KFENCE, KCSAN, sched) roll their own warnings, and each check "panic_on_warn". Consolidate this into a single function so that future instrumentation can be added in a single location. Cc: Marco Elver <elver@google.com> Cc: Dmitry Vyukov <dvyukov@google.com> Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com> Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> Cc: Juri Lelli <juri.lelli@redhat.com> Cc: Vincent Guittot <vincent.guittot@linaro.org> Cc: Dietmar Eggemann <dietmar.eggemann@arm.com> Cc: Steven Rostedt <rostedt@goodmis.org> Cc: Ben Segall <bsegall@google.com> Cc: Mel Gorman <mgorman@suse.de> Cc: Daniel Bristot de Oliveira <bristot@redhat.com> Cc: Valentin Schneider <vschneid@redhat.com> Cc: Andrey Ryabinin <ryabinin.a.a@gmail.com> Cc: Alexander Potapenko <glider@google.com> Cc: Andrey Konovalov <andreyknvl@gmail.com> Cc: Vincenzo Frascino <vincenzo.frascino@arm.com> Cc: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org> Cc: David Gow <davidgow@google.com> Cc: tangmeng <tangmeng@uniontech.com> Cc: Jann Horn <jannh@google.com> Cc: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org> Cc: Petr Mladek <pmladek@suse.com> Cc: "Paul E. McKenney" <paulmck@kernel.org> Cc: Sebastian Andrzej Siewior <bigeasy@linutronix.de> Cc: "Guilherme G. Piccoli" <gpiccoli@igalia.com> Cc: Tiezhu Yang <yangtiezhu@loongson.cn> Cc: kasan-dev@googlegroups.com Cc: linux-mm@kvack.org Reviewed-by: Luis Chamberlain <mcgrof@kernel.org> Signed-off-by: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org> Reviewed-by: Marco Elver <elver@google.com> Reviewed-by: Andrey Konovalov <andreyknvl@gmail.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20221117234328.594699-4-keescook@chromium.org |
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cdcc5ef26b |
Revert "cpufreq: schedutil: Move max CPU capacity to sugov_policy"
This reverts commit |
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0dff89c448 |
sched: Move numa_balancing sysctls to its own file
The sysctl_numa_balancing_promote_rate_limit and sysctl_numa_balancing are part of sched, move them to its own file. Signed-off-by: Kefeng Wang <wangkefeng.wang@huawei.com> Signed-off-by: Luis Chamberlain <mcgrof@kernel.org> |
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8baceabca6 |
sched/fair: use try_cmpxchg in task_numa_work
Use try_cmpxchg instead of cmpxchg (*ptr, old, new) == old in task_numa_work. x86 CMPXCHG instruction returns success in ZF flag, so this change saves a compare after cmpxchg (and related move instruction in front of cmpxchg). No functional change intended. Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20220822173956.82525-1-ubizjak@gmail.com Signed-off-by: Uros Bizjak <ubizjak@gmail.com> Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com> Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> Cc: Juri Lelli <juri.lelli@redhat.com> Cc: Vincent Guittot <vincent.guittot@linaro.org> Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org> |
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ee7dc86b6d |
wait: Return number of exclusive waiters awaken
Sbitmap code will need to know how many waiters were actually woken for its batched wakeups implementation. Return the number of woken exclusive waiters from __wake_up() to facilitate that. Suggested-by: Jan Kara <jack@suse.cz> Signed-off-by: Gabriel Krisman Bertazi <krisman@suse.de> Reviewed-by: Jan Kara <jack@suse.cz> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20221115224553.23594-3-krisman@suse.de Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@kernel.dk> |
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d6962c4fe8 |
sched: Clear ttwu_pending after enqueue_task()
We found a long tail latency in schbench whem m*t is close to nr_cpus.
(e.g., "schbench -m 2 -t 16" on a machine with 32 cpus.)
This is because when the wakee cpu is idle, rq->ttwu_pending is cleared
too early, and idle_cpu() will return true until the wakee task enqueued.
This will mislead the waker when selecting idle cpu, and wake multiple
worker threads on the same wakee cpu. This situation is enlarged by
commit
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91dabf33ae |
sched: Fix race in task_call_func()
There is a very narrow race between schedule() and task_call_func().
CPU0 CPU1
__schedule()
rq_lock();
prev_state = READ_ONCE(prev->__state);
if (... && prev_state) {
deactivate_tasl(rq, prev, ...)
prev->on_rq = 0;
task_call_func()
raw_spin_lock_irqsave(p->pi_lock);
state = READ_ONCE(p->__state);
smp_rmb();
if (... || p->on_rq) // false!!!
rq = __task_rq_lock()
ret = func();
next = pick_next_task();
rq = context_switch(prev, next)
prepare_lock_switch()
spin_release(&__rq_lockp(rq)->dep_map...)
So while the task is on it's way out, it still holds rq->lock for a
little while, and right then task_call_func() comes in and figures it
doesn't need rq->lock anymore (because the task is already dequeued --
but still running there) and then the __set_task_frozen() thing observes
it's holding rq->lock and yells murder.
Avoid this by waiting for p->on_cpu to get cleared, which guarantees
the task is fully finished on the old CPU.
( While arguably the fixes tag is 'wrong' -- none of the previous
task_call_func() users appears to care for this case. )
Fixes:
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52b33d87b9 |
sched/psi: Use task->psi_flags to clear in CPU migration
The commit
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710ffe671e |
sched/psi: Stop relying on timer_pending() for poll_work rescheduling
Psi polling mechanism is trying to minimize the number of wakeups to run psi_poll_work and is currently relying on timer_pending() to detect when this work is already scheduled. This provides a window of opportunity for psi_group_change to schedule an immediate psi_poll_work after poll_timer_fn got called but before psi_poll_work could reschedule itself. Below is the depiction of this entire window: poll_timer_fn wake_up_interruptible(&group->poll_wait); psi_poll_worker wait_event_interruptible(group->poll_wait, ...) psi_poll_work psi_schedule_poll_work if (timer_pending(&group->poll_timer)) return; ... mod_timer(&group->poll_timer, jiffies + delay); Prior to |
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2fcd7bbae9 |
sched/psi: Fix avgs_work re-arm in psi_avgs_work()
Pavan reported a problem that PSI avgs_work idle shutoff is not
working at all. Because PSI_NONIDLE condition would be observed in
psi_avgs_work()->collect_percpu_times()->get_recent_times() even if
only the kworker running avgs_work on the CPU.
