From patchwork Wed Nov 30 15:32:02 2022 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8" MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit X-Patchwork-Submitter: Kajetan Puchalski X-Patchwork-Id: 629800 Return-Path: X-Spam-Checker-Version: SpamAssassin 3.4.0 (2014-02-07) on aws-us-west-2-korg-lkml-1.web.codeaurora.org Received: from vger.kernel.org (vger.kernel.org [23.128.96.18]) by smtp.lore.kernel.org (Postfix) with ESMTP id 55616C433FE for ; Wed, 30 Nov 2022 15:33:21 +0000 (UTC) Received: (majordomo@vger.kernel.org) by vger.kernel.org via listexpand id S229814AbiK3PdU (ORCPT ); Wed, 30 Nov 2022 10:33:20 -0500 Received: from lindbergh.monkeyblade.net ([23.128.96.19]:56632 "EHLO lindbergh.monkeyblade.net" rhost-flags-OK-OK-OK-OK) by vger.kernel.org with ESMTP id S229653AbiK3PdT (ORCPT ); Wed, 30 Nov 2022 10:33:19 -0500 Received: from foss.arm.com (foss.arm.com [217.140.110.172]) by lindbergh.monkeyblade.net (Postfix) with ESMTP id 5C6C660E1; Wed, 30 Nov 2022 07:33:16 -0800 (PST) Received: from usa-sjc-imap-foss1.foss.arm.com (unknown [10.121.207.14]) by usa-sjc-mx-foss1.foss.arm.com (Postfix) with ESMTP id 4DCFDD6E; Wed, 30 Nov 2022 07:33:22 -0800 (PST) Received: from e126311.arm.com (unknown [10.57.72.111]) by usa-sjc-imap-foss1.foss.arm.com (Postfix) with ESMTPSA id 2F3E73F67D; Wed, 30 Nov 2022 07:33:14 -0800 (PST) From: Kajetan Puchalski To: rafael@kernel.org Cc: daniel.lezcano@linaro.org, lukasz.luba@arm.com, Dietmar.Eggemann@arm.com, dsmythies@telus.net, yu.chen.surf@gmail.com, kajetan.puchalski@arm.com, linux-pm@vger.kernel.org, linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org Subject: [RFC PATCH v5 0/2] cpuidle: teo: Introduce util-awareness Date: Wed, 30 Nov 2022 15:32:02 +0000 Message-Id: <20221130153204.2085591-1-kajetan.puchalski@arm.com> X-Mailer: git-send-email 2.37.1 MIME-Version: 1.0 Precedence: bulk List-ID: X-Mailing-List: linux-pm@vger.kernel.org Hi, At the moment, all the available idle governors operate mainly based on their own past correctness metrics along with timer events without taking into account any scheduling information. Especially on interactive systems, this results in them frequently selecting a deeper idle state and then waking up before its target residency is hit, thus leading to increased wakeup latency and lower performance with no power saving. For 'menu' while web browsing on Android for instance, those types of wakeups ('too deep') account for over 24% of all wakeups. At the same time, on some platforms C0 can be power efficient enough to warrant wanting to prefer it over C1. This is because the power usage of the two states can be so close that sufficient amounts of too deep C1 sleeps can completely offset the C1 power saving to the point where it would've been more power efficient to just use C0 instead. Sleeps that happened in C0 while they could have used C1 ('too shallow') only save less power than they otherwise could have. Too deep sleeps, on the other hand, harm performance and nullify the potential power saving from using C1 in the first place. While taking this into account, it is clear that on balance it is preferable for an idle governor to have more too shallow sleeps instead of more too deep sleeps on those kinds of platforms. Currently the best available governor under this metric is TEO which on average results in less than half the percentage of too deep sleeps compared to 'menu', getting much better wakeup latencies and increased performance in the process. This proposed optional extension to TEO would specifically tune it for minimising too deep sleeps and minimising latency to achieve better performance. To this end, before selecting the next idle state it uses the avg_util signal of a CPU's runqueue in order to determine to what extent the CPU is being utilized. This util value is then compared to a threshold defined as a percentage of the cpu's capacity (capacity >> 6 ie. ~1.5% in the current implementation). If the util is above the threshold, the idle state selected by TEO metrics will be reduced by 1, thus selecting a shallower state. If the util is below the threshold, the governor defaults to the TEO metrics mechanism to try to select the deepest available idle state based on the closest timer event and its own correctness. The main goal of this is to reduce latency and increase performance for some workloads. Under some workloads it will result in an increase in power usage (Geekbench 5) while for other workloads it will also result in a decrease in power usage compared to TEO (PCMark Web, Jankbench, Speedometer). As