On Thu, 19 Apr 2018 21:01:15 +0100 (BST)
"terry.montague.1...@btinternet.com" <terry.montague.1...@btinternet.com> wrote:

> I should also say - I've disabled the kernel's 5% time reservation for 
> SCHED_FIFO through setting /proc/sys/kernel/sched_rt_runtime_us to -1.
> 
> Any help with this problem gratefully appreciated.
> 
> Many thanks
> 
> Terry.
> 
> 
> ----Original message----
> From : terry.montague.1...@btinternet.com
> Date : 19/04/18 - 16:43 (BST)
> To : users@dpdk.org
> Subject : [dpdk-users] Linux forcibly descheduling isolated thread on 
> isolated cpu running DPDK rx under load
> 
> Hi there,
> I wondered if anyone had come across this particular problem regarding linux 
> scheduling, or rather what appears to be a forced descheduling effect.
> I'm running on standard vanilla Ubuntu 17-10 using kernel 4.13.0-36-generic. 
> Local Timer interrupts are therefore enabled....
> I'm running a dual CPU Xeon E5-2623v4 system. I have cpu 2 on the first NUMA 
> node (CPU 0) isolated for DPDK receive. I have an Intel X550 card attached to 
> NUMA 0.
> What I'm doing is running my DPDK receive thread on the isolated core (2) and 
> changing the scheduling for this thread to SCHED_FIFO and priority 98.
> Most of the time this works really well. However, I'm running this DPDK 
> thread inside a larger application - there are probably 40 threads inside 
> this process at default priority.
> What I'm seeing is, when the application is under load, the DPDK receive 
> thread is forcibly descheduled (observed with pidstat -p <PID> -w and seeing 
> the non-voluntary counts spike ) and the core appears to go idle, sometimes 
> for up to 1400uS. 
> This is obviously a problem....
> Running "perf" to sample activity on this isolated core only, I see the 
> following entries.
>    0.90%  swapper        [kernel.kallsyms]    [k] cpu_idle_poll
>    0.60%  lcore-slave-2  [kernel.kallsyms]    [k] clear_page_erms
> i.e  - it has gone idle and 1.5% of the processing time has gone elsewhere - 
> which ties in pretty well with my ~1400uS deschedule observation.
> In normal operation I do not see this effect.
> I've checked the code - it appears to go idle in the middle of some AVX2 data 
> processing code - there are no system calls taken, it just goes idle.
> Does anyone have any ideas ? 
> Many thanks
> Terry
> 

AVX2 has issue that it  uses more cpu power, and the CPU will sometimes go into 
power management (self preservation state).
At my previous employer, we experimented with AVX2 for firewall matching and 
discovered that under benchmark load
the overall performance was worse.

Also, unless you isolate cpu's from scheduler via kernel cmdline or 
offline/online with sysfs.
you can run into SCHED_FIFO processes that never yield
starving ksoftirqd.  That means of softirq ever happens on that cpu, it will 
never get serviced leading
to hangs etc.  

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