Although commit
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e38f89af6a |
sched/psi: Fix possible missing or delayed pending event
When a pending event exists and growth is less than the threshold, the current logic is to skip this trigger without generating event. However, from |
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851a723e45 |
sched: Always clear user_cpus_ptr in do_set_cpus_allowed()
The do_set_cpus_allowed() function is used by either kthread_bind() or select_fallback_rq(). In both cases the user affinity (if any) should be destroyed too. Suggested-by: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> Signed-off-by: Waiman Long <longman@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20220922180041.1768141-6-longman@redhat.com |
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da01903281 |
sched: Enforce user requested affinity
It was found that the user requested affinity via sched_setaffinity() can be easily overwritten by other kernel subsystems without an easy way to reset it back to what the user requested. For example, any change to the current cpuset hierarchy may reset the cpumask of the tasks in the affected cpusets to the default cpuset value even if those tasks have pre-existing user requested affinity. That is especially easy to trigger under a cgroup v2 environment where writing "+cpuset" to the root cgroup's cgroup.subtree_control file will reset the cpus affinity of all the processes in the system. That is problematic in a nohz_full environment where the tasks running in the nohz_full CPUs usually have their cpus affinity explicitly set and will behave incorrectly if cpus affinity changes. Fix this problem by looking at user_cpus_ptr in __set_cpus_allowed_ptr() and use it to restrcit the given cpumask unless there is no overlap. In that case, it will fallback to the given one. The SCA_USER flag is reused to indicate intent to set user_cpus_ptr and so user_cpus_ptr masking should be skipped. In addition, masking should also be skipped if any of the SCA_MIGRATE_* flag is set. All callers of set_cpus_allowed_ptr() will be affected by this change. A scratch cpumask is added to percpu runqueues structure for doing additional masking when user_cpus_ptr is set. Signed-off-by: Waiman Long <longman@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20220922180041.1768141-4-longman@redhat.com |
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8f9ea86fdf |
sched: Always preserve the user requested cpumask
Unconditionally preserve the user requested cpumask on sched_setaffinity() calls. This allows using it outside of the fairly narrow restrict_cpus_allowed_ptr() use-case and fix some cpuset issues that currently suffer destruction of cpumasks. Signed-off-by: Waiman Long <longman@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20220922180041.1768141-3-longman@redhat.com |
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713a2e21a5 |
sched: Introduce affinity_context
In order to prepare for passing through additional data through the affinity call-chains, convert the mask and flags argument into a structure. Suggested-by: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> Signed-off-by: Waiman Long <longman@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20220922180041.1768141-5-longman@redhat.com |
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5584e8ac2c |
sched: Add __releases annotations to affine_move_task()
affine_move_task() assumes task_rq_lock() has been called and it does an implicit task_rq_unlock() before returning. Add the appropriate __releases annotations to make this clear. A typo error in comment is also fixed. Signed-off-by: Waiman Long <longman@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20220922180041.1768141-2-longman@redhat.com |
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ad841e569f |
sched/fair: Check if prev_cpu has highest spare cap in feec()
When evaluating the CPU candidates in the perf domain (pd) containing the previously used CPU (prev_cpu), find_energy_efficient_cpu() evaluates the energy of the pd: - without the task (base_energy) - with the task placed on prev_cpu (if the task fits) - with the task placed on the CPU with the highest spare capacity, prev_cpu being excluded from this set If prev_cpu is already the CPU with the highest spare capacity, max_spare_cap_cpu will be the CPU with the second highest spare capacity. On an Arm64 Juno-r2, with a workload of 10 tasks at a 10% duty cycle, when prev_cpu and max_spare_cap_cpu are both valid candidates, prev_spare_cap > max_spare_cap at ~82%. Thus the energy of the pd when placing the task on max_spare_cap_cpu is computed with no possible positive outcome 82% most of the time. Do not consider max_spare_cap_cpu as a valid candidate if prev_spare_cap > max_spare_cap. Signed-off-by: Pierre Gondois <pierre.gondois@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Reviewed-by: Dietmar Eggemann <dietmar.eggemann@arm.com> Reviewed-by: Vincent Guittot <vincent.guittot@linaro.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20221006081052.3862167-2-pierre.gondois@arm.com |
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aa69c36f31 |
sched/fair: Consider capacity inversion in util_fits_cpu()
We do consider thermal pressure in util_fits_cpu() for uclamp_min only. With the exception of the biggest cores which by definition are the max performance point of the system and all tasks by definition should fit. Even under thermal pressure, the capacity of the biggest CPU is the highest in the system and should still fit every task. Except when it reaches capacity inversion point, then this is no longer true. We can handle this by using the inverted capacity as capacity_orig in util_fits_cpu(). Which not only addresses the problem above, but also ensure uclamp_max now considers the inverted capacity. Force fitting a task when a CPU is in this adverse state will contribute to making the thermal throttling last longer. Signed-off-by: Qais Yousef <qais.yousef@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220804143609.515789-10-qais.yousef@arm.com |
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44c7b80bff |
sched/fair: Detect capacity inversion
Check each performance domain to see if thermal pressure is causing its capacity to be lower than another performance domain. We assume that each performance domain has CPUs with the same capacities, which is similar to an assumption made in energy_model.c We also assume that thermal pressure impacts all CPUs in a performance domain equally. If there're multiple performance domains with the same capacity_orig, we will trigger a capacity inversion if the domain is under thermal pressure. The new cpu_in_capacity_inversion() should help users to know when information about capacity_orig are not reliable and can opt in to use the inverted capacity as the 'actual' capacity_orig. Signed-off-by: Qais Yousef <qais.yousef@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220804143609.515789-9-qais.yousef@arm.com |
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d81304bc61 |
sched/uclamp: Cater for uclamp in find_energy_efficient_cpu()'s early exit condition
If the utilization of the woken up task is 0, we skip the energy
calculation because it has no impact.
But if the task is boosted (uclamp_min != 0) will have an impact on task
placement and frequency selection. Only skip if the util is truly
0 after applying uclamp values.
Change uclamp_task_cpu() signature to avoid unnecessary additional calls
to uclamp_eff_get(). feec() is the only user now.
Fixes:
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c56ab1b350 |
sched/uclamp: Make cpu_overutilized() use util_fits_cpu()
So that it is now uclamp aware.
This fixes a major problem of busy tasks capped with UCLAMP_MAX keeping
the system in overutilized state which disables EAS and leads to wasting
energy in the long run.
Without this patch running a busy background activity like JIT
compilation on Pixel 6 causes the system to be in overutilized state
74.5% of the time.
With this patch this goes down to 9.79%.