of v2 the patch includes a 'fast exit' path for arm-based and similar systems where only 2 idle states are present. If there's just 2 idle states and the CPU is utilized, we can directly select the shallowest state and save cycles by skipping the entire metrics mechanism. Under the current implementation, the state will not be reduced by 1 if the change would lead to selecting a polling state instead of a non-polling state. This approach can outperform all the other currently available governors, at least on mobile device workloads, which is why I think it is worth keeping as an option. There is no particular attachment or reliance on TEO for this mechanism, I simply chose to base it on TEO because it performs the best out of all the available options and I didn't think there was any point in reinventing the wheel on the side of computing governor metrics. If a better approach comes along at some point, there's no reason why the same idle aware mechanism couldn't be used with any other metrics algorithm. That would, however, require implemeting it as a separate governor rather than a TEO add-on. As for how the extension performs in practice, below I'll add some benchmark results I got while testing this patchset. All the benchmarks were run after holding the phone in the fridge for exactly an hour each time to minimise the impact of thermal issues. Pixel 6 (Android 12, mainline kernel 5.18, with newer mainline CFS patches): 1. Geekbench 5 (latency-sensitive, heavy load test) The values below are gmean values across 3 back to back iteration of Geekbench 5. As GB5 is a heavy benchmark, after more than 3 iterations intense throttling kicks in on mobile devices resulting in skewed benchmark scores, which makes it difficult to collect reliable results. The actual values for all of the governors can change between runs as the benchmark might be affected by factors other than just latency. Nevertheless, on the runs I've seen, util-aware TEO frequently achieved better scores than all the other governors. Benchmark scores +-----------------+-------------+---------+-------------+ | metric | kernel | value | perc_diff | |-----------------+-------------+---------+-------------| | multicore_score | menu | 2826.5 | 0.0% | | multicore_score | teo | 2764.8 | -2.18% | | multicore_score | teo_util_v3 | 2849 | 0.8% | | multicore_score | teo_util_v4 | 2865 | 1.36% | | score | menu | 1053 | 0.0% | | score | teo | 1050.7 | -0.22% | | score | teo_util_v3 | 1059.6 | 0.63% | | score | teo_util_v4 | 1057.6 | 0.44% | +-----------------+-------------+---------+-------------+ Idle misses The numbers are percentages of too deep and too shallow sleeps computed using the new trace event - cpu_idle_miss. The percentage is obtained by counting the two types of misses over the course of a run and then dividing them by the total number of wakeups in that run. +-------------+-------------+--------------+ | wa_path | type | count_perc | |-------------+-------------+--------------| | menu | too deep | 14.994% | | teo | too deep | 9.649% | | teo_util_v3 | too deep | 4.298% | | teo_util_v4 | too deep | 4.02 % | | menu | too shallow | 2.497% | | teo | too shallow | 5.963% | | teo_util_v3 | too shallow | 13.773% | | teo_util_v4 | too shallow | 14.598% | +-------------+-------------+--------------+ Power usage [mW] +--------------+----------+-------------+---------+-------------+ | chan_name | metric | kernel | value | perc_diff | |--------------+----------+-------------+---------+-------------| | total_power | gmean | menu | 2551.4 | 0.0% | | total_power | gmean | teo | 2606.8 | 2.17% | | total_power | gmean | teo_util_v3 | 2670.1 | 4.65% | | total_power | gmean | teo_util_v4 | 2722.3 | 6.7% | +--------------+----------+-------------+---------+-------------+ Task wakeup latency +-----------------+----------+-------------+-------------+-------------+ | comm | metric | kernel | value | perc_diff | |-----------------+----------+-------------+-------------+-------------| | AsyncTask #1 | gmean | menu | 78.16μs | 0.0% | | AsyncTask #1 | gmean | teo | 61.60μs | -21.19% | | AsyncTask #1 | gmean | teo_util_v3 | 74.34μs | -4.89% | | AsyncTask #1 | gmean | teo_util_v4 | 54.45μs | -30.34% | | labs.geekbench5 | gmean | menu | 88.55μs | 0.0% | | labs.geekbench5 | gmean | teo | 100.97μs | 14.02% | | labs.geekbench5 | gmean | teo_util_v3 | 53.57μs | -39.5% | | labs.geekbench5 | gmean | teo_util_v4 | 59.60μs | -32.7% | +-----------------+----------+-------------+-------------+-------------+ In case of this benchmark, the difference in latency does seem to translate into better scores. 