It also fixes another problem when long running tasks that have their
UCLAMP_MIN changed while running such that they need to upmigrate to
honour the new UCLAMP_MIN value. The upmigration doesn't get triggered
because overutilized state never gets set in this state, hence misfit
migration never happens at tick in this case until the task wakes up
again.
Fixes:
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a2e7f03ed2 |
sched/uclamp: Make asym_fits_capacity() use util_fits_cpu()
Use the new util_fits_cpu() to ensure migration margin and capacity
pressure are taken into account correctly when uclamp is being used
otherwise we will fail to consider CPUs as fitting in scenarios where
they should.
s/asym_fits_capacity/asym_fits_cpu/ to better reflect what it does now.
Fixes:
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b759caa1d9 |
sched/uclamp: Make select_idle_capacity() use util_fits_cpu()
Use the new util_fits_cpu() to ensure migration margin and capacity
pressure are taken into account correctly when uclamp is being used
otherwise we will fail to consider CPUs as fitting in scenarios where
they should.
Fixes:
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244226035a |
sched/uclamp: Fix fits_capacity() check in feec()
As reported by Yun Hsiang [1], if a task has its uclamp_min >= 0.8 * 1024,
it'll always pick the previous CPU because fits_capacity() will always
return false in this case.
The new util_fits_cpu() logic should handle this correctly for us beside
more corner cases where similar failures could occur, like when using
UCLAMP_MAX.
We open code uclamp_rq_util_with() except for the clamp() part,
util_fits_cpu() needs the 'raw' values to be passed to it.
Also introduce uclamp_rq_{set, get}() shorthand accessors to get uclamp
value for the rq. Makes the code more readable and ensures the right
rules (use READ_ONCE/WRITE_ONCE) are respected transparently.
[1] https://lists.linaro.org/pipermail/eas-dev/2020-July/001488.html
Fixes:
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b48e16a697 |
sched/uclamp: Make task_fits_capacity() use util_fits_cpu()
So that the new uclamp rules in regard to migration margin and capacity
pressure are taken into account correctly.
Fixes:
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48d5e9daa8 |
sched/uclamp: Fix relationship between uclamp and migration margin
fits_capacity() verifies that a util is within 20% margin of the
capacity of a CPU, which is an attempt to speed up upmigration.
But when uclamp is used, this 20% margin is problematic because for
example if a task is boosted to 1024, then it will not fit on any CPU
according to fits_capacity() logic.
Or if a task is boosted to capacity_orig_of(medium_cpu). The task will
end up on big instead on the desired medium CPU.
Similar corner cases exist for uclamp and usage of capacity_of().
Slightest irq pressure on biggest CPU for example will make a 1024
boosted task look like it can't fit.
What we really want is for uclamp comparisons to ignore the migration
margin and capacity pressure, yet retain them for when checking the
_actual_ util signal.
For example, task p:
p->util_avg = 300
p->uclamp[UCLAMP_MIN] = 1024
Will fit a big CPU. But
p->util_avg = 900
p->uclamp[UCLAMP_MIN] = 1024
will not, this should trigger overutilized state because the big CPU is
now *actually* being saturated.
Similar reasoning applies to capping tasks with UCLAMP_MAX. For example:
p->util_avg = 1024
p->uclamp[UCLAMP_MAX] = capacity_orig_of(medium_cpu)
Should fit the task on medium cpus without triggering overutilized
state.
Inlined comments expand more on desired behavior in more scenarios.
Introduce new util_fits_cpu() function which encapsulates the new logic.
The new function is not used anywhere yet, but will be used to update
various users of fits_capacity() in later patches.
Fixes:
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8e5bad7dcc |
sched: Introduce struct balance_callback to avoid CFI mismatches
Introduce distinct struct balance_callback instead of performing function pointer casting which will trip CFI. Avoids warnings as found by Clang's future -Wcast-function-type-strict option: In file included from kernel/sched/core.c:84: kernel/sched/sched.h:1755:15: warning: cast from 'void (*)(struct rq *)' to 'void (*)(struct callback_head *)' converts to incompatible function type [-Wcast-function-type-strict] head->func = (void (*)(struct callback_head *))func; ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ No binary differences result from this change. This patch is a cleanup based on Brad Spengler/PaX Team's modifications to sched code in their last public patch of grsecurity/PaX based on my understanding of the code. Changes or omissions from the original code are mine and don't reflect the original grsecurity/PaX code. Reported-by: Sami Tolvanen <samitolvanen@google.com> Signed-off-by: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org> Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Reviewed-by: Nathan Chancellor <nathan@kernel.org> Link: https://github.com/ClangBuiltLinux/linux/issues/1724 Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20221008000758.2957718-1-keescook@chromium.org |
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e705968dd6 |
sched/core: Fix comparison in sched_group_cookie_match()
In commit |
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bd9a3dba18 |
PSI updates for v6.1:
- Various performance optimizations, resulting in a 4%-9% speedup in the mmtests/config-scheduler-perfpipe micro-benchmark. - New interface to turn PSI on/off on a per cgroup level. Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- iQJFBAABCgAvFiEEBpT5eoXrXCwVQwEKEnMQ0APhK1gFAmNJKPsRHG1pbmdvQGtl cm5lbC5vcmcACgkQEnMQ0APhK1iPmg//aovCitAQX2lLoHJDIgdQibU40oaEpKTX wM549EGz3Dr6qmwF8+qT1U2Ge6af/hHQc5G/ZqDpKbuTjUIc3RmBkqX80dNKFLuH uyi9UtfsSriw+ks8fWuDdjr+S4oppwW9ZoIXvK8v4bisd3F31DNGvKPTayNxt73m lExfzJiD1oJixDxGX8MGO9QpcoywmjWjzjrB2P+J8hnTpArouHx/HOKdQOpG6wXq ZRr9kZvju6ucDpXCTa1HJrfVRxNAh35tx/b4cDtXbBFifVAeKaPOrHapMTVsqfel Z7T+2DymhidNYK0hrRJoGUwa/vkz+2Sm1ZLG9LlgUCXVco/9S1zw1ZuQakVvzPen wriuxRaAkR+szCP0L8js5+/DAkGa43MjKsvQHmDVnetQtlsAD4eYnn+alQ837SXv MP3jwFqF+e4mcWdoQcfh0OWUgGec5XZzdgRYrFkBKyTWGLB2iPivcAMNf0X/h82Q xxv4DQJIIJ017GOQ/ho2saq+GbtFCvX8YnGYas9T47Bjjluhjo7jgTVtPTo+mhtN RfwMdG718Ap/gvnAX7wMe/t+L/4AP8AIgDRi5L35dTRqETwOjH+LAvOYjleQFYgu kMVtLMyzU+TGwHscuzPFRh7TnvSJ4sD48Ll1BPnyZsh3SS9u0gAs1bml7Cu7JbmW SIZD/S/hzdI= =91tB -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- Merge tag 'sched-psi-2022-10-14' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tip/tip Pull PSI updates from Ingo Molnar: - Various performance optimizations, resulting in a 4%-9% speedup in the mmtests/config-scheduler-perfpipe micro-benchmark. - New interface to turn PSI on/off on a per cgroup level. * tag 'sched-psi-2022-10-14' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tip/tip: sched/psi: Per-cgroup PSI accounting disable/re-enable interface sched/psi: Cache parent psi_group to speed up group iteration sched/psi: Consolidate cgroup_psi() sched/psi: Add PSI_IRQ to track IRQ/SOFTIRQ pressure sched/psi: Remove NR_ONCPU task accounting sched/psi: Optimize task switch inside shared cgroups again sched/psi: Move private helpers to sched/stats.h sched/psi: Save percpu memory when !psi_cgroups_enabled sched/psi: Don't create cgroup PSI files when psi_disabled sched/psi: Fix periodic aggregation shut off |
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27bc50fc90 |
- Yu Zhao's Multi-Gen LRU patches are here. They've been under test in
linux-next for a couple of months without, to my knowledge, any negative reports (or any positive ones, come to that). - Also the Maple Tree from Liam R. Howlett. An overlapping range-based tree for vmas. It it apparently slight more efficient in its own right, but is mainly targeted at enabling work to reduce mmap_lock contention. Liam has identified a number of other tree users in the kernel which could be beneficially onverted to mapletrees. Yu Zhao has identified a hard-to-hit but "easy to fix" lockdep splat (https://lkml.kernel.org/r/CAOUHufZabH85CeUN-MEMgL8gJGzJEWUrkiM58JkTbBhh-jew0Q@mail.gmail.com). This has yet to be addressed due to Liam's unfortunately timed vacation. He is now back and we'll get this fixed up. - Dmitry Vyukov introduces KMSAN: the Kernel Memory Sanitizer. It uses clang-generated instrumentation to detect used-unintialized bugs down to the single bit level. KMSAN keeps finding bugs. New ones, as well as the legacy ones. - Yang Shi adds a userspace mechanism (madvise) to induce a collapse of memory into THPs. - Zach O'Keefe has expanded Yang Shi's madvise(MADV_COLLAPSE) to support file/shmem-backed pages. - userfaultfd updates from Axel Rasmussen - zsmalloc cleanups from Alexey Romanov - cleanups from Miaohe Lin: vmscan, hugetlb_cgroup, hugetlb and memory-failure - Huang Ying adds enhancements to NUMA balancing memory tiering mode's page promotion, with a new way of detecting hot pages. - memcg updates from Shakeel Butt: charging optimizations and reduced memory consumption. - memcg cleanups from Kairui Song. - memcg fixes and cleanups from Johannes Weiner. - Vishal Moola provides more folio conversions - Zhang Yi removed ll_rw_block() :( - migration enhancements from Peter Xu - migration error-path bugfixes from Huang Ying - Aneesh Kumar added ability for a device driver to alter the memory tiering promotion paths. For optimizations by PMEM drivers, DRM drivers, etc. - vma merging improvements from Jakub Matěn. - NUMA hinting cleanups from David Hildenbrand. - xu xin added aditional userspace visibility into KSM merging activity. - THP & KSM code consolidation from Qi Zheng. - more folio work from Matthew Wilcox. - KASAN updates from Andrey Konovalov. - DAMON cleanups from Kaixu Xia. - DAMON work from SeongJae Park: fixes, cleanups. - hugetlb sysfs cleanups from Muchun Song. - Mike Kravetz fixes locking issues in hugetlbfs and in hugetlb core. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- iHUEABYKAB0WIQTTMBEPP41GrTpTJgfdBJ7gKXxAjgUCY0HaPgAKCRDdBJ7gKXxA joPjAQDZ5LlRCMWZ1oxLP2NOTp6nm63q9PWcGnmY50FjD/dNlwEAnx7OejCLWGWf bbTuk6U2+TKgJa4X7+pbbejeoqnt5QU= =xfWx -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- Merge tag 'mm-stable-2022-10-08' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/akpm/mm Pull MM updates from Andrew Morton: - Yu Zhao's Multi-Gen LRU patches are here. They've been under test in linux-next for a couple of months without, to my knowledge, any negative reports (or any positive ones, come to that). - Also the Maple Tree from Liam Howlett. An overlapping range-based tree for vmas. It it apparently slightly more efficient in its own right, but is mainly targeted at enabling work to reduce mmap_lock contention. Liam has identified a number of other tree users in the kernel which could be beneficially onverted to mapletrees. Yu Zhao has identified a hard-to-hit but "easy to fix" lockdep splat at [1]. This has yet to be addressed due to Liam's unfortunately timed vacation. He is now back and we'll get this fixed up. - Dmitry Vyukov introduces KMSAN: the Kernel