2. PCMark Web Browsing (non latency-sensitive, normal usage web browsing test) The table below contains gmean values across 20 back to back iterations of PCMark 2 Web Browsing. Benchmark scores +----------------+-------------+---------+-------------+ | metric | kernel | value | perc_diff | |----------------+-------------+---------+-------------| | PcmaWebV2Score | menu | 5232 | 0.0% | | PcmaWebV2Score | teo | 5219.8 | -0.23% | | PcmaWebV2Score | teo_util_v3 | 5273.5 | 0.79% | | PcmaWebV2Score | teo_util_v4 | 5239.9 | 0.15% | +----------------+-------------+---------+-------------+ Idle misses +-------------+-------------+--------------+ | wa_path | type | count_perc | |-------------+-------------+--------------| | menu | too deep | 24.814% | | teo | too deep | 11.65% | | teo_util_v3 | too deep | 3.481% | | teo_util_v4 | too deep | 3.662% | | menu | too shallow | 3.101% | | teo | too shallow | 8.578% | | teo_util_v3 | too shallow | 18.326% | | teo_util_v4 | too shallow | 18.692% | +-------------+-------------+--------------+ Power usage [mW] +--------------+----------+-------------+---------+-------------+ | chan_name | metric | kernel | value | perc_diff | |--------------+----------+-------------+---------+-------------| | total_power | gmean | menu | 179.2 | 0.0% | | total_power | gmean | teo | 184.8 | 3.1% | | total_power | gmean | teo_util_v3 | 177.4 | -1.02% | | total_power | gmean | teo_util_v4 | 184.1 | 2.71% | +--------------+----------+-------------+---------+-------------+ Task wakeup latency +-----------------+----------+-------------+-------------+-------------+ | comm | metric | kernel | value | perc_diff | |-----------------+----------+-------------+-------------+-------------| | CrRendererMain | gmean | menu | 236.63μs | 0.0% | | CrRendererMain | gmean | teo | 201.85μs | -14.7% | | CrRendererMain | gmean | teo_util_v3 | 106.46μs | -55.01% | | CrRendererMain | gmean | teo_util_v4 | 106.72μs | -54.9% | | chmark:workload | gmean | menu | 100.30μs | 0.0% | | chmark:workload | gmean | teo | 80.20μs | -20.04% | | chmark:workload | gmean | teo_util_v3 | 65.88μs | -34.32% | | chmark:workload | gmean | teo_util_v4 | 57.90μs | -42.28% | | surfaceflinger | gmean | menu | 97.57μs | 0.0% | | surfaceflinger | gmean | teo | 98.86μs | 1.31% | | surfaceflinger | gmean | teo_util_v3 | 56.49μs | -42.1% | | surfaceflinger | gmean | teo_util_v4 | 72.68μs | -25.52% | +-----------------+----------+-------------+-------------+-------------+ In this case the large latency improvement does not translate into a notable increase in benchmark score as this particular benchmark mainly responds to changes in operating frequency. 3. Jankbench (locked 60hz screen) (normal usage UI test) Frame durations +---------------+------------------+---------+-------------+ | variable | kernel | value | perc_diff | |---------------+------------------+---------+-------------| | mean_duration | menu_60hz | 13.9 | 0.0% | | mean_duration | teo_60hz | 14.7 | 6.0% | | mean_duration | teo_util_v3_60hz | 13.8 | -0.87% | | mean_duration | teo_util_v4_60hz | 12.6 | -9.0% | +---------------+------------------+---------+-------------+ Jank percentage +------------+------------------+---------+-------------+ | variable | kernel | value | perc_diff | |------------+------------------+---------+-------------| | jank_perc | menu_60hz | 1.5 | 0.0% | | jank_perc | teo_60hz | 2.1 | 36.99% | | jank_perc | teo_util_v3_60hz | 1.3 | -13.95% | | jank_perc | teo_util_v4_60hz | 1.3 | -17.37% | +------------+------------------+---------+-------------+ Idle misses +------------------+-------------+--------------+ | wa_path | type | count_perc | |------------------+-------------+--------------| | menu_60hz | too deep | 26.00% | | teo_60hz | too deep | 11.00% | | teo_util_v3_60hz | too deep | 2.33% | | teo_util_v4_60hz | too deep | 2.54% | | menu_60hz | too shallow | 4.74% | | teo_60hz | too shallow | 11.89% | | teo_util_v3_60hz | too shallow | 21.78% | | teo_util_v4_60hz | too shallow | 21.93% | +------------------+-------------+--------------+ Power usage [mW] +--------------+------------------+---------+-------------+ | chan_name | kernel | value | perc_diff | |--------------+------------------+---------+-------------| | total_power | menu_60hz | 144.6 | 0.0% | | total_power | teo_60hz | 136.9 | -5.27% | | total_power | teo_util_v3_60hz | 134.2 | -7.19% | | total_power | teo_util_v4_60hz | 121.3 | -16.08% | +--------------+------------------+---------+-------------+ Task wakeup latency +-----------------+------------------+-------------+-------------+ | comm | kernel | value | perc_diff | |-----------------+------------------+-------------+-------------| | RenderThread | menu_60hz | 139.52μs | 0.0% | | RenderThread | teo_60hz | 116.51μs | -16.49% | | RenderThread | teo_util_v3_60hz | 86.76μs | -37.82% | | RenderThread | teo_util_v4_60hz | 91.11μs | -34.7% | | droid.benchmark | menu_60hz | 135.88μs | 0.0% | | droid.benchmark | teo_60hz | 105.21μs | -22.57% | | droid.benchmark | teo_util_v3_60hz | 83.92μs | -38.24% | | droid.benchmark | teo_util_v4_60hz | 83.18μs | -38.79% | | surfaceflinger | menu_60hz | 124.03μs | 0.0% | | surfaceflinger | teo_60hz | 151.90μs | 22.47% | | surfaceflinger | teo_util_v3_60hz | 100.19μs | -19.22% | | surfaceflinger | teo_util_v4_60hz | 87.65μs | -29.33% | +-----------------+------------------+-------------+-------------+ 4. Speedometer 2 (heavy load web browsing test) Benchmark scores +-------------------+-------------+---------+-------------+ | metric | kernel | value | perc_diff | |-------------------+-------------+---------+-------------| | Speedometer Score | menu | 102 | 0.0% | | Speedometer Score | teo | 104.9 | 2.88% | | Speedometer Score | teo_util_v3 | 102.1 | 0.16% | | Speedometer Score | teo_util_v4 | 103.8 | 1.83% | +-------------------+-------------+---------+-------------+ Idle misses +-------------+-------------+--------------+ | wa_path | type | count_perc | |-------------+-------------+--------------| | menu | too deep | 17.95% | | teo | too deep | 6.46% | | teo_util_v3 | too deep | 0.63% | | teo_util_v4 | too deep | 0.64% | | menu | too shallow | 3.86% | | teo | too shallow | 8.21% | | teo_util_v3 | too shallow | 14.72% | | teo_util_v4 | too shallow | 14.43% | +-------------+-------------+--------------+ Power usage [mW] +--------------+----------+-------------+---------+-------------+ | chan_name | metric | kernel | value | perc_diff | |--------------+----------+-------------+---------+-------------| | total_power | gmean | menu | 2059 | 0.0% | | total_power | gmean | teo | 2187.8 | 6.26% | | total_power | gmean | teo_util_v3 | 2212.9 | 7.47% | | total_power | gmean | teo_util_v4 | 2121.8 | 3.05% | +--------------+----------+-------------+---------+-------------+ Task wakeup latency +-----------------+----------+-------------+-------------+-------------+ | comm | metric | kernel | value | perc_diff | |-----------------+----------+-------------+-------------+-------------| | CrRendererMain | gmean | menu | 17.18μs | 0.0% | | CrRendererMain | gmean | teo | 16.18μs | -5.82% | | CrRendererMain | gmean | teo_util_v3 | 18.04μs | 5.05% | | CrRendererMain | gmean | teo_util_v4 | 18.25μs | 6.27% | | RenderThread | gmean | menu | 68.60μs | 0.0% | | RenderThread | gmean | teo | 48.44μs | -29.39% | | RenderThread | gmean | teo_util_v3 | 48.01μs | -30.02% | | RenderThread | gmean | teo_util_v4 | 51.24μs | -25.3% | | surfaceflinger | gmean | menu | 42.23μs | 0.0% | | surfaceflinger | gmean | teo | 29.84μs | -29.33% | | surfaceflinger | gmean | teo_util_v3 | 24.51μs | -41.95% | | surfaceflinger | gmean | teo_util_v4 | 29.64μs | -29.8% | +-----------------+----------+-------------+-------------+-------------+ At the very least this approach seems promising so I wanted to discuss it in RFC form first. Thank you for taking your time to read this! --- Kajetan v4 -> v5: - remove the restriction to only apply the mechanism for C1 candidate state - clarify some code comments, fix comment style - refactor the fast-exit path loop implementation - move some cover letter information into the commit description v3 -> v4: - remove the chunk of code skipping metrics updates when the CPU was utilized - include new test results and more benchmarks in the cover letter v2 -> v3: - add a patch adding an option to skip polling states in teo_find_shallower_state() - only reduce the state if the candidate state is C1 and C0 is not a polling state - add a check for polling states in the 2-states fast-exit path - remove the ifdefs and Kconfig option v1 -> v2: - rework the mechanism to reduce selected state by 1 instead of directly selecting C0 (suggested by Doug Smythies) - add a fast-exit path for systems with 2 idle states to not waste cycles on metrics when utilized - fix typos in comments - include a missing header Kajetan Puchalski (2): cpuidle: teo: Optionally skip polling states in teo_find_shallower_state() cpuidle: teo: Introduce util-awareness drivers/cpuidle/governors/teo.c | 93 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-- 1 file changed, 89 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-)