Memory Sanitizer. It uses clang-generated instrumentation to detect used-unintialized bugs down to the single bit level. KMSAN keeps finding bugs. New ones, as well as the legacy ones. - Yang Shi adds a userspace mechanism (madvise) to induce a collapse of memory into THPs. - Zach O'Keefe has expanded Yang Shi's madvise(MADV_COLLAPSE) to support file/shmem-backed pages. - userfaultfd updates from Axel Rasmussen - zsmalloc cleanups from Alexey Romanov - cleanups from Miaohe Lin: vmscan, hugetlb_cgroup, hugetlb and memory-failure - Huang Ying adds enhancements to NUMA balancing memory tiering mode's page promotion, with a new way of detecting hot pages. - memcg updates from Shakeel Butt: charging optimizations and reduced memory consumption. - memcg cleanups from Kairui Song. - memcg fixes and cleanups from Johannes Weiner. - Vishal Moola provides more folio conversions - Zhang Yi removed ll_rw_block() :( - migration enhancements from Peter Xu - migration error-path bugfixes from Huang Ying - Aneesh Kumar added ability for a device driver to alter the memory tiering promotion paths. For optimizations by PMEM drivers, DRM drivers, etc. - vma merging improvements from Jakub Matěn. - NUMA hinting cleanups from David Hildenbrand. - xu xin added aditional userspace visibility into KSM merging activity. - THP & KSM code consolidation from Qi Zheng. - more folio work from Matthew Wilcox. - KASAN updates from Andrey Konovalov. - DAMON cleanups from Kaixu Xia. - DAMON work from SeongJae Park: fixes, cleanups. - hugetlb sysfs cleanups from Muchun Song. - Mike Kravetz fixes locking issues in hugetlbfs and in hugetlb core. Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/CAOUHufZabH85CeUN-MEMgL8gJGzJEWUrkiM58JkTbBhh-jew0Q@mail.gmail.com [1] * tag 'mm-stable-2022-10-08' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/akpm/mm: (555 commits) hugetlb: allocate vma lock for all sharable vmas hugetlb: take hugetlb vma_lock when clearing vma_lock->vma pointer hugetlb: fix vma lock handling during split vma and range unmapping mglru: mm/vmscan.c: fix imprecise comments mm/mglru: don't sync disk for each aging cycle mm: memcontrol: drop dead CONFIG_MEMCG_SWAP config symbol mm: memcontrol: use do_memsw_account() in a few more places mm: memcontrol: deprecate swapaccounting=0 mode mm: memcontrol: don't allocate cgroup swap arrays when memcg is disabled mm/secretmem: remove reduntant return value mm/hugetlb: add available_huge_pages() func mm: remove unused inline functions from include/linux/mm_inline.h selftests/vm: add selftest for MADV_COLLAPSE of uffd-minor memory selftests/vm: add file/shmem MADV_COLLAPSE selftest for cleared pmd selftests/vm: add thp collapse shmem testing selftests/vm: add thp collapse file and tmpfs testing selftests/vm: modularize thp collapse memory operations selftests/vm: dedup THP helpers mm/khugepaged: add tracepoint to hpage_collapse_scan_file() mm/madvise: add file and shmem support to MADV_COLLAPSE ... |
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d4013bc4d4 |
bitmap patches for v6.1-rc1
From Phil Auld: drivers/base: Fix unsigned comparison to -1 in CPUMAP_FILE_MAX_BYTES From me: cpumask: cleanup nr_cpu_ids vs nr_cpumask_bits mess This series cleans that mess and adds new config FORCE_NR_CPUS that allows to optimize cpumask subsystem if the number of CPUs is known at compile-time. From me: lib: optimize find_bit() functions Reworks find_bit() functions based on new FIND_{FIRST,NEXT}_BIT() macros. From me: lib/find: add find_nth_bit() Adds find_nth_bit(), which is ~70 times faster than bitcounting with for_each() loop: for_each_set_bit(bit, mask, size) if (n-- == 0) return bit; Also adds bitmap_weight_and() to let people replace this pattern: tmp = bitmap_alloc(nbits); bitmap_and(tmp, map1, map2, nbits); weight = bitmap_weight(tmp, nbits); bitmap_free(tmp); with a single bitmap_weight_and() call. From me: cpumask: repair cpumask_check() After switching cpumask to use nr_cpu_ids, cpumask_check() started generating many false-positive warnings. This series fixes it. From Valentin Schneider: bitmap,cpumask: Add for_each_cpu_andnot() and for_each_cpu_andnot() Extends the API with one more function and applies it in sched/core. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- iQGzBAABCgAdFiEEi8GdvG6xMhdgpu/4sUSA/TofvsgFAmNBwmUACgkQsUSA/Tof vshPRwv+KlqnZlKtuSPgbo/Kgswworpi/7TqfnN9GWlb8AJ2uhjBKI3GFwv4TDow 7KV6wdKdXYLr4pktcIhWy3qLrT+bDDExfarHRo3QI1A1W42EJ+ZiUaGnQGcnVMzD 5q/K1YMJYq0oaesHEw5PVUh8mm6h9qRD8VbX1u+riW/VCWBj3bho9Dp4mffQ48Q6 hVy/SnMGgClQwNYp+sxkqYx38xUqUGYoU5MzeziUmoS6pZQh+4lF33MULnI3EKmc /ehXilPPtOV/Tm0RovDWFfm3rjNapV9FXHu8Ob2z/c+1A29EgXnE3pwrBDkAx001 TQrL9qbCANRDGPLzWQHw0dwFIaXvTdrSttCsfYYfU5hI4JbnJEe0Pqkaaohy7jqm r0dW/TlyOG5T+k8Kwdx9w9A+jKs8TbKKZ8HOaN8BpkXswVnpbzpQbj3TITZI4aeV 6YR4URBQ5UkrVLEXFXbrOzwjL2zqDdyNoBdTJmGLJ+5b/n0HHzmyMVkegNIwLLM3 GR7sMQae =Q/+F -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- Merge tag 'bitmap-6.1-rc1' of https://github.com/norov/linux Pull bitmap updates from Yury Norov: - Fix unsigned comparison to -1 in CPUMAP_FILE_MAX_BYTES (Phil Auld) - cleanup nr_cpu_ids vs nr_cpumask_bits mess (me) This series cleans that mess and adds new config FORCE_NR_CPUS that allows to optimize cpumask subsystem if the number of CPUs is known at compile-time. - optimize find_bit() functions (me) Reworks find_bit() functions based on new FIND_{FIRST,NEXT}_BIT() macros. - add find_nth_bit() (me) Adds find_nth_bit(), which is ~70 times faster than bitcounting with for_each() loop: for_each_set_bit(bit, mask, size) if (n-- == 0) return bit; Also adds bitmap_weight_and() to let people replace this pattern: tmp = bitmap_alloc(nbits); bitmap_and(tmp, map1, map2, nbits); weight = bitmap_weight(tmp, nbits); bitmap_free(tmp); with a single bitmap_weight_and() call. - repair cpumask_check() (me) After switching cpumask to use nr_cpu_ids, cpumask_check() started generating many false-positive warnings. This series fixes it. - Add for_each_cpu_andnot() and for_each_cpu_andnot() (Valentin Schneider) Extends the API with one more function and applies it in sched/core. * tag 'bitmap-6.1-rc1' of https://github.com/norov/linux: (28 commits) sched/core: Merge cpumask_andnot()+for_each_cpu() into for_each_cpu_andnot() lib/test_cpumask: Add for_each_cpu_and(not) tests cpumask: Introduce for_each_cpu_andnot() lib/find_bit: Introduce find_next_andnot_bit() cpumask: fix checking valid cpu range lib/bitmap: add tests for for_each() loops lib/find: optimize for_each() macros lib/bitmap: introduce for_each_set_bit_wrap() macro lib/find_bit: add find_next{,_and}_bit_wrap cpumask: switch for_each_cpu{,_not} to use for_each_bit() net: fix cpu_max_bits_warn() usage in netif_attrmask_next{,_and} cpumask: add cpumask_nth_{,and,andnot} lib/bitmap: remove bitmap_ord_to_pos lib/bitmap: add tests for find_nth_bit() lib: add find_nth{,_and,_andnot}_bit() lib/bitmap: add bitmap_weight_and() lib/bitmap: don't call __bitmap_weight() in kernel code tools: sync find_bit() implementation lib/find_bit: optimize find_next_bit() functions lib/find_bit: create find_first_zero_bit_le() ... |
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30c999937f |
Scheduler changes for v6.1:
- Debuggability: - Change most occurances of BUG_ON() to WARN_ON_ONCE() - Reorganize & fix TASK_ state comparisons, turn it into a bitmap - Update/fix misc scheduler debugging facilities - Load-balancing & regular scheduling: - Improve the behavior of the scheduler in presence of lot of SCHED_IDLE tasks - in particular they should not impact other scheduling classes. - Optimize task load tracking, cleanups & fixes - Clean up & simplify misc load-balancing code - Freezer: - Rewrite the core freezer to behave better wrt thawing and be simpler in general, by replacing PF_FROZEN with TASK_FROZEN & fixing/adjusting all the fallout. - Deadline scheduler: - Fix the DL capacity-aware code - Factor out dl_task_is_earliest_deadline() & replenish_dl_new_period() - Relax/optimize locking in task_non_contending() - Cleanups: - Factor out the update_current_exec_runtime() helper - Various cleanups, simplifications Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- iQJFBAABCgAvFiEEBpT5eoXrXCwVQwEKEnMQ0APhK1gFAmM/01cRHG1pbmdvQGtl cm5lbC5vcmcACgkQEnMQ0APhK1geZA/+PB4KC1T9aVxzaTHI36R03YgJYZmIdtxw wTf02MixePmz+gQCbepJbempGOh5ST28aOcI0xhdYOql5B63MaUBBMlB0HvGUyDG IU3zETqLMRtAbnSTdQFv8m++ECUtZYp8/x1FCel4WO7ya4ETkRu1NRfCoUepEhpZ aVAlae9LH3NBaF9t7s0PT2lTjf3pIzMFRkddJ0ywJhbFR3VnWat05fAK+J6fGY8+ LS54coefNlJD4oDh5TY8uniL1j5SmWmmwbk9Cdj7bLU5P3dFSS0/+5FJNHJPVGDE srGT7wstRUcDrN0CnZo48VIUBiApJCCDqTfJYi9wNYd0NAHvwY6MIJJgEIY8mKsI L/qH26H81Wt+ezSZ/5JIlGlZ/LIeNaa6OO/fbWEYABBQogvvx3nxsRNUYKSQzumH CnSBasBjLnjWyLlK4qARM9cI7NFSEK6NUigrEx/7h8JFu/8T4DlSy6LsF1HUyKgq 4+FJLAqG6cL0tcwB/fHYd0oRESN8dStnQhGxSojgufwLc7dlFULvCYF5JM/dX+/V IKwbOfIOeOn6ViMtSOXAEGdII+IQ2/ZFPwr+8Z5JC7NzvTVL6xlu/3JXkLZR3L7o yaXTSaz06h1vil7Z+GRf7RHc+wUeGkEpXh5vnarGZKXivhFdWsBdROIJANK+xR0i TeSLCxQxXlU= =KjMD -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- Merge tag 'sched-core-2022-10-07' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tip/tip Pull scheduler updates from Ingo Molnar: "Debuggability: - Change most occurances of BUG_ON() to WARN_ON_ONCE() - Reorganize & fix TASK_ state comparisons, turn it into a bitmap - Update/fix misc scheduler debugging facilities Load-balancing & regular scheduling: - Improve the behavior of the scheduler in presence of lot of SCHED_IDLE tasks - in particular they should not impact other scheduling classes. - Optimize task load tracking, cleanups & fixes - Clean up & simplify misc load-balancing code Freezer: - Rewrite the core freezer to behave better wrt thawing and be simpler in general, by replacing PF_FROZEN with TASK_FROZEN & fixing/adjusting all the fallout. Deadline scheduler: - Fix the DL capacity-aware code - Factor out dl_task_is_earliest_deadline() & replenish_dl_new_period() - Relax/optimize locking in task_non_contending() Cleanups: - Factor out the update_current_exec_runtime() helper - Various cleanups, simplifications" * tag 'sched-core-2022-10-07' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tip/tip: (41 commits) sched: Fix more TASK_state comparisons sched: Fix TASK_state comparisons sched/fair: Move call to list_last_entry() in detach_tasks sched/fair: Cleanup loop_max and loop_break sched/fair: Make sure to try to detach at least one movable task sched: Show PF_flag holes freezer,sched: Rewrite core freezer logic sched: Widen TAKS_state literals sched/wait: Add wait_event_state() sched/completion: Add wait_for_completion_state() sched: Add TASK_ANY for wait_task_inactive() sched: Change wait_task_inactive()s match_state freezer,umh: Clean up freezer/initrd interaction freezer: Have {,un}lock_system_sleep() save/restore flags sched: Rename task_running() to task_on_cpu() sched/fair: Cleanup for SIS_PROP sched/fair: Default to false in test_idle_cores() sched/fair: Remove useless check in select_idle_core() sched/fair: Avoid double search on same cpu sched/fair: Remove redundant check in select_idle_smt() ... |
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513389809e |
for-6.1/block-2022-10-03
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- iQJEBAABCAAuFiEEwPw5LcreJtl1+l5K99NY+ylx4KYFAmM67XkQHGF4Ym9lQGtl cm5lbC5kawAKCRD301j7KXHgpiHoD/9eN+6YnNRPu5+2zeGnnm1Nlwic6YMZeORr KFIeC0COMWoFhNBIPFkgAKT+0qIH+uGt5UsHSM3Y5La7wMR8yLxD4PAnvTZ/Ijtt yxVIOmonJoQ0OrQ2kTbvDXL/9OCUrzwXXyUIEPJnH0Ca1mxeNOgDHbE7VGF6DMul 0D3pI8qs2WLnHlDi1V/8kH5qZ6WoAJSDcb8sTzOUVnyveZPNaZhGQJuHA2XAYMtg fqKMDJqgmNk6jdTMUgdF5B+rV64PQoCy28I7fXqGkEe+RE5TBy57vAa0XY84V8XR /a8CEuwMts2ypk1hIcJG8Vv8K6u5war9yPM5MTngKsoMpzNIlhrhaJQVyjKdcs+E Ixwzexu6xTYcrcq+mUARgeTh79FzTBM/uXEdbCG2G3S6HPd6UZWUJZGfxw/l0Aem V4xB7lj6SQaJDU1iJCYUaHcekNXhQAPvyVG+R2ED1SO3McTpTPIM1aeigxw6vj7u bH3Kfdr94Z8HNuoLuiS6YYfjNt2Shf4LEB6GxKJ9TYHtyhdOyO0H64jGHpygrWqN cSnkWPUqUUNpF7srKM0ZgbliCshvmyJc4aMOFd0gBY/kXf5J/j7IXvh8TFCi9rHH 0KyZH3/3Zsu9geUn3ynznlr4FXU+BcqE6boaa/iWb9sN1m+Rvaahv8cSch/dh44a vQNj/iOBQA== =R05e -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- Merge tag 'for-6.1/block-2022-10-03' of git://git.kernel.dk/linux Pull block updates from Jens Axboe: - NVMe pull requests via Christoph: - handle number of queue changes in the TCP and RDMA drivers (Daniel Wagner) - allow changing the number of queues in nvmet (Daniel Wagner) - also consider host_iface when checking ip options (Daniel Wagner) - don't map pages which can't come from HIGHMEM (Fabio M. De Francesco) - avoid unnecessary flush bios in nvmet (Guixin Liu) - shrink and better pack the nvme_iod structure (Keith Busch) - add comment for unaligned "fake" nqn (Linjun Bao) - print actual source IP address through sysfs "address" attr (Martin Belanger) - various cleanups (Jackie Liu, Wolfram Sang, Genjian Zhang) - handle effects after freeing the request (Keith Busch) - copy firmware_rev on each init (Keith Busch) - restrict management ioctls to admin (Keith Busch) - ensure subsystem reset is single threaded (Keith Busch) - report the actual number of tagset maps in nvme-pci (Keith Busch) - small fabrics authentication fixups (Christoph Hellwig) - add common code for tagset allocation and freeing (Christoph Hellwig) - stop using the request_queue in nvmet (Christoph Hellwig) - set min_align_mask before calculating max_hw_sectors (Rishabh Bhatnagar) - send a rediscover uevent when a persistent discovery controller reconnects (Sagi Grimberg) - misc nvmet-tcp fixes (Varun Prakash, zhenwei pi) - MD pull request via Song: - Various raid5 fix and clean up, by Logan Gunthorpe and David Sloan. - Raid10 performance optimization, by Yu Kuai. - sbitmap wakeup hang fixes (Hugh, Keith, Jan, Yu) - IO scheduler switching quisce fix (Keith) - s390/dasd block driver updates (Stefan) - support for recovery for the ublk driver (ZiyangZhang) - rnbd drivers fixes and updates (Guoqing, Santosh, ye, Christoph) - blk-mq and null_blk map fixes (Bart) - various bcache fixes (Coly, Jilin, Jules) - nbd signal hang fix (Shigeru) - block writeback throttling fix (Yu) - optimize the passthrough mapping handling (me) - prepare block cgroups to being gendisk based (Christoph) - get rid of an old PSI hack in the block layer, moving it to the callers instead where it belongs (Christoph) - blk-throttle fixes and cleanups (Yu) - misc fixes and cleanups (Liu Shixin, Liu Song, Miaohe, Pankaj, Ping-Xiang, Wolfram, Saurabh, Li Jinlin, Li Lei, Lin, Li zeming, Miaohe, Bart, Coly, Gaosheng * tag 'for-6.1/block-2022-10-03' of git://git.kernel.dk/linux: (162 commits) sbitmap: fix lockup while swapping block: add rationale for not using blk_mq_plug() when applicable block: adapt blk_mq_plug() to not plug for writes that require a zone lock s390/dasd: use blk_mq_alloc_disk blk-cgroup: don't update the blkg lookup hint in blkg_conf_prep nvmet: don't look at the request_queue in nvmet_bdev_set_limits nvmet: don't look at the request_queue in nvmet_bdev_zone_mgmt_emulate_all blk-mq: use quiesced elevator switch when reinitializing queues block: replace blk_queue_nowait with bdev_nowait nvme: remove nvme_ctrl_init_connect_q nvme-loop: use the tagset alloc/free helpers nvme-loop: store the generic nvme_ctrl in set->driver_data nvme-loop: initialize sqsize later nvme-fc: use the tagset alloc/free helpers nvme-fc: store the generic nvme_ctrl in set->driver_data nvme-fc: keep ctrl->sqsize in sync with opts->queue_size nvme-rdma: use the tagset alloc/free helpers nvme-rdma: store the generic nvme_ctrl in set->driver_data nvme-tcp: use the tagset alloc/free helpers nvme-tcp: store the generic nvme_ctrl in set->driver_data ... |
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585463f0d5 |
sched/core: Merge cpumask_andnot()+for_each_cpu() into for_each_cpu_andnot()
This removes the second use of the sched_core_mask temporary mask. Suggested-by: Yury Norov <yury.norov@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Valentin Schneider <vschneid@redhat.com> |
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c79e6fa98c |
Power management updates for 6.1-rc1
- Add isupport for Tiger Lake in no-HWP mode to intel_pstate (Doug Smythies). - Update the AMD P-state driver (Perry Yuan): * Fix wrong lowest perf fetch. * Map desired perf into pstate scope for powersave governor. * Update pstate frequency transition delay time. * Fix initial highest_perf value. * Clean up. - Move max CPU capacity to sugov_policy in the schedutil cpufreq governor (Lukasz Luba). - Add SM6115 to cpufreq-dt blocklist (Adam Skladowski). - Add support for Tegra239 and minor cleanups (Sumit Gupta, ye xingchen, and Yang Yingliang). - Add freq qos for qcom cpufreq driver and minor cleanups (Xuewen Yan, and Viresh Kumar). - Minor cleanups around functions called at module_init() (Xiu Jianfeng). - Use module_init and add module_exit for bmips driver (Zhang Jianhua). - Add AlderLake-N support to intel_idle (Zhang Rui). - Replace strlcpy() with unused retval with strscpy() in intel_idle (Wolfram Sang). - Remove redundant check from cpuidle_switch_governor() (Yu Liao). - Replace strlcpy() with unused retval with strscpy() in the powernv cpuidle driver (Wolfram Sang). - Drop duplicate word from a comment in the coupled cpuidle driver (Jason Wang). - Make rpm_resume() return -EINPROGRESS if RPM_NOWAIT is passed to it in the flags and the device is about to resume (Rafael Wysocki). - Add extra debugging statement for multiple active IRQs to system wakeup handling code (Mario Limonciello). - Replace strlcpy() with unused retval with strscpy() in the core system suspend support code (Wolfram Sang). - Update the intel_rapl power capping driver: * Use standard Energy Unit for SPR Dram RAPL domain (Zhang Rui). * Add support for RAPTORLAKE_S (Zhang Rui). * Fix UBSAN shift-out-of-bounds issue (Chao Qin). - Handle -EPROBE_DEFER when regulator is not probed on mtk-ci-devfreq.c (AngeloGioacchino Del Regno). - Fix message typo and use dev_err_probe() in rockchip-dfi.c (Christophe JAILLET). -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- iQJGBAABCAAwFiEE4fcc61cGeeHD/fCwgsRv/nhiVHEFAmM7OrYSHHJqd0Byand5 c29ja2kubmV0AAoJEILEb/54YlRxeKAP/jFiZ1lhTGRngiVLMV6a6SSSy5xzzXZZ b/V0oqsuUvWWo6CzVmfU4QfmKGr55+77NgI9Yh5qN6zJTEJmunuCYwVD80KdxPDJ 8SjMUNCACiVwfryLR1gFJlO+0BN4CWTxvto2gjGxzm0l1UQBACf71wm9MQCP8b7A gcBNuOtM7o5NLywDB+/528SiF9AXfZKjkwXhJACimak5yQytaCJaqtOWtcG2KqYF USunmqSB3IIVkAa5LJcwloc8wxHYo5mTPaWGGuSA65hfF42k3vJQ2/b8v8oTVza7 bKzhegErIYtL6B9FjB+P1FyknNOvT7BYr+4RSGLvaPySfjMn1bwz9fM1Epo59Guk Azz3ExpaPixDh+x7b89W1Gb751FZU/zlWT+h1CNy5sOP/ChfxgCEBHw0mnWJ2Y0u CPcI/Ch0FNQHG+PdbdGlyfvORHVh7te/t6dOhoEHXBue+1r3VkOo8tRGY9x+2IrX /JB968u1r0oajF0btGwaDdbbWlyMRTzjrxVl3bwsuz/Kv/0JxsryND2JT0zkKAMZ qYT29HQxhdE0Duw1chgAK6X+BsgP58Bu6LeM3mVcwnGPZE9QvcFa0GQh7z+H71AW 3yOGNmMVMqQSThBYFC6GDi7O2N1UEsLOMV9+ThTRh6D11nU4uiITM5QVIn8nWZGR z3IZ52Jg0oeJ =+3IL -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- Merge tag 'pm-6.1-rc1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/rafael/linux-pm Pull power management updates from Rafael Wysocki: "These add support for some new hardware, extend the existing hardware support, fix some issues and clean up code Specifics: - Add isupport for Tiger Lake in no-HWP mode to intel_pstate (Doug Smythies) - Update the AMD P-state driver (Perry Yuan): - Fix wrong lowest perf fetch - Map desired perf into pstate scope for powersave governor - Update pstate frequency transition delay time - Fix initial highest_perf value - Clean up - Move max CPU capacity to sugov_policy in the schedutil cpufreq governor (Lukasz Luba) - Add SM6115 to cpufreq-dt blocklist (Adam Skladowski) - Add support for Tegra239 and minor cleanups (Sumit Gupta, ye xingchen, and Yang Yingliang) - Add freq qos for qcom cpufreq driver and minor cleanups (Xuewen Yan, and Viresh Kumar) - Minor cleanups around functions called at module_init() (Xiu Jianfeng) - Use module_init and add module_exit for bmips driver (Zhang Jianhua) - Add AlderLake-N support to intel_idle (Zhang Rui) - Replace strlcpy() with unused retval with strscpy() in intel_idle (Wolfram Sang) - Remove redundant check from cpuidle_switch_governor() (Yu Liao) - Replace strlcpy() with unused retval with strscpy() in the powernv cpuidle driver (Wolfram Sang) - Drop duplicate word from a comment in the coupled cpuidle driver (Jason Wang) - Make rpm_resume() return -EINPROGRESS if RPM_NOWAIT is passed to it in the flags and the device is about to resume (Rafael Wysocki) - Add extra debugging statement for multiple active IRQs to system wakeup handling code (Mario Limonciello) - Replace strlcpy() with unused retval with strscpy() in the core system suspend support code (Wolfram Sang) - Update the intel_rapl power capping driver: - Use standard Energy Unit for SPR Dram RAPL domain (Zhang Rui). - Add support for RAPTORLAKE_S (Zhang Rui). - Fix UBSAN shift-out-of-bounds issue (Chao Qin) - Handle -EPROBE_DEFER when regulator is not probed on mtk-ci-devfreq.c (AngeloGioacchino Del Regno) - Fix message typo and use dev_err_probe() in rockchip-dfi.c (Christophe JAILLET)" * tag 'pm-6.1-rc1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/rafael/linux-pm: (29 commits) cpufreq: qcom-cpufreq-hw: Add cpufreq qos for LMh cpufreq: Add __init annotation to module init funcs cpufreq: tegra194: change tegra239_cpufreq_soc to static PM / devfreq: rockchip-dfi: Fix an error message PM / devfreq: mtk-cci: Handle sram regulator probe deferral powercap: intel_rapl: Use standard Energy Unit for SPR Dram RAPL domain PM: runtime: Return -EINPROGRESS from rpm_resume() in the RPM_NOWAIT case intel_idle: Add AlderLake-N support powercap: intel_rapl: fix UBSAN shift-out-of-bounds issue cpufreq: tegra194: Add support for Tegra239 cpufreq: qcom-cpufreq-hw: Fix uninitialized throttled_freq warning cpufreq: intel_pstate: Add Tigerlake support in no-HWP mode powercap: intel_rapl: Add support for RAPTORLAKE_S cpufreq: amd-pstate: Fix initial highest_perf value cpuidle: Remove redundant check in cpuidle_switch_governor() PM: wakeup: Add extra debugging statement for multiple active IRQs cpufreq: tegra194: Remove the unneeded result variable PM: suspend: move from strlcpy() with unused retval to strscpy() intel_idle: move from strlcpy() with unused retval to strscpy() cpuidle: powernv: move from strlcpy() with unused retval to strscpy() ... |